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capitalists and cajDitalist combines enter into agreement with each  
capitalists and cajDitalist combines enter into agreement with each  
other to eliminate free competition, which is thus superseded by the  
other to eliminate free competition, which is thus superseded by the  
rule of the monopolies. Lenin defined imperialism as monopolist capi-
rule of the monopolies. Lenin defined imperialism as monopolist capi
talism.  
talism.  


Line 30: Line 30:


Under imperialism the struggle for markets leads to an acceleration  
Under imperialism the struggle for markets leads to an acceleration  
of the export of capital to backward countries, colonies and semi-colo-
of the export of capital to backward countries, colonies and semi-colo
nies. The capitalists strive to monopolize the sources of raw materials.  
nies. The capitalists strive to monopolize the sources of raw materials.  
This inevitably gives rise to a struggle for the redivision of the world, to a  
This inevitably gives rise to a struggle for the redivision of the world, to a  
struggle for new territories . Comrade Stalin has defined this most impor-
struggle for new territories . Comrade Stalin has defined this most impor
tant feature of imperialism in the following terms: “Imperialism is the  
tant feature of imperialism in the following terms: "Imperialism is the  
export of capital to the sources of raw material, the frenzied struggle  
export of capital to the sources of raw material, the frenzied struggle  
for monopolist possession of these sources, the struggle for a redivision  
for monopolist possession of these sources, the struggle for a redivision  
of the already divided world, a struggle waged with particular fury bynew financial groups and Powers seeking a ‘place in ilic K\in’ against the old groups and Powers which cling tightly to what they Iiavo  
of the already divided world, a struggle waged with particular fury bynew financial groups and Powers seeking a 'place in ilic K\in' against the old groups and Powers which cling tightly to what they Iiavo  
grasped” (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism ^ Moscow, 1945, p, 15).  
grasped" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism ^ Moscow, 1945, p, 15).  


Imperialism intensifies all the contradictions of capitalism to the  
Imperialism intensifies all the contradictions of capitalism to the  
utmost degree; those contradictions can bo solved only by the  
utmost degree; those contradictions can bo solved only by the  
proletarian revolution. Under imperialism the contradictious be-
proletarian revolution. Under imperialism the contradictious be
tween capital and labour become extremely intensified. The exploita-
tween capital and labour become extremely intensified. The exploita
tion of the working class assumes such a character that it realizes that  
tion of the working class assumes such a character that it realizes that  
the only way out is to overthrow the rule of the imperialists.  
the only way out is to overthrow the rule of the imperialists.  


The contradictions between the various financial groui)s aiui  
The contradictions between the various financial groui)s aiui  
imperialist Powers also become so acute as to lead to armed con-
imperialist Powers also become so acute as to lead to armed con
flicts — imperialist wars. The contradictions between ruling nations and  
flicts — imperialist wars. The contradictions between ruling nations and  
colonial and dependent peoples also become intensified to the utmost'.  
colonial and dependent peoples also become intensified to the utmost'.  
The inhuman oppression of the inhabitants of colonial and depen-
The inhuman oppression of the inhabitants of colonial and depen
dent countries compel these vast enslaved masses to fight for their  
dent countries compel these vast enslaved masses to fight for their  
independence and freedom.  
independence and freedom.  
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In Russia, too, capitalism dcvolo 3 )ed into imperialism, but in  
In Russia, too, capitalism dcvolo 3 )ed into imperialism, but in  
Russia imperialism boro numerous distinctive features, Lenin and  
Russia imperialism boro numerous distinctive features, Lenin and  
Stalin called it militarist-feudal imperialism. Mililarisi-feudal impe-
Stalin called it militarist-feudal imperialism. Mililarisi-feudal impe
rialism bears all the characteristics of the imperialist system: in-
rialism bears all the characteristics of the imperialist system: in
tense concentration of production, formation of mono])olioB, export,  
tense concentration of production, formation of mono])olioB, export,  
of capital, the merging of bank capital with industrial capital, struggle  
of capital, the merging of bank capital with industrial capital, struggle  
for the division and rodivision of the world, and the extreme intensi-
for the division and rodivision of the world, and the extreme intensi
fication of class contradictions. Thus, militarist-feudal imperialism  
fication of class contradictions. Thus, militarist-feudal imperialism  
in Russia was, above all, imperialism, a part of the world imperial-
in Russia was, above all, imperialism, a part of the world imperial
ist system.  
ist system.  


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Remnants of feudal relationships survived in both industry and in  
Remnants of feudal relationships survived in both industry and in  
agriculture and influenced the development of the various classes in  
agriculture and influenced the development of the various classes in  
society as well as the entire system of society and of stale in twen-
society as well as the entire system of society and of stale in twen
tieth century Russia.  
tieth century Russia.  


Besides capitalist methods of exploitation, militarist and feudal  
Besides capitalist methods of exploitation, militarist and feudal  
methods wore employed in tsarist Russia. The country was ruled by  
methods wore employed in tsarist Russia. The country was ruled by  
the representatives of the big feudal landowners. Owing to the restrict-
the representatives of the big feudal landowners. Owing to the restrict
ed nature of the home market, the Russian landlords and capitalists  
ed nature of the home market, the Russian landlords and capitalists  
strove to conquer foreign markets, and with this object they seized  
strove to conquer foreign markets, and with this object they seized  
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Comrade Stalin wrote: "To begin with, tsarist Russia was the  
Comrade Stalin wrote: "To begin with, tsarist Russia was the  
of every kind of oppression — capitalist, colonial and militarist — in  
of every kind of oppression — capitalist, colonial and militarist — in  
its most inhuman and barbarous form. Who does not know that in Russia the omnipotence of capital coalesced with the despotism of tsarisiUa the aggressiveness of Russian nationalism with tsarism’s role  
its most inhuman and barbarous form. Who does not know that in Russia the omnipotence of capital coalesced with the despotism of tsarisiUa the aggressiveness of Russian nationalism with tsarism's role  
of executioner in regard to the non-Russian peoples, the exploitation  
of executioner in regard to the non-Russian peoples, the exploitation  
of entire regions — Turkey, Persia, China — ^with the seizure of these  
of entire regions — Turkey, Persia, China — ^with the seizure of these  
regions by tsarism, with wars of conquest? Lenin was right in saying  
regions by tsarism, with wars of conquest? Lenin was right in saying  
that tsarism was ^militarist-feudal imperialism.Tsarism was the  
that tsarism was ^militarist-feudal imperialism.' Tsarism was the  
(ioncontration of the worst features of imperialism raised to the second  
(ioncontration of the worst features of imperialism raised to the second  
power” (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism, Moscow, 1945, pp. 16-17).  
power" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism, Moscow, 1945, pp. 16-17).  


Industry in Russia was very highly concentrated, but the methods of  
Industry in Russia was very highly concentrated, but the methods of  
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The high concentration of industry was facilitated by the development  
The high concentration of industry was facilitated by the development  
of banks and joint-stock companies. By the beginning of the twentieth  
of banks and joint-stock companies. By the beginning of the twentieth  
(Century eight big banks controlled 55.7 per cent of the total bank capi-
(Century eight big banks controlled 55.7 per cent of the total bank capi
tal in Russia. The banks controlled 50 per cent of the capital invested  
tal in Russia. The banks controlled 50 per cent of the capital invested  
ill the iron and stool industry, 60 per cent of that invested in the coal  
ill the iron and stool industry, 60 per cent of that invested in the coal  
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in the period from 1895 to 1904 foreign firms drew profits from Russia  
in the period from 1895 to 1904 foreign firms drew profits from Russia  
tio tho amount of over 830,000,000 gold rubles, a sum exceeding the capital they iuv^cfcifcecl during that decade. Kruiu iorcign linanciers, mainly French, the tHarist government obtained what for that tim<^  
tio tho amount of over 830,000,000 gold rubles, a sum exceeding the capital they iuv^cfcifcecl during that decade. Kruiu iorcign linanciers, mainly French, the tHarist government obtained what for that tim<^  
wore huge loans. In lOOJl tsarist Russia’s foreign debt stood at tlu?  
wore huge loans. In lOOJl tsarist Russia's foreign debt stood at tlu?  
enormous sum of 3,000,000,000 gold rubles. Ink*, rest alone on thest*  
enormous sum of 3,000,000,000 gold rubles. Ink*, rest alone on thest*  
loans amounted to 130,000,000 gold rubles per annum, and this im-
loans amounted to 130,000,000 gold rubles per annum, and this im
posed a heavy burden upon the working ])0ople of tlie cH)mitry. As a.  
posed a heavy burden upon the working ])0ople of tlie cH)mitry. As a.  
result of the intense inlliix of foreign capital into llussia, llussjan  
result of the intense inlliix of foreign capital into llussia, llussjan  
tsarism and Russian capitalism became (l(*])cndeut upon West-Muro-
tsarism and Russian capitalism became (l(*])cndeut upon West-Muro
]}ean hnper ialism .  
]}ean hnper ialism .  


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aggravated the crisis. Production diminished c uis'dorably, ])arb]e.nlarly  
aggravated the crisis. Production diminished c uis'dorably, ])arb]e.nlarly  
in the iron and steel and fuel industries: in 1002, the output of ■|)ig iron,  
in the iron and steel and fuel industries: in 1002, the output of ■|)ig iron,  
for example, dropped 16 ])er cent below that of J00().Th<% crisis mosi-
for example, dropped 16 ])er cent below that of J00().Th<% crisis mosi
<lisasfcrously alTcetod.the more highly capital istieally-tlovoloped regions  
<lisasfcrously alTcetod.the more highly capital istieally-tlovoloped regions  
(the Douetz Basin and others), where as many as 3,000 plants were closed  
(the Douetz Basin and others), where as many as 3,000 plants were closed  
Line 164: Line 164:
whereas in 1903 only 453 versts were laid down.  
whereas in 1903 only 453 versts were laid down.  


Only the largest entet'iJrises were able to sxirvive* thes t‘r.isis. During  
Only the largest entet'iJrises were able to sxirvive* thes t'r.isis. During  
this period huge capitalist monopolies were formed in Russia under tlu^  
this period huge capitalist monopolies were formed in Russia under tlu^  
control of foreign finance capital. In 1902 the Prodam ot was formed.  
control of foreign finance capital. In 1902 the Prodam ot was formed.  
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and steel industry which controlled 80 per cent of the entire iron and  
and steel industry which controlled 80 per cent of the entire iron and  
steel industry of Russia. In the oil industry there were two iaonoj)olist*  
steel industry of Russia. In the oil industry there were two iaonoj)olist*  
groups — Nobel Brothers and Rothschild. In this ]xeriod too a sewing-
groups — Nobel Brothers and Rothschild. In this ]xeriod too a sewing
cotton syndicate wasfoimccl, consisting of only two firms which mouoj)-
cotton syndicate wasfoimccl, consisting of only two firms which mouoj)
olized the Russian sewing-cotton market. Jn 1004 the Prodvagon Syn-
olized the Russian sewing-cotton market. Jn 1004 the Prodvagon Syn
dicate was formed which monopolized nearly the entire sale of railway  
dicate was formed which monopolized nearly the entire sale of railway  
cars in Russia.  
cars in Russia.  
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foreign banks bought up the shares of Russian enterprises and banks  
foreign banks bought up the shares of Russian enterprises and banks  
and thus became the owners of these enteiprises. This still further  
and thus became the owners of these enteiprises. This still further  
increased the clependeucc of Russian capitalism ui)on West- European
increased the clependeucc of Russian capitalism ui)on WestEuropean
imperialism.  
imperialism.  


During the j)oriod of the crisis the number of factory workers great-
During the j)oriod of the crisis the number of factory workers great
ly diminished. At some of the plants in the 'Donotz Basin more than  
ly diminished. At some of the plants in the 'Donotz Basin more than  
half of the workers were discharged. This increase in unemploymont led to a worsening of the conditions of labour. The employers took advantage of the crisis to rob the workers of tlio gains they had won during  
half of the workers were discharged. This increase in unemploymont led to a worsening of the conditions of labour. The employers took advantage of the crisis to rob the workers of tlio gains they had won during  
the industrial boom. Every wliore piece rates were cut and the working  
the industrial boom. Every wliore piece rates were cut and the working  
day lengthened. Adult workers were rc])laccd by youths and children  
day lengthened. Adult workers were rc])laccd by youths and children  
who received only a half, or a third, of the pay which adults had re-
who received only a half, or a third, of the pay which adults had re
ceived. The steady influx into the towns of starving peasants who  
ceived. The steady influx into the towns of starving peasants who  
const’tutod cheap labour-power also served to woi^seil the conditions of  
const'tutod cheap labour-power also served to woi^seil the conditions of  
the workers.
the workers.


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among them by the revolutionary Social-Democrats, they began to  
among them by the revolutionary Social-Democrats, they began to  
understand that tlie worst enemy of the 3iooplo was the autocracy,  
understand that tlie worst enemy of the 3iooplo was the autocracy,  
which supported and encouraged the oruolost exploitation of the work-
which supported and encouraged the oruolost exploitation of the work
ers by the capitalists. An enormous part in the political odneation  
ers by the capitalists. An enormous part in the political odneation  
of the working class and in the organization of its struggle against the  
of the working class and in the organization of its struggle against the  
autocracy was played by the all-llussian Sooial-Domoeratic newspa-
autocracy was played by the all-llussian Sooial-Domoeratic newspa
per Ishra, which was founded by Lenin.
per Ishra, which was founded by Lenin.


Line 215: Line 215:
in building up a revolutionary  
in building up a revolutionary  
Social-Democratic party, for  
Social-Democratic party, for  
without such a party the prole-
without such a party the prole
tariat could not fight for its  
tariat could not fight for its  
emancipation.  
emancipation.  
Line 224: Line 224:


Lenin, in an article entitled  
Lenin, in an article entitled  
‘‘Where to< Begin?wrote: ‘‘A
"Where to< Begin?" wrote: "A
paper is not merely a collective  
paper is not merely a collective  
propagandist and collective agi-
propagandist and collective agi
tator, it is also a collective  
tator, it is also a collective  
organizer” (V. I. Lenin, Select-
organizer" (V. I. Lenin, Select
ed Works, VoL II, Moscow,  
ed Works, VoL II, Moscow,  


Line 239: Line 239:
It was impossible, however, to publish such a newspaper in tsarist  
It was impossible, however, to publish such a newspaper in tsarist  
B/Ussia. Lenin therefore decided to publish the paper abroad, where,  
B/Ussia. Lenin therefore decided to publish the paper abroad, where,  
at that time, conditions were more favourable for conducting revolu-
at that time, conditions were more favourable for conducting revolu
tionary activities. The first issue of Iskra appeared in December 1900.  
tionary activities. The first issue of Iskra appeared in December 1900.  
On its title page it bore the motto “The spark will kindle a flame,  
On its title page it bore the motto "The spark will kindle a flame,  
words taken from the reply which the Decembrists in exile made to  
words taken from the reply which the Decembrists in exile made to  
Pushkin’s appeal to continue the struggle. This motto was Iskra^s  
Pushkin's appeal to continue the struggle. This motto was Iskra^s  
pledge to carry to the end the revolutionary struggle that had been  
pledge to carry to the end the revolutionary struggle that had been  
initiated by preceding generations.  
initiated by preceding generations.  


Lenin edited Iskra in conjunction with Plekhanov and other Social-
Lenin edited Iskra in conjunction with Plekhanov and other Social
Democrats. It was printed on tissue paper, smuggled into Russia, and  
Democrats. It was printed on tissue paper, smuggled into Russia, and  
there distributed among the advanced workers. Workers caught read-
there distributed among the advanced workers. Workers caught read
ing Iskra were liable to imprisonment and exile, but this did not  
ing Iskra were liable to imprisonment and exile, but this did not  
daunt the class-conscious workers. They became extremely devoted  
daunt the class-conscious workers. They became extremely devoted  
Line 256: Line 256:
issue of the paper, and when they received it they read and  
issue of the paper, and when they received it they read and  
re-road it until it was literally worn to tatters. A weaver from  
re-road it until it was literally worn to tatters. A weaver from  
St, Petersburg wrote to the paper saying: “When you read the paper you  
St, Petersburg wrote to the paper saying: "When you read the paper you  
understand why the gendannes and the jx^bce are afraid of us workers and of those intollectiials whoso load we follow, • . . In the past every strike was a great event, but now everybody knows that strikes  
understand why the gendannes and the jx^bce are afraid of us workers and of those intollectiials whoso load we follow, • . . In the past every strike was a great event, but now everybody knows that strikes  
alone are nothing, that now we must win freodom by fighting for it”
alone are nothing, that now we must win freodom by fighting for it"
(Iskra No. 7).  
(Iskra No. 7).  


Workers in different towns acted as J,s'7cm’.v corrospondonts. Among  
Workers in different towns acted as J,s'7cm'.v corrospondonts. Among  
these wore I. V, Babushkin and other advanced workers whom Lenin  
these wore I. V, Babushkin and other advanced workers whom Lenin  
had trained in Social-Democratic study circles in the 1890 ’s. In tlio  
had trained in Social-Democratic study circles in the 1890 's. In tlio  
beginning of 1901, copies of the first issue of Loniu’s lakra reached Tifiis  
beginning of 1901, copies of the first issue of Loniu's lakra reached Tifiis  
(now Tbilisi). On Comrade Stalin’s proposal tho Tillis Committee of  
(now Tbilisi). On Comrade Stalin's proposal tho Tillis Committee of  
the Social-Democratic Party announced its solidarity with the policy  
the Social-Democratic Party announced its solidarity with the policy  
of Iskra. In September 1901 tho first issue of an illegal Georgian  
of Iskra. In September 1901 tho first issue of an illegal Georgian  
Line 271: Line 271:
appeared. This newspaper was printed in an underground printing  
appeared. This newspaper was printed in an underground printing  
plant that was set up in Baku by a colleague of Comrade Stalin, Lado  
plant that was set up in Baku by a colleague of Comrade Stalin, Lado  
Ketskhoveli. Brdzola was the best Iskra-ist newspaper in Russia. Pur-
Ketskhoveli. Brdzola was the best Iskra-ist newspaper in Russia. Pur
suing the political line advocated by Lenin’s Iskra, it undeviatiiigly  
suing the political line advocated by Lenin's Iskra, it undeviatiiigly  
fought for the unity of the working-class movement of Georgia with  
fought for the unity of the working-class movement of Georgia with  
that of the whole of Russia.  
that of the whole of Russia.  
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===== The First Political Demonstrations in 1900 and 1901 =====
===== The First Political Demonstrations in 1900 and 1901 =====
As a  
As a  
result of tho industrial crisis and thei)ropaganda (jouductod by tho revo-
result of tho industrial crisis and thei)ropaganda (jouductod by tho revo
lutionary Sooial-Domoorats, tho mass working-class movoinont took  
lutionary Sooial-Domoorats, tho mass working-class movoinont took  
another step forward and i)assod from economic strikes to political  
another step forward and i)assod from economic strikes to political  
Line 287: Line 287:


The first to como into tho vStroots with rod Hags and the slogan ^"Down  
The first to como into tho vStroots with rod Hags and the slogan ^"Down  
with the autocracy!were tho workers and students of Kharkov. This  
with the autocracy!" were tho workers and students of Kharkov. This  
demonstration occurred on May Day 1900 and created a profound  
demonstration occurred on May Day 1900 and created a profound  
impression upon the workers all over Russia. In August 1900, after a  
impression upon the workers all over Russia. In August 1900, after a  
strike of the workers employed in tho Tifiis railway workshops, Com-
strike of the workers employed in tho Tifiis railway workshops, Com
rade Stalin issued a leaflet calling upon the workers to commenco an  
rade Stalin issued a leaflet calling upon the workers to commenco an  
open revolutionary struggle. Tho first open revolutionary demonstra-
open revolutionary struggle. Tho first open revolutionary demonstra
tion of the Tillis workers was organized by Comrade Stalin in April  
tion of the Tillis workers was organized by Comrade Stalin in April  
1901, and about 2.000 workers took part in it.  
1901, and about 2.000 workers took part in it.  
Line 298: Line 298:
In 1901, May Day demonstrations and strikes took i)laoo all over  
In 1901, May Day demonstrations and strikes took i)laoo all over  
the country. Of exceptional importance were tho events that occurred  
the country. Of exceptional importance were tho events that occurred  
at the State Obukhov Munitions Plant, near St. Petersburg (now tho Bol-
at the State Obukhov Munitions Plant, near St. Petersburg (now tho Bol
shevik Works), which have gone into history as the “Obukhov dofonco.
shevik Works), which have gone into history as the "Obukhov dofonco."


On May 1,1901, as a result of the propaganda conducted by  
On May 1,' 1901, as a result of the propaganda conducted by  
the Social-Democrats, of the 6,000 workers employed at tho Obukhov  
the Social-Democrats, of the 6,000 workers employed at tho Obukhov  
Works, 1,200 stayed away from work. The management dis-
Works, 1,200 stayed away from work. The management dis
charged the most advanced and active workers at tlio ])laixt. This gave  
charged the most advanced and active workers at tlio ])laixt. This gave  
xiso to a protest strike which commenced on May 7. Tho workers dc^-
xiso to a protest strike which commenced on May 7. Tho workers dc^
mauded the roinstatomont of tho discharged worktu's and tho dismissal of  
mauded the roinstatomont of tho discharged worktu's and tho dismissal of  
a number of foremen whom they detested. In answer to tins demand the assistant manager said with a couteini)tuous sneer: “Next thing, perhaps, yon will demand the discharge of the Cabinet Ministers!
a number of foremen whom they detested. In answer to tins demand the assistant manager said with a couteini)tuous sneer: "Next thing, perhaps, yon will demand the discharge of the Cabinet Ministers!"
“Not only the ministers, but also the tsar!retorted the workers. Police and troops were called out against the strikers. To bar their way  
"Not only the ministers, but also the tsar!" retorted the workers. Police and troops were called out against the strikers. To bar their way  
the workers oroctod barricades, and when the soldiers arrived they wore  
the workers oroctod barricades, and when the soldiers arrived they wore  
greeted with a hail of stones, logs of wood and chunks of iron. The  
greeted with a hail of stones, logs of wood and chunks of iron. The  
police and tho troops could not take tlio workers’ living quarters exce])t  
police and tho troops could not take tlio workers' living quarters exce])t  
by storm. An active part in tho defence was played by women, Tlie  
by storm. An active part in tho defence was played by women, Tlie  
workers in neighbouring plants joined the strikers. The liglit lasted throe  
workers in neighbouring plants joined the strikers. The liglit lasted throe  
Line 321: Line 321:
capital. These sentences evoked protests from workers all over Russia.  
capital. These sentences evoked protests from workers all over Russia.  


Appraising the “Obukhov defence” as a new form of the mass pro-
Appraising the "Obukhov defence" as a new form of the mass pro
letarian struggle, Lonin wrote: “Street fighting is possible, it is not  
letarian struggle, Lonin wrote: "Street fighting is possible, it is not  
the position of tho fighters but the position of tho government thfit is  
the position of tho fighters but the position of tho government thfit is  
hopeless if it has to deal with larger numbers than those employed in  
hopeless if it has to deal with larger numbers than those employed in  
a single factory” {V. I. Lenin, Golhoied Work^, Vol. IV, Book I, Now  
a single factory" {V. I. Lenin, Golhoied Work^, Vol. IV, Book I, Now  
York, 1020, p. 121).
York, 1020, p. 121).


===== Political Strikes and Demonstrations in 1902 and 1903 =====
===== Political Strikes and Demonstrations in 1902 and 1903 =====
The mass working-class movement to an incroasiiig dogroo assumed a po-
The mass working-class movement to an incroasiiig dogroo assumed a po
litical character. In Transcaucasia tho political struggle of tho workers  
litical character. In Transcaucasia tho political struggle of tho workers  
was led by Comrade Stalin. On tlio iiistrucjtions of the Tiflis Committees  
was led by Comrade Stalin. On tlio iiistrucjtions of the Tiflis Committees  
Line 338: Line 338:
In Batnm, Comrade Stalin organized eleven study circles and  
In Batnm, Comrade Stalin organized eleven study circles and  
formed a Social-Domncratic organization in that town. On tho night of  
formed a Social-Domncratic organization in that town. On tho night of  
December 31, 1901, in tho guise of a Now Year’s Eve party, tho first  
December 31, 1901, in tho guise of a Now Year's Eve party, tho first  
Social-Democratic Conference was hold in Batum; at this coniorono(?  
Social-Democratic Conference was hold in Batum; at this coniorono(?  
the Batum Committee of tho Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party  
the Batum Committee of tho Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party  
Line 348: Line 348:
days and nights extinguishing tho fire, but tho management refused  
days and nights extinguishing tho fire, but tho management refused  
to pay the workers for this time. Tho workers threatened to go on strike  
to pay the workers for this time. Tho workers threatened to go on strike  
and the management yielded. Encouraged by this victory, the work-
and the management yielded. Encouraged by this victory, the work
ers in other plants went on strike in support of economic demands. On  
ers in other plants went on strike in support of economic demands. On  
tho night of March 7, tho police arrested thirty-two strikers. On March 9  
tho night of March 7, tho police arrested thirty-two strikers. On March 9  
a workers’ demonstratioix was hold in response to Comrade Stalin’s
a workers' demonstratioix was hold in response to Comrade Stalin's
appeal. Tho workers marched in columns to the doT)ortatioa centre whore  
appeal. Tho workers marched in columns to the doT)ortatioa centre whore  
the arrested strikers were detained, and demanded, their roloaso, Soldiers, their rifles at the ready, barred the way of the demonstrators.  
the arrested strikers were detained, and demanded, their roloaso, Soldiers, their rifles at the ready, barred the way of the demonstrators.  


