1917 rev

    Cards (28)

    • what happened on the anniversary of bloody Sunday in 1917 and what did this

      a demonstration was held in Petrograd with 150,000 workers = it was a hint of things to come
    • what was the first event of discontent
      14th feb
      100k workers from 58 factories go on strike in Petrograd
      the police are attacked
    • what happens next (22 FEB)
      20,000 workers are locked out of the Pulitov iron works by management after pay talks collapse
      workers in other factories go on strike to support
    • what happened on international womens day (23 FEB)

      (23 Feb)
      90,000 workers went on strike and 50 factories close
      these workers joined a traditional march of women alongside students and women from bread queues from the suburbs to the city center

      Petrograd falls into chaos with 240,000 out on the streets
      order restored by police in the evening, no loss of life
    • what happened the day after womens day (24 feb)

      200,000 workers went on strike and crowds overturned tsarist statues, waved red flags and shouted revolutionary slogans and songs about ending tsardom
    • how did the mass strike after womens day esculate even further

      on the 25th
      - 250,000 were now on strike, city was in a standstill
      - all major factories and shops closed, no transport, news

      violence escalated as the chief of the police tried to control the masses = he was dragged, beaten and shot
      - the Cossacks were refusing to attack the strikers depite orders
    • how did the tsar react to the strike the following day (26th)

      the duma president sent the tsar a telegram stating
      - "the situation is serious..
      - the gov is paralysed..
      - "troops are shooting at each other"
      - "hesitaton (to form a new gov) is fatal"

      Nicholas stated in his diary that the duma president was spewing "nonsense which I shall not even bother to reply"

      Nich's only response was to suspend the duma
    • what was the final breaking point for strikers in the February revolution

      the announcement that bread was to be rationed from the 1st March = long queues and violent exchanged for basic needs
    • what did the tsar order to do to solve the revolution on the monday (27th)

      the tsar ordered the commander of the Petrograd military district to restore order by military force

      == soldiers are sent onto the street, 40 killed
    • how did the Tsars decision to send troops in backfire

      there was a mutiny in the Volynskii regiment - a sergeant shot his commanding officer dead

      == 66,000 ended up joined the mutiny and helped to arm protestors with 40,000 riffles

      - police headquarters are attacked and prisons are opened
    • how did the duma react to the mass mutiny
      the duma held a meeting despite tsar orders and set up a 12 man provisional committee to take over government

      the army's high command (who had already ordered troops into the capital to restore stability) changed their mind and gave support to the duma instead
    • what was set up during the februrary revolution and why

      the Petrograd soviet - to take over the government and organize food supplies for the city following the revolution

      their were many soviets (councils) that sprang up in towns and cities across Russia but the petrograd soviet was the most important
    • why did many soliders join the mutiny
      many of those ordered to shoot the strikers were of peasant or worker background so were young and newly enlisted

      only joined for the war effort - patriotism
      not many men were from traditional noble background and likely to remain loyal to the Tsar

      their sympathies laid with the masses
    • what was the Tsar' final attempt to stop the feb revolution (28th)
      returns to petrograd, sends a telegram to the duma offering a form of power sharing

      Rodzianko (leader of duma) responds "measures you propose are too late... there is no return"
    • why was the Petrograd soviet the most important soviet

      10th March = 3000 members
      so large so most of its work was done by the executive committee - dominated by socialist intellectuals
    • what was the "order no.1 - a charter of soldiers" rights

      an agreement by the petrograd soviet that stated and promised soliders would:

      - elect a deputy to the soviet and agree to the political control of the Petrograd soviet
      - military commissions of the duma are to be obeyed if the soviet says so
      - all weapons are to be controlled by the elected soldier committees not officers
      - soldiers have citizen rights when off duty
      - no honorific titles to be used for officers
      - officers cannot degrade soldiers
    • why was Nicholas unable to return to Petrograd in time

      his train was delayed by rebellious railway workers and forced to stop in a town 200mi away from Petrograd
    • how was the tsar under pressure from the chief of general staff (Alekseev)

      Alekseev wanted the Tsar to resign in favor of his son, Alexei, and his younger brother Mikhail as regent

      - Alekseev had been reassured by an agreement on 1 march that the Petrograd soviet would recognize a provisional government formed by the Duma
    • how and when did Nicholas agree to Alekseevs, the duma and the soviets demands

      on the 2nd March = abdication announcement in favor of Mikhail (who hadn't been consulted)

      Sid Mikhail should rule "in complete union with the representatives of the people"
    • why was the tsar's abdication problematic
      Mikhail refused the throne despite the fact that the abdication terms had already been agreed
    • what happened to the Tsar after he abdicated the throne

      the tsar and his family were placed under house arrest, as were most of the Tsar's council of ministers

      == 304 years of Romanov rule came to an end
    • how did revolution spread beyond petrograd
      - Kronstadt naval base
      - Moscow + other industrial towns/cities

      == workers seized control of factories, set up workers committees and disposed of their former bosses
      == set up own elected regional assemblies and soviets
    • what happened to the army
      the army who were under the control of the petrograd soviet technically
      == set up semi-independent bodies and soldiers soviets without clear leadership and organisation
    • what happened in the countryside
      peasants attacked landlords properties and felled trees illegally
    • what happened to countries under tsar rule outside of Russia

      in provinces such as Finland, Ukraine, the Caucuses, and Poland national minority independence was declared
    • what is the clear cause of the february revolution

      the class struggle between the working class and traditional aristocatic forces in Petrograd
    • why is the revolution seen to be a spontaneous event rather than by revolutionary groups

      in 1917, most revolutionary leaders ie. Bolsheviks, Mensheviks and SRs were either in prison or exiled - siberia/abroad

      Bolsheviks were in no position to provide leadership and organize revolutionary uprisings
    • did the revolution defeat aristocracy altogether

      whilst it did end with the tsars abdication, it did not overthrow all aristocracy
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