Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Russia in Revolution (1881-1917)
- Alexander II
- Assassinated in March 1881
by the Peoples Will in
St.Petersburg
- Emancipation
(freeing) of the
serfs in 1861
- Known as the 'Tsar
Liberator'
- Alexander III
- Reactionary
(against
reform)
- 1881-1894
- Temporary
regulations
- Provincial governors and
officials to imprison people
without trail
- Ban public meetings
- Exile thousands of offenders to Siberia
- Relied on tutor
Pobendonostev
- Nationality
- Russification
- 1885 Russian official
language
- The rights of Russian majority were
put before majority groups
- This INCREASED OPPOSITION
- Autocracy
- 1889 elected Justices of the peace
were replaced by Land Captains
- They could overrule the
zemstva (local council)
- In 1890 the Tsar restricted the
right to vote for the zemstva in
the countryside
- Orthodoxy
- Rights and
privileges of the
Russian Orthodox
Church were
championed above
those of other
beliefs
- Primary schools
came under
Church control
- Nikolai Bunge 1881-1887
- Created peasant land
banks
- However too small to be effective
- Ivan Vyshnegradsky 1887-1892
- To raise money for
industrialisation
- encouraged foreign investment
- increased taxes
- Foreigners were enticed to
invest with incentives
- helped expansion of railway networks
- growth of heavy industry in ukraine
- oil production in Baku
- Exported grain to finance his
policies, despite the major famine
- Sergei Witte 1892-1903
- Developed a policy of state
intervention
- Foreign investment
- 1897 put the rouble on the
gold standard-guaranteeing
the currency's value
- This encouraged western
countries (especially France
and Belgium) to invest heavily
in Russian industry
- Increased from 200m
roubles in 1890 to
900m roubles in 1900
- Railways
- Trans-Siberian
railway 1891
- Opened up the eastern
empire and advanced the
growth of new towns and
cities
- A network of railways was
planned for western Russia to
link new industrial centres
- Linked the oil refineries of Baku
to the Black Sea port of Batum
- This helped stimulate the
growth of iron and coal
industries
- Successes
- Heavy industry meant massive
increases in production,
especially coal and iron
- Output from the Baku oil
refineries increased
tenfold 1883-1900
- Economy grew by 8% a
year in the 1890s
- Failures
- By 1914 trans-siberian only
partially finished and didnt
increase migration that much
- Raised taxes in order to
provide money for
industrail developments
- They squeezed the
peasants, making them
less likely to spend on
consumer goods
- The government ran
up enormous debts
- State control of industry meant that the middle
class grew slowly in the years before 1914
- Witte didn't improve the state of agriculture
industry- even though taxes on peasants
accounded for 80% of the governments income
- Opposition to Tsardom
- Industrialisation didn't make
for a happy society
- The gap between the rich
and the poor increased
- Society became divided
between the countryside
and the town
- Peasants
- Most were still
paying redemption
payments
- The nobles kept the best
land for themselves-leaving
the peasants with poor soil
- Farming practices
hadn't evolved much
since the Middle Ages
e.g Old fashioned crop
rotation
- Couldn't leave their village
without the permission of the mir
- So weren't really free
- Many peasants migrated to
towns to earn extra money
when they weren't needed
for sowing and harvesting
- Unrest among
the peasants
grew as their
needs were put
after the need
to industrialise
- Peasants resented the higher taxes
and were bitter about the lack of
government support during the famine
- Urban workers
- Earned barely enough to survive
from one week to the next
- Factory hours were not regulated
by the state until Witte introduced
an 11 1/2 hour working day in 1897.
