100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
CIE IGCSE History Russia (1917-41) Depth Study Summary Notes $15.84   Add to cart

Summary

CIE IGCSE History Russia (1917-41) Depth Study Summary Notes

 272 views  0 purchase
  • Course
  • Institution
  • Book

CIE IGCSE History Russia (1917-41) Depth Study Summary Notes Perfect for exams: CIE IGCSE History Paper 1 and Paper 4 Concise, detailed (for Paper 4), easy-to-revise Includes statistics, events and facts, as well as timelines

Preview 4 out of 31  pages

  • No
  • Russia depth study
  • May 29, 2023
  • 31
  • 2022/2023
  • Summary
  • 1
avatar-seller
Depth Study: Russia, 1905-41
Why did the Tsarist regime collapse by 1914?
The Tsar and his Government
Autocracy
 Huge empire (300 miles wide) ruled by only 1 person: Tsar
 By this time, most European countries had given people some say in how their country was
run, but Russia remained autocratic
 Tsar Nicholas II did not listen to any calls for political reform or democracy
o Nobles, army commanders, church and bureaucracy supported him with this
Control and repression
 Tsar used army, church, and bureaucracy for excessive control
 No political parties, free speech, free press
 Secret police, Okhrana, had 10 000 officers- exiled opposition to Siberia
o Army backed them up, particularly Cossacks
 In the countryside, each peasant belonged to a mir (commune), ruled by a noble to solve
disputes
 Larger areas ruled by governors (aristocrats appointed by the Tsar)
 Some elected officials in towns and district councils- Zemstva- but these were dominated by
nobles and professionals (doctors, lawyers)
 Zemstva did good work- health and education, experience in running local government
 People wanted a national zemstvo to help run the country, tsar did not accept this
Chaos and incompetence
 Tsar Nicholas was not a good ruler
 Avoided big decisions, wasted time on small things
 He felt threatened by able and talented ministers, refused to chair the Council of Ministers
(no confrontation)
 Encouraged rivalry between ministers, causing chaos
 Nepotistic, elected incompetent and corrupt officials, took bribes
The Russian people
Nationalities
 Only 40% of Tsar’s subjects spoke Russian
 Some nationalities were loyal (Cossacks), others (Finns, Poles) were not
 Discrimination against Jews
Peasants and the countryside
 80% of Russian population
 Some prosperous farmers (kulaks), but mostly poor working and living conditions:
o No clean water or education, hunger and disease, low life expectancy, quickly rising
population, lack of land
 Peasants were loyal to Tsar because of teachings of the church
 Some supported radical political parties who wanted to take land from aristocrats and give it
to peasants

Industrial workers and the cities
 Late 19th century: Tsars keen for Russian industrial growth: oil + coal production x3, iron x4
 Some peasants left countryside for factories, but living conditions were equally bad:
o Slum housing, illness, alcoholism, horrible working conditions, low pay
o Trade unions were illegal, no way to protest
o Workers no better off than peasants
Capitalists
 As a result of industrialism, new class, capitalists, arose
 Landowners, industrialists, bankers, traders, businessmen

,  These people increased the size of the middle class
 Main concerns were managing economy and controlling workforce
 Clashes between workers and capitalists
Political opposition to the Tsar
Moderates Wanted a constitutional democracy (don’t overthrow Tsar/Church) like Britain:
(liberals)  Octobrists: more conservative, defended October Manifesto
 Kadets: more radical
 Both supported by middle classes
Nationalists Russians should be leading with strong Empire
Conservatives Opposed political change
Socialist Sharing out wealth for equal society
Revolutionaries  Much peasant support
 By 1917, SRs were a collection of left-wing groups instead of a united
party
 Most revolutionary were the Left SRs- revolutionary action and
assassination of political enemies in ruling class
o Murdered government officials, Okhrana, spies
Social Socialists (Marxists)- believed history was decided by decided by struggle
Democrats between classes, as the proletariat would wise up in revolution and overthrow
capitalist owners of industry
 They thought this would lead to fair, communist societies with no class
conflict
In 1903, social democrats split into Mensheviks and Bolsheviks:
 Mensheviks thought Russia was not ready for revolution, wanted to
build a mass party with many workers and revolutionaries
o Fairly democratic, willing to work with other parties
 Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, wanted to form a close group of professional
revolutionaries who wouldn’t co-operate with other parties
o Non-democratic- controlled by Lenin and Central Committee



The 1905 Revolution
Long-Term Causes of the 1905 Revolution – Political
 Russia did not have a democratic system, the only elected organisations in Russia were the
Zemstva, and political parties were illegal
 Political opposition developed along many different ideological lines, and was often divided,
but they all agreed that Russia needed to reform
 There was a growing underground revolutionary movement which was inspired by Marxism,
and wanted to overthrow the Autocracy
 There was also a developing Liberal movement, of people that wanted to move towards a
constitutional monarchy
 Opposition was suppressed by the Okhrana (secret police), which had been founded by
Alexander II and hugely expanded by Alexander III in the 1880s
Long-Term Causes of the 1905 Revolution – Socio-Economic
 The rapid industrialisation organised by Witte in the 1880s had led to Russia becoming a
powerful economy
 However, there had been no effort to improve the lives of the people; working conditions in
cities were terrible, with workers renting a bed, having little to no time off, and receiving low
pay
 The famine in 1891 had shown the success of the Zemstva in helping the people, which had
inspired the development of the Liberal movement, who wanted a parliament

