Russia Flashcards

1
Q

Romanov family ruled since?

A

1613

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2
Q

Autocracy

A

Autocracy is a system of government in which absolute power is held by the ruler, known as an autocrat. It includes some forms of monarchy and all forms of dictatorship

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3
Q

Duma

A

An elected Russian assembly with advisory or legislative functions. The term comes from a Russian verb meaning ‘to think’ or ‘to consider’

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4
Q

Manifesto

A

A published declaration (of policy or aims). It usually promotes a new idea with prescriptive notions for carrying out the changes.

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5
Q

Cossacks

A

Loyal supporters of the Tsar on horseback who put down opposition and resistance to the Tsar. Best cavalry unit in the Russian Army, brutal and ruthless.

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6
Q

Imperial Russia

A

8 million square miles
twice the size of Europe
largest army of 1.5 million
Europes main exporter of agriculture produce
vast mineral reserves
diff nationalities
3/4 of pop live in 1/4 of land

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7
Q

Main problems

A

dense forest
hard to communicate over huge area
vulnerable- easily attacked as it has big borders
roads were hard to traverse along as muddy
artic ocean frozen-cant use boats
different ethnic groups
6/10 cant speak Russian
Tsar spent 45% money on army
rich/poor divide

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8
Q

communication and transport

A

mud roads
passenger steamers on River Volga
expansion of railways- Trans Siberian Railway 1904

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9
Q

Agriculture and economy

A

90% of people=peasants
inefficient farming led to frequent famines
average LE of peasant farmer=40 years
serf=Russian peasant

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10
Q

Government

A

autocrat that believed in the ‘divine right’
Tsar= head of church ‘Russian Orthodox’
no parliament or political parties until 1906
censorship

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11
Q

Okhrana

A

Russian secret police

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12
Q

Russian Political System

A
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13
Q

Russification

A

Russification was the policy of enforcing Russian culture on the vast numbers of ethnic minorities that lived in the Russian Empire

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14
Q

Who is Tsar Nicholas ii

A

Romanov fam
Eldest son of Alexander iii
Family oriented married to German Alexandra
Militaristic and believed in russification
Ruled from 1896-1917

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15
Q

Bloody Sunday

A

22nd Jan 1905 in St Petersburg
Growing discontent amongst the Russian working urban class
Father Gapon (Russian Orthodox Priest) gathered 150000 workers together to promote workers rights- made a petition urging the Tsar to reform workers rights
Led workers on a peaceful march to the Winter Palace to deliver the petition
Tsar was not in the palace and left the soldiers in charge
Soldiers began firing on the peaceful march - over 100 killed and many injured
The bloodshed caused riots and eventually led to the 1905 revolution

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16
Q

When was the Russo-Japanese war?

A

1904-1905
Russia suffered a humiliating loss which also led to the 1905 revolution

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17
Q

What were 2 consequences of Bloody Sunday?

A
  1. Sparked widespread outrage and protests leading to the larger revolutionary movement known as the 1905 Revolution, which included various strikes, uprisings, and demands for political reform
  2. The Tsar issued the October Manifesto in 1905, which promised to grant civil liberties, such as freedom of speech and to establish a legislative body known as the Duma. This was an attempt to appease the public and reduce the growing revolutionary sentiments
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18
Q

What was the 1905 revolution?

A

In 1904 Russia went to war with Japan as the result of imperial rivalry in the Far East. Russia’s catastrophic defeat sparked the 1905 revolution. The revolution was not a coordinated attack on the regime but a series of dramatic events that took place over several months. They included “Bloody Sunday” in January, which saw the massacre of workers peacefully marching to the Tsar’s Winter Palace in the capital, plus innumerable strikes and mutinies. In several cities, including the capital, workers set up elected ‘soviets’ (councils) and tried to assume control.

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19
Q

What did the Tsar do to the Duma?

A

1906 he issued the Fundamental Laws which reaffirmed his autocratic power and stated that the Duma could only advise the Tsar. He dissolved the Duma multiple times and ensured it was filled with members that were more favourable of his rule. Led to further frustration amongst the Russian people

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20
Q

What was the political climate like after 1905?