However, this law was often ignored
- Factories were meant to be
inspected regularly, but safety
rules weren't usually followed
- Rapid growth of towns meant
that workers lived in overcrowded
and insanitary tenements
- Health and education services were
poor, creating more social inequality
- Life expectancy were
under 30 years
- Industrial labourers suffered the most
under Witte's industrialisation of Russia
- They weren't allowed to form
a trade union and there were
no legal political parties to
represent their needs
- Although town dwellers only accounted
for 20% of the population, they became
an increasingly radical force
- Liberals
- Economic
reforms led to the
growth of a new,
educated middle
class
- They weren't completely opposed to Tsarism,
but they wanted the autocracy of the Tsars to
be replaced with a constitutional government
- Nicholas II said that a constitutional
government was a 'senseless dream'
- In 1903 liberals formed the league of Liberation,
which wanted a shorter working day, more land
for the peasants, and a elected parliament
- Socialist Revolutionaries
- SRs grew out of earlier
groups known as Populists
- They believed revolution
would begin in the countryside
- They tried unsuccessfully to convert
peasants into revolutionaries
- They aimed to: Redistribute land to the peasants,
improve living and working conditions in towns and
overthrow Tsarism by force
- The SRs used terrorism to advance their political aims. Between
1901 and 1905 SR terrorists assassinated several leading
politicians, including the Tsar's uncle, Governor of Moscow
- Social Democrats
- Followed the political
beliefs of Karl Marx
- Tsar feared Marxism due to
its revolutionary principles
- Later split and became the
Bolsheviks and Mensheviks
- Didn't get far
- Too small and ineffective
- Major divisions between parties
- Faced constant harassment
and violence from the okhrana
- 1905 Revolution
- Long term causes
- Towns and cities didn't have
good sanitation or water supplies
- Pressure on food supplies
and famine
- High taxes and redemption
payments=poor peasants
- Political parties
growing
- Committed to
autocracy
- Short term causes
- Bloody Sunday shocked
many Russians and badly
damaged the Tsars prestige
- Workers went on strikes in
protest at the massacre
- Affected railways, food
couldn't be delivered
- Peasants revolted-illegally
taking land from the
owners
- Humiliating defeats in
Russo-Japanese war esp. Port
Arthur Jan 1905
- October Manifesto
- Freedom of speech, religion
and press
- An elected Duma, laws issued by the
Tsar needed approval of the Duma
- In November a 2nd Manifesto was
published
- improve land bank
- abolish redemption payments
- Tsar survived?
- Army and
police loyal
- No effective
opposition
- Many revolutionary
leaders in exile
- The Dumas 1906-1917
- Fundamental law March 1906
- Tsar had supreme
autocratic power
- Tsar could govern by decree
(Article 87)
- Laws proposed by the Duma
had to be approved by the
council of state and tsar
- Government ministers were
appointed by the tsar
- 1st Duma April-June 1906
- Trudoviks-represented peasants
and workers
- Octobrists- moderate, loyal
to the tsar
- Progressives-new party of
businessmen
- Kadets-supported by intellectuals
and professionals
- Demands: all male adults
vote, land reforms to benefit
peasants, political prisoners
released, ministers
answerable to Duma
- demands refused
and duma dissolved
after 72 days
- deputies gathered in Vyborg and
appealed to Russian people to protest
dissolution
- 2nd Duma
- no. of Kadets
dropped
- SRs, Bolsheviks and
Mensheviks joined
- passed land reforms
by Stolypin
- Constant
uproar
- lasted 4 months
- 3rd Duma Nov 1907-June 1912
- Duma of lords and
lackeys-peasants lost the vote
- Octobrists largest party
present
- right wing- prepared to work with government
- further land
reforms
- Universal health
insurance
- Land Captains replaced by Justices of the peace
- Universal primary
education
- 4th Duma Nov 1912-Feb 1917
- Dominated by Octobrists
and other right-wing parties
- Worked with the government until war in Aug 1914-suspended
- Stolypin Prime Minister 1906-1911
- Proposed agricultural reforms
- Increase prosperity of
peasants to developed a class
of well-off agricultural workers
- Increase crop
yield
- Have fewer
famines
- Make peasants more
content so less likely to
rebel against autocracy
- Land Reforms
- each peasant unconditional
right to land
- Peasants could have their
own land holding without
interference
- agricultural
education to
train peasants
- sold crown land to
land banks
- Emigration to Siberia
- rural areas
overcrowded
- offered incentives to
peasants who moved e.g
cheaper land
- 3 million peasants
relocated 1908-1913
- Other Reforms
- Redemption
payments ended
1907
- Internal passports
abolished
- Land captains replaced
by Justices of the Peace
- Failures
- Few peasants could
afford to separate
from the mir
- still millions of hectares owned by the Tsar
- Little change in farming technique
and not much increase in output
- WW1
- Armed Forces
- enthusiasm shattered by 2
early defeats at Tannenburg
and Masurian Lakes
- poor conditions,
inefficient food
supplies
- Military
hospitals filthy
- Transport
- railways transported
troops and supplies
- railways were overloaded in peacetime,
by 1916 the system had collapsed
- food shortages in 1916
- Economy
- 1914- Gold standard abandoned
- Led to inflation
- Peasants hoarded
grain
- Nicholas and Alexandra
- Sept 1915 appointed himself commander
in chief and left Alex in charge
- Alex constantly changing ministers
causing instability in the govt
- Political Opposition
- 1914 Duma suspended
- 1915 recall Duma
- Had same demands as first Duma, Nicholas rejected
- Progressive Bloc formed, continued
to press changes in the running war
- Most political parties supported the war
- Zemgor formed to help with war effort
- Provided supplies for hospitals and
helped organise smaller industries
- Nicholas was suspicious and refused to work with it