The Russian Revolution
The Russian Revolution is dated to November 1917 (October 1917 on the Russian
calendar), when Bolshevik Party forces took over the government offices in Petrograd.
However, the problems that led toward revolution had been developing for generations.
The revolution’s consequences, too, were far-reaching—the Communist Party, which
formed to lead post-revolutionary Russia, remained in power until 1991.
Causes
• Widespread suffering under autocracy—a form of government in which one
person, in this case the czar, has absolute power
• Weak leadership of Czar Nicholas II—clung to autocracy despite changing times
• Poor working conditions, low wages, and hazards of industrialization
• New revolutionary movements that believed a worker-run government should
replace czarist rule
• Russian defeat in the Russo-Japanese War (1905), which led to rising unrest
• Bloody Sunday, the massacre of unarmed protestors outside the palace, in 1905
• Devastation of World War I—high casualties, economic ruin, widespread hunger
• The March Revolution in 1917, in which soldiers who were brought in for crowd
control ultimately joined labor activists in calling “Down with the autocracy!”
Consequences
• The government is taken over by the Bolshevik Party, led by V. I. Lenin; later, it
will be known as the Communist Party.
• Farmland is distributed among farmers, and factories are given to workers.
• Banks are nationalized and a national council is assembled to run the economy.
• Russia pulls out of World War I, signing the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, conceding
much land to Germany.
• Czarist rule ends. Nicholas II, his wife and five children are executed.
• Civil war, between Bolshevik (“red”) and anti-Bolshevik (“white”) forces, sweeps
Russia from 1918 to 1920. Around 15 million die in conflict and the famine
• The Russian economy is in shambles. Industrial production drops, trade all but
ceases, and skilled workers flee the country.
• Lenin asserts his control by cruel methods such as the Gulag, a vast and brutal
network of prison camps for both criminals and political prisoners.
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