The Februrary/March Revolution of 1917 Flashcards
Why was there an increase in urban unrest, strikes and protests that occurred in major cities by 1916?
WW1 had created extreme economic hardship - war continued- goods became increasingly scarce - inflation = value of workers wages cut by half
How many workers were on strike in Russia in 1914 and 1916?
1914=10,000
1916=880,000
What were the primary causes of peasant unrest?
War brought hardship to rural areas - young male peasants conscripted in large numbers - dramatic drop in rural workforce .
Horses requisitioned to help with war
Grain prices kept low but rising inflation = fall of standards of living in the countryside
What was the Tsar’s initial response to the unrest?
Complacent - despite the Okhrana and Army leadership being aware of the unrest he assumed that after 1905 the government could survive even severe unrest
What happened in February when the Government announced that bread would be rationed from 1st of March?
Panic buying, food shortages and mood strikes
On 23rd February thousands of women took to streets in Petrograd to celebrate International Women’s Day.
Women in major textile factories in Petrograd went on strike in protest of bread rationing and appealed to male workers of Putilov Engineering Works to join the strike.
In the last days of February how did the Tsar’s power crumble?
By 25th of February 200,000 people protested on streets of Petrograd, workers established soviets to put forward their demands, Cossack troops instructed to supress protest refused to stop the rebellion and reports reached the Tsar that his own troops were handing out rifles and bread to people of Petrograd
Major factories and most shops closed
Why did the capital of Russia change it’s name three times between 1894 and 1924?
Originally called St Petersburg - changed to Petrograd in 1914 when Government decided it sounded too Germanic
Changed again in 1924 to Leningrad in honour of Lenin
Who suggested the Tsar’s abdication and when did he agree?
Representatives from the Duma met the Tsar on his train and requested his abdication - he agreed to abdicate on March 2nd
Apart from himself who did the Tsar abdicate for?
His son who suffered from haemophilia, The Tsar believed he was too ill to assume the government of Russia (His brother then refused to take power)
What two things were different for Nicholas II in 1905 than in 1917, meaning he could not reassert power?
In 1905 he had support of the army, in 1917 senior generals indicated they were not willing to help him
In 1905 he was able to compromise with the middle class, by 1917 they had lost faith in the Tsar due to rumours of corruption and incompetence of his wartime government
Was the revolution popular?
By the time of Nicholas’s abdication support for him had universally collapsed and few people wanted him to continue running the country
What caused further discontent?
The introduction of bread rationing
What happened on Thursday the 23rd of February?
International Women’s day march - women marched towards the centre and went to the factories in Petrograd calling men cowards if they would not join them. Many striked including women tram drivers who overturned trams into the street
90,000 workers on strike and 50 factories closed - joined the womens day march = 240,000 on the streets - order restored by desperate police force - no loss of life
What had happened to the march by the afternoon?
Women had persuaded men from the Putilov engineering works and other factories to join them
What happened over the next few days?
Demonstrations grew taking on a more political nature - demands for bread turned into demands for an end to war and an end to the Tsar .
People from all classes joined and by Saturday it was virtually a general strike - major factories, shops and restaurants closed
Why couldn’t the International Women’s day march be dealt with effectively like previous demonstrations?
The soldiers had joined the demonstration as they often identified more with the people on the street and their discontent