Comrade Stalin delivered an impassioned spooelx to the workers call-
Comrade Stalin delivered an impassioned spooelx to the workers call
ing upon them to resist. Just thou volleys of rifle firo rang out; fifteen  
ing upon them to resist. Just thou volleys of rifle firo rang out; fifteen  
men wore killed and fifty-four wore wounded. The funeral of the vic-
men wore killed and fifty-four wore wounded. The funeral of the vic
tims of this massacre that was hold next day developed into an immense  
tims of this massacre that was hold next day developed into an immense  
political demonstration against tsarism. The j)C)lic(i arrested 450 work-
political demonstration against tsarism. The j)C)lic(i arrested 450 work
ers and made intense efforts to find Copirado Stalin, but the workers  
ers and made intense efforts to find Copirado Stalin, but the workers  
concealed him in their homos. As ho moved from one worker *s  
concealed him in their homos. As ho moved from one worker *s  
homo to another, the press used for the printing of passion-
homo to another, the press used for the printing of passion
ate appeals to the Batum workers anti to tho Ajar ])easants was re-
ate appeals to the Batum workers anti to tho Ajar ])easants was re
moved also. From time to time ho arranged mootings in the cemetery,  
moved also. From time to time ho arranged mootings in the cemetery,  
the watchman of which S3unpathized with tho working-class move-
the watchman of which S3unpathized with tho working-class move
ment. Soon, however, it became impossible for Comrade Stalin to  
ment. Soon, however, it became impossible for Comrade Stalin to  
hide in Batum any longer and so, taking his printing press with him,  
hide in Batum any longer and so, taking his printing press with him,  
Line 376: Line 376:
he would wrap tho vegetables and fruit in those loalh^ts and hand them  
he would wrap tho vegetables and fruit in those loalh^ts and hand them  
to workers whom ho know. Those, in turn, gave thorn a wide circulation.  
to workers whom ho know. Those, in turn, gave thorn a wide circulation.  
The m^^^sterious activities that wont on in Hashim ’s house attracted  
The m^^^sterious activities that wont on in Hashim 's house attracted  
the attention of neighbouring peasants and one day they came to  
the attention of neighbouring peasants and one day they came to  
Comrade Stalin and asked him what ho was doing. Comrade Stalin  
Comrade Stalin and asked him what ho was doing. Comrade Stalin  
answered: “I print leaflets in which I describe what hard lives you arc  
answered: "I print leaflets in which I describe what hard lives you arc  
loading and how tho trouble can bo mended.” “That’s fine,said  
loading and how tho trouble can bo mended." "That's fine," said  
the old peasants. “What you are doing is for our good. , . . Until  
the old peasants. "What you are doing is for our good. , . . Until  
today Hashim alone hid you . . . now wo shall all hide you and your  
today Hashim alone hid you . . . now wo shall all hide you and your  
work to the host of our power and ability.
work to the host of our power and ability."


Nevertheless, in Aju’il 1002, tho police managed to discover Com-
Nevertheless, in Aju'il 1002, tho police managed to discover Com
rade Stalin’s hiding place and arrested him. In November 1903 he  
rade Stalin's hiding place and arrested him. In November 1903 he  
was exiled to tho village of Novaya Uda, in tho Irkutsk Gubernia;  
was exiled to tho village of Novaya Uda, in tho Irkutsk Gubernia;  
but^two months later ho escaped from there and returned to Tiflis to  
but^two months later ho escaped from there and returned to Tiflis to  
Line 392: Line 392:


/. j The political struggle of the proletariat in 1902 and 1903 assumed  
/. j The political struggle of the proletariat in 1902 and 1903 assumed  
^vide dimensions in other towns of Eussia too. In May 1902, a demon-
^vide dimensions in other towns of Russia too. In May 1902, a demon
stration was held in Sormovo, near Nizhni Novgorod (now called Gorky) .  
stration was held in Sormovo, near Nizhni Novgorod (now called Gorky) .  
The demonstrators were arrested and tried. At the trial tho banner-
The demonstrators were arrested and tried. At the trial tho banner
bearer, a worker named Zalomov, delivered a passionate speech in  
bearer, a worker named Zalomov, delivered a passionate speech in  
which he described the conditions of tho workers and called upon them  
which he described the conditions of tho workers and called upon them  
to wage a struggle against tho autocracy. Subsequently, this speech  
to wage a struggle against tho autocracy. Subsequently, this speech  
was illegally printed and distributed. The Sormovo demonstration  
was illegally printed and distributed. The Sormovo demonstration  
is described in Maxim Gorky’s novel in which Zalomov figuros^  
is described in Maxim Gorky's novel in which Zalomov figuros^  


under the name of Pavel.
under the name of Pavel.


An important factor in the  
An important factor in the  
political education of the work-
political education of the work
ing class was the railway strike  
ing class was the railway strike  
in Rostov-on-Don in 1902, which  
in Rostov-on-Don in 1902, which  
developed into the first general  
developed into the first general  
strike in Russia. The workers  
strike in Russia. The workers  
of nearly all the trades and fac-
of nearly all the trades and fac
tories in the city were involved.  
tories in the city were involved.  
The conditions of the workers  
The conditions of the workers  
Line 416: Line 416:
extremely hard. All the workers,  
extremely hard. All the workers,  
even those who had worked there  
even those who had worked there  
for over twenty years, were regard-
for over twenty years, were regard
ed as day workers, and according  
ed as day workers, and according  
to the tsarist laws they could  
to the tsarist laws they could  
Line 432: Line 432:
30,000 were involved. The Don Party Committee organized meetings  
30,000 were involved. The Don Party Committee organized meetings  
in a ravine outside the city at which Social-Democratic orators spoke  
in a ravine outside the city at which Social-Democratic orators spoke  
and read out Social-Democratic leaflets. For the first time in the his-
and read out Social-Democratic leaflets. For the first time in the his




Line 439: Line 439:
displayed fine staunchness and solidarity. At one meeting a Colonel  
displayed fine staunchness and solidarity. At one meeting a Colonel  
of Gendarmes appeared and ordered the workers to disperse. The  
of Gendarmes appeared and ordered the workers to disperse. The  
speaker who was addressing the meeting asked: ''Shall we obey this  
speaker who was addressing the meeting asked: '"'Shall we obey this  
order?” “No, we shall not!came the loud and unanimous reply, “In
order?" "No, we shall not!" came the loud and unanimous reply, "In
that case remain where you are and let us continue our talk,said  
that case remain where you are and let us continue our talk," said  
the speaker. Meetings continued to be held. The authorities were dis-
the speaker. Meetings continued to be held. The authorities were dis
concerted by the organized resistance of the workers and called out  
concerted by the organized resistance of the workers and called out  
the Cossacks from the near-by villages. But when the Cossacks attempted  
the Cossacks from the near-by villages. But when the Cossacks attempted  
Line 449: Line 449:
prostrate people and the Cossacks were obliged to retire.  
prostrate people and the Cossacks were obliged to retire.  


Several days later soldiers fired upon a crowd assembled at a meet-
Several days later soldiers fired upon a crowd assembled at a meet
ing and killed and wounded several workers. So incensed were the workers by this outrage that they turuod the funeral of the victims into a revolutionary domoiisiTation. Only after mustering troops from  
ing and killed and wounded several workers. So incensed were the workers by this outrage that they turuod the funeral of the victims into a revolutionary domoiisiTation. Only after mustering troops from  
neighbouring towns did tho authorities succeed in suppressing the  
neighbouring towns did tho authorities succeed in suppressing the  
Line 456: Line 456:


Tho Rostov strike, which developed into a political demonstration,  
Tho Rostov strike, which developed into a political demonstration,  
was an extromoly important fiictor in stimulating tho class conscious-
was an extromoly important fiictor in stimulating tho class conscious
ness of the workers. As Lenin wrote: “For tho iirst time tho proletariat  
ness of the workers. As Lenin wrote: "For tho iirst time tho proletariat  
is standing up as a class against all the other classes and tho tsarist  
is standing up as a class against all the other classes and tho tsarist  
government” (V. Gollecdcd VoL VII, Moscow, 1937,  
government" (V. Gollecdcd VoL VII, Moscow, 1937,  


Russ, ed., pp. 105-106).  
Russ, ed., pp. 105-106).  
Line 472: Line 472:
joined the strike. In June, 45,000 workers wore involved in tho  
joined the strike. In June, 45,000 workers wore involved in tho  
strike, now a general strike. Even the bakers, bootmakers and  
strike, now a general strike. Even the bakers, bootmakers and  
tailors went on strike; shops wore closed and no newspapers ap-
tailors went on strike; shops wore closed and no newspapers ap
peared. Tho workers demanded an B-hour day and an increase in wages.  
peared. Tho workers demanded an B-hour day and an increase in wages.  
The strikes wore led by tho Baku Social-Domocjratio Committee.  
The strikes wore led by tho Baku Social-Domocjratio Committee.  
Meetings wore held at which political speeches wore deliv-
Meetings wore held at which political speeches wore deliv
ered and revolutionary leaflets wore distributed. As there wore few  
ered and revolutionary leaflets wore distributed. As there wore few  
troops in Baku, tho employers resorted to a manoeuvre and protended  
troops in Baku, tho employers resorted to a manoeuvre and protended  
to accede to tho workers’ demands; but as soon as more troops arrived  
to accede to tho workers' demands; but as soon as more troops arrived  
they withdrew their concession. TIxo Caucasian Party Committee  
they withdrew their concession. TIxo Caucasian Party Committee  
called upon the workers of Tiflis and of other towns to back the de-
called upon the workers of Tiflis and of other towns to back the de
mands of the Baku workers by moans of a solidarity strike. On July 14,  
mands of the Baku workers by moans of a solidarity strike. On July 14,  
a general strike broke out in Till is which lasted ton days. Soon this  
a general strike broke out in Till is which lasted ton days. Soon this  
Line 491: Line 491:


The general strike spread to the XJl?:raino — to Odessa, Kiev  
The general strike spread to the XJl?:raino — to Odessa, Kiev  
and Ekaterinoslav (now Dniep^’opetrovsk). Noting the characteristic  
and Ekaterinoslav (now Dniep^'opetrovsk). Noting the characteristic  
features of this general strike of 1903, Lenin wrote: “The strikes aifoot  
features of this general strike of 1903, Lenin wrote: "The strikes aifoot  
an entire area^ over 100,000 workers are involved, mass political meet-
an entire area^ over 100,000 workers are involved, mass political meet
ings are repeatedly held during strikes in a number of towns. One  
ings are repeatedly held during strikes in a number of towns. One  
feels that we are on the eve of barricades, . . (V. I. Lenin, Coh  
feels that we are on the eve of barricades, . . (V. I. Lenin, Coh  
Line 499: Line 499:
leoted Works^ Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, od., p. 106.)  
leoted Works^ Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, od., p. 106.)  


The working-class movement rousod other strata of tho popula-
The working-class movement rousod other strata of tho popula
tion, From 1899 onwards, student unrest and strikes wore an annual occurrence, and at their meetings the students put forth political demands. Bogolepov, the Minister of Education, issued ‘Temporary
tion, From 1899 onwards, student unrest and strikes wore an annual occurrence, and at their meetings the students put forth political demands. Bogolepov, the Minister of Education, issued 'Temporary
Regulations” ordering that students who were involved in this unrest  
Regulations" ordering that students who were involved in this unrest  
be conscripted for the army. Notwithstanding the repressive measures  
be conscripted for the army. Notwithstanding the repressive measures  
taken against them, the student movement grew. In 1901, following  
taken against them, the student movement grew. In 1901, following  
Line 507: Line 507:
St. Petersburg held a demonstration near the Kazafi Cathedral. The  
St. Petersburg held a demonstration near the Kazafi Cathedral. The  
demonstrators were brutally assaulted by the police. In 1901-1902 a  
demonstrators were brutally assaulted by the police. In 1901-1902 a  
general students’ strike affected all higher educational establishments  
general students' strike affected all higher educational establishments  
and 30,000 students were involved.
and 30,000 students were involved.


===== The Zubatov Stratagem =====
===== The Zubatov Stratagem =====
The tsarist government realized that  
The tsarist government realized that  
it could not cope with the working class by means of repressive meas-
it could not cope with the working class by means of repressive meas
ures alone. Scared by the steady growth of the revolutionary working-
ures alone. Scared by the steady growth of the revolutionary working
class struggle it tried to check the mass working-class movement with  
class struggle it tried to check the mass working-class movement with  
the aid of police-formed workers’ organizations. Playing upon the  
the aid of police-formed workers' organizations. Playing upon the  
economic needs of the workers, agents of Zubatov, the Chief of the  
economic needs of the workers, agents of Zubatov, the Chief of the  
Moscow Secret Police, called meetings of the more backward sections  
Moscow Secret Police, called meetings of the more backward sections  
of them and told them that the tsar would support their peaceful eco-
of them and told them that the tsar would support their peaceful eco
nomic demands if they refrained from organizing strikes and took no  
nomic demands if they refrained from organizing strikes and took no  
part in political struggle.  
part in political struggle.  


Zubatov societies were formed in Moscow, Minsk and Odessa. In Mos-
Zubatov societies were formed in Moscow, Minsk and Odessa. In Mos
cow Zubatov ’s agents succeeded, on February 19 , 1902, the anniversary of  
cow Zubatov 's agents succeeded, on February 19 , 1902, the anniversary of  
the abortion of serfdom, in organizing a monarchist demonstration of  
the abortion of serfdom, in organizing a monarchist demonstration of  
workers to the monument of Alexander II. Soon, however, this insid-
workers to the monument of Alexander II. Soon, however, this insid
ious movement utterly collapsed. The revolutionary Social-Democrats,  
ious movement utterly collapsed. The revolutionary Social-Democrats,  
followers of Lenin, exposed the fact that the police were behind the  
followers of Lenin, exposed the fact that the police were behind the  
Zubatov organizations. In spite of the opposition of Zubatov ’s agents,  
Zubatov organizations. In spite of the opposition of Zubatov 's agents,  
the workers backed their economic demands by strikes. Fearing that  
the workers backed their economic demands by strikes. Fearing that  
he would lose his influence over the workers, Zubatov sent police offi-
he would lose his influence over the workers, Zubatov sent police offi
cials to the factory owners and compelled them to make concessions to  
cials to the factory owners and compelled them to make concessions to  
the workers. This roused the ire of the Moscow factory owners and they  
the workers. This roused the ire of the Moscow factory owners and they  
protested against Zubatov ’s activities. One of them, a Frenchman  
protested against Zubatov 's activities. One of them, a Frenchman  
named Goujon, complained to the French Ambassador that Zubatov  
named Goujon, complained to the French Ambassador that Zubatov  
was supporting a strike at his plant. The ambassador communicated  
was supporting a strike at his plant. The ambassador communicated  
Line 540: Line 540:


The failure of the Zubatov stratagem as an attempt on the part  
The failure of the Zubatov stratagem as an attempt on the part  
of the government to “harmonize” the economic needs and demands of  
of the government to "harmonize" the economic needs and demands of  
the workers with the “aims of the Russian autocracy" was most vividly  
the workers with the "aims of the Russian autocracy" was most vividly  
revealed by the general strike in Odessa in 1903. Here an economic  
revealed by the general strike in Odessa in 1903. Here an economic  
strilco which had been organized with the help of Zubatov agents devel-
strilco which had been organized with the help of Zubatov agents devel
oped into a political strike. Even the most backward workers became  
oped into a political strike. Even the most backward workers became  
convinced that the Zubatov organizations wore a police affair and  
convinced that the Zubatov organizations wore a police affair and  
Line 553: Line 553:
waged by the workers aifocted tho peasantry, among whom discontent  
waged by the workers aifocted tho peasantry, among whom discontent  
continued to grow. Tlio chief reason Ibr this discontent was that when  
continued to grow. Tlio chief reason Ibr this discontent was that when  
they wore “liberated” in 18()1 the landlords do])rivod them of the  
they wore "liberated" in 18()1 the landlords do])rivod them of the  
best parts of tho land which they had cull/ivatod. Hence, tho ]ioasants  
best parts of tho land which they had cull/ivatod. Hence, tho ]ioasants  
were obliged to rent land from the landlords, mak ng iiayment  
were obliged to rent land from the landlords, mak ng iiayment  
in tho shaj)© of work on tho landlord’s estate or of half tho crop raised  
in tho shaj)© of work on tho landlord's estate or of half tho crop raised  
on tho land rented. Tho huge estates of tho landlords — ^tho latifundia  
on tho land rented. Tho huge estates of tho landlords — ^tho latifundia  
— continued bo hinder tho dovolopment of peasant farming. As Lenin  
— continued bo hinder tho dovolopment of peasant farming. As Lenin  
Line 564: Line 564:
inhabitants) with 75,000,000 desyatins of land and at the other polo we  
inhabitants) with 75,000,000 desyatins of land and at the other polo we  
have thirty thousand families (about 150,000 inliabitants) with  
have thirty thousand families (about 150,000 inliabitants) with  
70,000,000 desyatins of land” (V. I. Lenin, Golkcied Works, Yol. XII,  
70,000,000 desyatins of land" (V. I. Lenin, Golkcied Works, Yol. XII,  
Moscow, 1937, Russ, od., p. 224).  
Moscow, 1937, Russ, od., p. 224).  


Line 578: Line 578:
passed into their hands.  
passed into their hands.  


Owing to the growth of the peasant poxmlati on, the average peas-
Owing to the growth of the peasant poxmlati on, the average peas
ant allotment by the beginning of tho twentieth century was only  
ant allotment by the beginning of tho twentieth century was only  
half the size it had boon in tho past. Tho land hunger of the ]ioasants  
half the size it had boon in tho past. Tho land hunger of the ]ioasants  
increased and obliged them to rent land from the landlords  
increased and obliged them to rent land from the landlords  
and kulaks at exorbitant rents. In some places the rent oxcood-
and kulaks at exorbitant rents. In some places the rent oxcood
ed the income that could bo derived from tho land because, while rents,  
ed the income that could bo derived from tho land because, while rents,  
rose, income from the land dropped, particularly in bad harvest years.  
rose, income from the land dropped, particularly in bad harvest years.  
Line 589: Line 589:
this caused an increase in arrears in tho payment of taxes. In some  
this caused an increase in arrears in tho payment of taxes. In some  
counties the peasants were as much as three or four years in arrears.  
counties the peasants were as much as three or four years in arrears.  
The ruined and impoverished peasantry began to fight for tho aboli-
The ruined and impoverished peasantry began to fight for tho aboli
tion of landlordism.  
tion of landlordism.  


In the spring of 1002 considerable peasant unrest broke out in the  
In the spring of 1002 considerable peasant unrest broke out in the  
Ukraine — in the Kharkov and Poltava (jubemias whore tho jieasants’
Ukraine — in the Kharkov and Poltava (jubemias whore tho jieasants'
land hunger was particularly acute. By tho beginning of the twen-
land hunger was particularly acute. By tho beginning of the twen
tieth century the average peasant allotment in tho I’oltava Gubornia.  
tieth century the average peasant allotment in tho I'oltava Gubornia.  
had shrunk to one desyatin, whereas tho landlords owned as much as 60 per cent of the entire land in the gubernia. The industrial crisis still further aggravated the poverty of the peasants as it deprived  
had shrunk to one desyatin, whereas tho landlords owned as much as 60 per cent of the entire land in the gubernia. The industrial crisis still further aggravated the poverty of the peasants as it deprived  
them of the opportunity of finding work in the towns. The peasants  
them of the opportunity of finding work in the towns. The peasants  
Line 616: Line 616:
In 1903 the peasant movement assumed an exceptionally mass and  
In 1903 the peasant movement assumed an exceptionally mass and  
militant character in Guria where, influenced by the Transcaucasian  
militant character in Guria where, influenced by the Transcaucasian  
Bolsheviks, it assumed a political character. The peasants refused to de-
Bolsheviks, it assumed a political character. The peasants refused to de
liver half their crops to the landlords, refused to pay the tithes for  
liver half their crops to the landlords, refused to pay the tithes for  
the maintenance of the clergy, refused to pay taxes, would not recog-
the maintenance of the clergy, refused to pay taxes, would not recog
nize the tsar*s officials and refused in a body to perform labour  
nize the tsar*s officials and refused in a body to perform labour  
rent. To assist the Transcaucasian landlords the tsarist government  
rent. To assist the Transcaucasian landlords the tsarist government  
sent in Cossacks who dealt cruelly with the peasants; it also deport-
sent in Cossacks who dealt cruelly with the peasants; it also deport
ed many of the peasants to Siberia -
ed many of the peasants to Siberia  


Taken on the whole, however, the peasant revolt of 1902 did not  
Taken on the whole, however, the peasant revolt of 1902 did not  
yet assume the character of an organized mass movement. Lenin attrib-
yet assume the character of an organized mass movement. Lenin attrib
uted this failure to the following reasons: "The peasant revolt was  
uted this failure to the following reasons: "The peasant revolt was  
crushed because it was a revolt of an ignorant, unconscious mass, a re-
crushed because it was a revolt of an ignorant, unconscious mass, a re
volt without definite and clear 'political demands, i. c., without de-
volt without definite and clear 'political demands, i. c., without de
mands for a change in the system of state. The peasant revolt  
mands for a change in the system of state. The peasant revolt  
was crushed because it took place withoiU 'preparation. The peasant  
was crushed because it took place withoiU 'preparation. The peasant  
revolt was crushed because the rural proletarians had not yet formed  
revolt was crushed because the rural proletarians had not yet formed  
an alliance with the urban proletarians. These are the three rea-
an alliance with the urban proletarians. These are the three rea
sons for the first failure of the peasants’’ (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works,  
sons for the first failure of the peasants" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works,  
Vol. V, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 312).  
Vol. V, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 312).  


Line 645: Line 645:
===== Preparations for the Formation of a Party of a New Type =====
===== Preparations for the Formation of a Party of a New Type =====
In the epoch of iniporialiKin tho utter incapability of tho old Social-Democratic parties of Western Europe to organize tlio workers for a  
In the epoch of iniporialiKin tho utter incapability of tho old Social-Democratic parties of Western Europe to organize tlio workers for a  
revolutionary struggle for tho proletarian revolution was clearly re-
revolutionary struggle for tho proletarian revolution was clearly re
vealed. Hence, Lenin anjl his supporters launchod a struggle for tho  
vealed. Hence, Lenin anjl his supporters launchod a struggle for tho  
formation of a party of a now typo.  
formation of a party of a now typo.  


As Comrade Stalin wrote subsequently, the conditions prevailing  
As Comrade Stalin wrote subsequently, the conditions prevailing  
under imperialism reveal ^tho necessity for a new party, a militant  
under imperialism reveal '^tho necessity for a new party, a militant  
party, a revolutionary party, one bold enough to load the proletar-
party, a revolutionary party, one bold enough to load the proletar
ians in the struggle for power, sullicdontly oxporioncod to find its  
ians in the struggle for power, sullicdontly oxporioncod to find its  
bearings amidst the complex conditions of the revolutionary situation  
bearings amidst the complex conditions of the revolutionary situation  
and sufficiently flexible to steer clear of all submerged rocks in the path  
and sufficiently flexible to steer clear of all submerged rocks in the path  
to its goal” (J. Stalin, Problems of Laninim,, Moscow, 1945, p. 81).  
to its goal" (J. Stalin, Problems of Laninim,, Moscow, 1945, p. 81).  


The new party that Lenin and Stalin and tlieir closest colleagues  
The new party that Lenin and Stalin and tlieir closest colleagues  
Line 661: Line 661:
advanced revolutionary theory extant.  
advanced revolutionary theory extant.  


