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The Russian Revolution, Part I. State Emblem of the Russian Empire, 1890s. THE RUSSIAN SYSTEM The state, militarized and costly, heavily exploited society (especially the peasantry)
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THE RUSSIAN SYSTEM • The state, militarized and costly, heavily exploited society (especially the peasantry) • The political system was autocratic-patrimonial, with the monarch being the supreme owner of the country and the sole source of sovereignty • The church was subservient to the state • Real power in the state was held by massive and corrupt bureaucracy • Individual rights and liberties were severely curbed • Society had no legal means of influencing government policies – the people had an impact on the state either by obedience to it or by resistance to it (passive or active) • Market economy and private ownership had limited potential for development • When reforms became overdue, the state acted as the main agent of change, usually with limited effect
Russia’s 19th century: • The apex of expansion – and the lag behind the West • The pressures for change • The reforms of Alexander II • Development of capitalism vs. • Political modernization Capitalism was creating new classes, new issues, new conflicts – and the state was expected to evolve to be able to deal with them. But the Russian state was not up to the task. It was not part of the solution, it was the source of additional problems
Coronation of Nicholas II: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2b-Cfe7fPok
Tsar Nicholas II and the Romanov Family • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bo9sNh5InkY&feature=related
The Russian “battle order” The effects of wars on the Russian system: successful wars (1721, 1815, 1878, 1945) – reaffirmed the status-quo, strengthened the state, discouraged reforms unsuccessful wars (1856, 1905, 1917, 1989) – fostered reforms and revolutions
Start of the Russo-Japanese War • Jan.1904: Japan attacks Russian Navy in Korea and China • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwxHNGAM-KU&feature=related
The Battle of Tsushima, May 1905: Japanese Navy sinks Russian fleet
The 1905-07 Revolution • January 1905 • Defeats of the Russian army and navy in war with Japan trigger off discontent over socioeconomic conditions and lack of political rights • January 9: The Bloody Sunday • In St. Petersburg, 140,000 workers, led by a priest, march to the Royal Palace with a petition to the Tsar, asking for reforms • They are met with troops who fire on the crowds
January 9th, 1905: 200 killed, 800 wounded, the first victims of the Russian revolution
Classic confrontation between state and society • Repression backfires • Society revolts against the state, demanding: • Resolution of pressing social issues, such as land reform • Political freedoms • Accountable government • Peace
Participants: • Industrial workers • Peasants • Soldiers • Students • Intellectuals • Businessmen • Clergy • Non-Russian nationalities
Forms of struggle: • Demonstrations • Strikes, many of them political • Takeovers of farmland • Armed revolts • Mutinies in the armed forces • Political self-organization of civil society • Creation of political parties – from Left to Right • Creation of labour unions, independent professional associations, etc. • Creation of Soviets as new bodies of democratic government, challenging the autocratic state
Mutiny on battleship “Potemkin”, June 1905 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3NmRPjesOA&feature=related
The government’s response • Peace with Japan • Repression • Reforms, beginning with the Tsar’s October 1905 Manifesto, granting political freedoms and parliamentary elections • By 1907, the revolution subsides • But no viable new form of state-society relations has been created • Stalemate • The Tsar is a reactionary, rejects democracy • The nobility is stuck in the old order • The capitalist class is too dependent on the state, too afraid to show initiative
The gap between the rulers and the ruled • Reforms stimulate radical protest • THE ATTRACTIONS OF SOCIALISM • When the state resorts to repression, that only makes the state-society gap even wider • Russia’s options: • A liberal-capitalist path: what it would require • An authoritarian-capitalist path: what it would require • A non-capitalist path
The summer of 1914 marked a watershed in world history: • For the first time ever, a world war began • Since 1914, we’ve experienced 4 world wars • They are historically connected with each other – like links of a chain • They may be viewed as 4 stages of one continuous period of global conflict
What made world wars possible: • 1. An integrated world – globalization • 2. Struggle for power within countries acquires international dimensions • 3. Availability of economic resources • 4. Development of military technologies • 5. The culture of war • New rationalizations of war • The idea of total war
World War I: 1914-1918 Resulted from: • -Rivalries between states (Germany-Britain, France-Germany, Russia-Austria, Russia-Turkey, etc.) • -Social tensions within states • -Nationalist struggles against empires The war for power and influence inside the global capitalist system • Expected to be brief • The reality: a bloody 4-year stalemate • Ended by revolutions in Russia (1917) and Germany (1918) • 15 mln. deaths, incl. 9 mln. combat • The flu pandemic of 1918-1919: 20-40 mln. deaths: a direct environmental effect of “the Great War”
Causes of Russia’s involvement in World War I: - own imperial goals (the Balkans and Transcaucasus): natural behaviour of an empire - influence of Britain and France - a war to avoid a revolution The clash of empires: The interstate conflict The internal factors: - interplay of nationalisms - class conflicts - struggles over democratic reforms
THE WAR AS A REVOLUTIONARY FORCE: it tested the West and undermined capitalism • Results of the war: -Collapse of 4 empires: Russian, Austro-Hungarian, German, Turkish -World capitalism severely undermined – North and South (economically, politically, socially, ideologically) -The rise of socialprotest and revolutionary movements everywhere
1917 The protracted, stalemated war puts heavy burden on Russia The growing mood of anger and protest February 1917: mass demonstrations break out in Petrograd The government orders troops to fire on demonstrators Soldiers turn on their officers and join the protest Massive revolt engulfs the country The Tsar abdicates The state authority collapses within a week