RUSSIAN REVOLUTION WHOLE UNIT

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172 Terms

1
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the great spurt

1893 - 1903

2
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“bound to threaten political stability”

Roger - industrialisation

3
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“downfall was not inevitable, but its own stupidity made it so”

Figes - tsarism

4
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“while not probable, [downfall was] certainly not inevitable”

Pipes - tsarism

5
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“the tendency was repression and greater extremism”

Nettl - ideology and repression

6
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“i am not prepared to be a tsar. I know nothing of the business of ruling”

Tsar Nicholas II - himself

7
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“suppression first, and then… reform”

Stolypin - Reforms

8
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“no revolutionary movement can endure without… leaders maintaining continuity”

Lenin - 1902

9
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14 May 1896

Tsar’s Coronation / Khodynka Fields Tragedy

10
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8 February 1904

Russo-Japanese War begins

11
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“the might of Holy Russia will crush them”

Tsar Nicholas II - Russo-Japanese War

12
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14 - 15 May 1904

Battle of Tsushima

13
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11 battleships
7 cruisers
7 destroyers

losses of the Battle of Tsushima

14
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23 August 1905

Treaty of Portsmouth

15
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9 January 1905

Bloody Sunday

16
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96 deaths, 300 injured

Bloody Sunday casualties

17
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“mass action became possible”

Malone - Bloody Sunday

18
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“deliver them from the intolerable oppression of the bureaucracy”

Workers’ Petition - Bloody Sunday

19
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14 October 1905

Moscow and St Petersburg economies paralysed by strike

20
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“tsarism came out… alive and strong enough”

Trotsky - 1905 Revolution

21
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17 October 1905

October Manifesto declared

22
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“ambiguous and… unsatisfactory to all concerned”

Fitzpatrick - October Manifesto

23
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“no law shall become effective without the confirmation of the State Duma”

October Manifesto quote

24
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“…no way out but to… give what everyone was asking for”

Nicholas II - October Manifesto

25
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23 April 1906

Fundamental Laws

26
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“we have a constitution but absolutism remains”

Trotsky - Fundamental Laws

27
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“removed the sharing of power offered in the October Manifesto”

Malone - Fundamental Laws

28
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Duma could be dissolved in “exceptional circumstances”

Article 87

29
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“I have created the Duma not to be directed… but to be advised”

Nicholas II - the Dumas

30
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27 April - 8 July 1906

First Duma

31
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20 February - 3 June 1907

Second Duma

32
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“regions that had not yet reached sufficient levels of civil development”

Nicholas II - Voting reforms

33
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“gentlemanly statesmanlike people”

Stolypin - voting reforms

34
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7 November 1907 - 3 June 1912

Third Duma

35
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15 November 1912 - 27 February 1917

Fourth Duma

36
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“heightened the political consciousness”

Malone - Dumas

37
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27 February 1917

Formation of the Provisional Committee

38
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February 1914

Durnovo’s Warning

39
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“in the event of a defeat… social revolution in its most extreme form is inevitable”

Durnovo’s Warning quote

40
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17 July 1914

Russia’s troops are fully mobilised

41
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“a crushing burden on all nations”

Nicholas II - WWI

42
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“the army is no longer retreating but simply fleeing”

Polivanov - WWI

43
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13 - 17 August 1914

Battle of Tannenberg

44
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70,000 dead/wounded; 100,000 captured

Battle of Tannenberg consequences

45
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27 - 31 August 1914

Battle of the Masurian Lakes

46
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60,000 dead; ordered to retreat

Battle of the Masurian Lakes consequences

47
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22 August 1915

Tsar becomes commander-in-chief

48
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“Nicholas understood next to nothing about military affairs”

Brusilov - Tsar Nicholas II

49
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July 1915

War Industries Committee formed

50
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August 1915

Progressive Bloc forms

51
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1915

Zemgor forms

52
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22 May - 31 July 1916

Brusilov Offensive

53
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550,000 dead/wounded; collapsed Austro-Hungarian front

Brusilov Offensive consequences

54
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December 1916

Supply crisis in Petrograd

55
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“what is it, stupidity or treason?”