The most important task that confronted Lenin ’s Ishra was to draw up  
The most important task that confronted Lenin 's Ishra was to draw up  
a program around which the Party was to unite. This ])rogram indicated  
a program around which the Party was to unite. This ])rogram indicated  
first and foremost tlie ultimate aim of tlio proletarian class Struggle-
first and foremost tlie ultimate aim of tlio proletarian class Struggle
Socialism. This was tho maximum program. It also formulated tho  
Socialism. This was tho maximum program. It also formulated tho  
demands for which tho proletariat fought while on tho road to tlio  
demands for which tho proletariat fought while on tho road to tlio  
Line 676: Line 676:
from the working class, of which it was the vanguard. The members  
from the working class, of which it was the vanguard. The members  
of the Party must be united ideologically and organizationally; they  
of the Party must be united ideologically and organizationally; they  
must be united in their advocacy of Marxian theory, uphold the pro-
must be united in their advocacy of Marxian theory, uphold the pro
gram and tactics of tho Party, take an active part in the work of the  
gram and tactics of tho Party, take an active part in the work of the  
Party organization and maintain Party discipline. Lenin pointed out  
Party organization and maintain Party discipline. Lenin pointed out  
Line 695: Line 695:


The congress adopted the Party program as presented by Ishra.  
The congress adopted the Party program as presented by Ishra.  
The opportunists at the congress opposed this program, in particu-
The opportunists at the congress opposed this program, in particu
lar, the demand for the dictatorship of the proletariat. But Lenin  
lar, the demand for the dictatorship of the proletariat. But Lenin  
answered them with crushing efiect. The sharpest disagreements  
answered them with crushing efiect. The sharpest disagreements  
at the congress arose over the formulation of point 1 of the  
at the congress arose over the formulation of point 1 of the  
Party Rules. Lenin’s formulation of point 1 read as follows: “A
Party Rules. Lenin's formulation of point 1 read as follows: "A
member of the Party is one who accepts its program, and supports it  
member of the Party is one who accepts its program, and supports it  
both financially and by his personal participation in the work of one  
both financially and by his personal participation in the work of one  
of its organizations.The formulation proposed by the opportunist  
of its organizations." The formulation proposed by the opportunist  
Martov called merely for the acceptance of the program and the  
Martov called merely for the acceptance of the program and the  
rendering of financial support, but did not make it obligatory to  
rendering of financial support, but did not make it obligatory to  
participate in the work of one of the Party organizations. Unlike  
participate in the work of one of the Party organizations. Unlike  
Lenin’s formulation, the one proposed by Martov opened the door  
Lenin's formulation, the one proposed by Martov opened the door  
of the Party to unstable non-proletarian elements. With the object  
of the Party to unstable non-proletarian elements. With the object  
of preventing the Party from being swamped by petty-bourgeois  
of preventing the Party from being swamped by petty-bourgeois  
Line 714: Line 714:
In appraising the essence of that struggle Comrade Stalin wrote:  
In appraising the essence of that struggle Comrade Stalin wrote:  
^'By their formula on Party membership the Bolsheviks wanted to  
^'By their formula on Party membership the Bolsheviks wanted to  
set up an organizational barrier against the influx of non-prole-
set up an organizational barrier against the influx of non-prole
tarian elements into the Party. The danger of such an influx was very  
tarian elements into the Party. The danger of such an influx was very  
real at that time in view of the bourgeois-democratic character of the  
real at that time in view of the bourgeois-democratic character of the  
Russian revolution” (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism ^ Moscow, 1946,  
Russian revolution" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism ^ Moscow, 1946,  
p. 381).  
p. 381).  


Line 723: Line 723:
the Martovites stood for a petty-bourgeois opportunist party.  
the Martovites stood for a petty-bourgeois opportunist party.  


At the elections of the central bodies of the Party, Lenin’s support-
At the elections of the central bodies of the Party, Lenin's support
ers obtained a majority and from that time onwards were called  
ers obtained a majority and from that time onwards were called  
Bolsheviks. The opportunist Martovites were left in the minority and  
Bolsheviks. The opportunist Martovites were left in the minority and  
Line 750: Line 750:
intelligentsia to political activity.  
intelligentsia to political activity.  


The stronghold of the liberal landlords wore the Zemstvo achninis-
The stronghold of the liberal landlords wore the Zemstvo achninis
trations which dealt with the local affairs of the rural population.  
trations which dealt with the local affairs of the rural population.  
The Zemstvo liberal landlords wore, connootod with tho liberal bour-
The Zemstvo liberal landlords wore, connootod with tho liberal bour
geoisie and were almost merged with them, for they themselves wore  
geoisie and were almost merged with them, for they themselves wore  
beginning to introduce capitalist methods in agriculturo. Political  
beginning to introduce capitalist methods in agriculturo. Political  
Line 759: Line 759:
as its object tho ostablishinent of a constitutional monarchy in RmsHia.  
as its object tho ostablishinent of a constitutional monarchy in RmsHia.  
They accused tho workers and peasants who wore fighting for thoir  
They accused tho workers and peasants who wore fighting for thoir  
economic and political emancipation;, of displaying “class egoism,and  
economic and political emancipation;, of displaying "class egoism," and  
they attributed the poverty of tho peasants and the agrarian move-
they attributed the poverty of tho peasants and the agrarian move
ment to the “ignorance of tho peasants,Tho bourgeois liberals were  
ment to the "ignorance of tho peasants," Tho bourgeois liberals were  
hostile to revolution and wanted to achieve tho constitutional mon-
hostile to revolution and wanted to achieve tho constitutional mon
archy by peaceful moans.  
archy by peaceful moans.  


Line 769: Line 769:


As a result of the peasant movement, Narodnilc organizations began  
As a result of the peasant movement, Narodnilc organizations began  
to spring up again among a section of the potty-bourgoois intelli-
to spring up again among a section of the potty-bourgoois intelli
gentsia. In 1902 these groups united to form tho Socialist-Revolution-
gentsia. In 1902 these groups united to form tho Socialist-Revolution
ary Party (known for short as tho S.R.s), which revived the tactics  
ary Party (known for short as tho S.R.s), which revived the tactics  
of individual terrorism against the tsar's ministers. In April 1902 tho  
of individual terrorism against the tsar's ministers. In April 1902 tho  
Minister of the Interior Sipyagin was assassinated. His place was taken  
Minister of the Interior Sipyagin was assassinated. His place was taken  
by the arch reactionary Plehvo, who for many years liad been at the head  
by the arch reactionary Plehvo, who for many years liad been at the head  
of tho secret political police. Tho terrorist tactics of tho Socialist-Revo-
of tho secret political police. Tho terrorist tactics of tho Socialist-Revo
lutionaries caused enormous harm to the revolutionary movement, par-
lutionaries caused enormous harm to the revolutionary movement, par
ticularly in view of the development of the mass struggle. The terrorist  
ticularly in view of the development of the mass struggle. The terrorist  
section of tho Socialist-Revolutionary Party was hoailod by Azof, who  
section of tho Socialist-Revolutionary Party was hoailod by Azof, who  
Line 784: Line 784:


The Socialist-Revolutionary Party claimed to be a socialist party  
The Socialist-Revolutionary Party claimed to be a socialist party  
and to champion the interests of the “working people” as a whole,  
and to champion the interests of the "working people" as a whole,  
drawing no distinction between the peasant poor and the kulaks.  
drawing no distinction between the peasant poor and the kulaks.  
Actually, the Socialist-Revolutionaries were not socialists at all,  
Actually, the Socialist-Revolutionaries were not socialists at all,  
but represented the Left wing of the bourgeois democrats. The 'bour-
but represented the Left wing of the bourgeois democrats. The 'bour
geois liberals secretly supported and financed the terrorist activities  
geois liberals secretly supported and financed the terrorist activities  
of the Socialist-Revolutionaries.  
of the Socialist-Revolutionaries.  


In 1902, Lenin wrote that the Socialist-Revolutionary Party was  
In 1902, Lenin wrote that the Socialist-Revolutionary Party was  
a party of .“revolutionary adventurism” that stood apart from the  
a party of ."revolutionary adventurism" that stood apart from the  
working-class movement. He also said that “without the working people  
working-class movement. He also said that "without the working people  
bombs are utterly useless.The Socialist-Revolutionaries picked out  
bombs are utterly useless." The Socialist-Revolutionaries picked out  
and adhered to everything that was fallacious in the theory and  
and adhered to everything that was fallacious in the theory and  
practice of the former Narodniks.  
practice of the former Narodniks.  
Line 800: Line 800:
The Second Congress of the. Russian Social-Democratic Labour  
The Second Congress of the. Russian Social-Democratic Labour  
Party adopted a 'resolution on the Socialist-Revolutionaries which  
Party adopted a 'resolution on the Socialist-Revolutionaries which  
stated that it “regards their activities as harmful not only to the polit-
stated that it "regards their activities as harmful not only to the polit
ical development of the proletariat but also to the general democratic  
ical development of the proletariat but also to the general democratic  
struggle against absolutism.
struggle against absolutism."


===== Tsarism in the Struggle against the Movement for National Liberation =====
===== Tsarism in the Struggle against the Movement for National Liberation =====
Influenced by the development of capitalism and the pro-
Influenced by the development of capitalism and the pro
letarian class struggle at the end of the nineteenth and beginning  
letarian class struggle at the end of the nineteenth and beginning  
of the twentieth century, the oppressed non-Russian nationalities which  
of the twentieth century, the oppressed non-Russian nationalities which  
Line 813: Line 813:
parties.  
parties.  


Tsarism cruelly suppressed the nascent movement for the libera-
Tsarism cruelly suppressed the nascent movement for the libera
tion of the oppressed nations in Russia. Towards the begimiing of the  
tion of the oppressed nations in Russia. Towards the begimiing of the  
twentieth century national oppression became still more intense: the  
twentieth century national oppression became still more intense: the  
remnants of the cultural institutions of the oppressed nationalities were  
remnants of the cultural institutions of the oppressed nationalities were  
destroyed, instruction in the native languages in schools was pro-
destroyed, instruction in the native languages in schools was pro
hibited, and the national organizations of the non-Russian peoples  
hibited, and the national organizations of the non-Russian peoples  
were persecuted.  
were persecuted.  


Characterizing the colonial policy of tsarism, Comrade Stalin  
Characterizing the colonial policy of tsarism, Comrade Stalin  
wrote: “Tsarism deliberately cultivated patriarchal and feudal oppres-
wrote: "Tsarism deliberately cultivated patriarchal and feudal oppres
sion in the border regions in order to keep the masses in a state of slav-
sion in the border regions in order to keep the masses in a state of slav
ery and ignorance. Tsarism deliberately settled the best areas in the  
ery and ignorance. Tsarism deliberately settled the best areas in the  
border regions with colonizers in order to force the natives into the  
border regions with colonizers in order to force the natives into the  
worst areas and to intensify national enmity. Tsarism restricted and  
worst areas and to intensify national enmity. Tsarism restricted and  
at times simply suppressed the native schools, theatres and educational  
at times simply suppressed the native schools, theatres and educational  
institutions in order to keep the masses in intellectual darkness. Tsar-
institutions in order to keep the masses in intellectual darkness. Tsar
ism frustrated the initiative of the host members of the native population. Lastly, tsarism siip])rcssod all activity on tlio part of the massoK of the border regions” (J. Stalin, Mamm avd the National and  
ism frustrated the initiative of the host members of the native population. Lastly, tsarism siip])rcssod all activity on tlio part of the massoK of the border regions" (J. Stalin, Mamm avd the National and  
Colonial Question, Moscow, 10*40, p. 71).  
Colonial Question, Moscow, 10*40, p. 71).  


In all the non-Tliissian national regions the tsarist govornmoni  
In all the non-Tliissian national regions the tsarist govornmoni  
pursued a policy of forcible Russification. This ])o]ioy found most viv-
pursued a policy of forcible Russification. This ])o]ioy found most viv
id expression in the splicre of public education. Jn the Caiu^asus,  
id expression in the splicre of public education. Jn the Caiu^asus,  
at the end of the ninotoonth century, thoro was an average of one  
at the end of the ninotoonth century, thoro was an average of one  
school for every 800 Russians, but the average for the native inliabit-
school for every 800 Russians, but the average for the native inliabit
ants was one for every 4,800 Georgians, one for every 5,400 Armenians  
ants was one for every 4,800 Georgians, one for every 5,400 Armenians  
and one for every 17,300 Azerbaijanians. Instriuition in clemonlary  
and one for every 17,300 Azerbaijanians. Instriuition in clemonlary  
schools was conducted exclusively in Russian. Thoro wore villages in  
schools was conducted exclusively in Russian. Thoro wore villages in  
which the entire population was illiterate. Thoro wore no higher edu-
which the entire population was illiterate. Thoro wore no higher edu
cational establishments.  
cational establishments.  


To crush the movement for national liberation the tsarist author-
To crush the movement for national liberation the tsarist author
ities incited the various nationalities against each other. In Transcau-
ities incited the various nationalities against each other. In Transcau
casia the tsarist police systematically fomented national strife between  
casia the tsarist police systematically fomented national strife between  
Armenians and Azerbaijanians. The Minister of the Interior Plohve  
Armenians and Azerbaijanians. The Minister of the Interior Plohve  
Line 854: Line 854:
Finland was dein*ivod of her autonomy. By a law passed in I90J  
Finland was dein*ivod of her autonomy. By a law passed in I90J  
Finns were conscripted for the Russian anny and the Finnish national  
Finns were conscripted for the Russian anny and the Finnish national  
units wore abolished. Russian officials wore ap])ohitod to all ad-
units wore abolished. Russian officials wore ap])ohitod to all ad
ministrative posts in Finland and they pursued a ])oli(‘y of Russifica-
ministrative posts in Finland and they pursued a ])oli('y of Russifica
tion. In its struggle against the movement of the Finnish people for  
tion. In its struggle against the movement of the Finnish people for  
national liberation tho tsarist govornmont rtdied on the su})port of  
national liberation tho tsarist govornmont rtdied on the su})port of  
the Finnish and Swedish feudal landlords in l^'inland. The working-
the Finnish and Swedish feudal landlords in l^'inland. The working
class movement in Finland was led by tlio Finnish Social-
class movement in Finland was led by tlio Finnish Social
Democratic Party, of which the policy was similar to that of the  
Democratic Party, of which the policy was similar to that of the  
Russian Mensheviks, and which was united in a bloc with tho Finnish  
Russian Mensheviks, and which was united in a bloc with tho Finnish  
bourgeoisie.  
bourgeoisie.  


In Poland, in the middle of tho 1890’s, two nationalist parties  
In Poland, in the middle of tho 1890's, two nationalist parties  
were foimcd: a party of the bourgeoisie and nobility known as tho  
were foimcd: a party of the bourgeoisie and nobility known as tho  
People’s Democratic Party ("‘Narodovtsi”) and tho petty-bourgeois  
People's Democratic Party ("'Narodovtsi") and tho petty-bourgeois  
Polish Socialist Party (P.P.S.). Fearing that if Poland became  
Polish Socialist Party (P.P.S.). Fearing that if Poland became  
independent the Russian market would bo lost for Polish goods and  
independent the Russian market would bo lost for Polish goods and  
that they would bo deprived of the support of Russian tsarism in their  
that they would bo deprived of the support of Russian tsarism in their  
struggle against the workers and peasants of Poland, the "‘’Narodov-
struggle against the workers and peasants of Poland, the ""Narodov
tsi” (known as ^‘Endeki”) gave xrp tho demand for indopondonce  
tsi" (known as ^'Endeki") gave xrp tho demand for indopondonce  
in favour of autonomy within tho Russian empire. The aim of tho  
in favour of autonomy within tho Russian empire. The aim of tho  
Polish Socialist Party wto to establish a botirgeois Poland indopond-
Polish Socialist Party wto to establish a botirgeois Poland indopond
ent of Russia.  
ent of Russia.  


In Byelorussia a potty-bourgeois party knowii as tho Byelorus-
In Byelorussia a potty-bourgeois party knowii as tho Byelorus
sian Socialist Gromada was formed and was entirely under the iufluonoe of the' P.P.S. It demanded autonomy for Byelorussia and her amalgamation with Lithuania.  
sian Socialist Gromada was formed and was entirely under the iufluonoe of the' P.P.S. It demanded autonomy for Byelorussia and her amalgamation with Lithuania.  


Line 882: Line 882:
formed among the Jewish artisans in Poland, Lithuania and  
formed among the Jewish artisans in Poland, Lithuania and  
Byelorussia. The Bund was represented at the Second Congress  
Byelorussia. The Bund was represented at the Second Congress  
of the R.S.D.L.P. and there it demanded recognition as the sole repre-
of the R.S.D.L.P. and there it demanded recognition as the sole repre
sentative of all the Jewish workers in Russia, no matter where they  
sentative of all the Jewish workers in Russia, no matter where they  
resided. Had this nationalistic demand been conceded, it would  
resided. Had this nationalistic demand been conceded, it would  
have meant isolating the Jewish proletariat from the Russian pro-
have meant isolating the Jewish proletariat from the Russian pro
letariat and subordinating it to the influence of the Jewish bourgeoisie.  
letariat and subordinating it to the influence of the Jewish bourgeoisie.  
The Second Congress rejected the demand and the Bund withdrew  
The Second Congress rejected the demand and the Bund withdrew  
from the Party.  
from the Party.  


In 1900, thanks to the influence of the Ukrainian nationalist or-
In 1900, thanks to the influence of the Ukrainian nationalist or
ganizations in Western Ukraine, a bourgeois nationalist party was  
ganizations in Western Ukraine, a bourgeois nationalist party was  
formed in the Ukraine known as the Revolutionary Ukrainian Party  
formed in the Ukraine known as the Revolutionary Ukrainian Party  
Line 897: Line 897:


In Georgia there was a party of Georgian Mensheviks, headed  
In Georgia there was a party of Georgian Mensheviks, headed  
by Noah Jordania, which advocated unity among all Georgians irre-
by Noah Jordania, which advocated unity among all Georgians irre
spective of the class they belonged to.  
spective of the class they belonged to.  


Line 903: Line 903:
national-reformist programs, and wkile striving for increased political  
national-reformist programs, and wkile striving for increased political  
rights and privileges for their native landlords and bourgeoisie  
rights and privileges for their native landlords and bourgeoisie  
they fought against the workers and peasants of their respective na-
they fought against the workers and peasants of their respective na
tions. Only the Bolsheviks led the revolutionary mass struggle  
tions. Only the Bolsheviks led the revolutionary mass struggle  
of the working people of all the oppressed nationalities in  
of the working people of all the oppressed nationalities in  
tsarist Russia and demanded the complete abolition of all national  
tsarist Russia and demanded the complete abolition of all national  
oppression. They issued the slogan of the right of nations to self-
oppression. They issued the slogan of the right of nations to self
determination, including the right to secede from tsarist Russia and  
determination, including the right to secede from tsarist Russia and  
to form independent states.  
to form independent states.  


The Bolsheviks incessantly maintained that the oppressed national-
The Bolsheviks incessantly maintained that the oppressed national
ities could achieve genuine national liberation only as the result of  
ities could achieve genuine national liberation only as the result of  
the overthrow of tsarism and the abolition of the power of the land-
the overthrow of tsarism and the abolition of the power of the land
lords and cajpitalists. Hence, they called upon the working people of  
lords and cajpitalists. Hence, they called upon the working people of  
all the nationalities in Russia to rally round the Russian  
all the nationalities in Russia to rally round the Russian  
proletariat, the vanguard fighter and leader of the revolution-
proletariat, the vanguard fighter and leader of the revolution
ary struggle of all the numerous nationalities inhabiting Russia.  
ary struggle of all the numerous nationalities inhabiting Russia.  
Lenin and Stalin denounced the efforts of the nationalist parties to  
Lenin and Stalin denounced the efforts of the nationalist parties to  
Line 938: Line 938:
Russian tsarism, which came into conilict with Japanese imperialism  
Russian tsarism, which came into conilict with Japanese imperialism  
in Manchuria. The beginning of the construction of the Trans-Siberian  
in Manchuria. The beginning of the construction of the Trans-Siberian  
Railway which would greatly strengthen Russia’s position in tlu^  
Railway which would greatly strengthen Russia's position in tlu^  
Par East, prompted Japanese im])erialism to make liasto to carry out  
Par East, prompted Japanese im])erialism to make liasto to carry out  
its long cherished designs of armed conquest at the expense of China.  
its long cherished designs of armed conquest at the expense of China.  


In the Sino- Japanese War of 1804-lS!)r> China was defeated and  
In the SinoJapanese War of 1804-lS!)r> China was defeated and  
was conipollod to sign a peace treaty whicjli obligated her to i)ay Jai)an  
was conipollod to sign a peace treaty whicjli obligated her to i)ay Jai)an  
an enormous indemnity and to code to her the whole of the south  
an enormous indemnity and to code to her the whole of the south  
Line 951: Line 951:
.Japan to modify these oppressive terms and in the end Mancluiria with  
.Japan to modify these oppressive terms and in the end Mancluiria with  
the Liao-tung Peninsula and Port Arthur, and also Korea remained  
the Liao-tung Peninsula and Port Arthur, and also Korea remained  
under Chinese rule. In 1896, Witte, tho tsar’s Minister of Finances,  
under Chinese rule. In 1896, Witte, tho tsar's Minister of Finances,  
concluded a treaty with China for tho construction of the Chi-
concluded a treaty with China for tho construction of the Chi
<nowiki>*</nowiki> neso Eastern Railway, which was to run through North Manchuria  
<nowiki>*</nowiki> neso Eastern Railway, which was to run through North Manchuria  
to shorten tho route to Vladivostok. The construction of this railway  
to shorten tho route to Vladivostok. The construction of this railway  
facilitated tho seizure of Manchuria and Korea by tsarist Rus-
facilitated tho seizure of Manchuria and Korea by tsarist Rus
sia. In 1898 Russia secured a lease of tho Liao-tung Peninsula,  
sia. In 1898 Russia secured a lease of tho Liao-tung Peninsula,  
including Port Arthur, and thus secured an outlet to tho China Sea.  
including Port Arthur, and thus secured an outlet to tho China Sea.  
Line 963: Line 963:
Germany, by an agreement arrived at between Wilhelm II and  
Germany, by an agreement arrived at between Wilhelm II and  
Nicholas II, occupied tho port of Kiaochow, Groat Britain occupied  
Nicholas II, occupied tho port of Kiaochow, Groat Britain occupied  
the port of Weihaiwoi. Prance rounded off her Indo-Ohinoso posKses-
the port of Weihaiwoi. Prance rounded off her Indo-Ohinoso posKses
sions at the expense of China. Tlio United States of America domandcKl  
sions at the expense of China. Tlio United States of America domandcKl  
the '‘open door” in China, that is to say, equal freedom for all the  
the "open door" in China, that is to say, equal freedom for all the  
capitalist countries to exploit China.  
capitalist countries to exploit China.  


The systematic plunder of China by tho imperialist countries  
The systematic plunder of China by tho imperialist countries  
gave rise, in 1900, to a mass popular revolt against tho foreign invaders. This revolt was Imown as the Boxer, or Big Fist, Rebellion. The united forces of the imperialists, including those of tsarist Rus-
gave rise, in 1900, to a mass popular revolt against tho foreign invaders. This revolt was Imown as the Boxer, or Big Fist, Rebellion. The united forces of the imperialists, including those of tsarist Rus
sia, were flung against the rebels, captured Peking and sacked the  
sia, were flung against the rebels, captured Peking and sacked the  
city. While crushing the rebellion, tsarist troops, on the pretext  
city. While crushing the rebellion, tsarist troops, on the pretext  
of protecting the Chinese Eastern Railway, occupied the whole of  
of protecting the Chinese Eastern Railway, occupied the whole of  
Manchuria, which the tsarist high government officials had already  
Manchuria, which the tsarist high government officials had already  
given the derisive nickname of “Yellow Russia.
given the derisive nickname of "Yellow Russia."


A group of adventurers belonging to the circle that was close to  
A group of adventurers belonging to the circle that was close to  
Nicholas II formed a company which obtained a timber concession  
Nicholas II formed a company which obtained a timber concession  
on the Korean River Yalu bordering on Manchuria. This con-
on the Korean River Yalu bordering on Manchuria. This con
cession was intended to serve as a pZuce d^armes for the seizure of  
cession was intended to serve as a pZuce d^armes for the seizure of  
Korea, Port Arthur was converted into a naval fortress and base for  
Korea, Port Arthur was converted into a naval fortress and base for  
Line 993: Line 993:
inevitably bring about a rap]iroohoment between Russia and Great  
inevitably bring about a rap]iroohoment between Russia and Great  
Britain against Germany. Wilhelm II, in his turn, tried hard to tempt  
Britain against Germany. Wilhelm II, in his turn, tried hard to tempt  
Nicholas II with the prospect of the advantages to be gained from friend-
Nicholas II with the prospect of the advantages to be gained from friend
ship with Germany, in the hope of intensifying Anglo-Russian antag-
ship with Germany, in the hope of intensifying Anglo-Russian antag
onisms and of destroying the alliance between Russia and Prance.  
onisms and of destroying the alliance between Russia and Prance.  


Line 1,000: Line 1,000:
of diverting the attention of the workers and peasants of Russia  
of diverting the attention of the workers and peasants of Russia  
from their real enemies, the landlords and capitalists. The police  
from their real enemies, the landlords and capitalists. The police  
dictator Plehve said: “To avert a revolution in Russia we need a  
dictator Plehve said: "To avert a revolution in Russia we need a  
little victorious war.
little victorious war."


