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The 1905 Revolution

The 1905 Revolution. Background, Events, Significance Notes from Lynch, Reactions and Revolutions: Russia 1881-1924, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1992. Background .

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The 1905 Revolution

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  1. The 1905 Revolution Background, Events, Significance Notes from Lynch, Reactions and Revolutions: Russia 1881-1924, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1992

  2. Background • The government’s policy of political repression after 1881 continued well into the 1900’s. This repression, combined with famines and middle class discontent with the autocratic government led to a challenge to Tsarist authority.

  3. Tolstoy describes the time after 1881 • Russia lives under emergency legislation, and that means without any lawful guarantees. The armies of the secret police are continuously growing in numbers. The prisons and penal colonies are overcrowded with thousands of convict and political prisoners, among whom the industrial workers are now included. The censorship issues the most meaningless interdictions [bans]. At no previous time have the religious persecutions been so frequent and so cruel as they are today. In all the cities and industrial centres soldiers are employed and equipped with live ammunition to be sent out against the people. Yet this strenuous and terrible activity of the government result only in the growing impoverishment of the rural population, of those 100 million sold on whom the power of Russia is founded, and who, in spite of ever increasing budgets, are faced with famine which has become a normal condition. A similar normal condition is the general dissatisfaction of all classes with the government and their open hostility against it. Autocracy is a superannuated [hopelessly outdated] form of government that may suit the needs of a Central African tribe, but not those of the Russian people, who are increasingly assimilating the culture of the rest of the world. That is why it is impossible to maintain this form of government except by violence. From Nicolai Tolstoy’s ‘Open address to Nicholas II,” 1902

  4. The circumstances described in Tolstoy's address were not enough on their own to cause a revolution. What weakened the Tsarist regime the most was its own incompetence. • 1905 was the first time that the tsarist government was faced with the three main opposition classes: the peasantry, the industrial workers and the reformist middle class.

  5. The course of events: • 22nd of January – Bloody Sunday • A peaceful march of workers and their families, led by Father Gapon (an orthodox priest and an Okhrana double agent) leads to the killing of possibly hundreds of protesters. • The marchers were attempting a loyal petition to the tsar, begging him to use his position to help alleviate their poor conditions. • Police panicked and fired on the crowds and stormed them with cavalry, killing possibly hundreds of people.

  6. The aftermath • People against the tsar’s regime depicted the event as a deliberate massacre. • Nicholas II was not even in St Petersburg at the time, but it sorely damaged his reputation as the ‘Little Father’ of the Russian people.

  7. Bloody Sunday sparked: • A nationwide outbreak of disorder which only increased as the year went on. • Strikes in every major city and town • Terrorism against government officials and landlords, largely organised by the SRs • Plehve was assassinated by SR terrorists. Further outrage occurred as Russia’s humiliation at the hands of the Japanese in the Russo-Japanese war became known. The government was blamed for Russia’s defeat.

  8. One newspaper reported that: • Hundreds of buildings, worth several millions of roubles, have been destroyed. All the buildings have been razed to the ground on some enormous estates. Many houses have been burnt down without reference to the relations which existed between the peasants and the landowners or the latter’s political views.

  9. Peasants were also fearful of their land being siezed by the government due to their large mortgages under the post emancipation years deals. • Witte commented: • [Non-Russians], seeing this great upheaval, lifted their heads and decided that the time was ripe for the realisation of their dreams and desires. The Poles wanted autonomy, the Jews wanted equal rights, and so on. All of them longed for the destruction of the system of deliberate oppression which embittered their lives. And on top of everything, the army was in an ugly mood.

  10. May • The Kadets, led by Milyukov, persuaded the majority of the liberal groups, into forming a ‘Union of Unions,’ a broad-based alliance including the peasants and the factory workers. • A ‘Union of Unions’ declaration was issued: • All means are admissible in the face of the terrible menace contained in the very fact of the continued existence of the present government: and every means must be tried. We appeal to all groups, to all parties, all organised unions, all private groups, and we say with all our strength, with all the means at our disposal, you must hasten the removal of the gang of robbers that is now in power, and put in its place a constituent assembly.

  11. June • The crew of the battleship Prince Potemkin murdered their officers and deserted their squadron by sailing out of Russian waters. • The end of the Russo-Japanese War did little to ease the situation, as Russia suffered a humiliating defeat. • Witte was concerned that the returning soldiers would join the revolution

  12. The individual strikes soon turned into a general strike. In many cities like St Petersburg and Moscow workers formed themselves into elected soviets (the Russian word for council). • The soviets began as organisations to represent the workers demands for better conditions, but the revolutionaries recognised their potential as a base for political agitation. • Lev Trotsky, who at this time was a Menshevik, became the chairman of the St Petersburg soveit and organised a general strike in the capital.

  13. October • By October, the Tsar was facing the most united opposition in the history of the Romanov Dynasty. • He finally showed some of the sense he had been lacking by making concessions designed to placate the forces opposing the Tsar.

