0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views

Russian Revolution

Uploaded by

Vaibahv Sahay
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views

Russian Revolution

Uploaded by

Vaibahv Sahay
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 32

HISTORY CH-2

SOCIALISM IN EUROPE &


THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
AGE OF SOCIAL CHANGE
▪The French Revolution of 1789 gave momentum to the ideas of
freedom and equality in Europe.
▪In India, Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Henry Louis Vivian Derozio
popularized the ideals of the French Revolution.

Raja Ram Mohan Roy Henry Louis Vivian Derozio


▪ But not all people were in favour of complete transformation of society .
▪ Responses varied from those who accepted that change was necessary to those
who wanted to restructure the society radically.
▪ The 3 categories of people included :

LIBERALS EUROPE CONSERVATIVES

RADICALS
RADICALS
LIBERALS • They were opposed to
CONSERVATIVES
concentration of power in
• They were opposed to the few hands.
• They were opposed to • They were opposed to
absolute power of the
privileges of landowners & the liberals and radicals.
monarch.
wealthy factory owners. • They accepted some
• Wanted to safeguard
• They were not against the change was inevitable in
individual rights through existence of private 19th century.
an elected parliamentary property. • They believed the past
system of government & • They wanted a nation in had to be respected &
independent judiciary. which government was
change had to be brought
• They did not believe in based on majority of the
about through a gradual
universal adult franchise. country’s population.
• Favoured women’s process.
• Wanted voting rights for
men of property only. suffragate .
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY AND CHANGE
▪ This was the period of industrialization when new cities and new
industrial regions developed, railways expanded and the Industrial
Revolution started .

▪ Men , women and children worked in the factories.


▪ The working hours were long and wages were low.
▪ The main problems faced were :
1. Unemployment 2. Housing 3. Sanitation
▪ The Liberals and Radicals who were factory owners opposed
the privileges enjoyed by the aristocracy on the basis of birth.
▪ They stressed that the benefits of industrialization should be
passed on to the workers.
COMING OF SOCIALISM TO
EUROPE
▪ The idea of Socialism attracted widespread attention in mid 19th
century Europe.
▪ Socialists were against private property and saw it as the root of all
social evils.
ROBERT OWEN
▪ Socialists had different visions of the future.
▪ Robert Owen sought to built a cooperative community called New
Harmony in Indiana (U.S.A.).
▪ In France, Louis Blanc wanted the government to encourage co-
operatives to replace capitalist enterprises.
▪ Co-operatives were associations of people who produced goods
together and divided the profits amongst the members according to
the work done by them.
LOUIS BLANC
COMING OF SOCIALISM TO
EUROPE

▪ Karl Marx and Frederick Engels added their own ideas.


▪ Karl Marx argued that industrial society was capitalist,
where the capitalists owned the capital invested in
factories. They were the ones who earned all profits.
KARL MARX
▪ Marx argued that to free themselves from capitalist
exploitation , workers had to construct a radically socialist
society where all property was socially controlled.
▪ This would be a Communist Society – considered as the
natural society of the time.

FREDERICK ENGELS
SUPPORT FOR SOCIALISM
▪ By the 1870s, Socialist ideas spread throughout Europe.
▪ To co ordinate their efforts, Second International – an international body was
formed.
▪ Workers in England and Germany began to form associations to fight for
better living and working conditions.
▪ They demanded reduction of working hours
and the right to vote.
▪ Example –Social Democratic Party in Germany
Labour Party In England in 1905
Socialist Party in France in 1905
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
RUSSIAN EMPIRE IN 1914
▪ In 1914, the Russian Empire was ruled by Tsar
Nicholas II, who was a corrupt & oppressive ruler.
▪ The Russian empire included Moscow, Finland, TSAR NICHOLAS II
Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, parts of Poland,
Ukraine and Belarus.
▪ Russian empire stretched to the Pacific and
comprised Central Asian states like Georgia,
Armenia and Azerbaijan.
▪ The majority religion was Russian Orthodoxy
Christianity.
▪ Empire also included Catholics, Protestants,
Muslims & Buddhists.
ECONOMY AND SOCIETY
▪ At the beginning of the 20th century, 85% of the Russian population
were agriculturists.

▪ Russia was a major exporter of grain.

▪ Prominent industrial areas were Moscow and St. Petersburg.

▪ In 1890s Russia’s railway network expanded and foreign investment


in industry increased .

▪ Industries were controlled by industrialists.

▪ Workers were divided into groups on the basis of their skill.

