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Russian Revolution

Russian Revolution. CHY 4U. 1917. One to overthrow the Czar and establish a Provisional (temporary) Government = February 1917 = liberal. One to overthrow the Provisional Government = October 1917 = socialist. Two Revolutions. Czar Nicholas II. Context: A Time of Change.

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Russian Revolution

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  1. Russian Revolution CHY 4U 1917

  2. One to overthrow the Czar and establish a Provisional (temporary) Government = February 1917 = liberal One to overthrow the Provisional Government = October 1917 = socialist Two Revolutions Czar Nicholas II

  3. Context: A Time of Change • Change after 1860 because of loss of Crimean War and losing power in Europe. • Czar Alexander II introduced Great Reforms – emancipation of the serfs, some local representation, etc. Ideological inspiration? • But he was killed and his successors introduced counter-reforms: • they were reactionary (censorship, revoke local control). Alexander II in 1861

  4. Anti-Czarist Forces • Terrorists: • People’s Will, Land and Freedom • Lenin’s brother executed for plotting to kill the czar in 1887 • Marxists: • Economic and scientific thinking, not emotion • “sooner or later” the oppressed and oppressors would come into conflict and revolution would change the political system • Both were highly repressed by Czar’s secret police (Okhrana) Helen Rappaport, Conspirator: Lenin in Exile (London: Hutchinson, 2009), xxiv, xxvi.

  5. Context: 1905 • Humiliating loss of the Russo-Japanese War led to protests: • Troops fired on peaceful protesters (Bloody Sunday) • Peasants seized land • The Soviet (council) of workers was formed in St. Petersburg (all eventually put down by Czarist troops) • workers’ revolution, not socialist

  6. Russo-Japanese War Editorial Cartoons - American Japan-in-America: the Turn of the Twentieth Century. 2008. http://www.indiana.edu/~jia1915/war/weather27.html (Nov. 16, 2012).

  7. Ibid.

  8. Russian Propaganda

  9. 1905 Petition “Sire! We workers and people of St. Petersburg…our wives, our children and aged and helpless parents, are come to Thee…to seek for truth and protection. We are become beggars, bowing under oppression and burdened by toil beyond our powers, scorned, no longer regarded as human beings, treated as slaves who must suffer their bitter lot in silence. And having suffered, we are driven deeper and deeper into the abyss of poverty, lawlessness, and ignorance. We have been strangled by despotism and arbitrary rule, and we have lost our breath. We have no more strength, Sire. The limit of our patience has been reached. There has come for us the grave moment when death is preferable to a continuation of our intolerable torture.” Quoted in Rappaport, Conspirator, 108.

  10. St. Petersburg Soviet Trotsky at the St. Petersburg Soviet of Workers Deputies, middle row, holding papers Trotsky Internet Archive, 2006, http://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1907/1905/index.htm (Nov. 30, 2011).

  11. Russian Social Pyramid 1900 Elite: Czar and family, aristocrats Russian Orthodox Church Czarist military officers Middle class (bourgeoisie) Poor, peasants, farmers, workers

  12. Late industrialization in the 1890s Led to more problems: rapid urbanization lack of housing poor working conditions ... ...that created more pressure for change Trans-Siberian railroad built in 1890s 5000+ miles long connected European part of Russia with the Pacific built with loans from France Industrialization

  13. Putilov works, St Petersburg 1903 – making shells Ian Blanchard, Russian Industrialization, 1867-1927/8, N.d., http://www.ianblanchard.com/Research%20IB/Rus_Ind/Rus_ind.html (Nov. 15, 2012).