A

By the end of 1905, Russia boasted several major groups or parties desiring political reform. The events of 1905 served as a catalyst for this. In February Tsar Nicholas ordered the relaxation of laws governing political censorship, publication and assembly. This unleashed a tsunami of political propaganda, publications and documents, as well as the
organisation of scores if political meetings. Groups once forced to meet illegally or semi-legally could now gather openly, form political parties, draft party manifestos and produce propaganda for public consumption. Not all these Russian political parties were Marxist or socialist. Some wanted Russia to develop into a liberal democracy, underpinned by a constitution, a constituent assembly
and individual rights and freedoms. Others believed the promises laid out in the October Manifesto went far enough.

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21
Q

What does bureaucracy mean?

A

The state’s administrative officials

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22
Q

What were the main opposition groups?

A

The Liberals
The Social Revolutionaries (SRs)
The Social Democrats (SDs)

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23
Q

Who were the Liberals?

A

loose name for groups who favoured moderate reform and constitutional monarchy. Included among these were the Constitutional Democrats (Kadets), the Octoborists and the Progressives- loose grouping of businessmen.

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24
Q

Who were the Social Revolutionaries (SRs)

A

Formed in 1901
Evolved from groups who tried to improve the position of the peasantry from the 1860s
Tried to attract workers during industrial revolution but suffered from internal divisions
Extreme terrorist elements within became more influential and gained support from some trade unions and the middle class
Suffered from a lack of discipline-limited its chance of ambition

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25
Q

Who were the Social Democrats (SDs)

A

All-Russian Social Democrat Labour Party was founded in 1898
Based on the theories of Karl Marx
Led mainly by educated intellectuals
Based its support on the rapidly expanding industrial working class-proletariat

26
Q

When and why did the SDs split?

A

1903
Lenin won a vote in favour of a strong disciplined organisation of professional revolutionaries against Julius Martov who wanted a broad party with mass working class membership and favoured working through trade unions to destroy the tsarist government.

27
Q

What 2 groups did the SDs split into?

A

Bolsheviks led by Lenin
Mensheviks led by Martov

28
Q

Who was Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (Lenin)?

A

Trained as a lawyer
Attracted by Marxism which brought him to the attention of the police
Leader of the Bolsheviks
Was in exile in Serbia when SD party was launched
1902 wrote produced the pamphlet ‘what is to be done?’-argued that a revolution was needed to destroy autocracy
Founded revolutionary newspaper called Iskra

29
Q

Who was Karl Marx?

A

German philosopher and economist best known for his ideas about capitalism and socialism
Co-authored “The Communist Manifesto” which laid out the principles of communism and critiqued the capitalist system
His first volume Das Kapital was published in Russia in 1872

30
Q

Who was Julius Martov?

A

Helped found the Emancipation of Labour and the Social Democrat movement.
Led the Mensheviks
Favoured working through trade unions and soviets to destroy government
Mensheviks banned in 1918
Exiled in 1920

31
Q

What is a reformist?

A

Supporter of gradual reform, Alexander II was known as the ‘Tsar reformer’ for measures such as the 1861 Emancipation of the Serfs, but he never intended to weaken tsarist autocracy

32
Q

What is a reactionary?

A

backward-looking and opposed to change, particularly political and social reform

33
Q

Why did the Tsar believe he was right to rule?

A

Divine right to rule

34
Q

What did Nicholas do to keep ministers weak?

A

Pitted them against each other

35
Q

What happened in 1914?

A

Russia found itself embroiled in war
Supplies were limited

36
Q

How many desertions were there by the end of the first year of the war?

A

1.5 million

37
Q

How did the war begin?

A

The war began with a display of patriotic feeling. The Tsar appeared on the balcony of the Winter Palace and soldiers and civilians fell to their knees and sang “God Bless the Tsar”.

38
Q

When was the Battle of Tannenburg?

A

August 1914

39
Q

What was the result of the Battle of Tannenburg?

A

Devastating defeat for Russia
Around 170,000 soldiers killed, wounded or captured
Defeat affected the morale of Russian troops and civilian confidence
Led to the ‘Great Retreat’ of 1915

40
Q

How many men were lost in the first 12 months of the war?

