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The Russian Revolution

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The Russian Revolution. Scott Masters Crestwood College. . Pre-Revolutionary Russia. Nicholas II became tsar in 1884 Believed he was the absolute ruler anointed by God Russo-Japanese War (1904) – defeat led to pol. instability. The Revolution of 1905 AKA The October Revolution. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Russian Revolution Scott Masters Crestwood College
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Page 1: The Russian Revolution

The Russian Revolution

Scott MastersCrestwood College

Page 2: The Russian Revolution

Pre-Revolutionary Russia

Nicholas II became tsar in 1884

Believed he was the absolute ruler anointed by God

Russo-Japanese War (1904) – defeat led to pol. instability

Page 3: The Russian Revolution

The Revolution of 1905AKA The October Revolution

Rapid growth of (discontented) working class

Vast majority of workers concentrated in St. Petersburg and Moscow

Little help from the countryside:– No individual land

ownership– Rural Famine

Revolution leads to the creation of The Duma

Page 4: The Russian Revolution

Soviets Appear:1905-1917 Tsar paid no

attention to the Duma; it was harassed and political parties suppressed

Nicholas became increasingly remote as a ruler

Numerous soviets began to appear

Soviet: An elected local, district, or national council in the former USSR.

Page 5: The Russian Revolution

Alexandra: The Power Behind the Throne

She was under the influence of Rasputin

Scandals surrounding Rasputin served to discredit the monarchy

Page 6: The Russian Revolution

Alexis: Alexandra’s Son with Hemophilia

The only person the tsar trusted to help Alexis was Rasputin

Page 7: The Russian Revolution

World War I: “The Last Straw”

Average peasants had very little invested in World War I

Page 8: The Russian Revolution

World War I (cont) ill-trained, ineffective

officers, and poorly equipped troops resulted in mass desertions and 2 million casualties by 1915

Chaos and Disintegration of the Russian Army

Battle of Tannenberg (August, 1914) – massive defeat at hands of the Germans showed the weakness of the Russian army.

Page 9: The Russian Revolution

The Collapse of the Imperial Government

Nicholas left for the Front—September, 1915

Alexandra and Rasputin throw the government into chaos

Alexandra and other high government officials accused of treason

Page 10: The Russian Revolution

The Collapse of the Imperial Government (cont)

Rasputin assassinated in December of 1916

Complete mismanagement of the wartime economy

industrial production plummeted, inflation and starvation were rampant, and the cities were overflowing w/ refugees

Serious food shortages in March 1917, esp. in St. Petersburg

Page 11: The Russian Revolution

The Two Revolutions of 1917

The March Revolution (March 12)

The November Revolution (November 6)

Page 12: The Russian Revolution

The March Revolution

Origins: Food riots/strikes

Duma declared itself a Provisional Government on March12

Tsar ordered soldiers to intervene; instead they joined the rebellion…the Tsar thus abdicated on March 17

the Menshevik Alexander Kerensky headed the Provisional Government, along w/ Prince Lvov– Very Popular Revolution– Kerensky favoured

gradual socialist reform/ saw the war effort as #1 priority

Page 13: The Russian Revolution

The Petrograd Soviet leftists in St.

Petersburg formed the Petrograd Soviet, which they claimed to be the legit. gov’t

Ger. was aware of the Russ. situation and began to concentrate on the W. Front

Ger. even played a role in returning Lenin to Russia, so he could foment rev.

– Having been granted “safe passage”, Lenin returned in April 1917

Page 14: The Russian Revolution

Soviet Political Ideology More radical and

revolutionary than the Provisional Government

Most influenced by Marxist socialism

Two Factions-- “Mensheviks” (Whites)-- “Bolsheviks” (Reds)

The Bolsheviks are led by Vladimir Lenin

Page 15: The Russian Revolution

Lenin Steps into This Vacuum Lenin’s slogan of “Peace,

Land, Bread” resonates with the poor

“All Power to the Soviets” He preached that the war

was a capitalist/imperialist war that offered no rewards for the peasants/workers; he also felt the war was over w/ the tsar’s abdication

Bolshevik party membership exploded; their power was consolidated

Page 16: The Russian Revolution

Lenin formed the Military-Revolutionary Council and in May 1917 he urged the Pet. Soviet to pass Army Order # 1–This gave control of the army to the common soldiers; discipline thus collapsed, and Kerensky was undermined

Page 17: The Russian Revolution

The November Revolution

Nov. 6, 1917… The revolution planned

by Leon Trotsky, who had gained the confidence of the army and was already Lenin’s second in command

Lenin went on to consolidate his power in Jan. 1918 when he disbanded the Constituent Assembly (had replaced the Duma)

All private property was abolished and divided among the peasantry

Largest industrial enterprises nationalized

Page 18: The Russian Revolution

November Revolution (cont) Lenin’s 1st task was to

get Russia out of the war so he could concentrate on internal reform…

The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk negotiated with the Germans, giving them much Russian territory, population, and resources

Civil War followed, 1917-1920“Reds” versus “Whites”

Complete breakdown of Russian economy and society

Page 19: The Russian Revolution
Page 20: The Russian Revolution

So what about the tsar? What happened to him and his family?

Lenin ordered their execution by firing squad on

July 17th 1918


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