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Russian Revolution

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Title: Russian Revolution


1
Russian Revolution Through the Rise of Stalin
  • Marxist Dream?

2
I. Background Marxism
  • A. Communist Manifesto (1848) by Marx (1818
    1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)
  • 1. Dialectal materialism communism is the final
    form of government resulting from a historical
    progression. It is capitalisms successor.
  • 2. Surplus value theory the proletariat can no
    longer use the products of manufacture because
    the bourgeois capitalists lower wages. Therefore,
    a revolution is inevitable and a socialist
    government will be formed.
  • 3. Equality of classes will result from the
    abolishment of private property.

3
II. Other Background
  • A. Czar Alexander III, from 1881-1894, instituted
    policies of autocracy and Russification
    (persecution of all non-Russians).
  • B. Political parties
  • 1. Constitutional Democrats (Cadets) Reflected
    the middle class by not worrying about the
    proletariat.
  • 2. Social Revolutionaries (Narodniks) Believed
    that the formation of capitalism was not
    necessary for socialism to take hold (from
    agrarian system directly to socialism).
  • 3. Social Democrats (Marxists) Adherents to
    Marxism. In 1903, the party split
  • - Bolsheviks small group of elite
    revolutionaries, ed by V.I. Lenin, the strong
    authority at the top. No toleration of varying
    opinions or cooperation with outside influences,
    unless strategically used.
  • - Mensheviks mild revolutionaries who favored a
    more democratic style (everyone has input).
  • C. The Russians suffered a humiliating defeat in
    the Russo Japanese War.
  • 1. Treaty of Portsmouth Russia loses all land
    and rights in Manchuria, as well as military
    strength. This allows the underground political
    parties to surface and the Revolution of 1905 to
    begin.

4
III. Revolution of 1905
  • A. Bloody Sunday (January 1905) Father Gapon, a
    Russian Orthodox priest, led 200,000 Russians on
    a peaceful march to the czars Winter Palace. The
    czars troops fired on the demonstrators, killing
    hundreds.
  • 1. Soviets, or workers councils, formed and
    demanded reform.
  • 2. Peasant uprisings (burning of manor houses and
    overrunning of lands)
  • B. October Manifesto issued by Czar Nicholas II
    in response to a massive strike by the Petrograd
    (St. Petersburg) Soviet. It promised the
  • 1. Development of a constitution.
  • 2. Establishment of a Duma (legislature) to
    represent all classes.
  • 3. Freedom of speech, assembly, association and
    conscience.
  • C. Peter Stolypin, the czars principal minister,
    initiated reforms
  • 1. Peasants can leave their land communes (mirs)
    and take land that is rightfully theirs.
  • 2. Abolishment of peasant debts led to a wealthy
    peasant class (Kulaks).
  • 3. Increase in the power of zemstzos (provincial
    councils).

5
Revolution of 1917 March
  • A. World War I Russia is again devastated by
    loss of manpower and ammunition.
  • 1. Over 2,000,000 soldiers are lost due to
    the advance of the Central Powers, as well as
    incompetent leadership from Russian aristocrats.

6
Revolution of 1917 March
  • B. Rasputin Mad monk who apparently healed
    the czarevitch of hemophilia.
  • 1. He had a say in appointments of officials
    to high office.
  • 2. Anyone wishing to speak to the czar must
    first go through Rasputin.
  • 3. As a result, members of all classes
    resented the royal family and government.

7
Revolution of 1917 March
  • C. Other dissatisfaction
  • 1. Anti-German sentiment is high (the
    czarina is German).
  • 2. Czar Nicholas is thought to be
    incompetent and arrogant.
  • 3. More food shortages in industrial towns.

8
Revolution of 1917 March
  • D. Fighting breaks out in St. Petersburg.
  • 1. Peasant food riots.
  • 2. Soldiers turned traitors and support the
    peasants. Some of them free political prisoners.
  • 3. Armed workers stormed factories.
  • 4. Soviets formed.
  • 5. Two authorities emerged
  • - Petrograd Soviet representing
    revolutionary forces, 58 Menshevik, supported by
    soldiers and workers. It wanted to end Russias
    involvement in WWI.
  • - Duma committee (Provisional Government and
    then later the Constituent Assembly)
    representing moderates and constitutionalists

9
Revolution of 1917 March
  • E. Provisional Government set up by Duma
    because of pressure from the soviets.
  • 1. Prince Lvov (non-party moderate) is
    appointed President.
  • 2. To appease socialists, Alexander
    Kerensky, a Narodnik, is appointed Minister of
    Justice.
  • 3. It wanted to expand Russias territory.
  • 4. Institution of local self-government by a
    police force.
  • 5. Abolition of class, religious and
    nationality restrictions.
  • 6. Czar Nicholas II abdicates the throne.
  • 7. Russia is now a republic.

