Karazin was educated in schools for the nobility in Kharkov and then in Kremenchug. At the age of eighteen, he left for Saint Petersburg, and underwent military training in the 1st Semyonovsky Independent Rifle Regiment. He also studied at the School of Mines, one of the top educational institutions in the Russian Empire at that time. Karazin was unhappy in this environment, and often reacted against the manners and customs condoned by the nobility of the times. Unsatisfied with his military service, he moved back to his village and married a fourteen-year-old serf girl.
In 1798 Karazin attempted to leave Russia given his opposition to the policies of Emperor Paul I, but was denied a passport. After he attempted to cross the border illegally, he was swiftly arrested.
When Alexander I took power, Karazin began petitioning him with his views on government development, pointing out the state's need to invest in education. In 1802 he obtained the tsar's permission to open a university in Kharkov. On 1 September of that year, during a meeting of the Kharkov nobility, he gave a famous speech on the benefits of having a university, asking for voluntary donations. Lacking sufficient funding and academic supplies, Karazin struggled to achieve his educational priorities. The local elite preferred to have a military college in the city.[2]
On 17 January 1805, the Imperial Kharkov University was inaugurated, but Karazin did not take part in the opening ceremony, as by that time he had lost his position with the Ministry of Education. According to Alexander Herzen, "the colossal ideas of Karazin were downscaled to a provincial GermanHochschule".[4] Forced to return to his village, Karazin established a school for local children. In November 1808, he wrote a letter to the emperor titled On non-intervention in European affairs for which he was arrested for a second time.
Karazin carried out a wide range of academic work. He was a member of seven academies and published more than 60 articles in different fields of science, primarily agriculture, pharmacology, chemistry, and physics. As an example of his innovative spirit, in 1810 in his village he opened the first weather station in the territory of present-day Ukraine.
Karazin repeatedly voiced criticism of what he viewed as Alexander's resistance to self-government and national education in the Russian Empire. Karazin was the founding father of the Ministry of National Education. His direct confrontation with Emperor Alexander I was so public, that in 1820–21 Karazin was even imprisoned in Shlisselburg Fortress. After that he lived in his family estate. Karazin died in Nikolaev.
The Russian painter and writer Nikolay Karazin was his grandson.
See also
Kharkiv University (V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University), University in Kharkiv named in his honour
(in Ukrainian and Russian) "An Enthusiastic 'Ukrainian Lomonosov'", Zerkalo Nedeli, #1(376), 5 January 2002 Available online in Russian and in Ukrainian.