1917 Russian Revolution

The 1917 Russian Revolution was not, as many people suppose, one well organised event in which Tsar Nicholas II was overthrown and Lenin and the Bolsheviks took power. It was a series of events that took place during 1917, which entailed two separate revolutions in February and October (with a great deal of political wranglings inbetween), and which eventually plunged the country into Civil War before leading to the founding of the Communist State.

Growing Unrest

The first major event of the Russian Revolution was the February Revolution, which was a chaotic affair and the culmination of over a century of civil and military unrest. The causes of this unrest of the common people towards the Tsar and aristocratic landowners are too many and complicated to neatly summarise, but key factors to consider were ongoing resentment at the cruel treatment of peasants by patricians, poor working conditions experienced by city workers in the fledgling industrial economy and a growing sense of political and social awareness of the lower orders in general (democratic ideas were reaching Russia from the West and being touted by political activists). Dissatisfaction of the proletarian lot was further compounded by food shortages and military failures. In 1905 Russia experienced humilating losses in the Russo-Japanese war and, during a demonstration against the war in the same year, Tsarist troops fired upon an unarmed crowd - further dividing Nicholas II from his people. Widespread strikes, riots and the famous mutiny on the Battleship Potemkin ensued.

Such was the climate in 1905 in fact that Tsar Nicholas saw fit, against his will, to cede the people their wishes. In his October Manifesto, Nicholas created Russia's first constitution and the State Duma, an elected parliamentary body. However Nicholas's belief in his divine right to rule Russia meant that he spent much of the following years fighting to undermine or strip the Duma of its powers and to retain as much autocracy as possible. (Modern historians might note that Russian rulers haven't come a long way in the last hundred years!).

When Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by political activists in Serbia in 1914, the Austro-Hungarian empire declared war on its neighbours. Serbia turned to Russia for help. Tsar Nicholas II saw a chance to galvanise his people against a common enemy, and to atone for the humiliations suffered in the Russo-Japanese war. It didn't quite work out however...



World War I

In many ways Russia's disastrous participation in World War I was the final blow to Tsarist rule. In the very first engagement with the Germans (who had sided with the Austro-Hungarian Empire), the Battle of Tannenberg, the Russian army was comprehensively beaten suffering 120,000 casualties to Germany's 20,000. A continuing series of losses and setbacks meant that Nicholas left St. Petersburg in the autumn of 1915 to take personal control of the army. By this time Russia was sending conscripts and untrained troops to the front, with little or no equipment and fighting in an almost continual retreat. In 1916 morale reached an all time low as the pressure of waging the war fell hardest on prolaterian families, whose sons were being slaughtered at the front and who severe suffered food and fuel shortages at home. The Tsar and the Imperial regime took the blame as civil unrest heated up to boiling point.

The February Revolution (1917)

On 23rd February 1917 the International Women's Day Festival in St. Petersburg turned into a city-wide demonstration, as exasperated women workers left factories to protest against food shortages. Men soon joined them, and on the following day - encouraged by political and social activists - the crowds had swelled and virtually every industry, shop and enterprise had ceased to function as almost the entire populace went on strike.

Nicholas ordered the police and military to intervene, however the military was no longer loyal to the Tsar and many mutinied or joined the people in demonstrations. Fights broke out and the whole city was in chaos. On October 28th over 80,000 troops mutinied from the army and looting and rioting was widespread.

Faced with this untenable situation Tsar Nicholas abdicated his throne, handing power to his brother Michael. However Michael would not accept leadership unless he was elected by the Duma. He resigned the following day, leaving Russia without a head of state.

The Provisional Government

After the abdication of the Romanovs a Provisional Government was quickly formed by leading members of the Duma and recognised internationally as Russia's legal government. It was to rule Russia until elections could be held. However it's power was by no means absolute or stable. The more radical Petrograd Soviet organisation was a trade union of workers and soldiers that wielded enormous influence. It favoured full-scale Socialism over more moderate democratic reforms generally favoured by members of the Provisional Government.

After centuries of Imperial rule Russia was consumed with political fervour, but the many different factions, all touting different ideas, meant that political stability was still a long way off directly after February Revolution.

Lenin Returns to Russia

One person keen to take advantage of the chaotic state of affairs in St. Petersburg was Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov - aka Lenin. Lenin had spent most of the 20th Century travelling and working and campaigning in Europe - partly out of fear for his own safety, as he was known Socialist and enemy of the Tsarist regime. However with the Tsar under arrest and Russian politics in chaos, Lenin saw the opportunity to lead his party, the Bolsheviks, to power. From his home in Switzerland he negotiated a return to Russia with the help of German authorities. (As a proponent of withdrawing Russia from the Great War, the Germans were willing to facilitate Lenin's passage back via a 'sealed train'.)