  14. Nicholas’ Reforms • Czar Nicholas II promised some reforms after the 1905 Revolution • a Duma, or parliament • a constitution • But once in place the Duma supported the Czar who continued to have the most power The last Czar and his family

  15. RSDLP • Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (an umbrella group of socialists of many types) • Lenin disliked Bernstein’s revisionists and Menshiviks: • “Such thinking – suggesting conciliation with capitalism and the monarchy – enraged Ulyanov [Lenin]...” • Lenin wanted to use pamphlets, newspapers, professional secret agents, weapon smuggling to bring about incitement of the revolution • What Is To Be Done? (1902): “Ulyanov had no faith in the mass movement of the proletariat per se as a force for change: if left to its own devices, it would inevitably disintegrate and become petty and preoccupied with everyday bourgeois issues.” • Menshiviks too soft – willing to wait too long Rappaport, Conspirator, 23, 53.

  16. Party Organization • “Education – or, more correctly, indoctrination – was the key. The masses must be educated into class consciousness and a proper awareness of the battle ahead. But even with this level of political awareness they could achieve nothing in the wider arena without the leadership of an elite, scientifically informed, Marxist intelligentsia, whose role was to organise in the vanguard, in the utmost secrecy. Ulyanov was convinced that true political struggle had to be orchestrated by such a group of hardened, experienced professionals; they would do the thinking for the masses. The proletariat would remain, for him, merely an amorphous mass, the collective instrument of the party’s elite will. Having been indoctrinated by the party into a new revolutionary class consciousness, the masses would eventually bring into being the great socialist vision: the dictatorship of the proletariat.” Rappaport, Conspirator, 53-54.

  17. Bolsheviks vs. Menshiviks • Bolshevik - Menshevik split in 1903 • Lenin and the Bolsheviks wanted to push revolution along by using professional revolutionaries • Mensheviks were more orthodox and wanted to wait until revolution occurred (when conditions were ripe)

  18. Liberals (CADETS) or Constitutional Democrats Socialists Orthodox Marxists (gradual revolution) Lenin and his Bolshevik followers didn’t have any members Political Landscape in the Duma

  19. First Parliament, 1905 Note the Czar opening the Duma University of Toronto, Research Repository, March Revolution, N.d., https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/citd/RussianHeritage/11.MR/MR.8.html (Nov. 15, 2012).

  20. Russia part of the Triple Entente Faring very poorly in the war (5 million casualties, 1914-1917) Czar Nicholas went to the front leaving his (German) wife at home Lenin’s attitude to war: imperialist capitalist get out! World War I History Learning Site: Russia and World War One, 2012, http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/russia_and_world_war_one.htm (Nov. 16, 2012). Pride in the Czar at the start of war

  21. Rasputin • Manipulation? • Murdered in 1916 by aristocrats

  22. February Revolution • Rioting spread • Duma asked Czar to abdicate • Established Provisional Government • to hold elections to a Constituent Assembly • write a new constitution • dual power with Soviets Burning tsarist emblems in Feb. 1917 in Petrograd

  23. Provisional Government Only one socialist. U of T Research Repository, N.d., https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/citd/RussianHeritage/11.MR/MR.10.html (Nov. 16, 2012).

  24. Lenin’s Return • April Theses, 1917 • end the war • all power to the Soviets (don’t cooperate with the Provisional Gov’t) • Peace, Land, Bread To whom does this appeal? Lenin

  25. October Revolution • Bolsheviks waiting for the right time to overthrow Provisional Gov’t • gaining power in Petrograd and Moscow Soviets • Bloodless? Coup Red Army

  26. Civil War • Red (Communists) vs. Whites • Whites • foreigners • Czarists • others opposed to Bolsheviks • Red Victory - Red Army organized by Trotsky Trotsky on Guard, 1920/21

  27. Succession • Trotsky or Stalin

  28. Lenin’s Death Lenin embalmed Lenin after his stroke, 1923 Lenin’s mausoleum

  29. Idealization of Lenin Lenin Leads, 1924 5th anniversary of Russian Revolution, 1929

  30. Common causes of revolution social and economic discontent new theories, ideas (a program of change) leader(s) to implement ideas crisis Lenin’s adaptation of socialism to suit Russian needs compare to Marx’s theory Themes

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