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Revision Notes
(GCSE)
   Causes of the revolution
   March Revolution 1917
   November Revolution 1917
   Civil Wars 1918-21
   Economy 1918-29
   Collectivisation of Agriculture
   Industrialisation
   Purges
   N.B.
Back to Contents




Russia was a police       Widespread          Russia was unfit for
       state               poverty               war in 1914



                       Millions of peasant
Army was badly led     soldier deaths on       Tsarina Alexandra
                       the Eastern Front


            Inflation and food
                                     Failure of Tsar
            shortages causing
                                      Nicholas II
               more strikes
Back to Contents




1.       Russia was a police state
          Dumas (Parliament) was ignored
          Attempted reform by Witte and Stolypin failed
2.       Widespread poverty
          Strikes increased after 1912
3.       Russia was unfit for war in 1914
          Army was badly equipped
          Industry unable to produce enough arms
          Inadequate transportation
4.       Army was badly led
          Tsar took over and blamed for military defeats and
           domestic problems
Back to Contents




5.       Millions of peasant soldier deaths on the Eastern
         Front
          Peasants more angry at giving grain and horses to army
6.       Tsarina Alexandra
          Hated for being German
          Taking advice of Rasputin and influencing the Tsar
7.       Inflation and food shortages causing more strikes
8.       Failure of Tsar Nicholas II
          Ignored or did not understand the situation
          Indecisive and seemingly easily led by the Tsarina and
           advisors
Back to Contents




                       Troops refused to
    Food riots and                            Petrograd in hands
                       fire on people and
strikes were crushed                               of armed
                       allowed food to be
     by the army                                revolutionaries
                         given to people


    Provisional
                          Provisional         Government was
 Government and
                       Government made         unpopular with
  the Petrograd
                         Tsar abdicate         continued war
Soviet were formed


 Lenin and Trotsky          Bolsheviks
                                              “Bread, Peace and
    returned to           attempted and
                                                   Land”
     Petrograd         failed to take power
Back to Contents




1.       Food riots and strikes were crushed by the army
          Petrograd in February / March
2.       Troops refused to fire on people and allowed food to
         be given to people
          12 March
3.       Petrograd in hands of armed revolutionaries
          Within 4 days
4.       Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet
         were formed
          Prince Lvov led the government, full of middle class
           liberals not representing the people
          Lenin led the Soviet and representative of the people
5.       Provisional Government made Tsar abdicate
          15 March
Back to Contents




6.       Government was unpopular with continued war
            Revolutionary workers took over factories
            Peasants seized land
            Law and order broke out
            Troops deserted in their thousands
7.       Lenin and Trotsky returned to Petrograd
            Lenin helped by Germans into Russia from Switzerland
         ▪     Hope to cause revolution to end war on the Eastern Front
8.       Bolsheviks attempted and failed to take power
            Kerensky formed a new government which continued
             the war
9.       “Bread, Peace and Land”
            Trotsky planned the seizure of power
Back to Contents




Bolsheviks seized Petrograd’s key buildings
including the Winter Palace

Soon controlled major cities


2 decrees issued


Lenin dismissed the elected Duma


Treaty of Brest Litovsk
Back to Contents




1.       Bolsheviks seize power
            6-7 November – Bolsheviks seized Petrograd’s key
             buildings including the Winter Palace
         ▪    Signal for uprising from naval cruiser (Aurora)
            Soon controlled major cities
         ▪    Little fighting and few casualties
         ▪    Ministers of the Provisional Government arrested
            2 decrees issued
         ▪    Peace Decree – immediate armistice
         ▪    Land Decree – abolished private estates and created 25
              million small holdings
            January 1918 – Lenin dismissed the elected Duma
Back to Contents




   Treaty of Brest Litovsk – March 1918
     Trotsky negotiated with German and Austria-
      Hungary representatives
     Terms were very harsh
      ▪   Loss of Poland and Baltic states
      ▪   Independence of Finland and Ukraine
      ▪   Loss of ¼ of Russia’s coal and iron
      ▪   75% of population was lost
Back to Contents




Bolsheviks organised a secret police and Red Army

US/ British/ French/ Japanese forces invaded

War fought by the Red Army and the Whites

White armies were armed by the Allies but disunited

Russia lost millions of people
Back to Contents




1.       Bolsheviks (now Communists) organised a
         secret police (Cheka) and Red Army
2.       US/British/French/Japanese forces invaded
         Russia 1918-19
3.       War fought by the Red Army (led by Trotsky)
         and the Whites
4.       White armies in Ukraine, Baltic and Siberia
         were armed by the Allies
         Disunited and defeated in 1920
5.       Russia lost (approx) 2 million troops in WW1
         and maybe even more millions in civil war
Back to Contents




