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Revolution in Russia What happened to Russia during WW I?

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Revolution in Russia. What happened to Russia d uring WW I?. Background: Just read…. In the first half of the 1800s, Russia was one of the great powers of Europe. Russian troops helped defeat Napoleon, and Russia’s leaders helped reorganize Europe after his fall. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Revolution in Russia

Revolution in Russia

What happened to Russiaduring WW I?

Page 2: Revolution in Russia

Background: Just read….

• In the first half of the 1800s, Russia was one of the great powers of Europe. Russian troops helped defeat Napoleon, and Russia’s leaders helped reorganize Europe after his fall.

• Yet Russia was different from Europe’s other powers. The Russian Empire was HUGE! It stretched eastward far into Asia and included many different ethnic groups.

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So….• To govern this large and diverse empire, Russian monarchs

ruled with absolute power. They were called czars and had control over most aspects of Russian life. The czars believed in autocracy, or government by one ruler with unlimited power.

• Russian society under the czars was mainly agricultural. Unlike many other countries in Europe, Russia had NOT industrialized very much. Much of the country’s population consisted of peasants. Many of these Russian peasants were serfs - agricultural workers who were considered part of the land on which they worked.

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How bad was it for the serfs?• Controlled by lords, the wealthy nobles who owned the

land• Technically, NOT slaves because they were not legally

considered property• However, poor living conditions and lack of freedom

resembled slavery– Were not allowed to leave the property on which they were

born– They did not own the land they worked– Had to make regular payments of both goods and labor to their

lords

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Reform and Repression

• 1776: American Revolution• 1789: French Revolution• Russians wanted more freedom and

democracy.• Conservative czars were resistant to reform,

which led to revolts, unrest, and repression.

Page 6: Revolution in Russia

The Decembrist Revolt: 1825• Assembled near the Winter

Palace• Publicly refusing to declare

their allegiance to Czar Nicholas I

• Crushed by Nicholas• Captured Decembrists sent

to Siberia• Failed but began

revolutionary movement that would grow…

Page 7: Revolution in Russia

Reforms of Alexander II• Ruled from 1855 – 1881• Freed serfs • Allowed peasants to buy land

they worked on from the landowner, usually with gov’t help.

• Not enough – more radical change demanded

• 1881: a radical group called the People’s Will assassinated Czar Alexander II

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Alexander III:this apple fell far from the tree!

• Son of Alexander II• Ruled from 1881 – 1894• Was a reactionary: one who

wants to go back to the way things were in the past

• Ended the reforms of his father (like, look where it got him!)

• Used secret police and censorship to quell unrest

• Did nothing to stop widespread pogroms when Jews were wrongly blamed for the assassination of Alexander II

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Industrialization & Nicholas II

• Crowned in 1894• “Like father like son”• Ruled as an autocrat• Began building the Trans-

Siberian Railroad in the late 1890s to link western Russia with Siberia

• Expansion threatened another imperial power, Japan!

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WAR!!!!!

• Japanese attacked in 1904.• Russo –Japanese War resulted in a Russian

defeat.• Added to growing unrest and calls for change!

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Here comes Marxism…

• Marxists want a socialist republic: society with NO private property and where the state would collectively own and distribute goods.

• 1902: Vladimir Lenin, a Marxist, called for revolutionaries to rise up “against the shame and the curse of Russia.”

Page 12: Revolution in Russia

The Revolution of 1905

Bloody Sunday in St. Petersburg

• January 22, 1905• Led by Father Gapon, a

priest, who planned to bring a petition (of demands) to the czar at the Winter Palace.

• Were fired upon with hundreds dying.

• Became known as Bloody Sunday

Death in the Snow by Vladimir Makovsky

Unarmed men, women, and

children protesting for better

working conditions

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Reaction: Inspiration of the Masses

• Workers striked• University students protested in the streets• Peasants rebelled• Czar firmly supported autocracy at first.

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October Manifesto

• A official promise for reform and a more democratic government

• Promised a constitution to guarantee certain rights– Freedom of speech– Freedom of assembly***Stated that voters would elect reps to the Duma – an

assembly that would approve laws!The Czar would continue to rule Russia but promised not to

pass any laws without the approval of the Duma!!!!Czar did NOT want to give up absolute power!!!!!

Page 15: Revolution in Russia

Summer of 1914

• Assassination of Franz Ferdinand• Gavrilo Princip is a Serb!• Austria-Hungary delivers fateful ultimatum!• Russia to the Rescue!!!!!!!

Page 16: Revolution in Russia

FROM THE REVOLUTION OF 1905 TO WW I IN 1914

Russia and the Great War: A turning point in world history

Page 17: Revolution in Russia

But who’s in control?

• The Madman Behind the Throne

• How could an illiterate peasant control the Russian Empire?

