Russian Revolution
Russian Revolution
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 .
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.
▪ 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.
▪ The Russian Social Democratic Labour Party was divided into 2 groups .
▪ RSDLP
LENIN
BOLSHEVIKS MENSHEVIKS
VLADIMIR ALEXANDER
LENIN KERENSKII
KERENSKII
THE 1905 REVOLUTION
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
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