===== The Outbreak and the Course of the War =====
===== The Outbreak and the Course of the War =====
Knowing that Rus-
Knowing that Rus
sia was unprepared for war, Japan decided to strike a sudden blow.  
sia was unprepared for war, Japan decided to strike a sudden blow.  
Spies provided the Japanese High Command with an exact plan  
Spies provided the Japanese High Command with an exact plan  
Line 1,010: Line 1,010:
night of January 26, 1904, when the entire commanding personnel  
night of January 26, 1904, when the entire commanding personnel  
of the Russian fleet were at a ball to celebrate the birthday of the  
of the Russian fleet were at a ball to celebrate the birthday of the  
wife of Admkal Stark, the Commander-in-Chief, Japanese destroy-
wife of Admkal Stark, the Commander-in-Chief, Japanese destroy
ers, without a declaration of war, stole up under cover of darkness  
ers, without a declaration of war, stole up under cover of darkness  
to the outer roadstead of Port Arthur where the Russian squadron  
to the outer roadstead of Port Arthur where the Russian squadron  
Line 1,016: Line 1,016:
the battleships Retmzan and Cesarevich and the cruiser Pallada. In the  
the battleships Retmzan and Cesarevich and the cruiser Pallada. In the  
morning of January 27 the Japanese bombarded Port Arthur from the  
morning of January 27 the Japanese bombarded Port Arthur from the  
sea and damaged four more warships. That same day a Japanese squad-
sea and damaged four more warships. That same day a Japanese squad
ron damaged two Russian warships that were trying heroically to light their way out of the Korean port of Clio-ixiiihpo into the opoii sea. Notwithstanding the severe damage inflicted upon them, the two  
ron damaged two Russian warships that were trying heroically to light their way out of the Korean port of Clio-ixiiihpo into the opoii sea. Notwithstanding the severe damage inflicted upon them, the two  
ships — the cruiser Varyag and tlio gunboat Koreyetz — entered into  
ships — the cruiser Varyag and tlio gunboat Koreyetz — entered into  
unequal combat with the Japanese squadron and perished heroically  
unequal combat with the Japanese squadron and perished heroically  
off the Korean coast. After weakening the [Russian (loot by this ti'cach-
off the Korean coast. After weakening the [Russian (loot by this ti'cach
erous attack, Japan secured command of the sea.  
erous attack, Japan secured command of the sea.  


Line 1,030: Line 1,030:
mounted artillery, and heavy Kruj;)p siege guns.  
mounted artillery, and heavy Kruj;)p siege guns.  


Hostilities on land did not commence immediately on the out-
Hostilities on land did not commence immediately on the out
break of war. Japan’s main object was to destroy the Russian fleet  
break of war. Japan's main object was to destroy the Russian fleet  
and gain complete command of the sea routes. She therefore tried  
and gain complete command of the sea routes. She therefore tried  
to isolate the Vladivostok squadron from the Port Arthur squadron  
to isolate the Vladivostok squadron from the Port Arthur squadron  
and to impose a complete blockade upon Port Arthur. Meanwhile,  
and to impose a complete blockade upon Port Arthur. Meanwhile,  
the Russian High Command slowly mustered its forc*<ns in Manchuria.  
the Russian High Command slowly mustered its forc*<ns in Manchuria.  
The transportation of troops, arms, ammunition and pi’ovisions tens  
The transportation of troops, arms, ammunition and pi'ovisions tens  
of thousands of kilometres across the Great Siberian Road was a long  
of thousands of kilometres across the Great Siberian Road was a long  
and difficult task. Tho railway ended at Lakc^ Baikal and men and freight  
and difficult task. Tho railway ended at Lakc^ Baikal and men and freight  
had to bo shipped across in boats or ic-ebrea leers, and further on Rus-
had to bo shipped across in boats or ic-ebrea leers, and further on Rus
sian carts andhoims liad to struggle over the bad roads of Manchuria.  
sian carts andhoims liad to struggle over the bad roads of Manchuria.  


Tho army lacked mountain artillery and grenades, there was  
Tho army lacked mountain artillery and grenades, there was  
a shortage of machine guns, rifles and shells, and telegraph and tele-
a shortage of machine guns, rifles and shells, and telegraph and tele
phone communication wore extremely ])oor.  
phone communication wore extremely ])oor.  


Line 1,060: Line 1,060:
from Port Arthur.  
from Port Arthur.  


The talented Admiral Makarov was ajjpointod Oommander-iu-
The talented Admiral Makarov was ajjpointod Oommander-iu
Chief of the Fleet in Port Arthur. The son of a sailor, his promotion  
Chief of the Fleet in Port Arthur. The son of a sailor, his promotion  
was due entirely to his outstanding military capabilities. In Port  
was due entirely to his outstanding military capabilities. In Port  
Line 1,069: Line 1,069:
board the Petropavlovsk at the time, perished too.  
board the Petropavlovsk at the time, perished too.  


In April 1904, in a battle on the river Yalunear Chiu -Lien-Ch ’eng,  
In April 1904, in a battle on the river Yalunear Chiu -Lien-Ch 'eng,  
a Russian force of 20,000 men that was barring the Japanese advance  
a Russian force of 20,000 men that was barring the Japanese advance  
into Manchuria was defeated. In May the Japanese cut the lines of  
into Manchuria was defeated. In May the Japanese cut the lines of  
Line 1,084: Line 1,084:


In Augusb 1904, a battle lasting several days was fought near  
In Augusb 1904, a battle lasting several days was fought near  
Liao- Yang. The Russian troops repulsed all the furious attacks  
LiaoYang. The Russian troops repulsed all the furious attacks  
launched by the Japanese upon the main Liao- Yang positions. The  
launched by the Japanese upon the main LiaoYang positions. The  
Japanese command was already preparing to retreat southward when  
Japanese command was already preparing to retreat southward when  
Kuropatkin,. having received false information to the effect that the  
Kuropatkin,. having received false information to the effect that the  
Line 1,094: Line 1,094:


In September and October 1904, a second big battle took place  
In September and October 1904, a second big battle took place  
near the river Shaho which lasted for nearly two weeks. The Rus-
near the river Shaho which lasted for nearly two weeks. The Rus
sian troops held their position, but this time too the Russian Command  
sian troops held their position, but this time too the Russian Command  
failed to take advantage of the situation to achieve victory.  
failed to take advantage of the situation to achieve victory.  
Line 1,102: Line 1,102:
a military engineer, who was appointed chief of the land defence.  
a military engineer, who was appointed chief of the land defence.  
On his initiative improved fortifications and blindages were erected  
On his initiative improved fortifications and blindages were erected  
and the manufacture of grenades and observation balloons was organ-
and the manufacture of grenades and observation balloons was organ
ized on the spot. The guns and ammunition were removed from the  
ized on the spot. The guns and ammunition were removed from the  
sunken warships and utilized for the land defences, and the crews of  
sunken warships and utilized for the land defences, and the crews of  
these ships were transferred to the land. General Kondratenko appre-
these ships were transferred to the land. General Kondratenko appre
ciated the enormous political and military importance of Port Arthur  
ciated the enormous political and military importance of Port Arthur  
and devoted all his skill and resourcefulness to the task of holding  
and devoted all his skill and resourcefulness to the task of holding  
it. He was popular among the soldiers, roused their fighting  
it. He was popular among the soldiers, roused their fighting  
spirit, and awarded military decorations to those who displayed  
spirit, and awarded military decorations to those who displayed  
heroism. General Stcssol, the Gommander-in-Chief of the fortress, how-
heroism. General Stcssol, the Gommander-in-Chief of the fortress, how
ever, proved to bo a traitor and did all in his power to hinder the defence.  
ever, proved to bo a traitor and did all in his power to hinder the defence.  
On December 20, 1904, he treaclierously surrendered Port Arthur.  
On December 20, 1904, he treaclierously surrendered Port Arthur.  
During the period of the siege the defenders of the fortress inflicted heavy casualties upon the enemy amounting to about 130,000 killed and wounded. Considerable damage was also iu^l■i(^ted upon the Japa-
During the period of the siege the defenders of the fortress inflicted heavy casualties upon the enemy amounting to about 130,000 killed and wounded. Considerable damage was also iu^l■i(^ted upon the Japa
nese coastal fleet by the Russian coastal artillery and mines.  
nese coastal fleet by the Russian coastal artillery and mines.  


Line 1,126: Line 1,126:
A monument to the memory of these two heroes of the SieregmlicM  
A monument to the memory of these two heroes of the SieregmlicM  
now stands in Leningrad. Many feats of heroism wore i>orformod by  
now stands in Leningrad. Many feats of heroism wore i>orformod by  
the soldiers and sailors in the battles of Shalio, Liao- Yang and Mukden  
the soldiers and sailors in the battles of Shalio, LiaoYang and Mukden  
and during the defence of Port Aj’thur, but the blunders of the com-
and during the defence of Port Aj'thur, but the blunders of the com
manders nullified the heroic efforts of the army and ileot.
manders nullified the heroic efforts of the army and ileot.


Line 1,141: Line 1,141:
fronts wore a reflection of the general rotiouness of the tsarist regime.  
fronts wore a reflection of the general rotiouness of the tsarist regime.  
General Grippoiiburg, tlio commander of one of the armies, after fosing  
General Grippoiiburg, tlio commander of one of the armies, after fosing  
a battle, deserted the army and lied to St, Polersbuig. Other geiici*-
a battle, deserted the army and lied to St, Polersbuig. Other geiici*
als were concerned only with their own welfare. Gencial Stackle-
als were concerned only with their own welfare. Gencial Stackle
berg, while at the front, thought more of his own comfort than of any-
berg, while at the front, thought more of his own comfort than of any
thing else. Ho had a special freight car attached to his train in which  
thing else. Ho had a special freight car attached to his train in which  
he kept a cow so that ho might have fresh cream with his morning coj’^ec .  
he kept a cow so that ho might have fresh cream with his morning coj'^ec .  
The officers of the army wore no bettor. Tho Commandcr-in-Chief  
The officers of the army wore no bettor. Tho Commandcr-in-Chief  
Kuropatkiii wrote concerning them: ‘‘Large numbers of officers arc  
Kuropatkiii wrote concerning them: "Large numbers of officers arc  
tired of the war, and many of them, oven those of high rank, feign  
tired of the war, and many of them, oven those of high rank, feign  
sickness and try to get sent to tho roar.’’ In speaking of tlic-
sickness and try to get sent to tho roar." In speaking of tlic
rank and file, Knropatkin could not help admitting that “the war is  
rank and file, Knropatkin could not help admitting that "the war is  
alien to them.Embezzlement, theft and corruption were rife in tho  
alien to them." Embezzlement, theft and corruption were rife in tho  
army. The military equipment of tho tsarist anny was far inferior to  
army. The military equipment of tho tsarist anny was far inferior to  
that of the Japanese. Port Arthur did not even have a radio telegraph,  
that of the Japanese. Port Arthur did not even have a radio telegraph,  
Line 1,159: Line 1,159:
with Japanese spies and saboteurs. Certain Polish socialists rendered  
with Japanese spies and saboteurs. Certain Polish socialists rendered  
Japan direct assistance by acting as spies for her, and a similar rol<ik  
Japan direct assistance by acting as spies for her, and a similar rol<ik  
was played by certain members of the Finnish bourgeoisie who re-
was played by certain members of the Finnish bourgeoisie who re
ceived financial assistance from Japan.  
ceived financial assistance from Japan.  
In an article entitled ‘‘The Fall of Port Arthur” published on January 1, 1905, Lenin, summing up the military and political bank-
In an article entitled "The Fall of Port Arthur" published on January 1, 1905, Lenin, summing up the military and political bank
ruptcy of tsarism, wrote: “The fleet and the fortress, the field forti-
ruptcy of tsarism, wrote: "The fleet and the fortress, the field forti
fications and the land forces proved to be obsolete and useless.  
fications and the land forces proved to be obsolete and useless.  


“The connection between the military organization of the country  
"The connection between the military organization of the country  
and its entire economic and cultural system has never been so close  
and its entire economic and cultural system has never been so close  
as it is at the present time” (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII,  
as it is at the present time" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII,  
Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 48).  
Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 48).  


Lenin drew the conclusion that the military defeat of Russia  
Lenin drew the conclusion that the military defeat of Russia  
must become the starting point of a revolutionary crisis in the country  
must become the starting point of a revolutionary crisis in the country  
and that the capitulation of Port Arthur was the prologue to the capitu-
and that the capitulation of Port Arthur was the prologue to the capitu
lation of tsarism. He directly connected the further development of the  
lation of tsarism. He directly connected the further development of the  
revolution with the defeat of tsarism. “The cause of Russian freedom  
revolution with the defeat of tsarism. "The cause of Russian freedom  
and of the struggle of the Russian (and world) proletariat for Social-
and of the struggle of the Russian (and world) proletariat for Social
ism,he wrote, “depends on the military defeats suffered by the autoc-
ism," he wrote, "depends on the military defeats suffered by the autoc
racy” (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ,  
racy" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ,  
ed., p. 49). He called upon the revolutionary proletariat tirelessly  
ed., p. 49). He called upon the revolutionary proletariat tirelessly  
to oppose the war. In this predatory and shameful wot, Lenin and the  
to oppose the war. In this predatory and shameful wot, Lenin and the  
Line 1,185: Line 1,185:
Comrade Stalin urged the need for the defeat of Russian tsarism  
Comrade Stalin urged the need for the defeat of Russian tsarism  
in this war. In one of the leaflets he wrote against the war, he  
in this war. In one of the leaflets he wrote against the war, he  
said: “We want this war to be more lamentable for the Russian  
said: "We want this war to be more lamentable for the Russian  
autocracy than was the Crimean War. . . . Then it wras serfdom  
autocracy than was the Crimean War. . . . Then it wras serfdom  
that fell, now, as a result of this war, we will bury the child of serf-
that fell, now, as a result of this war, we will bury the child of serf
dom — ^the autocracy and its foul secret police and gendarmes!(Beria,  
dom — ^the autocracy and its foul secret police and gendarmes!" (Beria,  
On the History of the Bolshevik Organizations in Transcaucasia, Moscow,  
On the History of the Bolshevik Organizations in Transcaucasia, Moscow,  
1939, p. 46.)
1939, p. 46.)


===== The Revolutionary Crisis on the Eve of 1905 =====
===== The Revolutionary Crisis on the Eve of 1905 =====
The Russo-
The Russo
Japanese War greatly aggravated the economic situation in Russia.  
Japanese War greatly aggravated the economic situation in Russia.  
The war called for the expenditure of enormous funds, and this expend-
The war called for the expenditure of enormous funds, and this expend
iture was met by foreign loans obtained on exorbitant terms and by  
iture was met by foreign loans obtained on exorbitant terms and by  
the raising of indirect taxes. As a consequence the cost of living rose  
the raising of indirect taxes. As a consequence the cost of living rose  
considerably. The calling up of the reserves for the army struck a  
considerably. The calling up of the reserves for the army struck a  
heavy blow at the peasant farms, for it deprived them of man-
heavy blow at the peasant farms, for it deprived them of man
power.  
power.  


Line 1,205: Line 1,205:
industry. The capitalists cut wages. Strikes became more frequent.  
industry. The capitalists cut wages. Strikes became more frequent.  


The growth of the working-class movement and the defeat tsar-
The growth of the working-class movement and the defeat tsar
ism sujBFored in the Far East revived the opposition of the liberal  
ism sujBFored in the Far East revived the opposition of the liberal  
bourgeoisie, because, for one thing, they were afraid that the govern-
bourgeoisie, because, for one thing, they were afraid that the govern
ment would not be able to cope with the gi^owing working-class and  
ment would not be able to cope with the gi^owing working-class and  
peasant movement. In 1904, Finnish nationalists assassinated Bobri-
peasant movement. In 1904, Finnish nationalists assassinated Bobri
kov, the dictator of Finland. In July of that year Socialist-Revolu-
kov, the dictator of Finland. In July of that year Socialist-Revolu
tionaries assassinated Plehve. After its defeat in the battle of Liaoyang tlie tsarist govoruinout tried to win over to its side the moderate liberals, particularly the Zemstvo liberals, and in November 1904,  
tionaries assassinated Plehve. After its defeat in the battle of Liaoyang tlie tsarist govoruinout tried to win over to its side the moderate liberals, particularly the Zemstvo liberals, and in November 1904,  
it sanctioned the convocation of a Zemstvo congress. The majority  
it sanctioned the convocation of a Zemstvo congress. The majority  
Line 1,219: Line 1,219:
councils, who in their turn would form a })arliameut.  
councils, who in their turn would form a })arliameut.  


The Zemstvo liberals and bourgeois iiitelleetiials began l-o or-
The Zemstvo liberals and bourgeois iiitelleetiials began l-o or
ganize banquets at which, proposing toasts drunk in eham])agno,  
ganize banquets at which, proposing toasts drunk in eham])agno,  
they timidly expressed the desire to receive political rights. The  
they timidly expressed the desire to receive political rights. The  
Line 1,232: Line 1,232:
In November and Douembor 1904, the Bolslieviks organized street  
In November and Douembor 1904, the Bolslieviks organized street  
demonstrations in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Kharkov and other cities  
demonstrations in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Kharkov and other cities  
under tlie slogans of ^‘Down witli the autocraty !*5 "\Dowu with the  
under tlie slogans of ^'Down witli the autocraty !*" 5 "\Dowu with the  
war!
war!"


In that same ycuu* the Bolsheviks in TVanscaucasia developed  
In that same ycuu* the Bolsheviks in TVanscaucasia developed  
considerable activity under Comrade Stalin’s leadcu’ship. In Decem-
considerable activity under Comrade Stalin's leadcu'ship. In Decem
ber 1904, Comrade Stalin led a huge strike of the oil workers in Baku  
ber 1904, Comrade Stalin led a huge strike of the oil workers in Baku  
which lasted from December 13 to the end of the month and involved  
which lasted from December 13 to the end of the month and involved  
8,300 workers employed in 21 plants. The Baku ])rolotarians drew up  
8,300 workers employed in 21 plants. The Baku ])rolotarians drew up  
a series of demands which in the beginning of 1905 became the mili-
a series of demands which in the beginning of 1905 became the mili
tant program of all the revolutionary workers of Russia. At the head  
tant program of all the revolutionary workers of Russia. At the head  
of this list were th(5 demands for the convocation of a Constituent  
of this list were th(5 demands for the convocation of a Constituent  
Assembly and for an 8-hour working day. During the strike the workons  
Assembly and for an 8-hour working day. During the strike the workons  
held numerous demonstrations under the slogans: ‘‘Down with the  
held numerous demonstrations under the slogans: "Down with the  
autocracy !% “Down with the war!
autocracy !'% "Down with the war!"


The police tried to disrupt the strike by fomenting national  
The police tried to disrupt the strike by fomenting national  
Line 1,252: Line 1,252:


The Baku strike ended in a brilliant victory for the workers. For  
The Baku strike ended in a brilliant victory for the workers. For  
the first time in the liistory of Russia the workers compelled the capi-
the first time in the liistory of Russia the workers compelled the capi
talists to conclude a collective agreement concerning the hiring of  
talists to conclude a collective agreement concerning the hiring of  
workers. The agreement established a 9-honr day (eight hours on the  
workers. The agreement established a 9-honr day (eight hours on the  
eve of holidays). “The Baku strike, ■"* wrote Comrade Stalin, “was
eve of holidays). "The Baku strike, ■"* wrote Comrade Stalin, "was
the signal for the glorious actions in January aud February all over  
the signal for the glorious actions in January aud February all over  
Russia” {History of the Communist Party of the /Soviet Union | Bol-
Russia" {History of the Communist Party of the /Soviet Union | Bol
sheviks], Short Course, Moscow, li)45, p. 50).  
sheviks], Short Course, Moscow, li)45, p. 50).  


Line 1,269: Line 1,269:
tsarist government to seek every possible means of diverting the  
tsarist government to seek every possible means of diverting the  
workers from the political struggle. One of their instruments for  
workers from the political struggle. One of their instruments for  
the achievement of this object was the priest Gapon, an agent provo-
the achievement of this object was the priest Gapon, an agent provo
cateur, who, on the instruction of the secret police, attempted  
cateur, who, on the instruction of the secret police, attempted  
to repeat the Zubatov experiment and in 1904 formed the Assembly  
to repeat the Zubatov experiment and in 1904 formed the Assembly  
of Russian Factory Workers. This association organized pro-
of Russian Factory Workers. This association organized pro
monarchist lectures, theatrical performances and concerts for  
monarchist lectures, theatrical performances and concerts for  
workers.  
workers.  
Line 1,285: Line 1,285:
To keep the workers away from the revolutionary struggle the  
To keep the workers away from the revolutionary struggle the  
priest Gapon put forward a treacherous plan to draw up a petition  
priest Gapon put forward a treacherous plan to draw up a petition  
to the tsar in the name of the St. Petersburg workers and to get all the workers to march in a body to tlic Winter Palace to present it. He infoi’inocl the sc(*ret police of this plan and ibo latter approved  
to the tsar in the name of the St. Petersburg workers and to get all the workers to march in a body to tlic Winter Palace to present it. He infoi'inocl the sc(*ret police of this plan and ibo latter approved  
of it. The government decided to shoot down ilio workers and to drown  
of it. The government decided to shoot down ilio workers and to drown  
the growing revolutionary movcuneiit in blood.  
the growing revolutionary movcuneiit in blood.  


Tho petition read as follows: “Wo, tbo workingmen of St. Peters-
Tho petition read as follows: "Wo, tbo workingmen of St. Peters
burg, onr wives, our ohildroii and our bolpk'ss old parents, have  
burg, onr wives, our ohildroii and our bolpk'ss old parents, have  
(jomo to Tlico, our Sovereign, to seek trtitb and ]>rotoetion.  
(jomo to Tlico, our Sovereign, to seek trtitb and ]>rotoetion.  
Line 1,298: Line 1,298:
and ignorance; wo arc being strangled by despotism and tyranny, , . .  
and ignorance; wo arc being strangled by despotism and tyranny, , . .  
Our patience is exhausted, Tho dreaded moment has arrived when we  
Our patience is exhausted, Tho dreaded moment has arrived when we  
would rather die than bear these intolerable sufferings any longer
would rather die than bear these intolerable sufferings any longer "


Then followed a series of economic and political demands for  
Then followed a series of economic and political demands for  
Line 1,306: Line 1,306:
In the original draft of the petition there were no political demands  
In the original draft of the petition there were no political demands  
whatever; they wore introduced on tho proposal of tbo Bolsheviks when  
whatever; they wore introduced on tho proposal of tbo Bolsheviks when  
the petition was discussed at workers’ mootings. TJie Bolsheviks urged  
the petition was discussed at workers' mootings. TJie Bolsheviks urged  
tho workers to give up tho idea of marching in ])rocessiou to tho tsar and  
tho workers to give up tho idea of marching in ])rocessiou to tho tsar and  
told them that freodoiu could not bo obtained by means of petitions,  
told them that freodoiu could not bo obtained by means of petitions,  
but a largo section of tho workers still believotl iii tho tsar. “Wo ’ll
but a largo section of tho workers still believotl iii tho tsar. "Wo 'll
try. Tho tsar cannot reject our just demands,they said.  
try. Tho tsar cannot reject our just demands," they said.  


Early in the morning on Sunday tlauuary 9 (22), 1005, 140,000  
Early in the morning on Sunday tlauuary 9 (22), 1005, 140,000  
workei‘s carrying portraits of tho tsar, Hags and icons marched to the  
workei's carrying portraits of tho tsar, Hags and icons marched to the  
Winter Palace, ohautiug prayers on the way.  
Winter Palace, ohautiug prayers on the way.  


The tsarist government had decided to greet tho workers with bul-
The tsarist government had decided to greet tho workers with bul
lets and bayonets. Tho entire city was divided U]) into military areas,  
lets and bayonets. Tho entire city was divided U]) into military areas,  
and police, Cossacks and troops wore posted every whore. Troops  
and police, Cossacks and troops wore posted every whore. Troops  
posted at the city gates began to fire at the workers, to ])re-
posted at the city gates began to fire at the workers, to ])re
vent them penetrating into tho city. Nevertheless, large num-
vent them penetrating into tho city. Nevertheless, large num
bers of workers reached tho Winter Palace Square. The brutal  
bers of workers reached tho Winter Palace Square. The brutal  
tsarist troox)s shot d 9 wn tho approaching crowds of peaceful  
tsarist troox)s shot d 9 wn tho approaching crowds of peaceful  
Line 1,330: Line 1,330:


The workers gave to January 9 tho name of Bloody Sunday. On that  
The workers gave to January 9 tho name of Bloody Sunday. On that  
day even tho backward workers lost all faith in the tsar. “Wo have no  
day even tho backward workers lost all faith in the tsar. "Wo have no  
tsar,said aged workers, destroying tho portraits of tho tsar that hung  
tsar," said aged workers, destroying tho portraits of tho tsar that hung  
in their homes.  
in their homes.  


