Dual gov. created - Petrograd
Soviets & Prov. gov.
October Revolution 1917
Led by Bolsheviks - Trotsky used MRC
and Red Guards
The takeover of Provisional Government
Bolsheviks seized power
& arrested Prov. gov.
Bolsherviks gained majority in
All-Russia Soviet (Oct 1917)
3 Decrees were passed whilst
Bolsheviks had majority
1) Decree on Land - private
land was given to peasants
2) Peace Decree - ended war with
Germany and Austria-Hungary
3) Set up organisation of new gov.
At top was Sovnarkom - Council
of People's Commissars
Lenin was chairman of Sovnarkom
PROBLEMS FACING LENIN
July Days - Bolshevik members arrested
Lenin was accused of being a spy and fled
After Oct. Rev, Lenin did not
cancel Constituent Assembly -
too vulnerable
CA showed Bolsheviks only had 1/4
support of Russian electorate
CREATION OF USSR (1922)
Contained aspiration of
owrldwide revolution
Lenin created the world's
first totalitarian dictatorship
1928-53
STALIN'S RUSSIA
Stalin became General
Secretary in 1922
Struggle for power was between
members of the Politburo
After Lenin's death in 1924, he
never appointed a successor
MIGHTY POWER STRUGGLE 1924-29
TRIUMVIRATE (1923) was
formed to keep Trotsky out
of power
Zinoviev,
Kamenev and
Bukharin
Triumvirate split (1925) - Z & K formed New
Opposition and S & B joined as Duumvirate
LEFT OPPOSITION - LED BY TROTSKY, proposed
alternative policies to Triumvirate
1930s PURGES
Stalin used terror to rid of his opponents in the Party
Murder of Kirov was used
to purge Zinoviev and
Kamenev
There were rumours of an affair
- Nikolayev's wife and Kirov
NKVD members taught
Nikolayev how to use a pistol
The Chistka (secret police) were used to remove
officials who ignored orders from Party leadership in
Moscow
By 1935, 22% of Party had been removed
SHOW TRIALS (1936-38)
Trial of the Sixteen (1936) - involved Left
leaders like Zinoviev and Kamenev, accused
of working as agents for Trotsky
They confessed to crimes and murder
of Kirov (under pressure of NKVD)
Trial of the Seventeen (1937) - purge
of Party officials like Karl Radek and
Georgy Pyatakov
Accused of wrecking and sabotaging
Soviet economy, working under
Trotsky - critisising Five-Year Plans
Trial of the Twenty-One (1938) -
Purge of Right, Tomsky committed
suicide before brought to trial
Bukharin and Rykov accused of
forming a 'Trotskyite-Rightist Bloc'
which they confessed to
No hard evidence for links with Trotsky but Bukharin's article 'Notes
of an Economist' made clear of his criticisms of Stalin's economic
policies
PURGES OF RED ARMY (1937-38)
3/5 marshals were purged
14/16 army commanders and
35,000 officers were either shot or
imprisoned
Armed forces were critical of demoralising
impact of collectivisation on peasantry who
made up for bulk of soldiers
PURGE OF SECRET POLICE
1936 - Yezhov purged over 3000
members of NKVD
Yezhov was arrested in 1938 -
Stalin thought there was too
much terror
1953-85
KHRUSHCHEV/BREZHNEV
1.2) Industrial and
agricultural
change (1917-85)
1917-28 TOWARDS A
COMMAND ECONOMY
War Communism 1918-21
Forced requisitioning
of grain from peasants
Starvation occured
- 1921 famine
Led to peasant
uprisings all over Russia
Tambov uprising was very serious - Red
Guards were used to fight off protestors
Resources given to bolshevik
soldiers to fight Civil War
New Economic Policy (NEP) 1921
The NEP was introduced by
Lenin to keep Communist
regime alive
Markets were returned to
Russian towns and cities
More goods were available
Food shortages and 1921
famine disappeared
Many Communists accused NEP of
encouraging greed, independence and
self-interest
The NEP sparked off the 'Scissors Crisis'
People payed more and more for
manufactured goods whilst
getting less for produce
Agricultural production rose,
whilst agricultural prices fell
Industrial prices rose because of shortages
Peasants cultivated more land
INDUSTRY & AGRICULTURE
DURING STALIN ERA
Five-Year Plans were introduced to break
away from NEP
NEP abandoned
(1928)
The Plans aimed to use most
advanced technology applied with
emphasis on heavy industry
First Five-Year Plan (1928-32)
New plants were built to impact production
First Plan was result of making more
efficient use of existing factories
Magnitogorsk and Gorki (cities)
were built from scratch
Slave labour was used to finish unfinished projects