A

4 million

41
Q

What was the outcome of the Battle of Masurian Lakes?

A

Russian army suffered heavy casualties and was forced to retreat-weakened their position
Went into temporary retreat

42
Q

What did Nicholas do in 1915 which made him more unpopular?

A

Made himself commander-in-chief of the army
This was a poor decision as he not only was to blame for the state of Russia, he had to take accountability for the Russian war effort
He did not have military experience

43
Q

What was the Brusilov Offensive?

A

Despite early success, offensive stalled due to logistical issues
Brusilov said-“If I have to choose between the Tsar and Russia, I choose Russia”

44
Q

Who was running gov while Tsar was away with the war?

A

Tsarina Alexandra
She was German so people didn’t trust her
Devotion to Rasputin weakened her position

45
Q

What were overall problems with the war?

A

Weren’t enough supplies for shoulders
Nicholas lacked military experience
Transportation was weak

46
Q

What were the biggest military problems?

A

Army supplies limited and heavy casualties-lack of morale ‘peasants in uniform’
1.5 million desertions
Nicholas lost the support of Russian Generals
Disorganisation

47
Q

What were the main social and economic problems?

A

To pay for war, taxes were increased
Damage to exports cause of war caused inflation so money was basically worthless by 1917
Conscription-not enough farmers so not enough food
Rations were introduced - extreme hunger
Railway system collapsed
Unemployment soared-worker strikes
Cost of living rose by 300%

48
Q

What was the MAIN problem by 1917?

A

Loss of confidence in the Tsarist regime as all levels of society were realising that the country was failing

49
Q

What was the impact of the war on the Tsarist system?

A

Inflation-gov spending increased from 4 million roubles to 30 million. Gov put more bank notes in circulation but had no genuine value

Food supplies- impossible to sustain agricultural output. Army had first claim on food. Inflation made trading unprofitable

Transport- Disruption of transport intensified Russia’s wartime shortages. Attempt to transport millions of troops and masses of supplies to war front created unbearable pressure

50
Q

What view did the majority of duma members share?

A

The Tsar was an inept political and military leader

51
Q

What did the aristocracy, army and civil servants lead in 1917?

A

Revolution
They were at the beginning supporters of the Tsar-in 1914 duma they voted for its own supervision for the duration of the war

52
Q

What did Russia’s poor military lead the duma to do?

A

Demanded for it to be recalled . From then on the duma had become a platform for increasingly vocal critics of the Tsar and his gov for mishandling the war

53
Q

What was one major political mistake made by Nicholas and his ministers?

A

Their refusal to co-operate fully with the non-governmental organisations such as the union of Zemsto
Elected bodies formed a joint organisation Zemgor. Their success highlighted the govs failures. Hinted that there might be a workable alternative to tsardom.

54
Q

How did the Tsar destroy his last opportunity of retaining the support of the politically progressive parties?

A

His rejection to replace his incompetent cabinet with a ‘ministry of national confidence with members drawn from the duma

55
Q

What was the Progressive Bloc?

A

236 of duma created this
Coalition of liberal and moderate political parties that aimed to push for political reforms and greater representation in the Tsarist government
Addressed military failures and economic problems-advocated for a constitutional monarchy and greater democracy

56
Q

Who was Greogory Rasputin?

A

Self-ordained holy man notorious for his sexual depravity
Appeared to represent corruption taken over by royal court and gov
1907 he met the Tsar and his wife
Cured Alexei’s haemophilia
Alexandra made him a confidant and scandal followed
His behaviour made him hated at the imperial court

57
Q

Who became gov when Tsar was away?

A

Alexandra and Rasputin

58
Q

When was Rasputin murdered?

A

December 1916

59
Q

Who murdered Rasputin?

A

Group of aristocratic conspirators who wished to save the monarchy

60
Q

How was Rasputin murdered?

A

poisoned, shot, died when he was thrown trussed in a heavy curtain in the River Neva

61
Q

What was Rasputin’s importance?

A

Showed common sense and administrative skill that Russia so desperately needed