10
V. Revolution of 1917 November (Bolshevik
Revolution)
  • A. Causes
  • 1. The promised redistribution of land never took
    place.
  • 2. Discipline collapsed in the army because of
    Order Number 1, stating that command will be
    given to committees. Both officers and soldiers
    refused to
  • 2. Tried to continue war w/ Germany
  • 3. Promised peasants redistribution of land, but
    took no actions.
  • 4. Was opposed by Petrograd Soviet that wanted a
    speedy end of the war.
  • 5. Lost the discipline of the people by issuing
    Order No. 1

11
B. Lenin and the Bolsheviks
  • 1. Arrive in Petrograd (St. Petersburg). Mid
    April, took sides w/ Petrograd Soviet
  • 2. After abortive coup in July, they flee to
    Finland.
  • 3. Prince Lvov gave his power to Kerensky
  • 4. Kerenskys government did not succeed because
    he wanted to stay in war w/ centralized powers
    and didnt help w/ storages of food.
  • 5. General Kornikov dispatched a force of cavalry
    to restore order by suppressing the soviets.
    Didnt work.

12
C. Lenins points won over soldiers, peasants,
and workers by promising them Peace, Land, and
Bread.
  • The points called for
  • 1. Immediate peace w/ central powers.
  • 2. Redistribution of land to peasants
  • 3. Transfer of industrial plants from capitalists
    to committees of workers
  • 4. Recognition of soviets as the supreme power

13
D. The Bolsheviks take over
  • 1. Nov. 6 7, 1917 Bolsheviks take over
    telephone exchanges, railway stations, and
    electric power plants of Petrograd
  • 2. They storm the Winter Palace where Kerenskys
    government sat and seized other key centers of
    Petrograd
  • 3. Instead of Provisional Government, Council of
    Peoples Commissars was formed.
  • a. Lenin was the head of it, Trotsky was
    commissar for foreign affairs, and Stalin was
    commissar for nationalities
  • 4. Caused Kerensky to fled to USA
  • 5. Congress of Soviets tried to set up just
    democratic peace and abolished all landowning
    property
  • 6. Constituent Assembly broken up
  • 7. March 1918 renamed themselves Communists

14
VII. The New Regime The Civil War, 1918 1922
  • a. Russia and Germany signed the peace of
    Brest-Litovsk that surrendered to Germany control
    of the Baltic provinces, Poland and Ukraine.

15
A. Civil War lasted until 1922
  • 1. Tsarist reactionaries, liberals, bourgeois,
    zemstvos members, Constitutional Democrats,
    anti-Leninist socialists, Mensheviks, and Social
    Revolutionaries Vs. Bolsheviks and Communists
  • 2. First institution found Dec.7,1917- secret
    political police commonly known as Cheka, also
    goes under the names OGPU, NKVD, MVD, KGB.
  • 3. Jan 1918 Red Army is founded w/ Leon Trotsky
    as war commissar and founder
  • 4. Government required peasant to make states
    deliveries and invited labor unions to send armed
    men into the country to procure food by force.
  • 5. Class Wars broke out between the farmers and
    the city workers

16
B. Foreign Interventions
  • 1. Spring of 1918 Georgia, Armenia, and
    Azerbaijan in the Caucasus proclaimed their
    independence
  • 2. Omsk a disaffected group, proclaimed
    independence of Siberia.
  • 3. Red Army fought in Ukraine first against
    Germans, then the French who occupied Odessa as
    soon as the war ended in Europe.
  • - It also re-conquered Georgia, Armenia, and
    Azerbaijan, the ones that proclaimed their
    independence
  • 4. French aided the Poles and Ukrainians while
    Britain and U.S. wanted nothing to do with wars
    after the armistice of World War I was signed
  • 5. National peace was finally reached.

17
C. Red Terror (Bolshevik Terror) was carried out
by Cheka SUCCEEDED
  • 1. Broke out during the civil war, it was a
    response to civil and foreign war
  • 2. In Russia, thousands were shot.
  • 3. The terror was aimed at the physical
    extermination of all who opposed the new regime
  • a. Strengthen and enrich the country
  • b. Make it military and industrially
    self-sufficient
  • c. lay the groundwork for a true workers society
  • d. overcome the Russian reputation for
    backwardness

18
Stalins Rise to Power
  • Lenin dies in mid 1920s
  • Stalin uses secret police and alliances within
    the Communist Party to eliminate his
    enemies/rivals
  • By 1929 he had consolidated his power and has
    become a dictator of the USSR

19
First Five Year Plan
  • declared successful in 1932, it was administered
    by an agency called Gosplan. Gosplan determined
    the number of people to go into each profession,
    and the number of quantities of different
    materials that should be produced.