The Bolsheviks issued lea (lots headed: “To Arms, Comrades!
The Bolsheviks issued lea (lots headed: "To Arms, Comrades!"
whereupon the workers raided gunsmiths’ shops and workshops and seized the arms. In the afternoon of January 9, the first barricades were erected on Vasilyevsky Island, a district of St. Peters-
whereupon the workers raided gunsmiths' shops and workshops and seized the arms. In the afternoon of January 9, the first barricades were erected on Vasilyevsky Island, a district of St. Peters
burg. The workers said: “The tsar gave it to us; weTl now give it to  
burg. The workers said: "The tsar gave it to us; weTl now give it to  
him !Collisions with the police occurred in the streets. Cries were  
him !" Collisions with the police occurred in the streets. Cries were  
raised: "Down with the autocracy!
raised: '"Down with the autocracy!"


On January 9, 1905, the working class received a great lesson in  
On January 9, 1905, the working class received a great lesson in  
civil war. As Lenin wrote: . . . The revolutionary education of the  
civil war. As Lenin wrote: ". . . The revolutionary education of the  
proletariat made more progress in one day than it could have made in  
proletariat made more progress in one day than it could have made in  
months and years of drab, humdrum, wretched existence” (V. I. Lenin,  
months and years of drab, humdrum, wretched existence" (V. I. Lenin,  
Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 289).  
Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 289).  


Lenin heard of the events of Bloody Sunday in Geneva, where he  
Lenin heard of the events of Bloody Sunday in Geneva, where he  
was living at that time in exile. In an article entitled: “The Beginning  
was living at that time in exile. In an article entitled: "The Beginning  
of the Revolution in Russia,he appraised these events in the following  
of the Revolution in Russia," he appraised these events in the following  
terms: “The eyes of the proletariat of the whole world are turned with  
terms: "The eyes of the proletariat of the whole world are turned with  
feverish impatience towards the proletariat of the whole of Russia.  
feverish impatience towards the proletariat of the whole of Russia.  
The overthrow of tsarism in Russia, begun so valiantly by our  
The overthrow of tsarism in Russia, begun so valiantly by our  
working class, will be the turning point in the history of all coun-
working class, will be the turning point in the history of all coun
tries” \lhid,, p. 292). Lenin called upon the Party and the work-
tries" \lhid,, p. 292). Lenin called upon the Party and the work
ing class immediately to commence preparations for an armed  
ing class immediately to commence preparations for an armed  
insurrection.
insurrection.
Line 1,362: Line 1,362:
country. In January alone 440,000 workers were involved in strikes,  
country. In January alone 440,000 workers were involved in strikes,  
compared with only 430,000 throughout the whole of the preceding  
compared with only 430,000 throughout the whole of the preceding  
ten years. As Lenin wrote: “It is this awakening of tremendous masses  
ten years. As Lenin wrote: "It is this awakening of tremendous masses  
of the people to political consciousness and revolutionary struggle that  
of the people to political consciousness and revolutionary struggle that  
marks the historic significance of January 22, 1905” (V. I. Lenin,  
marks the historic significance of January 22, 1905" (V. I. Lenin,  
Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 2),  
Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 2),  


Line 1,371: Line 1,371:


Strikes also broke out in Poland, Finland, the Ukraine, the Caucasus  
Strikes also broke out in Poland, Finland, the Ukraine, the Caucasus  
and Siberia. In one of the leaflets he issued in the beginning of 1‘905,  
and Siberia. In one of the leaflets he issued in the beginning of 1'905,  
Comrade Stalin wrote that as soon as the signal was heard from St.  
Comrade Stalin wrote that as soon as the signal was heard from St.  
Petersburg the workers of all nationalities, “as though by common  
Petersburg the workers of all nationalities, "as though by common  
consent, responded with unanimous fraternal greeting to the call of  
consent, responded with unanimous fraternal greeting to the call of  
the St. Petersburg workers and boldly challenged the autocracy”
the St. Petersburg workers and boldly challenged the autocracy"
(Beria, On the History of the Bolshevik Ori^anizaiions in Transcaucasia,  
(Beria, On the History of the Bolshevik Ori^anizaiions in Transcaucasia,  
Moscow, 1939, p. 65).  
Moscow, 1939, p. 65).  


On January 18, a general strike of the Tiflis workers commenced  
On January 18, a general strike of the Tiflis workers commenced  
under Comrade Stalin’s leadership. Bolshevik agitators distributed  
under Comrade Stalin's leadership. Bolshevik agitators distributed  
among the strikers leaflets in the Georgian, Armenian and Russian  
among the strikers leaflets in the Georgian, Armenian and Russian  
languages, calling upon thorn to prepare for an armed insurrection. In  
languages, calling upon thorn to prepare for an armed insurrection. In  
Line 1,395: Line 1,395:
The massacre of tho workers on January 0 roused the indignation  
The massacre of tho workers on January 0 roused the indignation  
among tho working people in Western E\iropo too. Tho workers of  
among tho working people in Western E\iropo too. Tho workers of  
Paris, London, Vienna and Brussels demonstrated outside ihe Rus-
Paris, London, Vienna and Brussels demonstrated outside ihe Rus
sian embassies, their watchwords being: “Down with lsarisml’%  
sian embassies, their watchwords being: "Down with lsarisml'%  
"Down with the assassins !"Long live tho revolution!"The workers  
"Down with the assassins !" "Long live tho revolution!"' The workers  
of Prance and Italy sent the Russian 'w^’orkci's fratorjial greetings and  
of Prance and Italy sent the Russian 'w^'orkci's fratorjial greetings and  
promised them their assistance.
promised them their assistance.


Line 1,405: Line 1,405:
incipient revolution, the tsar ap]iointod Tro]mv, formerly Chief of  
incipient revolution, the tsar ap]iointod Tro]mv, formerly Chief of  
Police in Moscow, Governor General of St. Petersburg. Practically,  
Police in Moscow, Governor General of St. Petersburg. Practically,  
Trepov became the militajy dictator; ho lu’oclaiincd martial law in  
Trepov became the militajy dictator; ho lu'oclaiincd martial law in  
the capital.  
the capital.  


The tsar received a deputation of "workers*wlio had boon espe-
The tsar received a deputation of "workers*' wlio had boon espe
cially picked by tho i)olico and tol<l tluMii that, ho believed in tlu^  
cially picked by tho i)olico and tol<l tluMii that, ho believed in tlu^  
"unshakable devotion of tho working ])oo]d(^"and tlioroforo "forgave  
"unshakable devotion of tho working ])oo]d(^"' and tlioroforo "forgave  
them.This cynical statonicut of the assassin-tsar roused indignation  
them." This cynical statonicut of the assassin-tsar roused indignation  
even among tlv » most backward workoi's.  
even among tlv » most backward workoi's.  


In tho endeavour to divert tho worktu’s from revolution, the tsarist  
In tho endeavour to divert tho worktu's from revolution, the tsarist  
clique resorted to downriglit clocoptiou. In rJaniiary 1005, a com-
clique resorted to downriglit clocoptiou. In rJaniiary 1005, a com
mission was set up, under the chairmanship of Senator Shidlovsky, to in-
mission was set up, under the chairmanship of Senator Shidlovsky, to in
quire into the "causes of the discontent of tho workers in tho capital.*'*  
quire into the "causes of the discontent of tho workers in tho capital.*'*  


It was intended to include several roprosoiitativos of the workers  
It was intended to include several roprosoiitativos of the workers  
in this commission, in addition to government officials and capitalists.  
in this commission, in addition to government officials and capitalists.  
The Mensheviks wore ready to act on this tsar’s oomniission, but the  
The Mensheviks wore ready to act on this tsar's oomniission, but the  
workers, on tho proposal of the Bolsheviks, boycotted tho election  
workers, on tho proposal of the Bolsheviks, boycotted tho election  
of representatives to it. Tho Bolsheviks took part only in tho  
of representatives to it. Tho Bolsheviks took part only in tho  
Line 1,431: Line 1,431:
In tho endeavour to split the raiiliS of tho revolutionary workers  
In tho endeavour to split the raiiliS of tho revolutionary workers  
the tsarist axithorities deliberately fomented strife among tlio various  
the tsarist axithorities deliberately fomented strife among tlio various  
nationalities in Russia. The result of this was the frightful Armoni-
nationalities in Russia. The result of this was the frightful Armoni
an-Azerbaijanian massacre in Baku on February 0 and 7, 1005. This  
an-Azerbaijanian massacre in Baku on February 0 and 7, 1005. This  
pogrom was stopped by tho efforts of tho clasB-conscians workers undcjr  
pogrom was stopped by tho efforts of tho clasB-conscians workers undcjr  
the leadership of the Bolsheviks. In February, the ])olico, aided by  
the leadership of the Bolsheviks. In February, the ])olico, aided by  
hired bandits, organized an anti- Jo wish pogrom in Foodosia.  
hired bandits, organized an antiJo wish pogrom in Foodosia.  
In Kursk the police boat up high- school studontH in order to intimidate the radically-minded youth. But these pogroms and assaults only served to intensify popular hatred of tsarism -
In Kursk the police boat up highschool studontH in order to intimidate the radically-minded youth. But these pogroms and assaults only served to intensify popular hatred of tsarism  


In February 1905, tsarism sustained military 'defeat in the battle  
In February 1905, tsarism sustained military 'defeat in the battle  
Line 1,442: Line 1,442:
take advantage of a series of partial successes which the Russian troops  
take advantage of a series of partial successes which the Russian troops  
had achieved in the battle. The Russian army lost 120,000 men (out  
had achieved in the battle. The Russian army lost 120,000 men (out  
of a total of 300,000) in killed, wounded and taken prisoner. It was evi-
of a total of 300,000) in killed, wounded and taken prisoner. It was evi
dent that tsarism had lost the war against Japan. Terrified by the steady  
dent that tsarism had lost the war against Japan. Terrified by the steady  
growth of the revolution, and losing support even among the prop-
growth of the revolution, and losing support even among the prop
ertied classes, which did not believe that tsarism was capable  
ertied classes, which did not believe that tsarism was capable  
of coping with the revolution, the autocracy endeavoured to strike  
of coping with the revolution, the autocracy endeavoured to strike  
a bargain with the bourgeoisie by offering slight political con-
a bargain with the bourgeoisie by offering slight political con
cessions. In February 1905, a tsar’s rescript, addressed to Bulygin, the  
cessions. In February 1905, a tsar's rescript, addressed to Bulygin, the  
Minister of the Interior, was promulgated, instructing the latter to  
Minister of the Interior, was promulgated, instructing the latter to  
convene a conference to draw up a scheme for the establishment of an  
convene a conference to draw up a scheme for the establishment of an  
advisory Duma.  
advisory Duma.  


The liberal bourgeoisie readily entered into this deal with the gov-
The liberal bourgeoisie readily entered into this deal with the gov
ernment and submitted its extremely moderate proposals for a con-
ernment and submitted its extremely moderate proposals for a con
stitution. The constitutional proposals of the ^‘Liberation” group and  
stitution. The constitutional proposals of the ^'Liberation" group and  
of the Zemstvo congress (held in April 1905), left the monarchist form  
of the Zemstvo congress (held in April 1905), left the monarchist form  
of government intact and provided for the creation of a two-chamber  
of government intact and provided for the creation of a two-chamber  
Line 1,463: Line 1,463:
against universal suffrage. *  
against universal suffrage. *  


Lenin denounced this “constitutional haggling,as he described this  
Lenin denounced this "constitutional haggling," as he described this  
bargaining between the liberals and tsarism, and again and again  
bargaining between the liberals and tsarism, and again and again  
called upon the workers to prepare for an armed insurrection.  
called upon the workers to prepare for an armed insurrection.  
Line 1,470: Line 1,470:


===== The Third Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. =====
===== The Third Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. =====
The effect of the disrup-
The effect of the disrup
tive tactics that were pursued by the Mensheviks was that at the deci-
tive tactics that were pursued by the Mensheviks was that at the deci
sive stage in the development of the revolution the Party was split  
sive stage in the development of the revolution the Party was split  
in two and lacked a single leadership and a common Party line in tac-
in two and lacked a single leadership and a common Party line in tac
tics. Formally, the Party was imited, but actually the Bolsheviks and  
tics. Formally, the Party was imited, but actually the Bolsheviks and  
Mensheviks very much resembled two separate parties, each having  
Mensheviks very much resembled two separate parties, each having  
its own central body and its own leading newspaper.  
its own central body and its own leading newspaper.  


For the purpose of drawing up the Party’s tactics in the revolution  
For the purpose of drawing up the Party's tactics in the revolution  
and of setting up leading bodies for the Party, the Bolsheviks convened  
and of setting up leading bodies for the Party, the Bolsheviks convened  
the Third Congress of the Party. This congress was held in London in  
the Third Congress of the Party. This congress was held in London in  
Line 1,490: Line 1,490:
was liie hist bonrgoois-democratic revolution to take place inthoo])och  
was liie hist bonrgoois-democratic revolution to take place inthoo])och  
of imporialisni. Its main task was to destroy the Russian autocracy  
of imporialisni. Its main task was to destroy the Russian autocracy  
and its econoinic foundation, serf-based landlordism. Hence, the slo-
and its econoinic foundation, serf-based landlordism. Hence, the slo
gans of this revolution were: a democratic republic, confiscation of all  
gans of this revolution were: a democratic republic, confiscation of all  
landlords’ estates and thoir transfer to the ])oasauts for cultivation,  
landlords' estates and thoir transfer to the ])oasauts for cultivation,  
and the introduction of an 8-hour day in industry.  
and the introduction of an 8-hour day in industry.  


Line 1,504: Line 1,504:
the allies of the proletariat, for the proletariat alone could helj) the  
the allies of the proletariat, for the proletariat alone could helj) the  
peasants to solve the agrarian problem in a revolutionary way. The  
peasants to solve the agrarian problem in a revolutionary way. The  
Russian bourgeoisie was counior-revolut ionary; it feared tlio prole-
Russian bourgeoisie was counior-revolut ionary; it feared tlio prole
tariat and wanted to strike a bargain with tsarism with a view to  
tariat and wanted to strike a bargain with tsarism with a view to  
limiting the j)olitical rights and damaging the economic interests of  
limiting the j)olitical rights and damaging the economic interests of  
Line 1,514: Line 1,514:
Lenin taught that after overthrowing tsarism, tlie i)rolotariat  
Lenin taught that after overthrowing tsarism, tlie i)rolotariat  
would not rest content with this victory, but would utilize it  
would not rest content with this victory, but would utilize it  
for the purpose of immediately passing, together with the i)oorost sec-
for the purpose of immediately passing, together with the i)oorost sec
tions of the peasantry, to the socialist revolution. “From the democrat-
tions of the peasantry, to the socialist revolution. "From the democrat
ic revolution,he wrote, “wo shall at once, according to the dogroo  
ic revolution," he wrote, "wo shall at once, according to the dogroo  
of our strength, the strength of the class-conscious and organized prole-
of our strength, the strength of the class-conscious and organized prole
tariat, begin to pass over to the socialist revolution” (V. I. Lonin,  
tariat, begin to pass over to the socialist revolution" (V. I. Lonin,  
lected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 145). Basing itself on Lenin’s
lected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 145). Basing itself on Lenin's
appraisal of the revolution in Russia, the Third Congress of the Party  
appraisal of the revolution in Russia, the Third Congress of the Party  
adopted a resolution “On the Provisional Revolutionary Government,
adopted a resolution "On the Provisional Revolutionary Government,"
which affirmed tliat after the victory of the bourgeois-democratic revo-
which affirmed tliat after the victory of the bourgeois-democratic revo
lution, this provisional revolutionary govermnent would become the  
lution, this provisional revolutionary govermnent would become the  
organ of the revolutionary democratic dictatorship of the proletariat  
organ of the revolutionary democratic dictatorship of the proletariat  
and the peasantry. The task of this government was to carry the bour-
and the peasantry. The task of this government was to carry the bour
geois-democratic revolution in Russia to complete victory. Lonin and  
geois-democratic revolution in Russia to complete victory. Lonin and  
Stalin taught that the rovolutionary-dcmooratio dicjtatorslup of thoso  
Stalin taught that the rovolutionary-dcmooratio dicjtatorslup of thoso  
Line 1,531: Line 1,531:
Russia and help the proletariat to pass on to the socialist revolution.  
Russia and help the proletariat to pass on to the socialist revolution.  


The Third Congress also laid down the Party’s tactics, based on the  
The Third Congress also laid down the Party's tactics, based on the  
Bolshevik appraisal of the character and prospects of the revolution. It resolved to sujiport the agrarian demands of the peasantry, including that for the confiscation of all the landlords’ land.  
Bolshevik appraisal of the character and prospects of the revolution. It resolved to sujiport the agrarian demands of the peasantry, including that for the confiscation of all the landlords' land.  


The congress called upon the peasants to set up peasant committees  
The congress called upon the peasants to set up peasant committees  
for the i)ur2)ose of seizing the landlords’ land in a revolutionary man-
for the i)ur2)ose of seizing the landlords' land in a revolutionary man
ner. It particularly emphasized the importance of the general strike  
ner. It particularly emphasized the importance of the general strike  
as a weapon in the struggle. Urging the necessity of an armed insur-
as a weapon in the struggle. Urging the necessity of an armed insur
rection for the purpose of achieving the victory of the revolution, it  
rection for the purpose of achieving the victory of the revolution, it  
called upon the Party organizations to proceed forthwith to prepare for  
called upon the Party organizations to proceed forthwith to prepare for  
Line 1,549: Line 1,549:
Thus, the Third Congress set up a Bolshevik general staff to lead the  
Thus, the Third Congress set up a Bolshevik general staff to lead the  
revolution, armed the Party with a strategical plan for developing the  
revolution, armed the Party with a strategical plan for developing the  
bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolution, and formu-
bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolution, and formu
lated the main tactics of the proletarian party in the bourgeois-demo-
lated the main tactics of the proletarian party in the bourgeois-demo
cratic revolution. Herein lies the enormous historical importance of  
cratic revolution. Herein lies the enormous historical importance of  
the Third Congress of the Party.  
the Third Congress of the Party.  


Lenin expounded the Bolshevik tactics in a work of genius Tioo  
Lenin expounded the Bolshevik tactics in a work of genius Tioo  
Tactics of Social-Democracy iii the Democratic Eevohitioii, which ap-
Tactics of Social-Democracy iii the Democratic Eevohitioii, which ap
peared in July 1905.  
peared in July 1905.  


The Mensheviks and Trotsky ite agents of the bourgeoisie tried  
The Mensheviks and Trotsky ite agents of the bourgeoisie tried  
to frustrate Lenin’s plan for developing the bourgeois-democratic  
to frustrate Lenin's plan for developing the bourgeois-democratic  
revolution into a socialist revolution.  
revolution into a socialist revolution.  


Line 1,573: Line 1,573:
long voyage to the Far Bast round the coast of Africa.  
long voyage to the Far Bast round the coast of Africa.  


In an article entitled “A Debacle” Lenin wrote: "A great armada,  
In an article entitled "A Debacle" Lenin wrote: '"A great armada,  
as huge, as unwieldy, as absurd, as impotent and as monstrous as the  
as huge, as unwieldy, as absurd, as impotent and as monstrous as the  
entire Russian empire itself, set out on its voyage, squandering heaps  
entire Russian empire itself, set out on its voyage, squandering heaps  
of money on coal and maintenance, and evoking universal ridicule in  
of money on coal and maintenance, and evoking universal ridicule in  
Europe” (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ,  
Europe" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ,  
ed., p. 335). This “great armada” was destroyed by the Japanese  
ed., p. 335). This "great armada" was destroyed by the Japanese  
fleet on May 14, 1905 (the anniversary of the coronation of  
fleet on May 14, 1905 (the anniversary of the coronation of  
Nicholas II) in a battle off the island of Tsushima, in the Korea  
Nicholas II) in a battle off the island of Tsushima, in the Korea  
Line 1,595: Line 1,595:
mass revolutionary strikes. The lirst strike wave (January to Aj)ril)  
mass revolutionary strikes. The lirst strike wave (January to Aj)ril)  
afFectod 659,400 workers. The second (in the spring of 1905) affected  
afFectod 659,400 workers. The second (in the spring of 1905) affected  
362,600 workers. The third, covering the period from July to Sep-
362,600 workers. The third, covering the period from July to Sep
tember, affected 264,800 workers.  
tember, affected 264,800 workers.  


The rh’st of May celebrations worc>> accompanied by strikes  
The rh'st of May celebrations worc>> accompanied by strikes  
affecting 220,000 workers and developed into a huge demonstration  
affecting 220,000 workers and developed into a huge demonstration  
against the autocracy.  
against the autocracy.  


The vanguard of these political strikes and demonstrations consist-
The vanguard of these political strikes and demonstrations consist
ed of the metal workers. The textile workers at first organized mainly  
ed of the metal workers. The textile workers at first organized mainly  
economic strikes, but gradually they too entered the political struggle.  
economic strikes, but gradually they too entered the political struggle.  
A vivid example of this is provided by the strike of the textile workcu-s  
A vivid example of this is provided by the strike of the textile workcu-s  
in Ivanovo-Voznesensk, lb began on May 12, 1905, with the presenta-
in Ivanovo-Voznesensk, lb began on May 12, 1905, with the presenta
tion of economic doniands and soon affected the whole of the Ivanovo-
tion of economic doniands and soon affected the whole of the Ivanovo
Voziiosousk textile region. The strike lasted a long time and about 70,000  
Voziiosousk textile region. The strike lasted a long time and about 70,000  
workers, including many women, wore involved. To load the strike a  
workers, including many women, wore involved. To load the strike a  
Joint Strike Committee was oloctod in Ivanovo-Voznesensk, This ooiu-
Joint Strike Committee was oloctod in Ivanovo-Voznesensk, This ooiu
mitteo was called Council of Reprosontativos, and it was in facst thcr  
mitteo was called Council of Reprosontativos, and it was in facst thcr  
first Soviet of Workers’ Deputies in history. This eounoil formotl a  
first Soviet of Workers' Deputies in history. This eounoil formotl a  
workers’ militia to guard the textile mills, established a strike fund to  
workers' militia to guard the textile mills, established a strike fund to  
assist the families of strikers, demanded the closing of vodka shops,  
assist the families of strikers, demanded the closing of vodka shops,  
undertook the supply of provisions for the workers and made a' range-
undertook the supply of provisions for the workers and made a' range
ments for thisimrjjoso with the shopkeepers, and maintained order and  
ments for thisimrjjoso with the shopkeepers, and maintained order and  
discipline among the strikers. The strikers usually assembled on tlu*f  
discipline among the strikers. The strikers usually assembled on tlu*f  
Line 1,622: Line 1,622:
and after the meetings they learned and sang revolutionary songs.  
and after the meetings they learned and sang revolutionary songs.  
One of their favourite speakers w^as the Bolshevik worker Dunay<n^  
One of their favourite speakers w^as the Bolshevik worker Dunay<n^  
The general direction of the strike came from ilus Northern Commit-
The general direction of the strike came from ilus Northern Commit
tee of the Party, headed by Comrade Frunze and Py odor Afanasyev, au  
tee of the Party, headed by Comrade Frunze and Py odor Afanasyev, au  
old weaver who had been one of the speakers at the First of May demon-
old weaver who had been one of the speakers at the First of May demon
stration in St. Petersburg in 1891, and who was known as “Father.
stration in St. Petersburg in 1891, and who was known as "Father."


These meetings wore broken up by the police and troops, and in tlie  
These meetings wore broken up by the police and troops, and in tlie  
collisions scores of workers wore killed and many wounded . The work-
collisions scores of workers wore killed and many wounded . The work
ers remained staunch, however, and continued tlio strike. Flungor  
ers remained staunch, however, and continued tlio strike. Flungor  
alone comxiolled them to return to work, and this tJioy did in an or-
alone comxiolled them to return to work, and this tJioy did in an or
ganized manner.  
ganized manner.  


This strike steeled the workers; it served as a militant scliool for  
This strike steeled the workers; it served as a militant scliool for  
their political education. In a leaflet they issued at the end of the strike, the Social-Democratic workers summed up the struggle as fol-
their political education. In a leaflet they issued at the end of the strike, the Social-Democratic workers summed up the struggle as fol
lows; "The strflse has taught us a  
lows; "The strflse has taught us a  
great deal. Before it many of us were  
great deal. Before it many of us were  
Line 1,646: Line 1,646:
the hands of the tsar, who thinks  
the hands of the tsar, who thinks  
only about the capitalists, we shall  
only about the capitalists, we shall  
never be able to improve our con-
never be able to improve our con
ditions.
ditions."


