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Russia 1917-21Bolshevik Rule of Russia
The Consolidation of Bolshevik Power
1917: First Bolshevik DecreesThe Formation of the Soviet Government and Its First Acts
1917: Treaty of Brest LitovskTreaty of Brest LitovskThe ruined fortress town of Brest Litovsk, deep behind German
lines in occupied Poland, was selected by the Central Powers
(Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey) as the site to
conduct negotiations with the new Soviet government. There, on
December 2, 1917 an armistice was signed, but it would not be
Pokrovskii, Ioffe, Trotsky at Brest-Litovsk (1917)
Lenin addressing a crowd in 1920
In the early hours of October 26, 1917 the rump Second Congress of the Soviets adopted a proclamation drafted by
Lenin which declared the Provisional Government overthrown and laid out the new soviet government's program: an
immediate armistice "on all fronts," transfer of land to peasant committees, workers' control over production, the
convocation of the Constituent Assembly, bread to the cities, and the right of self-determination to all nations inhabiting
Russia. That very evening the Congress met for a second time and took three actions: decrees on peace and land,
and the formation of a new government.
The decree on peace called on the belligerent powers to cease hostilities and commit themselves to no annexations or
indemnities. It also appealed to the workers of Britain, France and Germany to support the Soviet's decision, that is, in
effect, to put pressure on their respective governments to enter into negotiations for a just peace. The land decree that
Lenin composed took its brief from the SR program and the peasant "mandates" that had been delivered to the All-
Russia Congress of Peasant Deputies in May. It proclaimed that "private ownership of land shall be abolished forever"
so that land could "become the property of the whole people, and shall pass into the use of those who cultivate it." By
recognizing what already had occurred in many parts of the country, the decree legitimized the new government in the
eyes of the peasants.
Finally, the Congress approved the formation of the new governing body presented by Lenin, the Council of People's
Commissars (Sovnarkom). It consisted of all Bolsheviks, including Lenin as chairman and thus head of the
government, Trotsky as commissar for foreign affairs, and Stalin as commissar for nationality affairs. The Congress
also selected a new Central Executive Committee (TsIK), which was to exercise full authority in between congresses.
Sixty-two of the 101 members of the TsIK were Bolsheviks, 29 were Left SRs, and the remaining ten were divided
among Menshevik-Internationalists and other minor socialist groups. The exact relationship between Sovnarkom and
the TsIK and the extent to which the rest of the country would recognize these decisions remained unclear for some
time to come.
until March 3 (NS), 1918 that a formal treaty was issued. Even thereafter, military action continued for
several months, as the German army pushed further and further into territories nominally under Soviet
control.
Initially, the Soviet government's strategy, as
articulated by Trotsky, its commissar for
foreign affairs, was "neither war nor peace."
That is, assuming that the capitalist world
was on the brink of exhaustion and that
Soviet defiance would rouse the oppressed
masses of Europe to revolution, Trotsky
argued (against the opposition of Lenin) that
the negotiations should be used for
propaganda purposes. However, after the
Germans resumed military operations on February 18 (NS) and presented stiffer demands that
included an end to the Soviet presence in Ukraine and the Baltic provinces, Lenin achieved a majority
in the party's Central Committee in favor of accepting the enemy's terms. Thus, the Treaty of Brest
Litovsk provided the fledgling Soviet government with
a "breathing spell," in effect buying it time by
sacrificing space.
This bow to expediency did not go down well with
many Bolsheviks, not to speak of their sympathizers
in Europe or Russia's war-time allies who had feared
just such a separate peace. At the Bolsheviks'
Seventh Congress, the treaty was denounced by
Nikolai Bukharin and other so-called Left Communists
as a capitulation to imperialism. It also was anathema
to the Left SRs who, having supplied several
commissars to Sovnarkom in December, withdrew
them in protest and voted against the treaty at the
Fourth Congress of Soviets.
The results in the November 1917 elections. Lenin
dissolved the assembly quickly after.
The Civil War
Causes of the Civil War
Events of the Civil War 1918–1921• The war lasted 3 years.
• White armies led by Generals Yudenich and Denikin attacked Russia from the west, Admiral Kolchak from the east.
• The Tsar and his family were put to death.
• The Red Army defeated Kolchak in 1919 – after this the British, American and French armies went home.
• The civil war caused shortages, famine and disease - millions died. There were many cruel atrocities.
• The last White army in Russia was defeated in the Crimea in 1920.