  War Communism        New Economic Policy
                                                Lenin’s Death 1924
      1918-21                1921-7
• Nationalisation      • Small private         • No obvious
• Government control     enterprise              successor but
  of grain and wages     permitted               warned Party about
• Fall in output       • Rents and charges       Stalin
• Famine                 reintroduced on all   • Main contenders
                         services                were Trotsky,
                       • Peasants could sell     Kamenev, Zinoviev
                         surplus produce         and Stalin
                                               • Stalin’s policy of
                                                 ‘socialism in one
                                                 country’
                                               • Stalin
                                                 outmanoeuvred
                                                 rivals
Back to Contents




 1.    War Communism 1918-21
       Introduce Marxist theory and rebuild Russia but failed
      Aims/ Introductions:                Disadvantages:
A.    Nationalised banks and              a) Industrial output fell to
      factories, and banned private          15% of 1913 level
      trade
                                          b) Urban workers returned
B.    Rents, railway fares, electricity
      and gas were free                      to farm work
C.    Government seized grain to          c) Peasants produced for
      feed urban populous                    themselves reducing
D.    Rationing introduced and wages         output to 50.5% of 1913
      paid in kind
                                          d) Famine led to deaths of
E.    Aimed to remove use of money
                                             5 million
Back to Contents




1.    New Economic Policy 1921-7
      Economy deteriorating rapidly, unrest in the
       countryside, riots in Petrograd, mutiny in
       Kronstadt
      Lenin began NEP March 1921
       a)   Small private enterprise permitted
       b)   Rents and charges reintroduced on all services
       c)   Peasants could sell surplus produce
       d)   NEP only abandoned with the first 5 Year Plan
Back to Contents




   Lenin’s Death 1924
     No obvious successor but warned Party about
     Stalin
      ▪ Main contenders were Trotsky, Kamenev, Zinoviev and
        Stalin
      ▪ Stalin held two important posts and many owed their
        jobs to him
      ▪ Policy of ‘socialism in one country’
      ▪ Stalin outmanoeuvred rivals by expelling them, firing
        them or having them in exile to ensure his own
        succession
      ▪ By late 1927, Stalin was sole leader and Trotsky was
        exiled
Back to Contents




                  •   Larger farming units are more efficient
                  •   Increased output
                  •   Cheaper food
Why Collectivise? •   Transferral of work from agriculture to industrial




                  • Assets amalgamated to form a Kolkhoz
                  • Collective in theory under control of the workers but in practice run by a member of the Party
                  • Produce bought very cheaply by the State
 Organisation




                  •   Kulaks opposed collectivisation
                  •   Thousand of Kulaks killed or deported
                  •   Massive drop in output
Consequences of •     Up 50% of livestock was slaughtered
 Collectivisation •   Famine in the early 1930’s
Back to Contents




1.       Why Collectivise?
            Larger farming units are more efficient
         ▪    Less workers required and more machinery used
            Increased output
         ▪    Allowing for exportation to raise money to buy
              machinery
            Cheaper food
         ▪    Less need to raise wages of industrial workers
         ▪    More money to buy key items from abroad
            Transferral of work from agriculture to industrial
Back to Contents




2.       Organisation
         Assets from a number of small farms
          amalgamated to form a collective (Kolkhoz)
         Collective in theory under control of the workers
          but in practice run by a member of the Party
         Produce bought very cheaply by the State
         Process began in 1928, by 1937 most arable land
          in collectives
Back to Contents




3.       Consequences of Collectivisation
            Wealthy peasants (Kulaks) opposed collectivisation
         ▪    Destroyed assets to prevent State getting them
            Thousand of Kulaks killed or deported to labour
             camps
            Massive drop in output because reorganisation
             disrupted sowing and harvesting
            Kulaks removed but they were the best, most
             efficient and successful farmers
            Up 50% of livestock was slaughtered
            Famine in the early 1930’s leading to deaths of
             (approx.) 10 million peasants
Back to Contents




Stalin believed in State Planning

5 Year Plans were introduced in 1928, 1932 and 1937

Aims:
 • Industrialise
 • Plans were under control of the State planning agency Gosplan
 • Emphasis was on heavy industry, coal, oil and steel
   • Consumer products were in the 3rd plan but war interrupted schemes
 • Industrial production and production of electricity increased
 • Most new industrial areas were away from possible threat if there was war