A determined struggle against  
A determined struggle against  
tsarism was also waged by the work-
tsarism was also waged by the work
ers in the industrial towns of Po-
ers in the industrial towns of Po
land, The general strike which broke  
land, The general strike which broke  
out in Lodz in June 1906, developed  
out in Lodz in June 1906, developed  
Line 1,658: Line 1,658:
throe days a regular battle was  
throe days a regular battle was  
fought between the workers and tho  
fought between the workers and tho  
tsar’s trooi)s. Lenin regarded the Lodz battles as the first armed  
tsar's trooi)s. Lenin regarded the Lodz battles as the first armed  
action of the workers of Russia. In August a collision between police  
action of the workers of Russia. In August a collision between police  
and demonstrators occurred in Byelostok, during which thirty-six per-
and demonstrators occurred in Byelostok, during which thirty-six per
sons were killed and many were wounded. The strikers took to arms  
sons were killed and many were wounded. The strikers took to arms  
to wage a determined struggle against tsarism.  
to wage a determined struggle against tsarism.  
Line 1,671: Line 1,671:


===== The Peasant Movement =====
===== The Peasant Movement =====
The strikes of the industrial workers aft-
The strikes of the industrial workers aft
er Bloody Sunday stimulated the revolutionary movement in the rural  
er Bloody Sunday stimulated the revolutionary movement in the rural  
districts. In the beginning of 1905, the Bolsheviks conducted extensive  
districts. In the beginning of 1905, the Bolsheviks conducted extensive  
Line 1,678: Line 1,678:
in the central regions of Russia, in Georgia and in the Baltic Provinces.  
in the central regions of Russia, in Georgia and in the Baltic Provinces.  
In Pebruary 1005, tho peasants in the Orel, Kursk, Chernigov and  
In Pebruary 1005, tho peasants in the Orel, Kursk, Chernigov and  
other gubernias began to seize the landlords’ estates. In the spring of  
other gubernias began to seize the landlords' estates. In the spring of  
1905, the mass jioasant movement began to spread all over the country.  
1905, the mass jioasant movement began to spread all over the country.  
The peasants wrecked landlords’ mansions, seized their meadows and  
The peasants wrecked landlords' mansions, seized their meadows and  
hay crops, and ploughed up their lands. Often, at night, the tocsin wa&  
hay crops, and ploughed up their lands. Often, at night, the tocsin wa&  
sounded, or a haystack burst into flames — ^this was the signal for general action. Hundreds of peasants, armed with axes and clubs, marched to the landlord’s estate, tore off the locks of the granary and took  
sounded, or a haystack burst into flames — ^this was the signal for general action. Hundreds of peasants, armed with axes and clubs, marched to the landlord's estate, tore off the locks of the granary and took  
the corn, shared among themselves the landlord’s cattle and poultry,  
the corn, shared among themselves the landlord's cattle and poultry,  
\\Tecked the estate offices and burnt the office books, particularly the  
\\Tecked the estate offices and burnt the office books, particularly the  
records of the peasants’ debts and obligations. They burnt the land-
records of the peasants' debts and obligations. They burnt the land
lord's mansion and farm buildings so that the landlord should have no  
lord's mansion and farm buildings so that the landlord should have no  
place to return to. In most cases this movement bore a spontaneous  
place to return to. In most cases this movement bore a spontaneous  
character.  
character.  


The Tliird Congress of the Party called upon the Party organ-
The Tliird Congress of the Party called upon the Party organ
izations to conduct activities among the peasants, to hoi]) them in their  
izations to conduct activities among the peasants, to hoi]) them in their  
struggle and to back their demands for the confiscation of the land-
struggle and to back their demands for the confiscation of the land
lords land. The Party advised the peasants to seize the landlords lands,  
lords ' land. The Party advised the peasants to seize the landlords ' lands,  
to expel the tsar’s officials and to set up their own peasant committees,  
to expel the tsar's officials and to set up their own peasant committees,  
which were to be the embryo of the new revolutionary authority in thc^  
which were to be the embryo of the new revolutionary authority in thc^  
countryside.  
countryside.  


The struggle that was waged by the peasants in Guida under the  
The struggle that was waged by the peasants in Guida under the  
leadership of the Bolsheviks was exceptionally determined and organ-
leadership of the Bolsheviks was exceptionally determined and organ
ized. Comrade Stalin had conducted Social-Democratic activities among  
ized. Comrade Stalin had conducted Social-Democratic activities among  


Line 1,707: Line 1,707:
1902 to their homos in Guria. On arriving homo the dejiortees formed  
1902 to their homos in Guria. On arriving homo the dejiortees formed  
Social-Democratic organizations and under tho leadership of those  
Social-Democratic organizations and under tho leadership of those  
organizations the Ourian peasants began to drive put the tsar’s officials,  
organizations the Ourian peasants began to drive put the tsar's officials,  
refused to ])ay taxes and boycotted tho tsar’s courts. All disputes tliat  
refused to ])ay taxes and boycotted tho tsar's courts. All disputes tliat  
arose were tried by elected people’s courts.  
arose were tried by elected people's courts.  


In March 1905, tho tsar’s government sent General Alikhanov-
In March 1905, tho tsar's government sent General Alikhanov
Avarsky to Guria with a force of 10,000 men of all arms to su])])r(^ss the  
Avarsky to Guria with a force of 10,000 men of all arms to su])])r(^ss the  
revolt. At the same time a high official was sent to investigate tho causes  
revolt. At the same time a high official was sent to investigate tho causes  
of the revolt. The peasants everywhere |)resented the same demands to  
of the revolt. The peasants everywhere |)resented the same demands to  
this official. The delegates from the village of Hidistavi said: "Our  
this official. The delegates from the village of Hidistavi said: '"Our  
demands can be expressed in tliree words: we want bread, justice and  
demands can be expressed in tliree words: we want bread, justice and  
freedom. We are not asking for baked bread, all that wo are asking is  
freedom. We are not asking for baked bread, all that wo are asking is  
that we should be allowed to enjoy the fruits of our labour.In another  
that we should be allowed to enjoy the fruits of our labour." In another  
village a j)easant delegate delivered an impassioned political speech in  
village a j)easant delegate delivered an impassioned political speech in  
the course of which he said: “We expect nothing from the government.  
the course of which he said: "We expect nothing from the government.  
We know very well how cruelly it treated the St. Petersburg workers.  
We know very well how cruelly it treated the St. Petersburg workers.  
We are not so naive as to place any hopes in the government after  
We are not so naive as to place any hopes in the government after  
these atrocities.
these atrocities."


The punitive expedition headed by Alildianov-Avarsky failed to  
The punitive expedition headed by Alildianov-Avarsky failed to  
pacify Guria. At tho Third Congress of the Party tho delegate from the  
pacify Guria. At tho Third Congress of the Party tho delegate from the  
Caucasian Social-Democratic Federation, which ‘was led by (Comrade  
Caucasian Social-Democratic Federation, which 'was led by (Comrade  
Stalin, proudly related the story of the heroic struggle that was being  
Stalin, proudly related the story of the heroic struggle that was being  
waged by the Gurian peasants. The Gurian peasant movement was tins  
waged by the Gurian peasants. The Gurian peasant movement was tins  
most organized and most politioally-conscious peasant movement in Eiussia. The revolutionary struggle of the Abkhazian peasants in Gudauti was led by Orjonikidze.  
most organized and most politioally-conscious peasant movement in Eiussia. The revolutionary struggle of the Abkhazian peasants in Gudauti was led by Orjonikidze.  


During the spring ploughing, strikes broke out among the agricul-
During the spring ploughing, strikes broke out among the agricul
tural labourers. These strikes assumed particularly wide dimensions  
tural labourers. These strikes assumed particularly wide dimensions  
in Latvia, Estonia, Poland, and Byelorussia. The Latvian and Estonian  
in Latvia, Estonia, Poland, and Byelorussia. The Latvian and Estonian  
labourers di*ove out the landlords, seized their estates and ploughed up  
labourers di*ove out the landlords, seized their estates and ploughed up  
the land for themselves.  
the land for themselves.  
In the summer of 1905, the All-Russian Peasant Union was fonned. Notwithstanding the fact that the Socialist-Revolutionaries and lib-
In the summer of 1905, the All-Russian Peasant Union was fonned. Notwithstanding the fact that the Socialist-Revolutionaries and lib
era Ls had succeeded in capturing the central leadership of this Peasant  
era Ls had succeeded in capturing the central leadership of this Peasant  
Union, Lenin held that it was of great importance for the organization  
Union, Lenin held that it was of great importance for the organization  
of the peasants. . Before the victory of the peasant insiirreotion,  
of the peasants. . Before the victory of the peasant insiirreotion,  
and for such a victory, the Peasant Union is a powerful and vital  
and for such a victory, the Peasant Union is a powerful and vital  
organization,he wrote. (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, VoL IX, Mos-
organization," he wrote. (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, VoL IX, Mos
cow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 129.)  
cow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 129.)  


The peasants joined the Union in whole villages. The Socialist-Rev-
The peasants joined the Union in whole villages. The Socialist-Rev
olutionaries wanted to subordinate the peasant movement to the lead-
olutionaries wanted to subordinate the peasant movement to the lead
ership of the bourgeoisie, but the Bolsheviks combated their efforts  
ership of the bourgeoisie, but the Bolsheviks combated their efforts  
to do so. The j)easant movement did not, however, spread all over tho  
to do so. The j)easant movement did not, however, spread all over tho  
Line 1,753: Line 1,753:
Russia.
Russia.


===== The Revolt on the Battleship ''Potemkin'' =====
===== The Revolt on the Battleship "Potemkin" =====
Tsarism had but one proj)  
Tsarism had but one proj)  
left — ^the armed forces; but the defeat in the war and the revolutionary  
left — ^the armed forces; but the defeat in the war and the revolutionary  
Line 1,760: Line 1,760:
crow of the battleship Potemkin of the Black Sea Elect clearly revealed  
crow of the battleship Potemkin of the Black Sea Elect clearly revealed  
that even this prop of tsarism was shaken. The sailors of the navy,  
that even this prop of tsarism was shaken. The sailors of the navy,  
among whom there were many industrial workers, were the most class -
among whom there were many industrial workers, were the most class  
conscious and revolutionary section of the armed forces.  
conscious and revolutionary section of the armed forces.  


Li 1905 the Bolsheviks made energetic preparations for a general  
Li 1905 the Bolsheviks made energetic preparations for a general  
revolt in the Black Sea Fleet which was timed to break out during the  
revolt in the Black Sea Fleet which was timed to break out during the  
assembly of the fleet for training purposes at the Island of Tendra, be-
assembly of the fleet for training purposes at the Island of Tendra, be
tween Odessa and Sevastopol. The revolt on the Potemkin, however,  
tween Odessa and Sevastopol. The revolt on the Potemkin, however,  
broke out spontaneously on June 14, 1905, before the whole fleet had  
broke out spontaneously on June 14, 1905, before the whole fleet had  
Line 1,772: Line 1,772:
to eat the borshcli. The commander assembled tho ringleaders, ordered  
to eat the borshcli. The commander assembled tho ringleaders, ordered  
a tarpaulin to be thrown over them and then ordered them to be  
a tarpaulin to be thrown over them and then ordered them to be  
shot. In protest against this order the whole crew mutinied. A colli-
shot. In protest against this order the whole crew mutinied. A colli
sion occurred between tho officers and the men during which tho sailor  
sion occurred between tho officers and the men during which tho sailor  
Vakuliiichuk, tho leader of the mutiny, was killed by a senior ofidccr.  
Vakuliiichuk, tho leader of the mutiny, was killed by a senior ofidccr.  
Tho leadership passed to another revolutionary sailor named  
Tho leadership passed to another revolutionary sailor named  
Matyushonko. Tho men killed many of tho officers and seized the bat-
Matyushonko. Tho men killed many of tho officers and seized the bat
tleship.
tleship.


The PoUmhin made for Odessa where a general strike was in prog-
The PoUmhin made for Odessa where a general strike was in prog
ress. The arrival of the revolutionary battleship flying the red flag  
ress. The arrival of the revolutionary battleship flying the red flag  
stimulated the workers of Odessa to rise in armed revolt against tsarism,  
stimulated the workers of Odessa to rise in armed revolt against tsarism,  
but the Mensheviks sabotaged the revolt and prevented tlie crew of the  
but the Mensheviks sabotaged the revolt and prevented tlie crew of the  
PoUmhin from landing a party to assist tjio workers. Tlio tsarist govern-
PoUmhin from landing a party to assist tjio workers. Tlio tsarist govern
ment ordered the whole of the remaining ]7art of the Black Sea Fleet to  
ment ordered the whole of the remaining ]7art of the Black Sea Fleet to  
attack the Poiemhin. The revolutionary battlcsliip wont out boldly  
attack the Poiemhin. The revolutionary battlcsliip wont out boldly  
Line 1,801: Line 1,801:
either executed or sentoncod to penal sorvitudo.  
either executed or sentoncod to penal sorvitudo.  


Lenin attributed immenHo imj)ortanec to the revolt on the PoUth-
Lenin attributed immenHo imj)ortanec to the revolt on the PoUth
kin. ^‘Por the first time,he wrote, “an importaiit unit of the armed  
kin. ^'Por the first time," he wrote, "an importaiit unit of the armed  
forces of tsarism — an entire battleship — hm openly gone over to the side  
forces of tsarism — an entire battleship — hm openly gone over to the side  
of the revolution” (V. I. Lenin, SelecUcl Works ^ Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934,  
of the revolution" (V. I. Lenin, SelecUcl Works ^ Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934,  
p. 311).  
p. 311).  


Line 1,811: Line 1,811:
too late. The ship had already left for Rumania.  
too late. The ship had already left for Rumania.  


The revolutionary movement in the anny and in the navy contin-
The revolutionary movement in the anny and in the navy contin
ued to grow. In 1905, cases of mutiny among the reserves increased and  
ued to grow. In 1905, cases of mutiny among the reserves increased and  
not infrequently these were accompanied by the killing of officers. This  
not infrequently these were accompanied by the killing of officers. This  
unrest revealed that the rank and file of the army wot*o wavering and  
unrest revealed that the rank and file of the army wot*o wavering and  
wore becoming an unreliable pro]^ for the autocracy. The Bolsheviks  
wore becoming an unreliable pro]^ for the autocracy. The Bolsheviks  
formed military revolutionary organizations for the ])urpose of conduct-
formed military revolutionary organizations for the ])urpose of conduct
ing activities in the army with the object of uniting the soldiers with  
ing activities in the army with the object of uniting the soldiers with  
the workers and peasants and of leading them on to the armed insur-
the workers and peasants and of leading them on to the armed insur
rection against tsarism.
rection against tsarism.


Line 1,824: Line 1,824:


===== The Bulygin Duma =====
===== The Bulygin Duma =====
The rising tide of the revolutionary move-
The rising tide of the revolutionary move
ment in the country forced the tsarist clique to manoeuvre.  
ment in the country forced the tsarist clique to manoeuvre.  
It was compelled, while continuing its policy of repression, to take a  
It was compelled, while continuing its policy of repression, to take a  
stop towards meeting the wishes of tlie bourgeoisie who, in their turn,  
stop towards meeting the wishes of tlie bourgeoisie who, in their turn,  
were seeking an alliance with it. In other words, it was obliged to strike a bargain with the bourgeoisie. With this object the tsar’s government, on August 6, 1905, passed a law for the convocation of a State Duma.  
were seeking an alliance with it. In other words, it was obliged to strike a bargain with the bourgeoisie. With this object the tsar's government, on August 6, 1905, passed a law for the convocation of a State Duma.  
In conformity with this law the proposed State Duma was to be not a  
In conformity with this law the proposed State Duma was to be not a  
legislative but an advisory body; it was to have the right to express an  
legislative but an advisory body; it was to have the right to express an  
opinion on the bills submitted to it by the government, but not to pass  
opinion on the bills submitted to it by the government, but not to pass  
or reject them. Thus, the law of August 6 left the autocratic system com-
or reject them. Thus, the law of August 6 left the autocratic system com
pletely intact. This Duma was referred to as the Bulygin Duma, after  
pletely intact. This Duma was referred to as the Bulygin Duma, after  
Bulygin, the Minister who had drafted the law. The landlords, who  
Bulygin, the Minister who had drafted the law. The landlords, who  
Line 1,841: Line 1,841:
the liberals. The Bolsheviks alone called upon the people to boycott  
the liberals. The Bolsheviks alone called upon the people to boycott  
the elections to the Bulygin Duma. The further development of the  
the elections to the Bulygin Duma. The further development of the  
revolutionary struggle of the proletariat, led by the Bolsheviks, prevent-
revolutionary struggle of the proletariat, led by the Bolsheviks, prevent
ed the convocation of this Duma.
ed the convocation of this Duma.


===== The Peace of Portsmouth =====
===== The Peace of Portsmouth =====
After the rout of the tsar’s fleet at  
After the rout of the tsar's fleet at  
Tsushima, the international bourgeoisie, fearing the further growth of  
Tsushima, the international bourgeoisie, fearing the further growth of  
the revolution in Russia, strongly urged the tsar’s government to con-
the revolution in Russia, strongly urged the tsar's government to con
clude peace. In their opinion peace with Japan would help to restore  
clude peace. In their opinion peace with Japan would help to restore  
^‘internal peace” in Russia, particularly if the tsarist government made  
^'internal peace" in Russia, particularly if the tsarist government made  
some moderate constitutional concessions to the people. On the other  
some moderate constitutional concessions to the people. On the other  
hand, the United States was apprehensive that Japan would become too  
hand, the United States was apprehensive that Japan would become too  
Line 1,858: Line 1,858:
interested in the speedy conclusion of peace.  
interested in the speedy conclusion of peace.  


At Japan’s request, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United  
At Japan's request, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United  
States, acted as mediator in the negotiations between Russig. and  
States, acted as mediator in the negotiations between Russig. and  
Japan.  
Japan.  


To discuss the situation the tsar’s government, on May 24 (June 6),  
To discuss the situation the tsar's government, on May 24 (June 6),  
1905, called a council of war over which the tsar presided. The majority  
1905, called a council of war over which the tsar presided. The majority  
of those present at the council were in favour of concluding peace. “In-
of those present at the council were in favour of concluding peace. "In
ternal well-being is more important for us than victory. We are living  
ternal well-being is more important for us than victory. We are living  
in an abnormal condition: we must restore to Russia her internal  
in an abnormal condition: we must restore to Russia her internal  
repose,they said.  
repose," they said.  


The government consented fco open peace negotiations and appoint-
The government consented fco open peace negotiations and appoint
ed a peace delegation, headed by Count Witte, who enjoyed the con-
ed a peace delegation, headed by Count Witte, who enjoyed the con
fidence of the bourgeois governments of Europe and America. The peace  
fidence of the bourgeois governments of Europe and America. The peace  
negotiations were opened in the small town of Portsmouth, Maine, in  
negotiations were opened in the small town of Portsmouth, Maine, in  
the United States.  
the United States.  


Japan presented very harsh peace terms. She demanded the Liao-
Japan presented very harsh peace terms. She demanded the Liao
tung Peninsula, the South Manchurian Railway up to Harbin, the Is-
tung Peninsula, the South Manchurian Railway up to Harbin, the Is
land of Sakhalin, and complete control of Korea. In addition, she coimt-
land of Sakhalin, and complete control of Korea. In addition, she coimt
ed on receiving a large indemnity from Russia.
ed on receiving a large indemnity from Russia.
The Russian delegation had received instructions not to yield' an inch of territory to the Japanes e and not to agre^ to the  
The Russian delegation had received instructions not to yield' an inch of territory to the Japanes e and not to agre^ to the  
Line 1,886: Line 1,886:
peace treaty was signed.  
peace treaty was signed.  


Tsarist Russia recognized Japan’s predominant economic, military  
Tsarist Russia recognized Japan's predominant economic, military  
and political interests in Korea , ceded to Japan her lease of Port Ai'thur  
and political interests in Korea , ceded to Japan her lease of Port Ai'thur  
and Dalni, pledged herself to run tho Chinese Eastern Railway exclu-
and Dalni, pledged herself to run tho Chinese Eastern Railway exclu
sively for coininercial purposes and ceded to Japan tho southern part of  
sively for coininercial purposes and ceded to Japan tho southern part of  
SaHialin, with all its adjacent islands. In addition, she concluded a  
SaHialin, with all its adjacent islands. In addition, she concluded a  
disadvantageous fishing convention with Japan. "‘As wo know,said  
disadvantageous fishing convention with Japan. "'As wo know," said  
Comrade Stalin in an address to the people on September 2, 1945,  
Comrade Stalin in an address to the people on September 2, 1945,  
“in the war against Japan, Russia was defeated. Jai:)an took  
"in the war against Japan, Russia was defeated. Jai:)an took  
advantage of tho defeat of tsarist Russia to seize from Russia the south-
advantage of tho defeat of tsarist Russia to seize from Russia the south
ern part ofSaklialin and establish herself on the Kuril Islands, thereby  
ern part ofSaklialin and establish herself on the Kuril Islands, thereby  
putting the lock on all our country’s outlets to the ocean in the East,  
putting the lock on all our country's outlets to the ocean in the East,  
which meant also all outlets to tho ports of Soviet Kani(.hatka and So-
which meant also all outlets to tho ports of Soviet Kani('.hatka and So
viet Chukotka. It was obvious that tlapan was aiming to (lo])rivo Russia  
viet Chukotka. It was obvious that tlapan was aiming to (lo])rivo Russia  
of tho whole of her Ear East” (J. Stalin, On the Omit Palrwiic War of  
of tho whole of her Ear East" (J. Stalin, On the Omit Palrwiic War of  
the Soviet Unio7b, Moscow, 1945, ]>]). 208-209).  
the Soviet Unio7b, Moscow, 1945, ]>]). 208-209).  


As Comrade Stalin obsorvofl in the same speech, tho defeat of tsar-
As Comrade Stalin obsorvofl in the same speech, tho defeat of tsar
ist Russia in 1904-1905 . lay like a black stain upon our country.  
ist Russia in 1904-1905 . lay like a black stain upon our country.  


Our people believed in and waited for tlio day when Japan would bo  
Our people believed in and waited for tlio day when Japan would bo  
defeated and tho stain would bo wiped out.
defeated and tho stain would bo wiped out."


Tho war with Japan cost tho Russian people dear: 400,000 men were  
Tho war with Japan cost tho Russian people dear: 400,000 men were  
Line 1,912: Line 1,912:
to over 3,000,000,000 rubles.  
to over 3,000,000,000 rubles.  


The conclusion of peace with Japan was of considerable assist-
The conclusion of peace with Japan was of considerable assist
ance to the tsarist clique in its further struggle against tho revo-
ance to the tsarist clique in its further struggle against tho revo
lution. But the revolution was not to be halted. In the autumn  
lution. But the revolution was not to be halted. In the autumn  
and winter of 1905 the revolutionary movement rose to its peak.
and winter of 1905 the revolutionary movement rose to its peak.


===== The All-Russian Political Strike =====
===== The All-Russian Political Strike =====
On September 19, 1906, a gen-
On September 19, 1906, a gen
eral printers’ strike broke out in Moscow. The bakers, tobacco work-
eral printers' strike broke out in Moscow. The bakers, tobacco work
ers and workers in other trades joined the printers. Cossacks and gen-
ers and workers in other trades joined the printers. Cossacks and gen
darmes broke up revolutionary demonstrations. The workers fired at the  
darmes broke up revolutionary demonstrations. The workers fired at the  
police with revolvers and wounded many of thorn. On September 25 a  
police with revolvers and wounded many of thorn. On September 25 a  
regular battle was fought in Tverskaya Street (now Gorky Street) out-
regular battle was fought in Tverskaya Street (now Gorky Street) out
side Philippov ’s bakery , A troop of Cossacks charged tho crowd that was  
side Philippov 's bakery , A troop of Cossacks charged tho crowd that was  
blocking the street. Tho workers rushed into tho bakery, climbed to tho  
blocking the street. Tho workers rushed into tho bakery, climbed to tho  
roof of this tall building and from there pelted tho troops with stones.  
roof of this tall building and from there pelted tho troops with stones.  
Line 1,934: Line 1,934:
<nowiki>:</nowiki>age. Lenin stated that the events in Moscow marked the beginning  
<nowiki>:</nowiki>age. Lenin stated that the events in Moscow marked the beginning  
f the insurrection. "^The outbreak of the insurrection has been crushed  
f the insurrection. "^The outbreak of the insurrection has been crushed  
gain. Again: long live the insurrection!he wi*ote (V. I. Lenin, GoU  
gain. Again: long live the insurrection!" he wi*ote (V. I. Lenin, GoU  
‘Cted Works^ Vol. VIII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 282).  
'Cted Works^ Vol. VIII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 282).  


