Lenin attendeda meeting of the
Bolshevik Central Committee
and his cal for a Bolshevik led
revolution was agreed
20th October
The Military
Revolutionary
Committee of the
Petrograd Soviet met
for the first time
24-25th October
Armed workers & soldiers led by the
Bolsheviks and organised by the
Military Revolutionary Committee
took over key buildings &
communication centres in Petrograd
25-27th October
The remaining members of the
Provisional Government were arrested
by the Bolsheviks; the revolution was
announced at the second Congress of
Soviets - the Congress adopted Lenin's
decree on peace and on land and
appointed the first Soviet government,
the Council of People's Commissars,
with Lenin as chairman
Impact of WW1:
collapse of Tsardom
Immediate
impact of war
Nicholas II took
Russia to war in
1914 against all
warnings
Initial outpouring of popular
enthusiasn & patriotism:
Duma voted for war credits
and Russian soldiers carried
icons of the tsar
Battle of Tanneburg in
East Prussia left 300,000
dead/injured which
damaged morale
Economic strains
& serious
shortages of
munitions
Economic &
social costs
Cost of war rose
from 1,500 million
roubles to 14,500
million
Production was
slumped; acute
fuel shortages
A 300% rise in the
cost of living, rising
death rates because
of insanitary lodgings
Military
problems
Soldiers were
fighting without
appropriate
provisions
Political
impact
People demanded for a
constitutional monarch;
N2 took on the role of
Commander-in-Chief of
the Russian Army & Navy
Set up 'military zones' in
which civilian authority was
suspended; opposed by the
Zemstva so they established
the Union of Zemstva to
provide medical facilities
Rasputin was
meddling in
policies/politics&
rumours about
N2's German wife
The February/March Revolution
February 14th
100,000 workers from
58 different factories:
'Tsar has to go'
January
1917
150,00 workers
demonstrated in
Petrograd; anniversary
of Bloody Sunday
February
22nd - 27th
24-27th - crowds
swelled; overturned
tsarist statues; waved
red flags; wore red
rosettes
23rd - International Women's Day, the
woman's march turned political,
female drivers refused to move so
blocked city streets - male drivers
were forced to take the keys off them,
almost 240,000 workers came out
22nd - a further
20,000 workers went
on strike
February 25th
200,000 workers still on
strike; Petrograd was
at a standstill; some
soldiers joined in
February 26th
N2 ordered the Duma to close
down - Duma refused,
encouraged a formation of a
new government. N2 ignored
the message, sent a message
to deal with it by military force
February 27th
The Duma formed a speical
committee to discuss Russia's
future - set up the Provisional
Committe of the Duma &
demanded the Tsar's
abdication
Generals of the High Command,
who ordered troops to march to
the capital to restore order, told
them to stop & support the
Duma committee
Petrograd Soviet took
up residence in Tuaride
Palace - dominated by
members of the
Mensheviks
February 28th
N2 left his military
headquarters and made
his way to Petrograd but
was diverted miles away
Petrograd soviet agreed that
each regiment should elect
committes which would send
representatives to the Soviet
- soviet of workers; order no
was issued
March 1st
Chief of staff put N2 under
pressure to resign; agreed that
the Petrograd Soviet would
reccognise a Provisional
Government; suggested that he
resign with his younger brother,
Mikhail, as regent
March 2nd
N2 agreed; Mikhail
new tsar - N2 under
house arrest
Order No 1
All units to elect a
soldier's committee
and a deputy
No honorific titles to
be used for officials
Russia & the Provisional Government
Outside Petrograd
Soviets set up in towns
for wokers & in rural
areas for peasants
Provisional governorswere
replaced by Commissars;
Committees of Private
Organisations formed from
old Zemstvo personnel
Ordered to wait for a
constituent Assembly - only
controlled Petrograd, Moscow
& central European provinces
Provisional
Government
March 2nd - set
upby the Duma
Committee &
Petrograd Soviet
It was provisional as it was waiting
for a consituent Assembley elected
under an equal, direct & secret ballot
to draw up the new constitution
A committee of
Commissars was
appointed to replace the
tsarist regime - composed
of mainly liberals:
Octobrists & Kadets
The Petrograd Soviet had to support the
new government as it controlled the
factories, essential services & the
military - the Soviet did not press for
redistrubution of land & the prov gov.
promised to carry out all the demands
Power was shared - prov govt ruled &
soviet watchdog - tsarist officials were
imprisoned; secret police abandoned
& an air of optimism
Soviet demands
A promise of independent
judges, trial by jury &
abolition of capital
punishment & exile
Freedom of speech &
civil liberties
Abolition of all legal
restrictions based on class,
nationality & religion