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Russian Revolution Whoo hoo! 1917 (February, March Revolution) • Spontaneous worker uprising • Causes existed for long time Aw, man! I missed the beginning. Bread shortage protest (Feb 23 OS / March 8 NS) – – – – – Started Vyborg factories / plants: no black bread Spread: Petrograd, Rozhdestvenskii, Liteinyi districts In 1 day, 87 534 men on strike Forced trams to quit Chased by police, dispersed, gathered elsewhere Feb 25 OS / March 10 NS: Food Shortage Telegram • Feb 24: 200 000 workers on strike • Stopped streetcars • Feb 23-4: workers to Nevsky, dispersed, but violence • No force from troops, but 4 injured • Feb 25 entered Nevsky: resisted by troops, dispersed by Cossacks • Police officer killed, 100 Light Guards + 5 Reserve Cavalry Regiment squads called in Feb 26 OS (March 11 NS): Telegram from Commander to Tsar • Feb 25, Tsar on front lines • Demonstrators rallied against war: “Down with the war!” • Warned about arms used against • Platoon of Dragoons opened fire on crowd: killed 3, wounded 10 • Feb 26: 240 000 workers on strike • Tsar Nicolas: order all to be stopped next day Revolutionaries Take Over • With protests, rev. leaders took advantage • Bolscheviks, Mensheviks, Socialist Revolutionaries banded together: called 3-day general strike • “lawnessness,” government “paralyzed,” • Transportation, food supply, fuel stopped • Disorderly shooting in streets, troops shooting one another • Feb 26 OS (March 12 NS): 60 000 soldiers join revolutionaries Soviet (Council) Established • Striking workers + Soldiers: Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, Social Revolutionaries • Later challenges Provisional Government, set up by Duma (National Gov. in Tsarist Russia – little power) • Revolutionaries control Petrograd – 4 regiments of Home Guard joined rev. – More troops join: tired, propaganda Provisional Government -- Chairman of State arrested -- Disobey Tsar: don’t dissolve Duma -- Duma; some party leaders create rev. gov.: Petrograd Soviet Workers + Soldiers’ Deputies – elects council from workers, rebel troops -- declare all Russians equal, grant: freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly, legal unions / strikes -- plan to continue war Telegram to Tsar: former gov. members removed, admin. Power given to Provisional Gov. Tsar Nicholas Abdicates (steps down): March 2 OS / March 15 NS • Gives title to son Alexis, with Tsar’s brother to have control • Brother refuses succession • Romanov line ends (1613 – 1917) • Tsar returns to palace, arrested, confined to palace • Provisional Government now has power He he. See ya. Provisional Government • Goals: prepare for permanent gov, continue in WW1 against Germany • Believed all land to go to peasants, didn’t do this • Peasants upset • Inflation on rise, transportation not working, food shortages, low industry production • Demonstrations against gov, mainly about war • Soldiers / Workers / Peasants: all wanted peace, reform, land • Gov asked them to wait. • Tired of waiting, people turned to revolutionaries So, Conflict of Power to Run Russia: • Provisional Government (old Duma, new members) VS • Petrograd Soviet of Workers’ & Soldiers’ Deputies (Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, Socialist Revolutionaries) I’ve got good bets on those Bolshis . . Soviets Appearing All Over Russia • Wanted socialism in Russia • Against Provisional Government • Included Petrograd Soviet of Workers & Soldiers’ Deputies • Success of revolution depended on support around Russia • Soviets spread revolution around Russia A Soviet is a Council, my comrades Where’s Lenin? • During Feb. Revolution: in exile (Switzerland) – Trotsky in US • Arrived Petrograd: April 16, met Bolsheviks, Soviet reps, 100s others Uh . . . Right here . . . More Demonstrations / Strikes • Bolsheviks incited more, 1000s joined mass demonstrations: May, June – Bolsheviks demanded end to Provisional Gov. – Carried signs: “All Power to the Soviets,” “Bread, Peace & Freedom” – Most supported Provis. Gov, against Bolsheviks – End June: Prov. Gov little power, Soviets = no direction, Lenin leading Bolsheviks – Groups plotted against each other for control Go, my little comrades , go! Alexander Kerensky • June, became leader of small socialist party, now prime minister of Russia • Main goal: parlaimentary democracy: gov. directly elected by people • Well educated, great speaker • Lacked strong leadership • Faced opposition in weeks I shall squash you like the little svolotch you are. Kornilov Affair • 1st serious opposition to Kerensky (Sept) • General Kornilov tried to overthrow Prov. Gov., but military takeover never happened • To prevent, Kerensky freed from prison many Bolsh. Leaders • Supplied arms to many revolutionaries – (later known as Red Guards) -- key role in Oct./ Nov. Russian Revolution He he. Silly man with your silly guns. Bolsheviks • Lenin arrived, but group not strong to overthrow Prov. Gov. Excuse, me . . . • Continued to plan to overthrow Over here . .. • Promised: – End to war – Land to peasants – Food into shops Greatest gains of all 3 rev. groups since March: support in Russia rising for Bolsheviks October / November Revolution = Bolshevik Revolution • All over, peasant rebellion: raiding, seizing