Results:
 • By 1941 industrial production was 4 times that of 1914
 • Many factories were inefficient with unrealistic targets
 • By 1941, many millions were better housed, better educated, better health care and (just) better fed
 • State propaganda made all successes attributed to Stalin
Back to Contents




1.       Stalin believed in State Planning
2.       5 Year Plans were introduced in 1928, 1932 and 1937
3.       Aims:
            Industrialise the USSR but not under capitalism
            Plans were under control of the State planning agency
             Gosplan
            Emphasis was on heavy industry, coal, oil and steel
         ▪     Consumer products were in the 3rd plan but war interrupted schemes
            Industrial production and production of electricity increased
             with some workers becoming national heros
         ▪     E.g. Stakhanov
            Prestige projects were built with slave labour and high cost of
             life
            Most new industrial areas were away from possible threat if
             there was war (Central Russia or Siberia)
Back to Contents




4.    Results
      By 1941 industrial production was 4 times that of 1914
       ▪ High cost to life
      Many factories were inefficient with unrealistic
       targets
       ▪ Targets that weren’t met led to deaths of
      By 1941, many millions were better housed, better
       educated, better health care and (just) better fed
      State propaganda made all successes attributed to
       Stalin
Back to Contents




                                                    It aimed to create terror
Stalin was determined                                  so prevent criticising
                             He purged many
    to prevent any                                   Stalin or the State and
                           hundreds of thousands
      opposition                                        make people work
                                                              harder


    1934 saw the
                                                       Many of Lenin’s
assassination of Kirov,
                            1936-38 show trials        colleagues were
 popular head of the
                                were held           condemned as enemies
 Communist Party in
                                                        of the people
      Leningrad


                                                           Trotsky was
                           Stalin used the purges
1937 saw a severe purge                              assassinated in Mexico
                             to consolidate his
of leading Army officers                            City in 1941 after he was
                                 leadership
                                                          exiled in 1928
Back to Contents




1.  Stalin was determined to prevent any
   opposition
2. He purged many hundreds of thousands, either
   sent to Gulags (camps) or killed
3. It aimed to create terror so prevent criticising
   Stalin or the State and make people work
   harder
4. 1934 saw the assassination of Kirov, popular
   head of the Communist Party in Leningrad
         Stalin probably ordered it though other rivals were
          made scapegoats
5.       1936-38 show trials were held
Back to Contents




6.       Many of Lenin’s colleagues were condemned as
         enemies of the people
         Millions were convicted and sent to Gulags or executed
7.       1937 saw a severe purge of leading Army officers
         Severe consequences for WW2
8.       Stalin used the purges to consolidate his
         leadership
         Collectivisation and industrialisation gained him many
          enemies
9.       Trotsky was assassinated in Mexico City in 1941
         after he was exiled in 1928
         Pursued for his important role in the Revolution and
          Civil War
Back to Contents




1917-19

• Use the term Bolsheviks then
  Communists

1918-90

• Use the terms Soviet Union or USSR
  (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)

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Russia 1917 41 revision notes