,  There was a lack of trade unions, so many workers turned to revolutionary groups
 Peasants and workers in poor living conditions- 75% unhappy
 Widespread hunger and famine, protests, and strikes
 Little to protect low pay and safety of workers, ethnic minorities suppressed, unfair taxation
 Low sanitation, horrible living conditions, high mortality rate
 No form of representative government apart from Zemstvas, whose influence was greatly
reduced
 Middle classes unhappy that they had no say in how the country was governed, much
opposition

Short-Term Causes of the Revolution – Defeat in Russo-Japanese War
 Embarrassment of defeat to 'racially inferior' Asiatic power added to opinion of Tsar's
incompetence
 Tsar agreed to humiliating defeat treaty
 Defeat in war led to mutiny on Potemkin battleship- harder for Tsar to combat rebels
 The war was unnecessary, increased hardships, and Russia was losing all battles
 1904: Plehve assassinated by terrorist bomb
 Tsar was an autocrat- could not fault the war on anyone else but himself
 The war exacerbated social, political, and economic hardships as resources were diverted
 Effects of Bloody Sunday sustained by Russo-Japanese War

Short-Term Causes of the Revolution – Bloody Sunday
 Events of Bloody Sunday helped bring publicity of worsening political and social situation in
Russia
 Events of Bloody Sunday aided aggravating the people and stimulating opposition,
encourages expressions of resistance
 Spark which lit the fire for the revolution, pushed it over the tipping edge
 Tsar was blamed, people thought he was aware of their issues but didn’t care- added to
growing feeling of disrespect- removal of 'little father'
 Instead of care + consideration, they are met by bullets and sabres
 Bloody Sunday was the final straw, and it would not have had the effect it did without long-
term inequalities
 Bloody Sunday was a peaceful demonstration, with respect for Tsar (national anthems,
images of Tsar, crosses), but it was met with unnecessary force as soldiers fired on
protesters (including women and children)
o Occurred after 5 men were fired from the Putilov factory in St Petersburg, causing
105 000 workers to strike in the city, and a demonstration at the Winter Palace was
organised by Father Gapon- 200 killed, 800 wounded
Short-Term Causes of the Revolution – The October Manifesto and the Duma
 The Tsar issued the October Manifesto, which created an elected Duma and seemed to
imply there would be further political reform in Russia
 This had been on the advice of Witte, and was not popular with Nicholas II
 The main way in which this helped to stop the protests was that it split opposition, as many
Liberals supported it
 This led to the ending of the General Strike
 There were also the ‘days of freedom’ after the manifesto, when there were celebrations
and the formation of political parties
 There was further unrest in the countryside, which forced Witte to cancel the redemption
payments

1905 Timeline

, January
 People’s protests led to petition presented to Tsar at Winter Palace on 9/22
 March to Palace Square grew out of control to ~150,000 people
 BLOODY SUNDAY – troops massacred people due to no police  rifles caused 200+ deaths
 17/30 general strike in protest of massacre  failed to have an impact on the government
as they wanted to buy time for the war  paralysis of economy
 Tsar advised/declines creation of consultative government
 Opponents of the Government had time to organise so government relaxed restrictions on
universities and proposed a consultative assembly due to risk of assassination
March
 By spring 1905, St Petersburg university was free of police  open political meetings
July
 All Russian Peasants’ Union met in Moscow  land issue + Gapon’s demands
August
 Black Sea mutinies e.g. on Potemkin
September
 (Constituent Assembly, hours of work regulation, measure of land redistribution) Demands
of Union of Unions were reaffirmed

How did the Tsar survive?
Tsarism in danger
 Bloody Sunday started many strikes, riots, violence in streets
 Tsar’s uncle (Grand Duke Sergei) assassinated, he lost respect and large areas of Russia
 Opposition groups:
o Liberals and middle classes wanted civil rights and a say in government
o Students wanted freedom in universities
o Nationalities wanted independence
o They didn’t combine to form united opposition
 Sailors on Potemkin mutinied, dangerous for the Tsar
 Soviets (councils of workers) formed in cities, general strikes began, paralysing Russia
October Manifesto
 Tsar was persuaded to issue October Manifesto as things had got so bad
 It allowed people to have free speech and press, an elected parliament (Duma), and political
parties
 It divided the Tsar’s opponents- some middle classes supported this
o SRs, Social Democrats, and Right Wing is unhappy (betrayal of autocracy)
The army restores tsarist rule
After troops returned from Japan, they could restore order more easily
 In December 1905, leaders of St Petersburg and Moscow Soviet were arrested
o Fighting in Moscow, crushed by the army
 In 1906, it took longer to keep peasants under control
o Tsar promised financial help to set up peasant’s bank to buy land
o In the end, troops were sent to crush peasants and nationalities
o Many executions/imprisonments, beatings, and rape
The troubled years, 1905-14
 Tsar had just about survived- reform was needed to satisfy some opposition
 Hopeful for the Duma to make change
 Before the first meeting of the Duma, the Tsar releases the Fundamental Laws in May 1906
o Essentially tries to counteract (indirectly) the October Manifesto
 First 2 Dumas were critical of the Tsar, did not last very long at all as they were left wing
 In 1907, electoral laws changed so more nobles voted, and Tsar had a favourable Duma

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller rdas07. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $15.84. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

77254 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$15.84
  • (0)
  Add to cart