Lenin's return in April of 1917 was greeted by the Russian populace, as well as by many leading political figures, with great rapture and applause. However, far from uniting the fractious parties, he immediately condemned the policies and ideologies of both the Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet. In his April Theses, published in the Bolshevik newspaper Pravda, he advocated non-co-operation with the liberals (ie. non-hardline Communists) and an immediate end to the war.

At first his uncompromising stance served to isolate Lenin and the Bolsheviks, however with powerful slogans like 'Peace, land and bread,' Lenin begin to win the hearts of the Russian people - who were increasingly unable to stomach war and poverty.

Summer of 1917

During the summer of 1917 Lenin made several attempts to invoke another revolution the likes of which had taken place in February, with the aim of overthrowing the Provisional Government. When the Machine Gun Regiment refused to leave Petrograd (as St. Petersburg was then known) for the frontline Lenin sought to manoeuvre them instead into making a putsch. However Kerensky, arguably the most important figure of the time - a member of both the Provisional Government and Petrograd Soviet - adeptly thwarted the coup. Experienced troops arrived in the city to quell any dissidents and the Bolsheviks were accused of being in collusion with the Germans. Many were arrested whilst Lenin escaped to Finland.

Despite this PR disaster Lenin continued plotting and scheming. Meanwhile Kerensky suffered his own political setbacks and even had to appeal to the Bolsheviks for military aid when he feared his Minister of War, Kornilov, was aiming for a military dictatorship. By autumn the Bolsheviks were climbing into the ascendency, winning majority votes within the Petrograd and Moscow Soviets. Leon Trotsky was elected as president of the former.

The October Revolution

(Nb. By the Julian Calendar used in Russia at the time, the revolution took part in November 1917, and is therefore often referred to as the November Revolution)

With Russian politics still in a state of constant flux Lenin realised that now was the time to capitalise on his party's popularity. He planned a coup d'etat that would overthrow the increasingly ineffective Provisional Government and replace them with the Bolsheviks. On October 10th he held a famous meeting with twelve party leaders, and tried to persuade them that a revolution was required. Despite receiving the backing of only 10 of them plotting went ahead.

October 24th was the date decided upon, and on that day troops loyal to the Bolsheviks took up crucial positions in the city, such as the main telephone and telegraph offices, banks, railroad stations, post offices, and major bridges. Guards commissioned by the Provisional Government, who had got wind of the plot, fled or surrendered without a fight. By the 25th October every key building in St. Petersburg was under Bolshevik control, except the Winter Palace where Kerensky and the other Ministers were holed up with a small guard.

At 0900 of that day Kerensky fled the Palace by car, never to return to Russia. On the 26th the Palace was taken with barely a shot fired, and Lenin's October Revolution had been achieved with the bare minimum of drama or bloodshed.

Aftermath and Consequences

Despite being allowed to seize power so easily Lenin soon discovered that his support was far from absolute. His Peace Policy with the Germans was particularly unpopular as it ceded large amounts of Russian territory. Shortly after the October Revolution, the Russian Civil War broke out between the 'Reds' (Communists) and the 'Whites' (Nationalists, Conservatives, Imperialists and other anti-Bolshevik groups). After a bloody four year struggle Lenin and the Reds won, establishing the Soviet Union in 1922, at an estimated cost of 15 million lives and billions of roubles. In 1923 Lenin died and Stalin took over the Communist Party, which continued to rule Russia until 1991 when the USSR was dissolved.

Moderated page. Comments will be published after editorial review.

add your comments

very helpful for projects .

reviewed by Rhutwik Inamdar from India on May.28.2011

IT NEEDS CITES!!! Who wrote this??? Good source of info, though.

reviewed by Bella from United States on May.27.2011

great essay i liked it

reviewed by abcd from India on May.27.2011

really helped me with my GCSE history revision, thanks!

reviewed by lucyxoxoxo from United Kingdom on May.27.2011

nice and written so well and in easy language so everybody can undersatand it.

reviewed by ela from India on May.22.2011

its a v.gud site.it helps in projects!!!:)
:)

reviewed by yashita from India on May.21.2011

its a well summarised essay looking @ the fact that my hand-out is as thick as a text book...