  14. Concessions • As a result of the unrest of the 1905 Revolution, the Tsar issued the OCTOBER MANIFESTO, in which he accepted the creation of a legislative (law-making) duma. • The manifesto also contained a promise to introduce a range of civil rights, including freedom of speech, assembly and worship, and the legalising of trade unions. • For the moment it appeared that the liberals had remarkable success in gaining these reforms.

  15. The peasants were bought off by an announcement that mortgage repayments were to be reduced and then abolished entirely. • This resulted in a drop in the number of peasants seizing land, and a decline in general lawlessness by the peasants.

  16. The industrial workers did not receive concessions, rather suppression. • The government felt strong enough to crush the soviets, and used the troops who had returned from the Far East, who had proven to be loyal, to seize the soviet headquarters and arrest the ringleaders including Trotsky. • Lenin had been out of the country during the 1905 Revolution, and returned in time to see the soviet buildings burning to the ground.

  17. The significance of the 1905 Revolution • There is debate about whether the 1905 revolution was truly a revolution. • It is probably better to regard 1905 as a rebellion. • Trotsky was the only SD who led a group, and the Tsar’s rule emerged relatively unchanged, despite early indications. • The Liberals were content with their gains and did not seek an overthrow of the government, and the armed forces remained loyal to the Tsar.

  18. There was even speculation that the revolutionary desire among the Liberals diminished when it became clear they had to associate with the uncivilised, uneducated workers. • Trotsky was extremely critical of the bourgeoisie for accepting the tsar’s offer instead of pushing for total revolution, but he saw 1905 as a precursor, almost a practice for the real revolutions in 1917.

  19. The Dumas • The hope of the liberals was that the Duma would be an opportunity for them to be involved in influencing the government, and making important decisions and legislation. • In reality, due to the Fundamental Law that Nicholas introduced in 1906 which said: The Sovereign Emperor poseesses the initiative in all legislative matters. The Fundamental Laws may be subject to revision in the State Council and the State Duma only on His initiative. The Sovereign Emperor ratifies the laws. Now law can come into force without his approval.

  20. There were 4 Dumas in the years between the 1905 Revolution and the February Revolution of 1917 • After the Fundamental Laws had been released, and it became clear that the Duma was powerless and the Tsar’s absolute power was unchanged, the Duma demanded an increase in their power. • The Tsar had also secured a loan from France to ensure that he was financially independent and not economically reliant on the Duma. • After two months the Tsar ordered the Duma’s dismissal.

  21. About half the members (mostly Kadets) fled to Finland and called for national disobedience (non-payment of taxes etc) in retaliation for the dismissal. • The Russian people responded with violence, however, and the Tsar was given the perfect opportunity to violently repress the people who opposed the Tsar. • He appointed Stolypin to act in this regard, and martial law was proclaimed. Stolypin became known as the government’s strong man. All those members of the first Duma who had fled to Finland and agitated for non-obedience were banned from the second Duma.

  22. The Second Duma, February-June 1907 • The Second Duma was elected with the number of seats held by the Kadets halved (mostly due to their failure in Finland). • SDs and SRs won many seats, but when the members began to criticise the government they were dismissed after a few months.

  23. The Third Duma, 1907-June 1912 • After the disobedience of the first two Dumas, the Tsar wanted the third Duma to operate differently. • To maintain international relationships and foreign loans, it was important for the Russia to appear to be a democracy. To ensure a more workable Duma, Stolypin introduced new legislation that restricted the numbers of people that could vote.

  24. Only those owning property could now vote, and the result (predictably) was a conservative, right wing majority that wasn’t as confrontational with the Tsar. • It became a workable cog in the legislative machine as it developed a solid relationship with Stolypin and approved bills. • It didn’t just ratify the Tsar’s wishes, however, as some of the bills improved the condition for workers.

  25. The Fourth Duma, November 1912-August 1914 • Stolypin was assassinated in 1911, and the ministers appointed by the Tsar in his place were ineffective. • Their main course of action was to increase repression. • Public disorder rose in response to these heavy-handed tactics, and the repression increased even further. • The number of political strikes rose from 24 in 1911 to 2401 in 1914.

  26. The Fourth Duma was heavily criticised by the Bolsheviks who eventually took power in October 1917, as being merely a body that authorised the Tsar’s wishes. • They did, however, criticise the government and the Ministry for its own ineptitude.

  27. In 1914 the Duma passed a resolution that lamented its own inability to affect change and the government’s unwillingness to do so. “The Ministry of the Interior systematically scorns public opinion and ignores the repeated wishes of the new legislature. The duma considers it pointless to express any new wishes in regard to internal policy. The Ministry’s activities arouse dissatisfaction among the broad masses who have hitherto been peaceful. Such a situation threatens Russia with untold dangers.”

  28. It appears, therefore, that the Duma was prevented from being effective by the Tsarist government. • The fourth Duma voted for its own suspension in 1914 so the country could concentrate on the war effort.

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