20
Second Five Year Plan
  • launched and lasted until 1937

21
The Collectivization of Agriculture
  • 1. The plan set up collective farms- averaging a
    few thousand acres apiece
  • 2. Individual peasants were to pool their
    privately owned fields and livestock in these
    collectives
  • a. Kulaks (prosperous peasants) who possessed
    fields and stock in considerable amount resisted
    surrendering them to the new collectives. ?
    Kulaks were liquidated as a class.
  • b. Big farmers slaughtered their animals (horses,
    cattle, pigs, and poultry) rather than give them
    up ? worst unforeseen calamity of the first Five
    Year Plan
  • 1. Sparked a deadly famine in southeast Russia in
    1932 (cost millions of lives)

22
The Growth of Industry
  • 1. Great Britain industrialization had been
    gradual in Germany and the United States it had
    been more rapid but in the USSR (1928-1938)
    production of steel and iron had expanded four
    times and that of coal three and a half times.
  • 2. Copper mines were open in the Urals and around
    Lake Balkhash, lead mines in eastern Asia and in
    the Altai Mountains
  • 3. Grain producing regions were developed in
    Siberia
  • 4. The Kuznetsk Basin was found to possess coal
    deposits
  • 5. For the first time, inner Asia was turning
    industrial
  • 6. The USSR industry lagged behind the West
  • D. Social Costs and Social Effects of the Plans
  • 1. Kulaks lost their lives and others were sent
    off to correctional labor camps.
  • 2. Those being forced to enter a program of
    self-denial (peasants were all collectivized)
    were going without the better food and housing,
    all for the industry of the country
  • 3. People were told to look forward to better
    clothing, better housing, more leisure, etc ?
    Morale was preached by propaganda
  • 4. Hard work and low wages
  • 5. No one could leave the country without special
    permission
  • 6. No free labor unions, no free press, no
    freedom of association, low religious tolerance
  • 7. Socialism caused a) No cycle of boom and
    depression b) Less misuse of women and children
    c) No complete equality of income government
    officials, managers, engineers, and favored
    artists and intellectuals received the highest
    rewards. d) Competition persisted

23
The Purge Trials of the 1930s
  • 1. Stalin was paranoid and though that there were
    plots in the party and government to unseat him.
  • 2. He executed those who were original
    Bolsheviks, instrumental in carrying out the
    revolution, as well as high military officers.
    (They were tried on trumped-up charges)
  • 3. Stalin became on of the most powerful
    dictators by gaining more power and strength over
    the party, the government, and the nation.

24
The international Impact of Communism
  • A. Lenin, after the Bolshevik Revolution, saw
    Russia merely as a center for actions to be made
    in an international class war.
  • 1. In Germany, followers of Lenin organized the
    Spartacist Movement and attempted to overthrow
    their moderate socialist government.
  • 2. In Hungary, Nela Kun set up a soviet regime
    for several months.
  • 3. Lenin and the Bolsheviks lent all possible aid
    to these attempts.

25
B. Third International (communist International
or Comintern)
  • 1. Formed when radicals of the Second
    International joined with the Russian Communist
    Party.
  • 2. Its purpose, according to Lenin To begin to
    carry into effect the dictatorship of the
    proletariat. It was also set up to discredit and
    isolate the moderate socialists, whom the
    Bolsheviks despised the most.
  • 3. Its Executive committee was filled with
    members of the Russian Central Committee.
    Therefore, Russia dominated the Third
    International.
  • 4. It was a weapon for revolution, not a welfare
    system.
  • 5. In 1927, under Stalins policy of building
    socialism in one country, the Third International
    moderated its activities. In 1943, Russia
    terminated it as an act of good will to both
    Britain and the U.S.

26
C. Other impacts
  • 1. Europe now feared an existing Marxist society,
    covering 1/6th of the Earth
  • 2. Socialists, previously seen as dangerous, now
    considered respectable
  • 3. People planned against the uncertainty of
    capitalism
  • 4. The 3rd World (poor) Countries, under European
    colonization, showed admiration toward Russia
    because it modernized without foreign intervention
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