Chapter 10 - Opposition: ideas and ideologies Flashcards

Opposition: ideas and ideologies

1
Q

What did liberal nobles want?

A
  • the creation of an all-class zemstvo at district level
  • a National Assembly
  • for example, Prince Georgi Lvov
  • who was a Kadet leader and the leader of the Russian Union of Zemstva in 1914 and the first Chariman of the Provincial Government in March 1917
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2
Q

What did Ivan Shipov try to do in 1896?

A

Tried to set up an ‘All-Zemstvo Organisation’ in 1896
Immediately banned

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3
Q

What did the banning of the ‘All-Zemstvo Organisation’ in 1896 encourage radical liberals to do?

A
  • Establish the Beseda Symposium in 1899
  • Meet in secret to discuss matters of liberal interesr (such as judicial reform and education)
  • the Beseda Symposium assumed leadership of the liberal movement in 1900 - where the government ordered the dismissal of hundreds of liberals from the elected boards of the zemstva.
  • the Symposium attracted a wide range of support from public figures, town leaders, members of the legal and teaching professions and industrialists
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4
Q

What was founded under Pyotr Struve?

A

the Union of Liberation was founded in 1903 by Struve

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5
Q

Pyotr Struve

A
  • defected from the Marxist movement
  • he opposed its commitment to violent revolutions
  • began a journal called ‘Liberation’ which was published in Germany
  • Struve believed Russia needed a period of ‘peacful evolution’ to adapt to its new industrialising status
  • wanted a constitutional system where the urban workers could campaign legally to improve their conditions
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6
Q

What event in 1904 highlighted the succes of the Union of Liberation?

A
  • grand meeting
  • representatives of the zemstva and other professional societies were invited
  • members declared their intention to work for the establishment of a constitutional government
  • arranged a series of around 50 society banquets during the winter of 1904
  • were attended by the members of the landed elite
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7
Q

Pros and cons of the liberal movement before 1905

A

Pros:
- esacped closer attention of the police
- this was due to their focus on radical opposition as well as urban and rural unrest
- helped contribute to the momentum that was building up within the country
- were the main beneficiaries of ther evolution that year when one of their aims was achieved - the Duma was established

Cons:
- limited political influence before 1905

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8
Q

By 1894, what political idea seemed unlikely?

A

Slavophile and populist ideas of a ‘new Russia’ based on the peasants

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9
Q

What political ideas were revived as a result of the Great Famine of 1891-92, and why?

A

Agrarian socialism - taking estates from landowners and dividing the land between the peasants to be farmed communally.

The Great Famine highlighted the need to reform the rural economy

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10
Q

Students and opposition

A
  • championed a new-style Populism
  • took inspiration from The Peoples’ Will (defunct)
  • favoured violent protest
  • their activities culminated in the assassination of the Minister of Education, Nikolay Bogolepov, by a student named Pyotr Karpovich in 1901
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11
Q

The murder of Bogolepov

Bogolepov = Minister of Education

A

1901
- Karpovich (student) killed Bogolepov
- Karpovich expelled twice from Kazan Univeristy
- several thousand people gathered in front of Kazan Cathedral in support of Karpovich
- this was broken up by the police
- 60 injured
- 800 arrests
- it provoked demonstrations in Moscow
- also provoked an attempt on Pobedonostsev’s life a month later
- but that student failed

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12
Q

The SRs

A
  • rallying point for those who wished to appeal to the peasantry
  • commitment to ‘land socialisation’ and a decentralised government
  • Chernov = influential; editor of the party journal ‘Revolutionary Russia’; former The Peoples’ Will member; leader of the SRs in the 2nd Duma
  • party never held congress until 1906
  • members broadly accepted Marxist teachings but combined with populist ideas; favoured a Russian revolutionary programme
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13
Q

What view did the SRs put forward?

A

The view that the interest of the peasants and workers - the ‘labouring poor’ - were idential, and therefore should work together to destory autocracy and bring about land redistribution.

This emphasis on ‘land socialisation’ rather than ‘land nationalisation’ set them apart from pure Marxists.

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14
Q

What support did the SRs have?

A
  • a wide national base
  • large peasant membership
  • 50% of their support was from the working class
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15
Q

What tactics did the SRs implement?

A
  • stir up discontent in the coutnryside and strikes in towns
  • disrupt government by political assassinations
  • in this they were quite successful
  • promoted a wave of political terrorism in the early years of the 20th century
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16
Q

Between 1901-05, how many political assassinations did the SRs carry out?

A

around 2,000 between 1901-05

included:
- two Ministers of Internal Affairs
- Dmitri Sipyagin in 1902
- Plehve in 1904

17
Q

What role did the SRs play in the 1905 revolution?

A
  • active part - campaign of killing and violence
  • developed a full programme in Nov 1905
  • formed a seperate combat organisation, which attracted many students to carry out assassination
  • most success = killing Stolypin in 1911
18
Q

After the Secret Police foiled some activities and was successtul in inflitrating the movement at its highest level, what happened?

A
  • 4,579 SRs were sentenced to death between 1905-09
  • 2,365 were executed
19
Q

Which groups were attracted by Marxist ideas?

A
  • discuss circles
  • workers’ organisations
  • illegal trade unions
20
Q

When was the First Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party of the Soviet Union held?