▪ Women made up 31% of the factory labour force by 1914.

▪ Despite divisions, workers united to strike work when they were WORKERS ON STRIKE
unhappy with the working conditions and working hours.
RUSSIAN PEASANTS
▪ In the countryside, peasants cultivated most of the land.
▪ The Russian peasants had no respect for the nobility.
▪ They refused to pay rent.
▪ They wanted lands of the nobles to be given to them.
▪ The peasants even murdered the landlords, particularly in
1902 and 1905.
▪ Russian peasants unlike the European peasants pooled
their land together periodically and the commune (Mir)
divided it according to the needs of the individual families.

RUSSIAN MIR

SOCIALISM IN RUSSIA
▪ All political parties were illegal in Russia before 1914.
▪ The Russian Social Democratic Workers Party was founded in 1898.
▪ It struggled to give peasants their rights over land that belonged to the
nobles.

▪ As land was divided among peasants periodically, it was felt that they were
the natural socialist and they were the main source of the revolution.

▪ Socialists founded the Socialist Revolutionary Party in 1900.

▪ But the Social Democrats disagreed with Social Revolutionaries about


peasants being one social group & were divided over the strategy of
organisation.

▪ The Russian Social Democratic Labour Party was divided into 2 groups .
▪ RSDLP

LENIN

BOLSHEVIKS MENSHEVIKS

VLADIMIR ALEXANDER
LENIN KERENSKII

KERENSKII
THE 1905 REVOLUTION

▪ Russia was an autocracy.


▪ The Tsar was not subject to the Parliament.
▪ The liberals wanted to end this state of affairs.
▪ They worked towards demanding a Constitution during the Revolution
of 1905.
BLOODY SUNDAY
▪ Prices of essential goods rose so quickly by 1904 that the real wages
declined by 20 %.
▪ During this time, 4 members of the Putilov Iron Works were
dismissed.
▪ There was a call for industrial action.
▪ Over 110,000 workers went on strike demanding a reduction in
working hours and increase in wages.
FATHER GAPON
▪ The procession was led by Father Gapon.
▪ The procession was attacked by the police and Cossacks.
▪ Over 100 workers were killed and 300 wounded.
▪ This incident known as Bloody Sunday started a series of events
that became known as 1905 Revolution.
REVOLUTION OF 1905

▪ People demanded the creation of a Constituent assembly.


▪ The Tsar allowed the creation of an elected consultative Parliament or Duma.
▪ The Tsar dismissed the First Duma within 75 days and announced the election
of a Second Duma.

RUSSIAN DUMA
FIRST WORLD WAR & RUSSIAN EMPIRE
▪ In 1914, First World War broke out between 2 European alliances-
Central Powers and Allied Powers .
▪ Central Powers – Germany, Austria, Hungary, Turkey
▪ Allied Powers – England, France, America and Russia ( later Italy and
Romania).
▪ In Russia, the war was popular at the beginning and people rallied
around the Tsar.
▪ But later the support grew thin
▪ There were 7 million casualties and 3 million refugees in Russia.
▪ Anti German sentiments ran high.
▪ Russian armies lost badly in Germany and Austria between 1914
& 1916 .
EUOROPE DURING FIRST WORLD WAR
FIRST WORLD WAR & RUSSIAN
EMPIRE
▪The first world war (1914-18) had a severe
impact on industry.
▪By 1916, railway lines began to break down.
▪Able bodied people were called up to the war.
▪Large supplies of grain were sent to feed the
army.
▪So bread and flour became scarce in the cities.
▪By 1916, bread riots became a common feature.

BREAD RIOTS
FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN
PETROGRAD IN 1917
▪ In the winter of 1917, conditions in the capital
Petrograd (St. Petersburg) were grim.
▪ In February 1917, acute food shortages were felt in
the worker’s quarters.
▪ On February 22, a lockout took place at a factory
on the right bank of the River Neva.
▪ Workers of 50 other factories joined in sympathy.
▪ Women also led and participated in the strikes.
This came to be called the International Women’s
Day.
FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN PETROGRAD