land, livestock, etc. • Sept. 25: Lenin hiding in Finland, letter to Bolsheviks w/ plans for armed seizure of Prov. Gov.. Bolsheviks couldn’t decide where to seize gov. • Oct. 23: Lenin, in disguise, to secret Bolshevik meeting in Petrograd. Stalin there. Lenin convinced members to rebel: armed uprising b/c had strong leaders, well-organized I looked swingin’ in my fake wig and beard. • Nov 4: Mass Bolshevik meeting (1000s) • Nov 5: Kerensky: special cabinet meeting for Prov. Gov – declaring Russia in state of emergency, to arrest Trotsky, other Bolshevik leaders • Nov 6: Prov. Gov ordered “Aurora” to sea, commanders (Bolsheviks) told “no” by Trotsky, who then orders removal of 1000s guns from Fortress of Peter & Paul to arm Red Guards (Bolshevik troops) • Nov 6 (evening): Bolsheviks strike, seize important buildings, services: railroad, telegraph, banks, printing plants, powerhouses • Nov 7: Trotsky declares overthrow of Prov. Gov, Soviets in power • Kerensky escapes in US embassy car • Bolshevik troops surround Winter Palace, give Kerensky ministers ultimatum (surrender or we shoot), ministers refuse • “Aurora” and Peter & Paul Fortress fire blank shots at Winter Palace to begin attack: Bolsheviks (soldiers, sailors, workers Red Guards) storm palace • Nov 8: Prov. Gov. does not resist, Bolsheviks control government (2pm), arrest Prov. Gov ministers Uh! Uh! Uh! Tremble at my power! Resistanc e if futile! And the new leader is . . . Lenin (in Petrograd) -- new government controlled by Bolsheviks – soon to be the Communist Party Thank you, thank you! I’d like to thank my mother for her support, and my dog, Fluffy . .. Bolsheviks: 1, Provisional Government: 0 • Why? • Kerensky not good leader • Prov. Gov disorganized • Bolsheviks organized, wellplanned, dedicated to goals, carried them out (so remember these points if you want to ever take over a government) Man, I guess those Transfer able Skills did come in handy. So, what did our pal Lenin do? • Proposed end to war, promising peace • Proposed land distribution to peasants, (landowners not to be paid for land taken) • New Government: – led by Bolsheviks (of course) adopted proposals – appointed Lenin as Chairman (most important) of new gov: “Council of People’s Commissars” If I’d – Stalin appointed Commissar of National Minorities known Stalin – Trotsky appointed Commissar of Foreign Affairs was going to be such a Svolotch, I would have voted for Did Everyone Like the Bolsheviks? • Moscow: officials of Prov. Gov fought them, surrendering after several days of fighting • Kiev (Ukraine): Bolsheviks defeated Boo. • Had weak control in Siberia, Georgia, Armenia, Central Asia • Strongest in Central Russia, large cities Russian Democracy • Constituent Assembly (Nov 25) Body set up to draft • Socialist Revolutionaries country constitution Party = 2 X votes of Bolsheviks -- peasants wanted to own land, Bolsheviks had no plan to gain peasant support (majority voters) -- Jan 18, 1918: Bolsheviks (minority) wanted control, posted soldiers So much for outside to prevent SRPs from democrac entering, closed down assembly y... Lenin’s Way to Get Peasants • End war: Lenin signed treaty of BrestLitovsk b/w Germany & Russia • Treaty = German occupation of Ukraine, Belorussia, Baltics, Finland • Russia lost ¼ farmland, 1/3 population, all coal mines, ½ industries = lots of $$$ Civil War • After treaty, armed resistance to Bolshevik rule • 1918-1921: long, bloody civil war • Came out of Prov. Gov. overthrow (1917) from people disliking Lenin / Bolsh. Socialist policies • Uprisers: opposers to Bolsheviks, non-Russians (for independence), troops from Great Britain, France, US (fear of Bolshevik ideas) • Fight for control & Bolsheviks for Communism • Russia named “Soviet Federated Socialist Republic” 1918 • 1921: Bolsheviks defeated opponents Whites • • • • • Middle, upper class Wanted old ways (pre 1917) Favoured nobility control Wanted parlaiment through Duma or military dictator Supported anti-Bolshevik military forces: White Army = disorganized • Bolsheviks = – organized, disciplined army under Trotsky: – Red Army (1000s conscripts – workers, peasants, tsarist soldiers) – Support of peasants / workers through promises of land, future – To hold power, used terror: new areas, secret police arrested, killed “opposition” So, My Foes . . . • The Whites • Non-Russian Nationalities • Allied Troops 1921, after WW1, 1917 Revolution, Civil War: I need a holiday. • Russia in ruins • Wasted cities, land, factories • Bolsheviks now had to rebuild Whatever Happened to Those Darned Romanovs? Um, yeah. Those guys. • August 1917: sent to Siberia (captive) • May 1918: Ekaterinburg, Ural Mountains (captive) • Telegraph (July) from local Bolsheviks to Sverlov (head, secret police), Lenin: requested immediate execution of family b/c of fear of Whites gaining city • July 16, 1:30 am: Romanovs, doctor, servants (11 total) taken to cellar, executed by secret police • Daughters: bullets bounced off b/c of hidden diamonds in corsets • Those surviving bayonetted • Bodies into truck, stripped at mine, thrown down • Mine too shallow, so July 18, recovered, dumped in pit in marshy area • July 25: Whites took Ekaterinburg, searched for bodies: found clothes & jewelry at mine, thought mine final resting place