On October 7, the railwaymen on the Moscow-Kazanskaya Railway  
On October 7, the railwaymen on the Moscow-Kazanskaya Railway  
ent bn strike, and on October 8, the men on all the other railways in  
ent bn strike, and on October 8, the men on all the other railways in  
uussia joined them. On October 11, the railway strike developed into a  
uussia joined them. On October 11, the railway strike developed into a  
ation-wido general strike in which the workers of all trades were in-
ation-wido general strike in which the workers of all trades were in
olved. The intelligentsia — schoolteachers, office employees, lawyers,  
olved. The intelligentsia — schoolteachers, office employees, lawyers,  
igineers and students — ^joined the workers. The strikers demanded the  
igineers and students — ^joined the workers. The strikers demanded the  
Dnvocation of a Constituent Assembly. The tsar’s government tried  
Dnvocation of a Constituent Assembly. The tsar's government tried  
3 suppress the strike by armed force. On October 14, Trepov, the Gov-
3 suppress the strike by armed force. On October 14, Trepov, the Gov
<nowiki>:</nowiki>nor General of St. Petersburg and virtual dictator of Russia, issued  
<nowiki>:</nowiki>nor General of St. Petersburg and virtual dictator of Russia, issued  
10 order: “Don’t fire blanli shot; spare no bullets.'But the govern-
10 order: "Don't fire blanli shot; spare no bullets.'" But the govern
lont was already powerless to stop the strilce.  
lont was already powerless to stop the strilce.  


Line 1,972: Line 1,972:


In Ekaterinoslav the entire population of the working-class suburb  
In Ekaterinoslav the entire population of the working-class suburb  
’of Chocholevka took part in building barricades. They threw down tel-
'of Chocholevka took part in building barricades. They threw down tel
egraph ])obs and erected barbed-wire ontanglemonts. The barricades  
egraph ])obs and erected barbed-wire ontanglemonts. The barricades  
wore demolished by troo])s. Collisions with troops also occurred in Odo.s-
wore demolished by troo])s. Collisions with troops also occurred in Odo.s
sa, Saratov, Rostov and other cities.  
sa, Saratov, Rostov and other cities.  


Line 1,982: Line 1,982:
hundred thousand wore affected.
hundred thousand wore affected.


===== The Tsar’s Manifesto of October 17 =====
===== The Tsar's Manifesto of October 17 =====
Scared by the general strike,  
Scared by the general strike,  
the tsar, on October 17, issued a manifesto, which had been drawn up  
the tsar, on October 17, issued a manifesto, which had been drawn up  
Line 1,990: Line 1,990:
franchise, etc. The State Duma was proclaimed a legislative body. But  
franchise, etc. The State Duma was proclaimed a legislative body. But  
this manifesto was only intended to deceive the masses. The tsar hoped  
this manifesto was only intended to deceive the masses. The tsar hoped  
by means of it to gain time to muster his forces for the purpose of crush-
by means of it to gain time to muster his forces for the purpose of crush
ing the revolution. In appraising the tsar’s manifesto, and utteiing a  
ing the revolution. In appraising the tsar's manifesto, and utteiing a  
warning against exaggerating its importance, Lenin wrote: ^‘The tsar’s
warning against exaggerating its importance, Lenin wrote: ^'The tsar's
concession is indeed a very great victory for the revolution, but this  
concession is indeed a very great victory for the revolution, but this  
victory does not yet by a long way decide the fate of the entire cause of  
victory does not yet by a long way decide the fate of the entire cause of  
Line 2,002: Line 2,002:
The manifesto of October 17 fully satisfied tlio bourgeoisie who,  
The manifesto of October 17 fully satisfied tlio bourgeoisie who,  
frightened by the nation-wide strike and the incipient insiirroction, began openly to oppose the revolutionary masses. The big industrial and commercial bourgeoisie formed an organization called the Union  
frightened by the nation-wide strike and the incipient insiirroction, began openly to oppose the revolutionary masses. The big industrial and commercial bourgeoisie formed an organization called the Union  
of October Seventeenth (laiown as the Octobrists). The Eight- wing
of October Seventeenth (laiown as the Octobrists). The Eightwing
Zemstvo- ites and the various commercial and industrial ^^parties” that  
Zemstvoites and the various commercial and industrial ^^parties" that  
.sprang up in 1905 joined this organization.  
.sprang up in 1905 joined this organization.  


The liberal Zemstvo-ites and the members of the Emancipation  
The liberal Zemstvo-ites and the members of the Emancipation  
League officially inaugurated the abeady legally existing Constitution-
League officially inaugurated the abeady legally existing Constitution
al-Democratic Party (known as the Cadets). The Cadets expressed the  
al-Democratic Party (known as the Cadets). The Cadets expressed the  
strivings of those sections of the bourgeoisie which were less interested  
strivings of those sections of the bourgeoisie which were less interested  
than the Octobrists in feudal methods of exploitation. Unlike theavow-
than the Octobrists in feudal methods of exploitation. Unlike theavow
‘Odly reactionary Octobrist bourgeoisie, the Cadets tried to manoeuvre  
'Odly reactionary Octobrist bourgeoisie, the Cadets tried to manoeuvre  
between the revolution and the autocracy. When the tsar’s manifesto  
between the revolution and the autocracy. When the tsar's manifesto  
was promulgated, the Cadets declared the revolution at an end and  
was promulgated, the Cadets declared the revolution at an end and  
'Called for co-operation with the Witte government.  
'Called for co-operation with the Witte government.  


The Mensheviks were also pleased with the manifesto of October  
The Mensheviks were also pleased with the manifesto of October  
17 . The leaders of the Georgian Mensheviks in Tiflis even stated at meet-
17 . The leaders of the Georgian Mensheviks in Tiflis even stated at meet
ings: ^There is no longer an autocracy, the autocracy is dead. Russia  
ings: '^There is no longer an autocracy, the autocracy is dead. Russia  
is entering the ranks of constitutional monarchist states.
is entering the ranks of constitutional monarchist states."


Comrade Stalin emphatically denounced this piece of Menshevik  
Comrade Stalin emphatically denounced this piece of Menshevik  
•deception. On the day the manifesto of October 17 was promulgated he  
•deception. On the day the manifesto of October 17 was promulgated he  
said at a meeting in Tiflis: “What do we need in order to really win? We  
said at a meeting in Tiflis: "What do we need in order to really win? We  
need three things: first — arms, second — ^arms, third — ^arms and arms  
need three things: first — arms, second — ^arms, third — ^arms and arms  
again.
again."


Tlie Bolsheviks urged the masses to place no confidence in the tsar ’s
Tlie Bolsheviks urged the masses to place no confidence in the tsar 's
Jinanifcsjo and to prepare for armed insurrection.
Jinanifcsjo and to prepare for armed insurrection.


Line 2,033: Line 2,033:
seek supjiort in Kaiser Germany and among the Baltic German barons.  
seek supjiort in Kaiser Germany and among the Baltic German barons.  
During tho general strike of October 1905 several Gorman destroyers  
During tho general strike of October 1905 several Gorman destroyers  
appeared in tlu^ I’oadstcad off Fotorhof with tho objecrt of taking Ni-
appeared in tlu^ I'oadstcad off Fotorhof with tho objecrt of taking Ni
cholas II and his lamily to Germany in the event of tho revolution being  
cholas II and his lamily to Germany in the event of tho revolution being  
victorious. At this time the tsarist government conducted negotiations  
victorious. At this time the tsarist government conducted negotiations  
Line 2,042: Line 2,042:


In Poland martial law was declared as a consequoneo of tho growth  
In Poland martial law was declared as a consequoneo of tho growth  
of tho revolutionary movement. German troops were moved to tho Bus-
of tho revolutionary movement. German troops were moved to tho Bus
sian frontier in readiness to invade Bussia. Tho proletariat of St, Pe-
sian frontier in readiness to invade Bussia. Tho proletariat of St, Pe
tersburg retaliated to this threat on tho part of German imperialism to  
tersburg retaliated to this threat on tho part of German imperialism to  
intervene in tho internal affairs of Bussia by declaring a general strike.  
intervene in tho internal affairs of Bussia by declaring a general strike.  
Line 2,051: Line 2,051:
was a German, zealously cleaning tlio boots of an army ofHccr whoso  
was a German, zealously cleaning tlio boots of an army ofHccr whoso  
face was concealed, l)ut wlmso figure could bo recognized as that of  
face was concealed, l)ut wlmso figure could bo recognized as that of  
Williohii II. The ca’})tiou to tlie cartoon rea<i: ‘TTnfortunatoly wo had to  
Williohii II. The ca'})tiou to tlie cartoon rea<i: 'TTnfortunatoly wo had to  
rescind martial law, hut I shall continue to servo you ftiithfully and  
rescind martial law, hut I shall continue to servo you ftiithfully and  
well.
well."


Immediately after tho manifesto of October 17 was promulgated  
Immediately after tho manifesto of October 17 was promulgated  
revolutionary demonstrations ocoiUTcd all over Bussia. Street mootings  
revolutionary demonstrations ocoiUTcd all over Bussia. Street mootings  
wore held at which impassioned revolutionary speeches were deliv-
wore held at which impassioned revolutionary speeches were deliv
ered. To combat tho revolution, tho government formed a hooligan or-
ered. To combat tho revolution, tho government formed a hooligan or
ganization called the Union of Bussian People, which united tlie cor-
ganization called the Union of Bussian People, which united tlie cor
rupt Black Hundreds which had already sprung U]) in many localities  
rupt Black Hundreds which had already sprung U]) in many localities  
in tho beginning of 1905.  
in tho beginning of 1905.  
Line 2,069: Line 2,069:
During a pogrom in Odessa several thousand Jewish working people  
During a pogrom in Odessa several thousand Jewish working people  
were killed. In Tomsk, the Black Hundreds, with the blessing of the  
were killed. In Tomsk, the Black Hundreds, with the blessing of the  
Bishop and in tho presence of the City Governor, surrounded the I'ail-
Bishop and in tho presence of the City Governor, surrounded the I'ail
way administration ofi&ces where a workers’ meeting was taking place  
way administration ofi&ces where a workers' meeting was taking place  
and set fire to it. Many of the people present at the mooting perished  
and set fire to it. Many of the people present at the mooting perished  
in the flames, and it was only tlianlcs to tho heroic efforts of S . M. Kirov  
in the flames, and it was only tlianlcs to tho heroic efforts of S . M. Kirov  
Line 2,077: Line 2,077:
a liberal body, and killed and injured many momberH of tlio ZcmiKstvo  
a liberal body, and killed and injured many momberH of tlio ZcmiKstvo  
staff. In Ivanovo, the Black Hundreds brutally murdorod the veteran  
staff. In Ivanovo, the Black Hundreds brutally murdorod the veteran  
revolutionary worker and loader of tho textile strike, Fyodor Afanasyev, known as “Father.In Moscow the Black Hundreds arranged the assassination of the prominent Bolshevik N. E. Bauman, who had only  
revolutionary worker and loader of tho textile strike, Fyodor Afanasyev, known as "Father." In Moscow the Black Hundreds arranged the assassination of the prominent Bolshevik N. E. Bauman, who had only  
just been released from the Taganskaya prison. Bauman’s funeral devel-
just been released from the Taganskaya prison. Bauman's funeral devel
oped into a huge revolutionary demonstration in which several hundred  
oped into a huge revolutionary demonstration in which several hundred  
thousand people took part. These arrests, pogroms and assassination  
thousand people took part. These arrests, pogroms and assassination  
Line 2,087: Line 2,087:
Liberty for the dead, for the living — arrest.</blockquote>
Liberty for the dead, for the living — arrest.</blockquote>


===== Soviets of Workers’ Deputies =====
===== Soviets of Workers' Deputies =====
During the stormy days of the  
During the stormy days of the  
October general strike the working class created a new ty]>e of revolu-
October general strike the working class created a new ty]>e of revolu
tionary organization which played a leading role in the revolution. These  
tionary organization which played a leading role in the revolution. These  
organizations were the Soviets of Workers’ Deputies. On OctoberlS,  
organizations were the Soviets of Workers' Deputies. On OctoberlS,  
while the strike was in progress, the workers of St. Petersburg held meet-
while the strike was in progress, the workers of St. Petersburg held meet
ings in their factories and works and elected representatives to a Coun-
ings in their factories and works and elected representatives to a Coun
cil (Soviet) of Workers’ Deputies for the purpose of leading the strike.  
cil (Soviet) of Workers' Deputies for the purpose of leading the strike.  
Formed originally as a Joint Strike Committee, the St. Petersburg  
Formed originally as a Joint Strike Committee, the St. Petersburg  
Soviet rapidly became the embryo of a new revolutionary authority.  
Soviet rapidly became the embryo of a new revolutionary authority.  
Thus, in November, the Soviet on its own authority proclaimed the  
Thus, in November, the Soviet on its own authority proclaimed the  
introduction of an 8-hour day; it had its own organ, Izvestia, which  
introduction of an 8-hour day; it had its own organ, Izvestia, which  
was printed in the biggest printing plants of St. Petersburg and ap-
was printed in the biggest printing plants of St. Petersburg and ap
peared without the sanction of the tsarist censor. The Soviet began to in-
peared without the sanction of the tsarist censor. The Soviet began to in
terfere in the orders of the tsarist administration. While the j)Ost and  
terfere in the orders of the tsarist administration. While the j)Ost and  
telegraph employees were on strike government telegrams were sent off  
telegraph employees were on strike government telegrams were sent off  
only with the Soviet’s sanction. The inliabitants of St. Petersburg came  
only with the Soviet's sanction. The inliabitants of St. Petersburg came  
to the Soviet on every kind of business as if it were an official adminis-
to the Soviet on every kind of business as if it were an official adminis
trative body. Nevertheless, the St. Petersburg Soviet failed to take the  
trative body. Nevertheless, the St. Petersburg Soviet failed to take the  
lead of the revolution. The reason for this was that, taking advantage  
lead of the revolution. The reason for this was that, taking advantage  
of the absence from St. Petersburg of Lenin, who was living abroad  
of the absence from St. Petersburg of Lenin, who was living abroad  
in exile, the Mensheviks captured the leadership of the Soviet and  
in exile, the Mensheviks captured the leadership of the Soviet and  
did all in their power to prevent it from becoming an organ of revolu-
did all in their power to prevent it from becoming an organ of revolu
tionary authority and, in particular, frustrated the preparations for  
tionary authority and, in particular, frustrated the preparations for  
armed insurrection.  
armed insurrection.  


Following the example of St. Petersburg, Soviets of Workers’
Following the example of St. Petersburg, Soviets of Workers'
Deputies were formed in all the other big cities of Russia during the  
Deputies were formed in all the other big cities of Russia during the  
period of October to December 1905. The Moscow Soviet was led by  
period of October to December 1905. The Moscow Soviet was led by  
Bolsheviks and, as a consequence, it became an organ for the prepara-
Bolsheviks and, as a consequence, it became an organ for the prepara
tion of armed insurrection. In the Caucasus, in Latvia, and also in some  
tion of armed insurrection. In the Caucasus, in Latvia, and also in some  
parts of Central Russia (the Tver and Moscow Gubernia), representa-
parts of Central Russia (the Tver and Moscow Gubernia), representa
tives of the soldiers, i. e., peasants in military uniform, were members  
tives of the soldiers, i. e., peasants in military uniform, were members  
of the Soviets. Thus, Lenin’s idea of the revo ut ionary democratic  
of the Soviets. Thus, Lenin's idea of the revo ut ionary democratic  
dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry began to take practi-
dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry began to take practi
(‘al shape.
('al shape.


When Lenin returned from abro<ad and studied the activities of  
When Lenin returned from abro<ad and studied the activities of  
the St, Petersburg Soviet, he pointed out to the Party the world his-
the St, Petersburg Soviet, he pointed out to the Party the world his
torical importance of the Soviets as the embryo of a new revolutionary  
torical importance of the Soviets as the embryo of a new revolutionary  
popular authority. But in order that the Soviets might play their  
popular authority. But in order that the Soviets might play their  
Line 2,138: Line 2,138:
expressed his high axipreeiation of the historic im^iortance of the  
expressed his high axipreeiation of the historic im^iortance of the  
Soviets in the revolution of 1005 in the words . . the movement for  
Soviets in the revolution of 1005 in the words . . the movement for  
the Soviets of Workers’ Deputies begun in 1005 by the workers of  
the Soviets of Workers' Deputies begun in 1005 by the workers of  
Leningrad and Moscow led in the end to tho rout of cajiitalism and  
Leningrad and Moscow led in the end to tho rout of cajiitalism and  
the victory of Socialism on one-sixth of the globe” (J. Stalin, Prohkms  
the victory of Socialism on one-sixth of the globe" (J. Stalin, Prohkms  
of Lenmism^ Moscow, 1045, ]>. 530).
of Lenmism^ Moscow, 1045, ]>. 530).


Line 2,147: Line 2,147:
===== Finland's Fight for Autonomy =====
===== Finland's Fight for Autonomy =====
nio revolntiouary movement  
nio revolntiouary movement  
of the })rolotariat t‘.ompolled the tsarist autocracy to make certain  
of the })rolotariat t'.ompolled the tsarist autocracy to make certain  
concessions on the national (piesbion. After Bloody Sunday (January 0)  
concessions on the national (piesbion. After Bloody Sunday (January 0)  
the struggle against tsarism liared up with exceptional vigour in thc^  
the struggle against tsarism liared up with exceptional vigour in thc^  
regions inhabited by tho ox)prossed nationalities. Tho workers of  
regions inhabited by tho ox)prossed nationalities. Tho workers of  
Helsingfors, tho capital of Finland, wore among tho first to organize  
Helsingfors, tho capital of Finland, wore among tho first to organize  
a general strike of xirotest against tho atrocities perpetrated by Nicho-
a general strike of xirotest against tho atrocities perpetrated by Nicho
las II against the workers. The Fimiish bourgeoisie and its party of  
las II against the workers. The Fimiish bourgeoisie and its party of  
^<nowiki>''</nowiki>active resistance” believed that tho tsarist autocracy would he eoin-
^<nowiki>"</nowiki>active resistance" believed that tho tsarist autocracy would he eoin
pellod by tho workers to make concessions and restore tlio Finnish  
pellod by tho workers to make concessions and restore tlio Finnish  
constitution, which had boon abolished in 1002.  
constitution, which had boon abolished in 1002.  


The tsar’s government, however, made only slight concessions,  
The tsar's government, however, made only slight concessions,  
for it calculated that the Finnish bourgeoisie wotilcl readily come  
for it calculated that the Finnish bourgeoisie wotilcl readily come  
to tenns in order to wage a joint struggle against the workers. Tho  
to tenns in order to wage a joint struggle against the workers. Tho  
Line 2,164: Line 2,164:
regulation on the non-dismissal of judges was re-introduced. But these  
regulation on the non-dismissal of judges was re-introduced. But these  
minor concessions failed to satisfy oven tho Finnish bourgeoisie. They  
minor concessions failed to satisfy oven tho Finnish bourgeoisie. They  
<iemancled tho re:-torat’on of the Finnish Con-^titution.  
<iemancled tho re:-torat'on of the Finnish Con-^titution.  


The October x)olitical strike in Russia was backed by the Finnish  
The October x)olitical strike in Russia was backed by the Finnish  
worker, who xu'oclaimed a general strike in Finland. They formed  
worker, who xu'oclaimed a general strike in Finland. They formed  
a Rod Guard and x^i’oparcd for insurreebion.  
a Rod Guard and x^i'oparcd for insurreebion.  


The nation-wide strike of tho working class comptdled the tsarist  
The nation-wide strike of tho working class comptdled the tsarist  
Line 2,175: Line 2,175:
Mensheviks supported the bourgeoisie in everything; they spread  
Mensheviks supported the bourgeoisie in everything; they spread  
constitutional illusions among the masses and assured the workers  
constitutional illusions among the masses and assured the workers  
and peasants that the armed struggle against tsarism was over. Describ-
and peasants that the armed struggle against tsarism was over. Describ
ing the opportunist stand taken by the Finnish Mensheviks during  
ing the opportunist stand taken by the Finnish Mensheviks during  
the revolution of 1905, Lenin said that *^they are not genuine Social-
the revolution of 1905, Lenin said that *^they are not genuine Social
Democrats.
Democrats."


===== The Struggle for National Liberation in Poland =====
===== The Struggle for National Liberation in Poland =====
Line 2,203: Line 2,203:


In the autumn of 1905 the tsarist autocracy proclaimed martial  
In the autumn of 1905 the tsarist autocracy proclaimed martial  
law in Poland, but the political strike proclaimed by the St. Peters-
law in Poland, but the political strike proclaimed by the St. Peters
burg workers compelled the government to rescind it. This demonstrated  
burg workers compelled the government to rescind it. This demonstrated  
to the Polish people that the Russian proletariat alone was their  
to the Polish people that the Russian proletariat alone was their  
Line 2,209: Line 2,209:


===== The National Movement in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia =====
===== The National Movement in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia =====
Tlie revolutionary struggle of the workers of the Ukraine and Byelo-
Tlie revolutionary struggle of the workers of the Ukraine and Byelo
russia in 1905 developed in complete unison with the struggle waged  
russia in 1905 developed in complete unison with the struggle waged  
by the Russian proletariat.  
by the Russian proletariat.  
Line 2,216: Line 2,216:
of the revolutionary movement, the UlLrainians succeeded in publishing  
of the revolutionary movement, the UlLrainians succeeded in publishing  
books and newspapers in the Ulcrainian language. A section of the  
books and newspapers in the Ulcrainian language. A section of the  
Ukrainian petty-hourgeois nationalists who had formed the Revo-
Ukrainian petty-hourgeois nationalists who had formed the Revo
lutionary Ula^ainian Party (R.U.P.) demanded autonomy for the  
lutionary Ula^ainian Party (R.U.P.) demanded autonomy for the  
Ukraine and the transfer of x:)Ower to an autonomous Ukrainian Sejm.  
Ukraine and the transfer of x:)Ower to an autonomous Ukrainian Sejm.  
Line 2,222: Line 2,222:
Democrats, they demanded the transfer of the land to the peasants  
Democrats, they demanded the transfer of the land to the peasants  
with payment of compensation to the landlords. In addition to the R.U.P. thoro were in the Ukraine in 1005 the Ukrainian Social-Bomocratie Union, the Spilka (Loagno) wIiujIi was of a Menshevik  
with payment of compensation to the landlords. In addition to the R.U.P. thoro were in the Ukraine in 1005 the Ukrainian Social-Bomocratie Union, the Spilka (Loagno) wIiujIi was of a Menshevik  
trend, and the Ukrainian Socialist- Revolutionary Party.  
trend, and the Ukrainian SocialistRevolutionary Party.  


The Ukrainian nationalists were actually agents of Austria, whicli  
The Ukrainian nationalists were actually agents of Austria, whicli  
promised to sujiport their struggle for the ‘'indopendonco” of the  
promised to sujiport their struggle for the "indopendonco" of the  
Ukraine. Th(^ nationalist slogans of those separatists {i, e., advocates  
Ukraine. Th(^ nationalist slogans of those separatists {i, e., advocates  
of secession) found no favour among the Ukrainian workers and peasants  
of secession) found no favour among the Ukrainian workers and peasants  
Line 2,235: Line 2,235:
to capture the leadership of the national movement. In January 1906,  
to capture the leadership of the national movement. In January 1906,  
this party held a congress in Minsk at whicjh it demanded autonomy  
this party held a congress in Minsk at whicjh it demanded autonomy  
for Byelorussia and the formation of a federation consisting of Byelo-
for Byelorussia and the formation of a federation consisting of Byelo
russia, Lithuania, Latvia and the Ukraine with a common Sej in in  
russia, Lithuania, Latvia and the Ukraine with a common Sej in in  
Vilna. This party also demanded the allotment of land to the peasants  
Vilna. This party also demanded the allotment of land to the peasants  
Line 2,241: Line 2,241:


Both in tho Ukraine and in Byelorussia an important part in the  
Both in tho Ukraine and in Byelorussia an important part in the  
national movement was ])layo(l liy t.ho schoolteaelHU’s who formed  
national movement was ])layo(l liy t.ho schoolteaelHU's who formed  
their Spilki and Prosvity (eultiiral and educational societies).  
their Spilki and Prosvity (eultiiral and educational societies).  
Tho Prosvity distributed litt'rafcure in tho Ukrainian and Byelorussian  
Tho Prosvity distributed litt'rafcure in tho Ukrainian and Byelorussian  
Line 2,262: Line 2,262:
assumed a more definitely class and revolutionary character than it  
assumed a more definitely class and revolutionary character than it  
did in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia. Thanks to the leadership of  
did in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia. Thanks to the leadership of  
tho Social-Democratic organization, which had been trained by Com-
tho Social-Democratic organization, which had been trained by Com
rade Stalin, the workers’ and peasants’ movement in Georgia, and  
rade Stalin, the workers' and peasants' movement in Georgia, and  
particularly in Guria, rose to a considerable height. 0]3en prepara-
particularly in Guria, rose to a considerable height. 0]3en prepara
tions for an insurrection against tsarism wore made nob only in tlie  
tions for an insurrection against tsarism wore made nob only in tlie  
towns, but also in tho rural districts.  
towns, but also in tho rural districts.  