• The Red Army invaded Poland in 1921, but was defeated and driven back.
• In 1922 The Tenth Party Congress declared the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
White propaganda poster representing the Bolsheviks as a fallen communist dragon and the White Cause as a crusading knight.
Collapse of Russian Empire• Decree on Nationalities allowed national minorities chance to govern
themselves• Many territories declared independence from RSFSR• Central Siberian Region Soviet rejected Treaty of Brest-Litovsk• 33 sovereign governments in Russia (June 1918)
Political opposition• Growth of political opposition, e.g. Union for Defence of the Motherland &
Liberty (Jan 1918)• SRs and Mensheviks excluded from Constituent Assembly & Sovnakom
(Executive Committee of Soviets) joined anti-Bolshevik alliance, ‘Whites’Allied opposition
• Western allies angry with Russia’s withdrawal from WWI• Churchill sent £100m of supplies to help Whites• French govt sent 7 million francs to Kaedin, leader of Cossacks.• USA, Japan, Italy, Canada sent troops
Breakdown of law & order• Class warfare broke out – mobs and armed solidiers roamed Petrograd.• Peasants acting illegally seizing land without official sanction• Arbitrary arrest & imprisonment by Cheka
Food requisitioning• Loss of Ukraine – ‘bread basket of Russia’ as part of Tr. of B-L exacerbated
problem• Soaring inflation• Kulaks accused of grain hoarding
Why The Bolsheviks Won The War1. Whiteswere disunited and thousands of miles apart, so Trotsky could fight them one by one. 2. Trotskywas a brilliant war leader and strategist, so the Red Army had good tactics. 3. BeliefMany Russians were Communists, who believed they were fighting for a better world. Others fought for them because they hated foreign (British, American and French) armies invading Russia. This made the Bolshevik soldiers fervent and enthusiastic.
4. War CommunismThe Bolsheviks nationalised the factories, and introduced military discipline. Strikes were made illegal. Food was rationed. Peasants were forced to give food to the government. This gave the Bolshevik armies the supplies they needed. 5. TerrorThe Cheka murdered any Whites they found – more than 7000 people were executed, and Red Army generals were kept loyal by taking their families hostage – so the Bolsheviks were united. 6. WherewithalThe Bolsheviks had control of the main cities of Moscow and Petrograd (with their factories), control of the railways (vital), an army of 300,000 men, very strict army discipline, and internal lines of communication – giving them the advantage in the war.
The Kronstadt Mutiny
Source AThe Internationale
Arise, ye slaves who know starvation!Shake off the curse that binds the earth!Our reason boils with indignation,And makes us die to gain new birth.
We'll tear down our planet's false foundation,
Then build a better world anew,While he who lived in humble stationWill stand erect, as is his due.
Bolshevik propaganda poster of Trotsky slaying the counter-revolutionary dragon, 1918
The sailors at the Kronstadt naval base had long been a source of radical dissent. Mutinies had taken place during the 1905 Revolution and played an important role in persuading Nicholas II to issue his October Manifesto.
The Kronstadt sailors were also active in the overthrow of Nicholas II in the February Revolution. A
Effects of KronstadtThe Kronstadt rebellion had two key effects:
1. Many socialists all over the world lost faith in the Bolshevik revolution, which they now saw as a repressive regime.
2. Lenin realised that he would have to relax War Communism, or he was going to provoke a revolution which would throw out the Bolsheviks; this was why he invented the ‘New Economic Policy’.
The sailors at the Kronstadt naval base had long been a source of radical dissent. Mutinies had taken place during the 1905 Revolution and played an important role in persuading Nicholas II to issue his October Manifesto.
The Kronstadt sailors were also active in the overthrow of Nicholas II in the February Revolution. A
Russian Civil War Posters
Why was War Communism introduced? The Red Army needed to be supplied
with food and weapons to help it fight the Civil War against the Whites.
The Bolsheviks were Communists. They wanted to take control of industry and food production in Russia.
What was War Communism? The Bolsheviks took control of
factories, mines, workshops and railways.
Workers were forced to work in factories.
Grain was taken from the peasants using force.
The Bolsheviks took control of the banks.
Private trade was not allowed. Food was rationed.
Why did War Communism fail?
Grain hidden
Peasants hid grain. Many peasants were arrested or shot.
Fall in food production
Peasants grew less grain. This led to a famine in 1921.
Food shortages and famine
There were food shortages in towns.
Fall in factory production
The number of goods produced by factories did not increase as a result of War
Communism.