▪ On 25th February, 1917 the government suspended the


Duma.
▪ On 27th February,1917 the police headquarters were
raided.
▪ The streets were crowded with people raising slogans
about bread, wages, better hours and democracy.
▪ On 2nd March, the Tsar finally abdicated his power and
the Soviet and Duma leaders formed a Provisional
government for Russia.
EFECTS OF FEBRUARY REVOLUTION
1917
▪ Restrictions on public meetings and associations were removed.
▪ Soviets like the Petrograd Soviet were set up everywhere.
▪ No system of election was followed.
▪ In April 1917, the Bolshevik leader Lenin returned to Russia from his
exile.
▪ He made three demands known as the April Theses . These demands
were -
1 . War should be brought to an end.
2. Land should be transferred to the peasants.
3. Banks should be nationalized.
LENIN ADDRESSING THE
WORKERS
EFFECTS OF FEBRUARY REVOLUTION

▪Slowly, the Bolshevik party


was becoming powerful .
▪To reduce its power,
Provisional Government
arrested Bolshevik leaders. PRO BOLSHEVIK DEMONSTRATION
▪Hence many Bolshevik
leaders had to go into hiding
or flee.
OCTOBER REVOLUTION,1917
▪ On 16th October ,Lenin persuaded Petrograd Soviet and Bolshevik party to
agree to a socialist seizure of power.
▪ A Military Revolutionary Committee was appointed by the Soviets to
organise the seizure.
▪ The uprising began on October 24, 1917. KERENSKII
▪ Sensing trouble, Prime Minister Alexander Kerenskii left the city to summon
troops.
▪ Military men loyal to the government seized the buildings of two Bolshevik
newspapers.
▪ Pro government troops were sent to take over telephone and telegraph
offices and protect the Winter Palace.
▪ Military Revolutionary Committee ordered to seize government offices and
arrest the ministers.
LENIN
OCTOBER REVOLUTION IN 1917

▪Aurora ship shelled the Winter Palace in


Petrograd.
▪Other ships sailed down the Neva river
and took over strategic points.
▪By night , the city was under the AURORA SHIP
Committee’s control and the ministers
had resigned.
▪All Russian Congress of Soviets in
Petrograd approved the Bolshevik
action.

WINTER PALACE
EFFECTS OF OCTOBER REVOLUTION
▪ Most industries and banks were nationalized in November
1917.
▪ Land was declared as social property and peasants were
allowed to seize the land of the nobility.
▪ Use of old aristocratic titles was banned.
▪ New uniforms were designed for the army and the officials.
▪ Russia became a one party state.
BUDEONOVKA
▪ Trade unions were kept under party control.
▪ The Secret Police ( called Cheka first, later OGPU and
NKVD) punished the anti Bolsheviks.
CIVIL WAR
▪ When the Bolsheviks ordered land redistribution, the Russian army
began to break up.
▪ Non Bolshevik socialists, liberals, supporters of autocracy condemned
the Bolshevik uprising.
▪ The Socialist Revolutionaries formed their troops and were called
Greens, who would fought against Bolshevik Red.
▪ The Pro Tsar Whites controlled most of the Russian empire.
▪ They were supported by French, American, British and Japanese
troops.
▪ All these fought a war with the Bolsheviks.
▪ By January 1920, the Bolsheviks controlled the former Russian
Empire.
▪ In 1922, the Bolsheviks created the Soviet Union (USSR) from the
Russian empire in Dec 1922.
MAKING OF A SOCIALIST
SOCIETY
▪ A process of centralized planning was introduced.
▪ Five Year Plans were introduced.
▪ This led to economic growth.
▪ Industrial production increased.
▪ An extended schooling system was developed .
▪ Arrangements were made for factory workers and
peasants to enter universities.
▪ Collectivisation of farms started.
STALIN AND COLLECTIVE FARMING
▪ By 1927-28, towns in Soviet Russia were facing acute problem
of food shortage.
▪ Stalin who headed the party after Lenin introduced firm
emergency measures.
▪ He believed that rich peasants and traders stocked supplies to
create the shortage of grains.
▪ Hence Stalin introduced collectivization programme.
▪ Kulaks (well to do peasants ) were eliminated.
▪ From 1929, peasants were forced to cultivate in collective farms
.
▪ Bulk of land and implements were transferred to the JOSEPH STALIN
ownership of collective farms.
▪ Those farmers who resisted collectivization were punished,
deported or exiled.
GLOBAL INFLUENCE OF
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION & USSR
▪ Russia became the first country to establish a communist state.
▪ Bolsheviks encouraged colonial people to follow their experiment.
▪ Many non Russians participated in the Conference of the Peoples of the East
(1920) .
▪ Bolshevik founded Comintern, an international union of pro Bolshevik
socialist parties.
▪ By end of 2oth century, international reputation of USSR as a socialist party
had declined.
▪ But socialist ideas still enjoyed respect among people.
THANK
YOU

You might also like