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Who was Grigory Rasputin?

• Filthy• Illiterate• Believed by some to be insane• Was a self-proclaimed holy-man and healer

and….• Was a trusted adviser to Czarina Alexandra

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Influence on the royal family began in the early 1900s

• Had a reputation for healing the sick.• Was sought by the royals to heal son Alexis –

a hemophiliac• Seemed to relieve the boy’s suffering• Became a common sight at the royal palace

Page 20: Revolution in Russia

Two Views of Rasputin….

In the presence of the royal family….

• Careful to appear as a humble, holy peasant

Outside the palace….• Immoral behavior created a

scandal – drinking, womanizing, and “wild behavior”

aka “The Mad Monk”

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What happened next?

• After Nicholas went off to lead Russia’s armies in WW I, Rasputin became Alexandra’s personal adviser.

• Helped the Czarina make decisions including political appointments AND military actions.

• Nearly all were disastrous…

Page 22: Revolution in Russia

December 16, 1916

• Russian nobles plan to kill Rasputin• Poisoned and shot, he did NOT die!!!!!!• Drowned in an icy river!!!!

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Start Copying:Russia and WW I

• Even before WW I, Russia was troubled.• Promised changes never delivered after

1905 Revolution .

• Economic conditions worsened.• Another revolution inevitable.

Page 24: Revolution in Russia

War begins….

Relief: hopes were high!• Nicholas hoped the conflict

would united bonded by patriotism.

• Russia had an enormous army of 6 million soldiers.

• People flocked to enlist!

Reality: ill prepared for war!

• Factories were NOT able to supply army’s needs.

• Weak infrastructure– impacted mvt. of troops &

equipment• Outdated equipment• Officers advanced on personal

connections – not merit• Millions of soldiers were

wounded or killed!

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From bad to worse….

Czar Nicholas to the Rescue!?!?

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Say what?

• 1915: Czar takes personal command

• “understood literally nothing about military matters”

• Clear that his fate was linked to the success of the military operations at hand….

• Conditions worsened!

Page 27: Revolution in Russia

Another Revolution Begins!Seven Days…

• March 8, 1917• Unhappy citizens protest a lack of food and fuel• Sympathetic police and soldiers refuse to shoot!• Czar Nicholas II ordered the Duma to disband.• The Duma defied the order.• March 15: Nicholas II abdicates & the Russian

monarchy ends!

Page 28: Revolution in Russia

Side note

• March Revolution aka February Revolution in Russia

• At that time, Russia used an old type of calendar that was 13 days behind the west.

• Russia adopted the new calendar in 1918.

Page 29: Revolution in Russia

What next?

Page 30: Revolution in Russia

The Provisional Government in big trouble!

• Duma established a temporary- aka provisional – government

• Many still unsatisfied – wanted Russia out of the war.

• Bolsheviks led the opposition– Planned to abolish private property– Enforced social equity– Believed that the revolution would go global– Became known as Marxism - Leninism

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Bolshevik Revolution Begins!

• November 1917 (but referred to as the October Revolution)

• Armed Bolshevik factory workers, known as th Red Guard, attacked the provisional government.

• Lenin becomes the new leader!

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Vladimir Lenin, Decree on Land, October 26, 1917

• All private ownership of land is abolished immediately without compensation [payment to the owners]. All landowners’ estates and all land belonging to the Crown, to monastaries, church lands with all their livestock and… property are..are transferred to the disposition [control] of the township Land Committees.

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After the Revolution…

• Lenin keeps promise to get out of war – rally cry “Bread Land Peace.”

• Trotsky negotiates for peace with the Central Powers.

• Russia leaves war but loses large chunks of land.

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Finally, a time for peace?

• NO!!!!• A time of Civil War!!!!• Bolsheviks’ acceptance of peace treaty upset many

Russians who organize “The White Army.”• “Whites” – Army leaders– Political opponents– Wealthy Russians who opposed Communism

• Whites receive military aid from France and the U.S.

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Russian Civil War: Reds vs. Whites

• Lasts three years • Millions die – fighting, starvation (famine)• Bolsheviks triumph in late 1920

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Russia In Turmoil: A Recap!Match key dates w/ events.

• After three years of fighting, the Russian Civil War ends.

• E.• Bolshevik gov’t signs the Treaty of

Brest-Litovsk• D.• Russia enter the Great War• A.• Czar Nicholas II abdicates and a

provisional gov’t is established.• B.

• Lenin, via the Bolshevik Revolution takes over the gov.t

• C.

• A. August 1914• B. March 1917• C. November 1917• D. March 1918• E. November 1920

Page 37: Revolution in Russia

WITH RUSSIA OUT OF WW I,

WHAT WILL HAPPEN NEXT?