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Since the reign of Ivan the
Terrible, the Russian Tsars had followed a fairly consistent policy of drawing more
political power away from the nobility and into their own hands. This centralization of
authority in the Russian state had usually been accomplished in one of two ways--either by
simply taking power from the nobles and braving their opposition (Ivan the Terrible was
very good at this), or by compensating the nobles for decreased power in government by
giving them greater power over their land and its occupants. Serfdom, as this latter
system was known, had increased steadily in Russia from the time of Ivan the Terrible, its
inventor. By the time of Catherine the Great, the Russian Tsars enjoyed virtually
autocratic rule over their nobles. However, they had in a sense purchased this power by
granting those nobles virtually autocratic power over the serfs, who by this time had been
reduced to a state closer to slavery than to peasantry.
By the nineteenth century, both of these
relationships were under attack. In the Decembrist revolt in 1825, a group of young,
reformist military officers attempted to force the adoption of a constitutional monarchy
in Russia by preventing the accession of Nicholas I. They failed utterly, and Nicholas
became the most reactionary leader in Europe. Nicholas' successor, Alexander II, seemed by
contrast to be amenable to reform. In 1861, he abolished serfdom, though the emancipation
didn't in fact bring on any significant change in the condition of the peasants. As the
country became more industrialized, its political system experienced even greater strain.
Attempts by the lower classes to gain more freedom provoked fears of anarchy, and the
government remained extremely conservative. As Russia became more industrialized, larger,
and far more complicated, the inadequacies of autocratic Tsarist rule became increasingly
apparent. By the twentieth century conditions were ripe for a serious convulsion.
At the same time, Russia had expanded its
territory and its power considerably over the nineteenth century. Its borders extended to
Afghanistan and China, and it had acquired extensive territory on the Pacific coast. The
foundation of the port cities of Vladivostok and Port Arthur there had opened up
profitable avenues for commerce, and the construction of the Trans-Siberian
Railway (constructed from 1891-1905) linked the European Russia with its new eastern
territories.
In 1894 Nicholas II acceded to the throne. He
was not the most competent of political leaders, and his ministers were almost uniformly
reactionaries. To make matters worse, the increasing Russian presence in the far east
provoked the hostility of Japan. In January of 1905, the Japanese attacked, and Russia
experienced a series of defeats that dissolved the tenuous support held by Nicholas'
already unpopular government. Nicholas was forced to grant concessions to the reformers,
including most notably a constitution and a parliament, or Duma. The power of the reform
movement was founded on a new and powerful force entered Russian politics. The
industrialization of the major western cities and the development of the Batu oil fields
had brought together large concentrations of Russian workers, and they soon began to
organize into local political councils, or soviets. It was in large part the power of the
soviets, united under the Social Democratic party, that had forced Nicholas to accept
reforms in 1905.
After the war with Japan was brought to a
close, Nicholas attempted to reverse the new freedoms, and his government became more
reactionary than ever. Popular discontent gained strength, and Nicholas countered it with
increased repression, maintaining control but worsening relations with the population. In
1912, the Social Democrats split into two camps--the radical Bolsheviks and the
comparatively moderate Menshiviks. In 1914, another disastrous war once again brought on a
crisis. If the Russo-Japanese war had been costly and unpopular, it was at least remote.
The First World War, however, took place right on Russia's western doorstep. Unprepared
militarily or industrially, the country suffered demoralizing defeats, suffered severe
food shortages, and soon suffered an economic collapse. By February of 1917, the workers
and soldiers had had enough. Riots broke out in St. Petersburg,
then called Petrograd, and the garrison there mutinied. Workers soviets were set up, and
the Duma approved the establishment of a Provisional Government to attempt to restore
order in the capital. It was soon clear that Nicholas possessed no support, and on March 2
he abdicated the throne in favor of his brother Michael. No fool, Michael renounced his
claim the next day.
The Provisional Government set up by the Duma
attempted to pursue a moderate policy, calling for a return to order and promising reform
of worker's rights. However, it was unwilling to endorse the most pressing demand of the
soviets--an immediate end to the war. For the next 9 months, the Provisional Government,
first under Prince Lvov and then under Alexandr Kerensky, unsuccessfully attempted to
establish its authority. In the meanwhile, the Bolsheviks gained increasing support from
the ever more frustrated soviets. On October 25, led by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, they
stormed the Winter Palace and deposed the Kerensky government.
Although the Bolsheviks enjoyed substantial
support in St. Petersburg and Moscow, they were by
no means in control of the country as a whole. They succeeded in taking Russia out of the
war (though on very unfavorable terms), but within months civil war broke out throughout
Russia. For the next three years the country was devastated by civil strife, until by 1920
the Bolsheviks had finally emerged victorious.
Ancient Russia | The Mongols & the Emergence of Moscow | The
Romanovs |
Napoleon's Invasion | The Path to
Revolution | The Soviet Era
Copyright (c) 2000 Dm.Core
Ltd.. All rights reserved.
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