Russia and The War Effort +Economic and Social state Flashcards
How big was Russia’s army at beginning of war?
1.4 million soldiers
3 million reservists = biggest in Europe
What did military reforms in 1908 lead to?
10 year programme to modernise army including introduction to military aircraft
What were some of the key weaknesses in the Russian army?
Incompetent general help senior positions due to their family connections - not skill
Russian soldiers least educated of any European army
Russian industry underdeveloped so arms production = comparatively inefficient
How did WW1 expose the weaknesses of the Russian army?
Initial victories = short-lived
Russian defeat at Battle of Tannenberg let to ‘Great Retreat’ of 1915
Attempts to regain initiative through ‘Brusilov Offensive’ in 1916 also ended in failure
What was the key economic problem in WW1?
Inflation - by 1917 it had reached 200%
Price of flour rose by 500%
What was the grain problem?
By Jan 1917 Petrograd only getting 48% of it’s grain requirements = army forced to reduce rations from 4000 calories a day to 2000
How much did the population in Petrograd rise by and why?
Petrpgrad = 2.1 million in 1914 but 2.7 million by 1917 because growth of war economy meant more workers were employed in factories in cities
What two other key supply problems did Russia face?
Munitions crisis - By 1915 artillery units limited to 3 shells a day = military setbacks
Russia’s transport stuggled to cope with need to transport troops, munitions and food = exacerbated food shortages in cities and munition shortages on the front line
What did the Tsar do in August 1915? (Army)
Took personal command of the army becmong ‘Commander-in-Chief’ of the Russian armed forces
For what two reasons did the absence of the Tsar undermine faith in the government?
- Rumours circulated that the Tsar’s wife was in charge of the government - she was born in Germany so many believed she was a German agent (and having an affair with Rasputin)
- Rumours suggested the Tsar and Tsarina were under the influence of Grigori Rasputin (reputation of a drunken womaniser) -> damaging authority of royal family
What were Rasputin and the Tsarina accused of doing during the 1916 ‘ministerial leapfrog’?
- Giving jobs to their favourites as they replaced four prime ministers, three foreign secretaries, three ministers of defence and six interior ministers
What happened when members of the aristocracy became aware of the impact gossip about Rasputin was having on the government?
Prince Felix Yusupov (in December 1916) working with other aristocrats and politicians assassinated Rasputin but this failed to change public opinion
What was the Progressive Bloc?
A political alliance of Duma deputies united by their desire for constitutional reform
What happened in the summer of 1915 when the Tsar recalled the Duma?
236/442 Duma deputies formed the progressive bloc demanding a ‘government of confidence’ (new government comprising leading members of the Duma which could manage the war effort competently)
The Tsar refused to collaborate with the Progressive Bloc believing Duma had no right to play a role in government
What happened at the start of the war, that got Russia involved?
- August 1st Nicholas persuaded to declare war on Germany, invaded Germany soon after but success short lived
- two Russian armies didn’t communicate and used out of date maps, suffered succession of heavy defeats
What two significant consequences did Nicholas II’s decision to take command of the army have?
1) he would be responsible for military failures
2) he was removed from the capital
Who warned the Tsar of the unrest and when did he eventually abdicate?
- Rodzianko warned of severe unrest and need for immediate action but the Tsar preferred to listen to the letters of his wife.
- He was more concerned about his childrens measles than ‘children running about and screaming that they have no bread’ and he reassured his wife it would calm down
- March 1st he was forced to abdicate