reviewed by Chichi from Zambia on May.15.2011

This was really good however it did not mention that the Bolsheviks were members of the Duma but were a minority party, Lenin then forcefully closed it down if I can remember properly

reviewed by Martine from United Kingdom on May.12.2011

GREAT!!!

reviewed by Vanessa from Dominican Republic on May.08.2011

great work i'm doing a research paper on the russian revolution thanks alot

reviewed by Adam from United States on Apr.26.2011

it was good. needs to show the effects and how it was remembered by people.

reviewed by londongirl from United Kingdom on Apr.25.2011

Incredible useful- was searching for research on the inevitability of the Russian Revolution.

reviewed by Faheem Rokadiya from United Kingdom on Apr.21.2011

i think this is really help but i suggest putting more visuals to back up statments

reviewed by pat from New Zealand on Apr.04.2011

thank you. this helped me lot with my S+E essay.

reviewed by no name from Australia on Mar.29.2011

first good (short and not intimidating) explination of the october revolution i found. Sometimes you just want the short general facts. this was exactly what i wanted.

reviewed by Jimmaaayyy from United States on Mar.24.2011

It was okay, but I needed some major events for the Russian Revolution. Other than that. Great! :D

reviewed by from United States on Mar.22.2011

it was great thanks for the info!!!!

reviewed by Megan from United States on Mar.21.2011

it was great and helped me alot. But i think it would be better if there was compsrison of the lives of the russians before and after.

reviewed by ---------------------- from Singapore on Mar.20.2011

A simple overview of the Russian Revolution. It gives you the basic gist of it all without throwing in extremely small details no one really cares about.

reviewed by kevin from United States on Mar.14.2011

the revolution is a watershed in world history.it shook the world to its foundAtion.russia never remained thesame:economically,socially, and politically

reviewed by Kassam Golwi Goltura from Nigeria on Mar.07.2011

horrifying

reviewed by bon qui qui from United States on Mar.04.2011

Not bad I suppose, but much better than many other websites.

reviewed by Harris from Micronesia, Federated States of on Mar.03.2011

I think you should make a list of facts for people!!

reviewed by vanessa from United States on Mar.01.2011

Thank you so much this helped a lot!!!

reviewed by LM from South Africa on Feb.28.2011

In america your money says "In god we trust". In Russia we have no money.
In america you buy gun. In russia man with gun buy you.

reviewed by Billy from United States on Feb.23.2011

What year was American Troops in Russia and What was their purpose in the Revolution.My fatherI think particpated.
Thank you

reviewed by James Patty from United States on Feb.17.2011

It was very well written, and elped me understand a lot, however, [you] need to cite your work. author, publisher, date of publication, etc. (: thank you!

reviewed by Dasha Umansky from United States on Feb.16.2011

Wonderful! I got everything i needed for my assignment from your page. Appreciate the help.

reviewed by from United States on Feb.16.2011

It was short, sweet, and to the point. Thanks for the help

reviewed by Emilie from United States on Feb.15.2011

This article was really great. It helped me so much with the humanities assessment I have now.

reviewed by AJ from Norway on Feb.13.2011

The transition in Russia from centuries of imperial rule to a socialist republic in the decades leading up to the Bolshevic Revolution is full of complicated power struggles and military conflicts. This overview was just right for me as I seek to understand this fascinating segment of world history.

reviewed by Dannu from United States on Feb.05.2011

This is a good enough summary I could use for my speech but why does it not include any information about the royal family being killed?

reviewed by Elliot from United States on Feb.03.2011

Russian revolution was among of the causes of the First world war of 1914-1918

reviewed by FREDRICK PATRICK from Tanzania on Feb.01.2011

Thanks! That's just great. Helped me quite a lot! :)

reviewed by Unknown from Mauritius on Jan.26.2011

it was good i got a lot of information for my research activity for my high school class...i just need 5 more facts that werent in here...but still...GOOD JOB DUDE

reviewed by December Christman from United States on Jan.10.2011

I think you need to use some spell check, but other than that excellently written, and was a lot of help on my school project.

reviewed by Alexis from United States on Jan.09.2011

Nice.... A concise info on The Russian Revolution

reviewed by BANU from India on Jan.09.2011

Pretty good, not too much detail. could have included a few more specific dates on the major events

reviewed by No chance! from Belarus on Jan.03.2011

This was a really helpful overview of the Russian Revolution

reviewed by Chad from United States on Dec.17.2010

not a bad source not too much help for a college but not bad for a normal high school level class.

reviewed by blabla from United States on Dec.16.2010

helped me get the main points.

