Clearias.com Russian Revolution 1917 1923
Clearias.com Russian Revolution 1917 1923
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What was Russian Revolution? What led to the Russian Revolution? What was
February Revolution? What was October Revolution? Read to know more.
Russian Revolution was a series of revolutions of the early 20th century. The first
revolution took place in 1905. It was followed by the Russian Revolution of 1917.
The Russian Revolution of 1917 was actually two revolutions. The first revolution in
February overthrew the imperial government. The second revolution in October placed
the Bolsheviks in power.
It was a period of political and social revolution that took place in the former Russian
Empire and began during the First World War. It was one of the most significant events of
the twentieth century that ended centuries of monarchy in Russia and brought forth the
first constitutionally communist state in the world.
Table of Contents
Russia was being ruled by the imperial House of Romanovs from 1613 to 1917. The Tsar
or czar was the head of the monarchy along with his wife the Tsarina.
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The oppressive rule of most 19th-century tsars caused widespread social unrest for
decades. Anger over social inequalities and the ruthless treatment of peasants
grew.
The tsars’ unfair governing sparked many violent reactions like the Army officers
revolted in 1825, and hundreds of peasants rioted.
Secret revolutionary groups formed who plotted to overthrow the government. In
1881, the angry student revolutionaries assassinated the reform-minded tsar,
Alexander II.
During this time the industrial revolution also reached Russia doubling the population and
workforce in the nation. It started putting a strain on the infrastructure of the cities leading
to overcrowding and pollution. The result was a new level of destitution of the urban
working class.
The population boom did not have the food supply to sustain it for a long time, as
decades of economic mismanagement and costly wars lead to chronic shortages in the
vast country.
Bloody Sunday Massacre: In protest of the poor conditions, the working class marched
to the winter palace of Tsar Nicholas II. The Russian troops were given orders by the Tsar
to not shoot, but the large scale crowd intimidated the troops and they opened fire killing
and wounding hundreds of protestors. This came to be called the Bloody Sunday
massacre.
The massacre sparked the Russian revolution of 1905, as angry workers responded with
a series of crippling strikes throughout the country. The strikes further threatened Russia’s
already fragile economy. Left with no choice, Nicholas II agreed to implement reforms,
which would be known as the October manifesto.
Though the autocracy became a constitutional monarchy, the Tsar had the final decision-
making power which he misused. He repeatedly kept dismissing the Duma (Russian
parliament) to delay reforms.
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Russia had not modernized its army even after the defeat in Russo Japanese war, and as
a result, the war proved disastrous for Russia. Its casualties were far more than any other
nation in the war.
The Russians were not enthusiastic about the war and the tension grew further when Tsar
Nicholas decided to personally command the Eastern front in the war, Tsarina Alexandra
was in charge of the governance and her German heritage made her unpopular among
the people.
Above all, she was greatly under the influence of the self-styled ‘holy man’ Grigori
Rasputin. She dismissed elected officials on his advice and governance fell into disarray
along with mounting war causalities.
Rasputin was murdered by the nobles in 1916, but people’s resentment against the
monarchy was at its peak.
It forced Tsar Nicholas II to abdicate his throne. A year later revolutionaries executed
Nicholas and his family. The Tsarist rule of the Romanovs, which spanned over three
centuries, had finally collapsed.
In 1903, the revolutionaries got split into two groups- Mensheviks and Bolsheviks.
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The leader of the Bolsheviks was Vladimir Lenin. In the early 1900s, Lenin fled to
Western Europe to avoid arrest by the Tsarist regime but maintained contact with other
Bolsheviks.
The new government under Lenin was composed of a council of soldiers, peasants, and
workers. The Bolsheviks and their allies occupied key locations across St. Petersburg
and Russia as a whole and soon formed a new government with Lenin as its head and
renamed themselves as the ‘communist party’. Lenin became the dictator of the world’s
first communist state.
Bolshevik government also decided to withdraw from the war. In March 1918 Russia and
Germany signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in which Russia surrendered a large portion
of its territory to Germany and its allies. The humiliating terms of this treaty caused
widespread anger and objection to the policies of the Bolsheviks.
In the end, the Red Army of the Bolsheviks won and formed a stronger government and a
superstate called the Soviet Union.
Reforms by Lenin:
In March 1921, Lenin launched the New Economic Policy (NEP) in which he temporarily
put aside his plan for a state-controlled economy and resorted to a small-scale version of
capitalism.
The reforms under the NEP allowed peasants to sell their surplus crops instead of
turning them over to the government. Individuals could buy and sell goods for profit.
The government kept control of major industries, banks, and means of
communication, but it let some small factories, businesses, and farms operate
under private ownership.
Lenin also tried to encourage foreign investment.
Russia was a mixture of many nationalities and this was seen as an obstacle to national
unity by the Communists. The Communist leaders also saw nationalism as a threat to
unity and party loyalty.
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To check nationalism, Lenin organized Russia into several self-governing republics
(Soviets) under the central government.
In 1922, Russia was named the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), in
honour of the councils that helped launch the Bolshevik Revolution.
The new capital of the union was Moscow.
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