Milyukov - Tsarina’s leadership

56
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“…on the eve of big events, compared with which, 1905 was child’s play”

Petrograd Chief of police

57
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“prepared for the wildest excesses of a hunger riot”

Okhrana report, Oct 1916

58
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“leaderless, spontaneous, anonymous revolution”

Chamberlin - February Revolution

59
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“…autocracy collapsed in the face of popular demonstrations and the withdrawal of elite support for the regime”

Fitzpatrick - February Revolution

60
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“ideas were not a key aspect of the motivation”

Malone - February Revolution

61
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9 January 1917

demonstration in commemoration of Bloody Sunday - 150,000 workers

62
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23 February 1917

International Women’s Day March - thousands of women; joined by 100,000 workers

63
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25 February 1917

almost all factories in Petrograd close - 300,000 workers on the streets

64
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26 February 1917

Troops fire on protesters

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27 February 1917

Petrograd Garrison Mutiny - 160,000 men;
Provisional Committee formed

66
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28 February 1917

Petrograd Soviet of Soldiers’, Sailors’, and Workers’ Deputies formed

67
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1 March 1917

Soviet Order no.1; Provisional Committee renames to Provisional Government

68
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2 March 1917

Tsar Nicholas II abdicates

69
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“a bread riot became a revolution”

Doboru - February Revolution

70
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“power without authority… authority without power”

Kerensky - dual government

71
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“we were appointed by the revolution itself”

Milyukov - Provisional Government

72
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“weak to the point of impotence”

Chamberlin - Provisional Government

73
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“had to keep Russia in the war, but [this] destroyed its chances of survival”

Lynch - Provisional Government

74
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3 April 1917

Lenin returns to Russia

75
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4 April 1917

Lenin’s April Theses

76
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“appeared… out of touch with reality”

Pipes - April Theses

77
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“peace, bread, land” / “all power to the soviets”

Lenin - April Theses

78
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18 June - 2 July 1917

June Offensive

79
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3 - 6 July 1917

July Days; first Machine Gun Regiment ordered to the front lines

80
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“a semi-insurrection”

Trotsky - July Days

81
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8 July 1917

Kerensky appointed Prime Minister

82
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18 July 1917

Kornilov appointed Commander-in-Chief

83
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19 - 30 August 1917

Kornilov Affair

84
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“the Provisional Government… convulses from within”

Kornilov - Kornilov Affair

85
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“undermined the gains it made in the July Days”

Lynch - Kornilov Affair

86
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2 September 1917

Bolshevik majority in Moscow Soviet

87
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13 September 1917

Bolshevik majority in Petrograd Soviet

88
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25 September 1917

Trotsky becomes chairman of the Petrograd Soviet

89
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10 October 1917

Bolshevik Central Committee discuss when to seize power

90
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29 October 1917

Military Revolutionary Committee (Milrevcom) formed

91
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24 October 1917

Red Guards and Bolsheviks seize bridges and communication points in Petrograd

92
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“Kerensky is on the offensive” / “this is defence” / “no compromise is possible”

Trotsky - October Revolution

93
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25 October 1917

Lenin releases to the press that the Provisional Government has been deposed

94
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25 October 1917

Soviet government is established; Mensheviks and SRs walk out and never come back in

95
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“Bolsheviks were pushing against an already open door”

Lynch - October Revolution

96
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“foolishly added to his isolation by assuming command”

Wood - Tsar Nicholas II

97
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“indisputably the executive figure who organised the actual rising”

Lynch - Trotsky

98
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“decay of the tsarist regime was most apparent”

Nenarokov - Rasputin

99
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“became the political alternative for the disappointed and disenchanted”

Wade - Bolsheviks

100
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“adept in fanning the flames of class antagonism”

Chamberlin - Bolsheviks