Kronstadt Rebellion
The sailors at the Kronstadt naval base revolted against the Bolshevik government in
1921. They wanted an end to War communism.
In December, 1917, Felix Dzerzhinsky was appointed as Commissar for Internal Affairs and head of the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage (Cheka). As Dzerzhinsky later commented: "In the October Revolution, I was a member of the Military Revolutionary Committee, and then I was entrusted with the task of organizing the Extraordinary Commission for the Struggle against Sabotage and Counterrevolution I was appointed its Chairman, holding at the same time the post of Commissar for Internal Affairs."
Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky argued that unless internal opposition to the government was removed the White Army would win the Civil War. The Constituent Assembly was closed down and political parties such as the Cadets, Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries were banned. Strict censorship was also introduced with all anti-Bolshevik newspapers being closed down.
Political repression was intensified after two incidents in August, 1918. Moisei Uritsky, chief of the Petrograd Secret Police was assassinated by a student and two weeks later Fanya Kaplan shot and severely wounded Vladimir Lenin. These violent acts were blamed on the Socialist Revolutionaries.
Joseph Stalin, who was in Tsaritsyn at the time, sent a telegram advocating an "open and systematic mass terror" against those responsible. The advice of Stalin, who had used these tactics successfully in Tsaritsyn, was accepted and in September, 1918, Felix Dzerzhinsky, head of the Cheka, instigated the Red Terror. It is estimated that in the next few months 800 socialists were arrested and shot without trial. In the first year the official figure, almost certainly an underestimate, suggested 6,300 people were executed without trial.
Red Terror
Yekaterinburg's "Church on the Blood", built on the spot where the Ipatiev House once stood
Following the tsar’s abdication, the Imperial Family (pictured in 1913) was kept under house arrest first in the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo, 15 miles south of Petrograd, then, from August 1917, in Tobolsk in Western Siberia. In April
Following the tsar’s abdication, the Imperial Family (pictured in 1913) was kept under house arrest first in the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo, 15 miles south of Petrograd, then, from August 1917, in Tobolsk in Western Siberia. In April 1918, they were transferred to Yekaterinburg in the Urals and kept in a former merchant’s house, known by the Bolsheviks obscurely as the ‘House of Special Purpose’.
In July 1918, a legion of Czech troops were closing in on the town, and the Bolsheviks, fearing the Romanovs might be
After the civil war, Lenin revised his economic policy and introduced the New Economic Policy (NEP). Through this, peasants were allowed to sell some of their produce for profit and small traders were allowed to run businesses.
The NEP: how successful was Lenin's attempt to set up a Communist state?
In 1921, the Kronstadt sailors - who had been the Bolsheviks fiercest supporters -mutinied, demanding an end to War Communism. Trotsky put down the rebellion, but Lenin was worried - if the Kronstadt sailors had been pushed too far, how long would it be before the rest of the country rose up and threw out the Bolsheviks? The civil war was won. It was time to pull back.
Lenin brought in what he called the New Economic Policy. Peasants who had been forced to hand over all their produce to the war effort - were allowed to keep some to sell for profit - some (the kulaks) became quite rich. Small traders called Nepmen were allowed to set up businesses. At the same
Why did War Communism fail?
Grain hidden
Peasants hid grain. Many peasants were arrested or shot.
Fall in food production
Peasants grew less grain. This led to a famine in 1921.
Food shortages and famine
There were food shortages in towns.
Fall in factory production
The number of goods produced by factories did not increase as a result of War
Communism.
Kronstadt Rebellion
The sailors at the Kronstadt naval base revolted against the Bolshevik government in
1921. They wanted an end to War communism.
Yekaterinburg's "Church on the Blood", built on the spot where the Ipatiev House once stood
Following the tsar’s abdication, the Imperial Family (pictured in 1913) was kept under house arrest first in the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo, 15 miles south of Petrograd, then, from August 1917, in Tobolsk in Western Siberia. In April
Execution of Tsar Nicholas
II
time, local nationalities who had been forced to follow a strict Communist line were allowed to bring back their own language and customs. Churches, mosques and bazaars were re-opened.
The economy picked up, and people were much happier. But many old Bolsheviks said Lenin had sold out to capitalism, and left the party.
USEFUL WEBSITEShttp://www.soviethistory.org/index.php
http://www.johndclare.net/Russ1.htm
http://www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/learning/bitesize/standard/history/russia_1914_1941/