  • 2. Causes of the revolution  March Revolution 1917  November Revolution 1917  Civil Wars 1918-21  Economy 1918-29  Collectivisation of Agriculture  Industrialisation  Purges  N.B.
  • 3. Back to Contents Russia was a police Widespread Russia was unfit for state poverty war in 1914 Millions of peasant Army was badly led soldier deaths on Tsarina Alexandra the Eastern Front Inflation and food Failure of Tsar shortages causing Nicholas II more strikes
  • 4. Back to Contents 1. Russia was a police state  Dumas (Parliament) was ignored  Attempted reform by Witte and Stolypin failed 2. Widespread poverty  Strikes increased after 1912 3. Russia was unfit for war in 1914  Army was badly equipped  Industry unable to produce enough arms  Inadequate transportation 4. Army was badly led  Tsar took over and blamed for military defeats and domestic problems
  • 5. Back to Contents 5. Millions of peasant soldier deaths on the Eastern Front  Peasants more angry at giving grain and horses to army 6. Tsarina Alexandra  Hated for being German  Taking advice of Rasputin and influencing the Tsar 7. Inflation and food shortages causing more strikes 8. Failure of Tsar Nicholas II  Ignored or did not understand the situation  Indecisive and seemingly easily led by the Tsarina and advisors
  • 6. Back to Contents Troops refused to Food riots and Petrograd in hands fire on people and strikes were crushed of armed allowed food to be by the army revolutionaries given to people Provisional Provisional Government was Government and Government made unpopular with the Petrograd Tsar abdicate continued war Soviet were formed Lenin and Trotsky Bolsheviks “Bread, Peace and returned to attempted and Land” Petrograd failed to take power
  • 7. Back to Contents 1. Food riots and strikes were crushed by the army  Petrograd in February / March 2. Troops refused to fire on people and allowed food to be given to people  12 March 3. Petrograd in hands of armed revolutionaries  Within 4 days 4. Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet were formed  Prince Lvov led the government, full of middle class liberals not representing the people  Lenin led the Soviet and representative of the people 5. Provisional Government made Tsar abdicate  15 March
  • 8. Back to Contents 6. Government was unpopular with continued war  Revolutionary workers took over factories  Peasants seized land  Law and order broke out  Troops deserted in their thousands 7. Lenin and Trotsky returned to Petrograd  Lenin helped by Germans into Russia from Switzerland ▪ Hope to cause revolution to end war on the Eastern Front 8. Bolsheviks attempted and failed to take power  Kerensky formed a new government which continued the war 9. “Bread, Peace and Land”  Trotsky planned the seizure of power
  • 9. Back to Contents Bolsheviks seized Petrograd’s key buildings including the Winter Palace Soon controlled major cities 2 decrees issued Lenin dismissed the elected Duma Treaty of Brest Litovsk
  • 10. Back to Contents 1. Bolsheviks seize power  6-7 November – Bolsheviks seized Petrograd’s key buildings including the Winter Palace ▪ Signal for uprising from naval cruiser (Aurora)  Soon controlled major cities ▪ Little fighting and few casualties ▪ Ministers of the Provisional Government arrested  2 decrees issued ▪ Peace Decree – immediate armistice ▪ Land Decree – abolished private estates and created 25 million small holdings  January 1918 – Lenin dismissed the elected Duma
  • 11. Back to Contents  Treaty of Brest Litovsk – March 1918  Trotsky negotiated with German and Austria- Hungary representatives  Terms were very harsh ▪ Loss of Poland and Baltic states ▪ Independence of Finland and Ukraine ▪ Loss of ¼ of Russia’s coal and iron ▪ 75% of population was lost
  • 12. Back to Contents Bolsheviks organised a secret police and Red Army US/ British/ French/ Japanese forces invaded War fought by the Red Army and the Whites White armies were armed by the Allies but disunited Russia lost millions of people
  • 13. Back to Contents 1. Bolsheviks (now Communists) organised a secret police (Cheka) and Red Army 2. US/British/French/Japanese forces invaded Russia 1918-19 3. War fought by the Red Army (led by Trotsky) and the Whites 4. White armies in Ukraine, Baltic and Siberia were armed by the Allies  Disunited and defeated in 1920 5. Russia lost (approx) 2 million troops in WW1 and maybe even more millions in civil war
  • 14. Back to Contents War Communism New Economic Policy Lenin’s Death 1924 1918-21 1921-7 • Nationalisation • Small private • No obvious • Government control enterprise successor but of grain and wages permitted warned Party about • Fall in output • Rents and charges Stalin • Famine reintroduced on all • Main contenders services were Trotsky, • Peasants could sell Kamenev, Zinoviev surplus produce and Stalin • Stalin’s policy of ‘socialism in one country’ • Stalin outmanoeuvred rivals
  • 15. Back to Contents 1. War Communism 1918-21  Introduce Marxist theory and rebuild Russia but failed Aims/ Introductions: Disadvantages: A. Nationalised banks and a) Industrial output fell to factories, and banned private 15% of 1913 level trade b) Urban workers returned B. Rents, railway fares, electricity and gas were free to farm work C. Government seized grain to c) Peasants produced for feed urban populous themselves reducing D. Rationing introduced and wages output to 50.5% of 1913 paid in kind d) Famine led to deaths of E. Aimed to remove use of money 5 million
  • 16. Back to Contents 1. New Economic Policy 1921-7  Economy deteriorating rapidly, unrest in the countryside, riots in Petrograd, mutiny in Kronstadt  Lenin began NEP March 1921 a) Small private enterprise permitted b) Rents and charges reintroduced on all services c) Peasants could sell surplus produce d) NEP only abandoned with the first 5 Year Plan