reviewed by bobbb from United States on Dec.13.2010

well I think they should state the facts easier to find on the website

reviewed by bailey asdecka from United States on Dec.13.2010

Could Have Used More Facts However It Was Well Written

reviewed by from United States on Dec.13.2010

its Czar Nicholas II not the way you spelled it.

reviewed by skool kid from United States on Dec.10.2010

Greate Job. It's very informative source of Russian history & very useful for competetive exams.

reviewed by Kannan.S from India on Dec.10.2010

Thank You so much for your help! You have made the Russian Revolution clearer to me!!!

reviewed by Century Perry-Ostravosky from United States on Dec.06.2010

it was very good for a brief review on the revoulotion try reading animal farm helped me in my essay :)

reviewed by CHOWDER from United Kingdom on Dec.06.2010

Helped, but showed no effects of the communism around

reviewed by Fran from United Kingdom on Dec.05.2010

It was okay. A little less than I was expecting, regarding the results/ aftermath/consequences,
but it was okay.

reviewed by from Jamaica on Nov.29.2010

I believe in this source. It is very reliable and is it is well writen.

reviewed by aeropastel123@yahoo.com from United States on Nov.23.2010

Good with the information, but I would prefer if it could get to the point!

reviewed by from United States on Nov.19.2010

It is a nice overview. Rather helpful.

reviewed by Frankie from Australia on Nov.15.2010

Well written, easy read... Needs more Citations!

reviewed by Patrick from Canada on Nov.12.2010

very good! but, where is the author and publisher?

reviewed by Daniel DiTommaso from Canada on Nov.10.2010

It wasnt as productive as it would have been. Im doing a project thats relates to this but no main details or clues or what exactly happend during the revolution and no old or new regime

reviewed by The Red Bear from Russia on Nov.09.2010

it got me an A* but the teacher said that it needs a lot more facts rather than opinions.

reviewed by monica from United Kingdom on Oct.23.2010

Superb i just like the way the topic was explained and the it was summarise

reviewed by babla from India on Oct.08.2010

Mega helpfull for my history course work!

reviewed by Jack Austin from United Kingdom on Oct.08.2010

Was really detailed. Big thanks !

reviewed by Myname from United States on Oct.04.2010

I thought this was really helpful for my history coursework as I needed to understand the 1917 revolution, and i certainly did after reading this. Simple but enough detail - great!

reviewed by Lydia from United Kingdom on Oct.03.2010

thankyou so much

This has really helped me. I had to plan a revolution in Russia at this time and this had the exact information I needed

reviewed by Lissie from United Kingdom on Oct.02.2010

i think that it should state perspectives of the leaders on the revolution!

reviewed by Rihanna from New Zealand on Mar.30.2009

I feel it needs more facts

reviewed by sara from United States on Mar.26.2009

Excellently written. Full of the information that I need to write this short story for my World Wars class.

reviewed by Shae from United States on Feb.26.2009

Thank you for help! I was searching for the consequences of the revolution.

reviewed by Anya from United States on Feb.23.2009

It was really good with lots of info. It helped me understand it a bit more but me essay was on production and statistics in russia at the time so it didn't give me the answer to that but still...great!

reviewed by COOLIE from United Kingdom on Oct.27.2008

It was ok, but a comparison between the Old Regime and New regime would have been nice.

reviewed by from United States on Oct.06.2008

Put the author, publisher etc. There needs to be a citation.

reviewed by Anonomys from New Zealand on Jun.17.2008

This is really good, except that I'm trying to use it for my project at school but I have no idea how to cite it. Any help? I need it in the MLA format. Thanks!

reviewed by Dana from United States on Apr.20.2008

There is some good info on this page, but my essay Q was 'did the russian revolution effect the outcome of the war'. So it would have been better if there was more on WWI in the info. Good Anyway :)

reviewed by Narauloff. from United States on Apr.03.2008

good, but what about the people?

PS: read animal farm, based on Russian revolution

reviewed by Mental Plague from United States on Mar.26.2008

I like it enough info you get what you need without some much details you get lost

reviewed by Somebody from United States on Mar.12.2008

IT WAS OK AND HELPED ME

reviewed by BOBY from Zimbabwe on Mar.10.2008

superb

reviewed by lover of girlp from Pakistan on Mar.01.2008

Where could I find a short paragraph about the revolution (summarized) need it for a project.

reviewed by Tori from United States on Feb.29.2008


Culture
Velvet Revolution, Prague
Solidarity in Poland
Estonian Singing Revolution
Fall of the Berlin Wall