Economic resources were located
in Siberia (where no one worked)
Gulag population were used -
example 'White Sea Canal project'
180,000 prisoners employed, 1931-32
winter 10,000 died
Second (1933-37) and Third Five-Year Plans (1938-41)
2nd Plan learnt from mistakes - coal production rose substantially
3rd Plan focused heavily on defence industry
1953-85 CHANGING PRIORITIES
FOR INDUSTRY & AGRICULTURE
1.3) Control of the
people (1917-85)
Media, propaganda and religion
Newspapers - Pravda (truth) and Izvestiya
(news) highlighted achievements of
government + socialism
Magazines - aimed at
specific groups of
people such as
farmers and soldiers
Radio - Helped get government's
message across - they were
government controlled
TV - Life in Soviet Union was
presented as joyous, Capitalism had
negative view
Results - Censorship + restiction of
material was used a lot government relied
on output that provided distraction from
socialism reality
The secret
police
Cheka was established in 1917
After Civil War - Cheka changed to OGPU
(State's Political Administration) 1922
1934 OGPU merged with
NKVD so power and numbers
increased
Yezhov introduced quotas for execultions -
expanded numbers in gulags whcih increased
deaths
Dzerzhinsky was leader of Cheka
Yagoda became head of
SP in 1934
1936 Yagoda was accused of
incompetance in safeguarding
Kirov - shot in 1938
Yezhov replaced Yagoda as
head of NKVD in 1936
State and cultural change
1.4) Social developments
(1917-85)
Social security
Employment - after Civil War (1918-21)
millions of Red Army soldiers were
demobilised - went to cities to get jobs
Unemployment soared + reached over
1mil workers by 1926 - shortages in
countryside caused peasant to also
move to cities
There were wage differentials in NEP -
continued use of arteli (groups of
workers paid in groups)
Hired workers
rose from 11.6mil
in 1928 to 27mil in
1937
There was a labour shortage in
1932 - restrictions placed on trade
unions, could no longer improve
working conditions]
Due to fall in production in First
Five Year Plan (1932-37),
government used medals +
honours to motivate workers
Passport system introduced in
1932 for food rations and
changing jobs
Women were employed due to men
fighting in WWII - slave labour was also
used to make up for shortages
Gulag labour inmates rose from 1.5mil in
1945 to nearly 2.5mil in 1953
Work clothes provided for free,
cheap food was available to
workforce
State resorts organised by trade unions.
sport facilities were available - workers
were given 2 weeks paid holiday
Health care contained epidemics
such as cholera (1921) - number
of doctors fled Russia after 1917
Revolution
Government forced to increase training -
70,000 (1928) to 155,000 (1940) - progress
was made to train more women
Role of women
Zhenotdel was set up by
Bolsheviks to promote
status of women
Bolsheviks made: divorce easier, abortion
legalised, women did not need husband's
permission to take a job/higher education
An equal pay law was passed in Dec 1917
Impact of Civil War (1918-21) - Over
70,000 women fought in Red Army
(more jobs)
Many lost jobs however when men were
demobilised - 1921-22 famine left many
women homeless and destitute
Countryside - Zhenotdel was
closed down in 1930 -
claimed issues were solved
At least 50% of population were
women - they shared jobs in
industry and agriculture
Collectivisation - many men
departed to cities to look for
better jobs
WWII - the most able-bodied men
were conscripted in armed forces -
women made up for agri. loss
Imbalance of sexes after
war - rural areas lacked
abel-bodied men
Towns - Women had no choice but to
work under 5 Year Plans, number of
female workers rose from 3mil (1928) to
over 13mil (1940)
1929 - government reserved 20% higher
education places for women
'Wives of Soviet Elite' - those married
to industrial managers/Party officials
did not have to enter workforce
Initial wave of volunteers to join Red Army
for WWII was turned away (1941) - gov.
changed mind and 800,000 women served in
armed forces (medical field/others)
Politics - women were under-presented
even in Communist party - female
delegates in party congressdid not
exceed 10% before 1939
Alexandra Kollontai was 1st people's
commissar - only 7 women were
members of Central Committee before
WWII