A

1898 in Minsk

21
Q

What happened at the first meeting of the SDs?

A
  • only 9 delegates were present
  • chose their name
  • elected a three-man Central Committee
  • prodcued a manifesto (drawn up by Struve)
22
Q

What did the SD manifesto contain?

A
  • asserted that the working calsses had been, and were being, exploited by their masters
  • the future of RUssia would be the product of the class struggle
  • made it clear that the stimulus for change had to come from the working men themselves
23
Q

When did the Second Party Congress of the SDs take place?

A

1903 in Brussels
But moved to a chapel in London

24
Q

What happened at the Second Party Congress of the SDs?

A
  • 51 voting delegates
  • propositions on how the party should move forward
  • divided on these
  • Lenin wanted a strong disciplined organisation of professional revolutionaries to lead to the proleteriat
  • Martov though their aim should be to develop a broad party with a mass working-class membership
  • Lenin wanted total dedication to revolution whereas Martov wanted member to ‘cooperate’ with other liberal parties
  • Lenin didn’t have the majority initially, but eventually won the vote in favour of a more centralised party structure
  • Lenin claimed his supporters were in the majority = Bolsheviks
  • But Martov (Mensheviks = minority) was actually in the majority
25
Q

What happened in the next few years with the SD party that led to their split in 1906?

A

Arguments and rivarly in the centre of the party about the nature, timing and organisation of the revolution that they were planning.

Menshevik/Bolshevik divide was so strong that the party split in 1906.
Two Social Democratic Workers’ Parties.

26
Q

Vladimir Lenin

A
  • initially wrote pamphlets and organised strikes among the factory workers
  • led to his exile in Siberia
  • 1902, produced the pamphlet ‘What is to be done?’ which argued the need for revolution rather than trade-unionism
  • founded a revolutionary newspaper called Iskra (The Spark) with Plekhanov
27
Q

What was the consequence of the split in the SD party?

A
  • members were changing sides
  • people were confused
28
Q

The difference between the Mensheviks and Bolsheviks

A

Mensheviks:
- bourgeois revolution would precede the proleterian revolution
- impetus had to come from the workers themselves
- membership open to all
- party should work through the trade unions and other workers’ organisations to raise workers’ consciousness

Bolsheviks:
- bourgois and proleterian revolution could occur simultaneously
- it was the party’s job to educate the workers to lead them through the revolution
- membership should be restricted
- members should work within small cells that could escape police notice
- favoured contol in the hands of a Central Committee

29
Q

What happened with Trade Unions after the 1905 revolution?

A

Changes:
- trade unions legalised
- reforms, e.g. the 1912 Insurance Law
- hopes to improve state-employer-worker relation
- all to reduce working class discontent

Continuity:
- state continued to fear working class activity
- state feared the potential for revolutionaries to work through the trade unions

30
Q

What statistics show the tsarist government’s fear of Trade Unions?

A
  • 497 trade unions were closed down
  • 604 were denied registration
31
Q

Economic recovery in 1911 did what?

A
  • gave skilled labour more bargaining power in the market place
  • a new round of strikes
32
Q

The trade union activity

A

Success:
- demonstrated the State’s failure to pacify the working class in 1905

Failure:
- confined to St Petersburg and the surrounding area, where 3/4 of the strikes took place; half in the metal trades
- danger to the autocract of the pre-war strike movement was less than it seemed
- geographically limited = only 12% of enterprises experienced a strike
- the General Strike in St Petersburg in the first half of July 1914 only brought out 1/4 of the manufacturing labour force

Government failure:
- repressive measures to break strikes (fines, lockouts and blacklists) added to anger and oppression

33
Q

Were the SRs and SDs a threat to the government after 1905?

A

No.
The parties were weakened by the exile of their leaders after 1905, as well as a damaging split within the SD party and the rivarly between the SDs and the SRS.

34
Q

How else the the SDs and SRs threat to the tsarist government weakened?

A
  • Secret Police network, whose agents were efficient at smashing revolutionary cells
  • the industrial depression from 1907
  • the lack of finance
  • a shortage of secret printing presses made organisation difficult
  • none of the exiled leaders, including Lenin, exercised effective control over their parties within Russia
  • membership declined
  • ## no national, regional or even city organisations, only underground organisations in individual factories and workshops
35
Q

Statistics to show a fall in membership of the SD party.

A

Ukraine:
- 20,000 in 1906 to 200 in 1912

Moscow:
- 7,500 in 1906 to 40 in 1912

36
Q

How did these revolutionary groups show some strength?

when leaders were in exile - cooperation

A

cooperated irrespective of the ideological differences that absorbed the attention of their leaders in eile

37
Q

What happened that was lucky for the Bolsheviks in 1912-14?

A
  • succeeded in taking over many legal labour institutions from the Mensheviks in both St Petersbug and Moscow
  • gained 6 workers’ deputies in elections to the 4th Duma
  • their newspaper, Pravda (The Truth), was launched in April 1912 and had higher circulation than the Menshevik Luch (The Ray)

However:
- growing support was limited
- helped in the 4th Duma elections by the boycotting of the SRs
- no success with the army or navy
- nothing came of their avowed promise to launch a general political strike, provoke mass street demonstrations and recreate a soviet of workers’ deputies on the 1905 model