1) The czars ruled over Russia for 300 years (the ‘Romanov Dynasty’, 1613-1917)… but the last century of their rule was marked by social & political unrest, with increasing revolutionary activity: - Army officers revolted in 1825 (the ‘Decemberists’), demanding a constitutional monarchy, with an elected legislature (learned from French soldiers 13 years earlier). - Multiple revolutionary groups developed through the 1800s, seeking to overthrow the czars.
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1) The czars ruled over Russia for 300 years (the ‘Romanov Dynasty’, 1613-1917)… but the last century of their rule was marked by social & political unrest,
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1) The czars ruled over Russia for 300 years (the ‘Romanov Dynasty’, 1613-1917)… but the last century of their rule was marked by social & political unrest, with increasing revolutionary activity:
- Army officers revolted in 1825 (the ‘Decemberists’), demanding a constitutional monarchy, with an elected legislature (learned from French soldiers 13 years earlier).
- Multiple revolutionary groups developed through the 1800s, seeking to overthrow the czars.
- Czar Alexander II was assassinated in 1881.
2) The last four czars, and their openness to reforms:
Nicholas I opposed
Alexander II in favor (and was assassinated!)
Alexander III opposed
Nicholas II opposed
3) Most czars favored ‘AUTOCRACY’:
Any form of government in which ONE person (OR party) has total political power.
Can be an absolute monarchy OR dictatorship
4) Alex III considered the following dangerous:
1. Anyone who questioned the absolute authority of the czar (DISSIDENTS)
2. Anyone NOT Russian Orthodox Christian
3. Anyone who did not speak Russian as their first language (i.e. any non-Russian ethnic group)
ALL were considered potential (or actual) sources of revolutionary activity against the czar.
(consider: Alex II had been assassinated!)
5) Czar Alexander III used, harsh autocratic policies:
- strict censorship
- secret police
- teacher reports on student activity
(creates distrust, paranoia!)
- deportation to eastern Russia (Siberia) for punishing hard labor
- outlawed non-Russian languages in schools
6) Religious group most persecuted: Jews
aka ANTI-SEMITISM
Victims of organized mob violence & destruction of property… encouraged (or ignored) by the gov.
= POGROMS
(WHY?)→ scapegoating (falsely blame them for
national problems) → small, vulnerable group = easy target → easily identified group in segregated
communities
7) Russian industrialization…
Similarities w/ Western Europe, U.S. (or anywhere!):- Government policies designed to encourage
industrial growth- Terrible working conditions, early on
(i.e. unsafe, dirty, long hours, low pay, child labor)- Government outlaws labor unions (so no
opportunity for improved conditions!)- Workers sometimes responded w/ illegal strikes
Difference:
Dissaffected working class (and peasants) increasingly turned to violent, REVOLUTIONARY activity, inspired by…
8) Karl Marx
(why was there NOT a similar Marxist revolutionary reaction in Britain, the U.S., and Germany?)
9) Not all Russian Marxist revolutionaries agreed on the GOALS and METHODS of revolution… they would split into two factions:
Mensheviks preferred a more moderate, gradual approach in cultivating a broader and more democratic base of popular support among Russia’s working class in preparing for revolution.
Bolsheviks a smaller, more radical group of ruthless and “committed revolutionaries willing to sacrifice everything” for more immediate change.
- Top Down Bourgeoisie - Bottom Up (dictatorial) (democratic)
- Marxist
10) Bolshevik leader: Lenin
Leadership Qualities:
- charismatic (“engaging personality”)
- well organized
- well educated (middle class background)
- ruthless
- ambitious
- gifted speaker
Early obstacles to revolution:
Self-exile to avoid
arrest & imprisonment.
11) Czar Nicholas II’s fateful decisions, which will cost him his throne and end three centuries of monarchy in Russia:
1. Russo-Japanese War (1904): Czar uses nationalism and militarism to try and distract and unify Russians... initiates a war with Japan (for imperial control of Korea).
Result: FAILURE... Russians lost war to a more industrialized Japan, thus magnifying the scope of Russia's problems and poor leadership!
11) End of the czars (continued):
2. Russia's “Bloody Sunday” (Revolution of 1905) →
200,000 workers gather peacefully to petition for better working & living conditions (i.e. more personal freedoms) and an elected legislature to represent them as a voice in the government.
Outcome:
- Czar's security forces, feeling threatened, fire upon crowd, killing hundreds, wounding thousands
- Workers respond with violent national strikes
- Czar forced to create a national legislature, but he then dissolves it within months... tensions remain!
11) Failures of Czar Nicholas II (continued): 3. World War I