Abstract
The article is devoted to the attitude of Russian society towards the participants in the uprising in the Kingdom of Poland of 1863-1864 in the territory of Western Siberia. Based on a wide range of sources, the author concludes that most of the representatives of Russian society in Siberia were positive about exiled Poles. Local residents gladly took them to the service, the administration also proceeded loyal to the participants in the January uprising. Separately, it is worth noting the representatives of Russian society who were in exile with the Poles. For the most part, these were participants in the populist movement, and, as a result, the intellectual part of Russian society. The Narodniks supported the Polish liberation movement, opposing the policy of tsarism in Poland.
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