  • 17. Back to Contents  Lenin’s Death 1924  No obvious successor but warned Party about Stalin ▪ Main contenders were Trotsky, Kamenev, Zinoviev and Stalin ▪ Stalin held two important posts and many owed their jobs to him ▪ Policy of ‘socialism in one country’ ▪ Stalin outmanoeuvred rivals by expelling them, firing them or having them in exile to ensure his own succession ▪ By late 1927, Stalin was sole leader and Trotsky was exiled
  • 18. Back to Contents • Larger farming units are more efficient • Increased output • Cheaper food Why Collectivise? • Transferral of work from agriculture to industrial • Assets amalgamated to form a Kolkhoz • Collective in theory under control of the workers but in practice run by a member of the Party • Produce bought very cheaply by the State Organisation • Kulaks opposed collectivisation • Thousand of Kulaks killed or deported • Massive drop in output Consequences of • Up 50% of livestock was slaughtered Collectivisation • Famine in the early 1930’s
  • 19. Back to Contents 1. Why Collectivise?  Larger farming units are more efficient ▪ Less workers required and more machinery used  Increased output ▪ Allowing for exportation to raise money to buy machinery  Cheaper food ▪ Less need to raise wages of industrial workers ▪ More money to buy key items from abroad  Transferral of work from agriculture to industrial
  • 20. Back to Contents 2. Organisation  Assets from a number of small farms amalgamated to form a collective (Kolkhoz)  Collective in theory under control of the workers but in practice run by a member of the Party  Produce bought very cheaply by the State  Process began in 1928, by 1937 most arable land in collectives
  • 21. Back to Contents 3. Consequences of Collectivisation  Wealthy peasants (Kulaks) opposed collectivisation ▪ Destroyed assets to prevent State getting them  Thousand of Kulaks killed or deported to labour camps  Massive drop in output because reorganisation disrupted sowing and harvesting  Kulaks removed but they were the best, most efficient and successful farmers  Up 50% of livestock was slaughtered  Famine in the early 1930’s leading to deaths of (approx.) 10 million peasants
  • 22. Back to Contents Stalin believed in State Planning 5 Year Plans were introduced in 1928, 1932 and 1937 Aims: • Industrialise • Plans were under control of the State planning agency Gosplan • Emphasis was on heavy industry, coal, oil and steel • Consumer products were in the 3rd plan but war interrupted schemes • Industrial production and production of electricity increased • Most new industrial areas were away from possible threat if there was war Results: • By 1941 industrial production was 4 times that of 1914 • Many factories were inefficient with unrealistic targets • By 1941, many millions were better housed, better educated, better health care and (just) better fed • State propaganda made all successes attributed to Stalin
  • 23. Back to Contents 1. Stalin believed in State Planning 2. 5 Year Plans were introduced in 1928, 1932 and 1937 3. Aims:  Industrialise the USSR but not under capitalism  Plans were under control of the State planning agency Gosplan  Emphasis was on heavy industry, coal, oil and steel ▪ Consumer products were in the 3rd plan but war interrupted schemes  Industrial production and production of electricity increased with some workers becoming national heros ▪ E.g. Stakhanov  Prestige projects were built with slave labour and high cost of life  Most new industrial areas were away from possible threat if there was war (Central Russia or Siberia)
  • 24. Back to Contents 4. Results  By 1941 industrial production was 4 times that of 1914 ▪ High cost to life  Many factories were inefficient with unrealistic targets ▪ Targets that weren’t met led to deaths of  By 1941, many millions were better housed, better educated, better health care and (just) better fed  State propaganda made all successes attributed to Stalin
  • 25. Back to Contents It aimed to create terror Stalin was determined so prevent criticising He purged many to prevent any Stalin or the State and hundreds of thousands opposition make people work harder 1934 saw the Many of Lenin’s assassination of Kirov, 1936-38 show trials colleagues were popular head of the were held condemned as enemies Communist Party in of the people Leningrad Trotsky was Stalin used the purges 1937 saw a severe purge assassinated in Mexico to consolidate his of leading Army officers City in 1941 after he was leadership exiled in 1928
  • 26. Back to Contents 1. Stalin was determined to prevent any opposition 2. He purged many hundreds of thousands, either sent to Gulags (camps) or killed 3. It aimed to create terror so prevent criticising Stalin or the State and make people work harder 4. 1934 saw the assassination of Kirov, popular head of the Communist Party in Leningrad  Stalin probably ordered it though other rivals were made scapegoats 5. 1936-38 show trials were held
  • 27. Back to Contents 6. Many of Lenin’s colleagues were condemned as enemies of the people  Millions were convicted and sent to Gulags or executed 7. 1937 saw a severe purge of leading Army officers  Severe consequences for WW2 8. Stalin used the purges to consolidate his leadership  Collectivisation and industrialisation gained him many enemies 9. Trotsky was assassinated in Mexico City in 1941 after he was exiled in 1928  Pursued for his important role in the Revolution and Civil War
  • 28. Back to Contents 1917-19 • Use the term Bolsheviks then Communists 1918-90 • Use the terms Soviet Union or USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)