All through 1905 mass strikes, demonstrations and meetings took  
All through 1905 mass strikes, demonstrations and meetings took  
place, funds wore collcotod for revolutionary purjioses and “Red
place, funds wore collcotod for revolutionary purjioses and "Red
Hundreds” and })oasant oommittoos wore formed in the villages, Tho peasants rose in revolt against the landlords and drove them from their estates. The landlords, assisted by the authorities, organized  
Hundreds" and })oasant oommittoos wore formed in the villages, Tho peasants rose in revolt against the landlords and drove them from their estates. The landlords, assisted by the authorities, organized  
their armed squads known as “Black Hundreds.In many parts of  
their armed squads known as "Black Hundreds." In many parts of  
Georgia the inhabitants refused to recognize the tsarist courts and  
Georgia the inhabitants refused to recognize the tsarist courts and  
j)olice.  
j)olice.  
Line 2,281: Line 2,281:


In Azerbaijan the movement for national liberation was led by  
In Azerbaijan the movement for national liberation was led by  
the Baku Bolshevilcs, who formed for this purpose a special organi-
the Baku Bolshevilcs, who formed for this purpose a special organi
zation known as Gummet (energy). This organization conducted  
zation known as Gummet (energy). This organization conducted  
extensive activities among the more backward and downtrodden  
extensive activities among the more backward and downtrodden  
section of the Azerbaijanian workers in Baku, As a result of the educa-
section of the Azerbaijanian workers in Baku, As a result of the educa
tional work conducted by the Bolsheviks, the more class-conscious of the  
tional work conducted by the Bolsheviks, the more class-conscious of the  
Azerbaijanian workers, jointly with the Russian workers, succeeded,  
Azerbaijanian workers, jointly with the Russian workers, succeeded,  
in February 1905, in putting a stop to the Armenian-Azerbaijanian  
in February 1905, in putting a stop to the Armenian-Azerbaijanian  
massacres. During the oil workers’ strike in August, the majority of  
massacres. During the oil workers' strike in August, the majority of  
the Azerbaijanian workers, for the first time, joined the strike, for  
the Azerbaijanian workers, for the first time, joined the strike, for  
they were beginning to understand that a united class movement was  
they were beginning to understand that a united class movement was  
needed. The landlords and the rising local bourgeoisie tried to keep  
needed. The landlords and the rising local bourgeoisie tried to keep  
the Azerbaijanian workers and peasants away from the revolu-
the Azerbaijanian workers and peasants away from the revolu
tionary struggle. Intense religious and nationalist agitation was  
tionary struggle. Intense religious and nationalist agitation was  
conducted in the towns and villages by the Pan-Islamists, who  
conducted in the towns and villages by the Pan-Islamists, who  
Line 2,303: Line 2,303:


In Armenia the bourgeois party known as the Dashnacktsutyun  
In Armenia the bourgeois party known as the Dashnacktsutyun  
tried to capture the leadership of the movement for national liber-
tried to capture the leadership of the movement for national liber
ation. In the endeavour to obtain the support of the Armenian bour-
ation. In the endeavour to obtain the support of the Armenian bour
geoisie and the clergy in the struggle against the revolution in Trans-
geoisie and the clergy in the struggle against the revolution in Trans
caucasia, the tsar’s government repealed the church property law,  
caucasia, the tsar's government repealed the church property law,  
which limited the revenues of the Armenian Church.
which limited the revenues of the Armenian Church.


===== The National Movement among the Peoples of the Volga Region and Siberia =====
===== The National Movement among the Peoples of the Volga Region and Siberia =====
The revolution of 1905 roused all the nationali-
The revolution of 1905 roused all the nationali
ties of Russia to political life. In the Volga Region and in Bashkiria  
ties of Russia to political life. In the Volga Region and in Bashkiria  
the bourgeois nationalists formed a Moslem League, the object of  
the bourgeois nationalists formed a Moslem League, the object of  
Line 2,316: Line 2,316:
to some extent to the Moslem bourgeoisie in Central Asia and in Trans*  
to some extent to the Moslem bourgeoisie in Central Asia and in Trans*  
caucasia. A prominent part in this league was played by the mullahs,  
caucasia. A prominent part in this league was played by the mullahs,  
who fomented religious strife between the Moslem and Russian popu-
who fomented religious strife between the Moslem and Russian popu
lations. At the end of 1905 the Tatar bourgeoisie convened in Kazan the first Mosloii congress, which in a loyal ]>otition to the tsar ploatlod for the abolition of all Moslem disabilities and for political, religions  
lations. At the end of 1905 the Tatar bourgeoisie convened in Kazan the first Mosloii congress, which in a loyal ]>otition to the tsar ploatlod for the abolition of all Moslem disabilities and for political, religions  
and civil rights equal to those enjoyed by tlic Ivusslan population.  
and civil rights equal to those enjoyed by tlic Ivusslan population.  
Line 2,322: Line 2,322:
Tlio Chuv«ash national movement in 1005 assumed the pui*cly  
Tlio Chuv«ash national movement in 1005 assumed the pui*cly  
peasant character of a struggle for land and freedom. Activities among  
peasant character of a struggle for land and freedom. Activities among  
the Clnivash and Mari ])opulations of the Cheboksari district on tlu-
the Clnivash and Mari ])opulations of the Cheboksari district on tlu
Volga wore conducted by members of the All-Russian Peasant Union.  
Volga wore conducted by members of the All-Russian Peasant Union.  
The peasants at their meetings passed decisions to seize the land of  
The peasants at their meetings passed decisions to seize the land of  
Line 2,330: Line 2,330:
officials. A league of Siberian nationalities was formed. The awakening  
officials. A league of Siberian nationalities was formed. The awakening  
of the Yakuts was brought about by tlic Yakut League which was  
of the Yakuts was brought about by tlic Yakut League which was  
formed in 1905, but which was soon suppressed by the tsarist au-
formed in 1905, but which was soon suppressed by the tsarist au
thorities. Such were the first steps in the awakening to political life of  
thorities. Such were the first steps in the awakening to political life of  
the Siberian peoples who were oppressed and downtrodden by tsarism.  
the Siberian peoples who were oppressed and downtrodden by tsarism.  


Ill the 1905 revolution the Bolsheviks fought for Lenin’s ijrogi'anv  
Ill the 1905 revolution the Bolsheviks fought for Lenin's ijrogi'anv  
on the national question. Comrade Stalin formulated this program  
on the national question. Comrade Stalin formulated this program  
in the following terms: ‘‘Complete (Uunocracy in the (‘oiiutry is tlie  
in the following terms: "Complete (Uunocracy in the ('oiiutry is tlie  
ba^sis and condition for the solution of the national problem. . . . Thr  
ba^sis and condition for the solution of the national problem. . . . Thr  
right of sdf-iUUrminaUon is an esmUml clcmiml in tlu^ solution of the  
right of sdf-iUUrminaUon is an esmUml clcmiml in tlu^ solution of the  
Line 2,342: Line 2,342:


units as Poland, Lithuania, the Ukraine, l.heOau(uisns,cte. . , . Nationa!  
units as Poland, Lithuania, the Ukraine, l.heOau(uisns,cte. . , . Nationa!  
e.gmiliiy in all forms {^ianguagv.^ schoo ,s’, vJ(\) is an cssvntml element  
e.gmiliiy in all forms {^ianguagv.^ schoo ,s', vJ(\) is an cssvntml element  
in the solution of the national question*"' (rf. vStaliii, Marxism amf  
in the solution of the national question*"' (rf. vStaliii, Marxism amf  
the National ami Colonial QwsHon^ Moscow, 3940, p]). 49-51).  
the National ami Colonial QwsHon^ Moscow, 3940, p]). 49-51).  
Line 2,351: Line 2,351:
Experience taught the  
Experience taught the  
workers that they could not achieve victory over tsarism by strikes  
workers that they could not achieve victory over tsarism by strikes  
alone; they realized that armed insurrection was n(K’.essary for this.  
alone; they realized that armed insurrection was n(K'.essary for this.  


The first to take to arms after the October wtrila^ were the sailors  
The first to take to arms after the October wtrila^ were the sailors  
and artillerymen of Kronstadt. Por two days and nights — October 25-
and artillerymen of Kronstadt. Por two days and nights — October 25
and 27 — ^Kronstadt was in the hands of the insurgents. But the sailors’
and 27 — ^Kronstadt was in the hands of the insurgents. But the sailors'
movement was unorganized, it was accoin])anied by the wrecking of  
movement was unorganized, it was accoin])anied by the wrecking of  
shops j nd the living quarters of the officers, and it lacked a j^lan and  
shops j nd the living quarters of the officers, and it lacked a j^lan and  
clearly formulated aim. On October 28, the insurrection was crushed  
clearly formulated aim. On October 28, the insurrection was crushed  
and 200 of the participants and leaders of the insurrection were court-
and 200 of the participants and leaders of the insurrection were court
martiallecl.  
martiallecl.  


On November 1, 1905, the St, Potcu’sbnrg Sovic^t of Workers'  
On November 1, 1905, the St, Potcu'sbnrg Sovic^t of Workers'  
Deputies proclaimed a general political strike in support of the  
Deputies proclaimed a general political strike in support of the  
demand for rescinding martial law in Poland and for the roloaso of  
demand for rescinding martial law in Poland and for the roloaso of  
the Kronstadt insurgents. Tho tsar’s government was obligcnl to  
the Kronstadt insurgents. Tho tsar's government was obligcnl to  
yield to the demands of the workers of Kt. P(‘t(*rsburg. Martial law in Poland was rescinded, and instead of trying the ICronstadt sailors by court martial, which had iDower to pass sentence of deaths  
yield to the demands of the workers of Kt. P('t(*rsburg. Martial law in Poland was rescinded, and instead of trying the ICronstadt sailors by court martial, which had iDower to pass sentence of deaths  
they were tried by a military court and received comparatively light  
they were tried by a military court and received comparatively light  
sentences: nine were sentenced to penal servitude, 123 to imprisonment,  
sentences: nine were sentenced to penal servitude, 123 to imprisonment,  
Line 2,377: Line 2,377:
champion and leader of their struggle. The Mensheviks had opposed  
champion and leader of their struggle. The Mensheviks had opposed  
this second general strike. Instead of fraternization with the soldiers  
this second general strike. Instead of fraternization with the soldiers  
and revolutionary propaganda in the tsar’s army for the purpose of  
and revolutionary propaganda in the tsar's army for the purpose of  
winning it to the side of the insurgent ]}eople they put forward the  
winning it to the side of the insurgent ]}eople they put forward the  
cotinter-revolutionary demand for the withdrawal of the garrison  
cotinter-revolutionary demand for the withdrawal of the garrison  
from St. Petersbiiig. Had this been done the soldiers would have been  
from St. Petersbiiig. Had this been done the soldiers would have been  
isolated from the St. Petersburg proletariat and left under tlie un-
isolated from the St. Petersburg proletariat and left under tlie un
divided influence of the army officers.
divided influence of the army officers.


Line 2,392: Line 2,392:
again hoisted ilio rod Hag. The Sevastopol revolt was led by Lieutenant  
again hoisted ilio rod Hag. The Sevastopol revolt was led by Lieutenant  
Schmidt. Being a bourgeois democrat in liis convictions he, instead  
Schmidt. Being a bourgeois democrat in liis convictions he, instead  
of launching a vigorous attack against tlie tsar’s forces, undertook  
of launching a vigorous attack against tlie tsar's forces, undertook  
no active operations whatever, but waited for the entire Hoot to join  
no active operations whatever, but waited for the entire Hoot to join  
tho Ochakov, Naively believing that tlio tsar would make concessions,  
tho Ochakov, Naively believing that tlio tsar would make concessions,  
Line 2,398: Line 2,398:
spite of his confused political views, however, Lieutenant Schmidt  
spite of his confused political views, however, Lieutenant Schmidt  
was devoted to the revolution. On November 15, ho boarded the gunboat  
was devoted to the revolution. On November 15, ho boarded the gunboat  
S^virepy and going fiom ship to sli p he urged the men to join the in-
S^virepy and going fiom ship to sli p he urged the men to join the in
surrection. Many of them hoisted the red flag, but Lieutenant Schmidt  
surrection. Many of them hoisted the red flag, but Lieutenant Schmidt  
was unable to organize them for joint and speedy operations.  
was unable to organize them for joint and speedy operations.  


Tho authorities recovered from their consternation and drew  
Tho authorities recovered from their consternation and drew  
troops to Sevastopol. Late in the afternoon of November 16, the bat-
troops to Sevastopol. Late in the afternoon of November 16, the bat
teries and ships which had remained loyal to the govermnent opened  
teries and ships which had remained loyal to the govermnent opened  
fire on the Ochakov and the other revolutionary sliijis and continued  
fire on the Ochakov and the other revolutionary sliijis and continued  
Line 2,409: Line 2,409:
from the flames by swimming or rowing ashore, but they were shot  
from the flames by swimming or rowing ashore, but they were shot  
down by machine guns that wore posted on tho beach. Schmidt and  
down by machine guns that wore posted on tho beach. Schmidt and  
the other leaders of tho insurrection were captured and later court-
the other leaders of tho insurrection were captured and later court
martiallod and shot.  
martiallod and shot.  


Line 2,416: Line 2,416:


Gommenting on the weaknesses of the revolts among the armed  
Gommenting on the weaknesses of the revolts among the armed  
forces Lenin said that tho soldiers and sailors ‘‘'lacked a clear under-
forces Lenin said that tho soldiers and sailors "'lacked a clear under
standing of the fact that only the most vigorous continuation of the  
standing of the fact that only the most vigorous continuation of the  
armed struggle, only a victory over all the military and civil authorities,  
armed struggle, only a victory over all the military and civil authorities,  
only tho overthrow of tho government and tho seizure of power over  
only tho overthrow of tho government and tho seizure of power over  
tho whole state could guarantee the success of the revolution’’
tho whole state could guarantee the success of the revolution"
(V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 10).
(V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 10).


Line 2,432: Line 2,432:
Saratov, Kursk and Tambov Gubernias and in tho Ukraine — in the  
Saratov, Kursk and Tambov Gubernias and in tho Ukraine — in the  
Kharkov and Chernigov Gubernias, where tho peasants wrecked 272  
Kharkov and Chernigov Gubernias, where tho peasants wrecked 272  
landlords’ country-seats. In Latvia tho peasants organized several hun-
landlords' country-seats. In Latvia tho peasants organized several hun
dred revolutionary committees. In Guria the peasant “Red Hundn^ls”
dred revolutionary committees. In Guria the peasant "Red Hundn^ls"
drove out all tho tsar’s oflioials and established revolutionary rule. The  
drove out all tho tsar's oflioials and established revolutionary rule. The  
peasants’ struggle and preparation for armed insurrection in Trans-
peasants' struggle and preparation for armed insurrection in Trans
caucasia proceeded under the direct leadership of Comrade Stalin.  
caucasia proceeded under the direct leadership of Comrade Stalin.  


Line 2,446: Line 2,446:
the altered conditions, he at the same time edited Novaya Zliizn^ the  
the altered conditions, he at the same time edited Novaya Zliizn^ the  
first legal Bolshevik newspaper, and wrote articles for it on the  
first legal Bolshevik newspaper, and wrote articles for it on the  
fundamental problems of the revolution and the tactics and or-
fundamental problems of the revolution and the tactics and or
ganization of the Party.  
ganization of the Party.  


On Lenin’s instructions the Party organizations procured arms,  
On Lenin's instructions the Party organizations procured arms,  
formed workers’ fighting squads and organized their military training.  
formed workers' fighting squads and organized their military training.  
The Bolsheviks also conducted extensive revolutionary propaganda  
The Bolsheviks also conducted extensive revolutionary propaganda  
among the armed forces.  
among the armed forces.  


In December 1905, a Bolshevik Party Conference was held in Tam-
In December 1905, a Bolshevik Party Conference was held in Tam
merfors, in Finland. Here Lenin and Stalin met for the first time. The  
merfors, in Finland. Here Lenin and Stalin met for the first time. The  
conference discussed the question of armed insurrection.While the con-
conference discussed the question of armed insurrection.While the con
ference was in progress news was received of the outbreak of the insur-
ference was in progress news was received of the outbreak of the insur
rection in Moscow. On Lenin’s proposal the conference broke up to  
rection in Moscow. On Lenin's proposal the conference broke up to  
allow the delegates to return to their respective localities in order  
allow the delegates to return to their respective localities in order  
to take the lead of the insurrection.  
to take the lead of the insurrection.  


By tlie beginning of December the position of the tsarist autoc-
By tlie beginning of December the position of the tsarist autoc
racy had improved. By this time the more reliable regular army  
racy had improved. By this time the more reliable regular army  
units had been transferred from Manchmua to European Russia. The  
units had been transferred from Manchmua to European Russia. The  
foreign banlteis hastened to the aid of tsarism, for they feared they  
foreign banlteis hastened to the aid of tsarism, for they feared they  
would lose the capital they had invested in Russia and that a victory  
would lose the capital they had invested in Russia and that a victory  
of the Russian revolution would kindle the flames of socialist revo-
of the Russian revolution would kindle the flames of socialist revo
lution in Europe, They helped the tsar’s government to meet the  
lution in Europe, They helped the tsar's government to meet the  
more urgent payments of interest on loans and promised another  
more urgent payments of interest on loans and promised another  
large loan for the suppression of the revolution.  
large loan for the suppression of the revolution.  
Line 2,478: Line 2,478:
made for it, or where it had already commenced.  
made for it, or where it had already commenced.  


On December 2, the St. Petersburg Soviet of Workers’ Deputies  
On December 2, the St. Petersburg Soviet of Workers' Deputies  
adopted the so-called financial manifesto in which it called upon the  
adopted the so-called financial manifesto in which it called upon the  
inhabitants to demand their savings bank deposits and wages in gold.  
inhabitants to demand their savings bank deposits and wages in gold.  
Line 2,490: Line 2,490:
The Moscow/ Soviet,  
The Moscow/ Soviet,  
which was led by Bolsheviks, began actively to prepare for an armed  
which was led by Bolsheviks, began actively to prepare for an armed  
insurrection from the very first day of its existence. As a result of the agilatiou c'oucliictod by t-lio ’JjolHlioviks, uiiroHi. broke out among tlu* troops of t.lio Moseovr garrison. Tlio iirsi to revolt was tho Jlostov  
insurrection from the very first day of its existence. As a result of the agilatiou c'oucliictod by t-lio 'JjolHlioviks, uiiroHi. broke out among tlu* troops of t.lio Moseovr garrison. Tlio iirsi to revolt was tho Jlostov  
llcgiinont. On Ooueinbei' !2, the men arreste<l their ohieors aiul clceted  
llcgiinont. On Ooueinbei' !2, the men arreste<l their ohieors aiul clceted  
a HokUems’ CJoinmittco to eoiulnct tiie regiiuoiit s aifains. 'J'lio otha?*  
a HokUems' CJoinmittco to eoiulnct tiie regiiuoiit s aifains. 'J'lio otha?*  
niiits of ilio Moscow garrison, ho\vev<n*, failed to sn])port the rovolt  
niiits of ilio Moscow garrison, ho\vev<n*, failed to sn])port the rovolt  
and it vras crushed by the evening of ])ec<unber -t.  
and it vras crushed by the evening of ])ec<unber -t.  
Line 2,502: Line 2,502:
Tile general strike eommeneed in the morning of December 7.  
Tile general strike eommeneed in the morning of December 7.  
Owing to tho shortage of firearms tho workers in tiio faetorios forged  
Owing to tho shortage of firearms tho workers in tiio faetorios forged  
cold-steel weapons. Abpnt !2,000 Avorkers (almost half of them Bolshe-
cold-steel weapons. Abpnt !2,000 Avorkers (almost half of them Bolshe
viks) joined the lighting squads, ytreot demonstrations, meetings  
viks) joined the lighting squads, ytreot demonstrations, meetings  
and collisions witii the police occurred in tiio working-class districts.  
and collisions witii the police occurred in tiio working-class districts.  
The Astrakhan Bogiment came out in full fighting kit to assist tho  
The Astrakhan Bogiment came out in full fighting kit to assist tho  
insurgents, but it was intereex)t(^(l by the Cossaefe, completely sur-
insurgents, but it was intereex)t(^(l by the Cossaefe, completely sur
rounded and eain])clled to return to barraeks, TJie other regiments  
rounded and eain])clled to return to barraeks, TJie other regiments  
were also tionliiKul to barraeks because tliey were ‘hmreliable.” Thc‘
were also tionliiKul to barraeks because tliey were 'hmreliable." Thc'
Moscow garrison Avavenul. Of tho 15,000 men avIio constituted tlii'  
Moscow garrison Avavenul. Of tho 15,000 men avIio constituted tlii'  
garrison only 1,300 Dragoons were on the side of tlie autocracy;  
garrison only 1,300 Dragoons were on the side of tlie autocracy;  
the Governor tlonoral of Mcjscoav s(‘iit urgent messages to St. Petersburg  
the Governor tlonoral of Mcjscoav s('iit urgent messages to St. Petersburg  
pleading for the dispatch of otluu* troojis. The revolutionaries allowed  
pleading for the dispatch of otluu* troojis. The revolutionaries allowed  
tlio op])(>rtunity to sli]) by and the gOA'crnmeut sucecodod in coping  
tlio op])(>rtunity to sli]) by and the gOA'crnmeut sucecodod in coping  
with iho unrest in tht^ Moscow garrison.  
with iho unrest in tht^ Moscow garrison.  


The men of the Nikolayevskaya Bail way (uoav the October Rail-
The men of the Nikolayevskaya Bail way (uoav the October Rail
way) did not join the strike. As a cousoqueneo, the tsarist goA^ci*umoiif  
way) did not join the strike. As a cousoqueneo, the tsarist goA^ci*umoiif  
was able to send ilie Semyouovsky Guards Regiment from St. Peters-
was able to send ilie Semyouovsky Guards Regiment from St. Peters
burg and artillery from IVcr (now Kalinin) to sup]iro8s the insurrec-
burg and artillery from IVcr (now Kalinin) to sup]iro8s the insurrec
tion in Moscow. The police arrested the loader's of tho insurrection, wlio had been appointed by the Moscow Committee of the Party, and ilispersod a mass meeting that was being held in the Aquarium Park,  
tion in Moscow. The police arrested the loader's of tho insurrection, wlio had been appointed by the Moscow Committee of the Party, and ilispersod a mass meeting that was being held in the Aquarium Park,  
by armed force.  
by armed force.  


In the ovening of December 9, troops surrounded Fiedler’s School,  
In the ovening of December 9, troops surrounded Fiedler's School,  
where the fighting squads were assembled, and bombarded it with  
where the fighting squads were assembled, and bombarded it with  
artillery. The demolition of the school infuriated the masses. In re-
artillery. The demolition of the school infuriated the masses. In re
sponse to the appeal of the fighting squads, and in many cases on their  
sponse to the appeal of the fighting squads, and in many cases on their  
own accord, the peoj^le of Moscow erected barricades, using telegraph  
own accord, the peoj^le of Moscow erected barricades, using telegraph  
Line 2,539: Line 2,539:
mill knoAvn as the Trekhgornaya Mills, hut the leading body of the  
mill knoAvn as the Trekhgornaya Mills, hut the leading body of the  
insuxTection — ^the Moscow Committee of the Party — had been arrested  
insuxTection — ^the Moscow Committee of the Party — had been arrested  
on the eve of the outbreak. Deprived of central leadership, the in-
on the eve of the outbreak. Deprived of central leadership, the in
surrection deteriorated into isolated district fighting. The workers  
surrection deteriorated into isolated district fighting. The workers  
waged a guerilla fight against the troops; they hesitated to fight  
waged a guerilla fight against the troops; they hesitated to fight  
Line 2,546: Line 2,546:
insurreotLon.  
insurreotLon.  


Nevcrthcdcss, Presnya held out against the tsar s troops anuod with artillery, machine guns and rifJos, for ten wliolo days. Q-lio district was subjected to continuous bombardinont. Houses burned and col-
Nevcrthcdcss, Presnya held out against the tsar s troops anuod with artillery, machine guns and rifJos, for ten wliolo days. Q-lio district was subjected to continuous bombardinont. Houses burned and col
lapsed, but the workers remained siauncli. Fighting squads from  
lapsed, but the workers remained siauncli. Fighting squads from  
other industrial centres in the Moscoav Itegion Jiastcncjd to i.ho aid of  
other industrial centres in the Moscoav Itegion Jiastcncjd to i.ho aid of  
the Moscow revolutionaries. A workers’ squad led by M. V. Frunze  
the Moscow revolutionaries. A workers' squad led by M. V. Frunze  
arrived from Ivanovo-Voznesensk. Feasants su])])lied broad to the  
arrived from Ivanovo-Voznesensk. Feasants su])])lied broad to the  
lighters, who were aided by the entire ]) 0 ])u]ation of the Presnya  
lighters, who were aided by the entire ]) 0 ])u]ation of the Presnya  
Line 2,557: Line 2,557:


Weighing up the situation, the Moscow Committee of the Party  
Weighing up the situation, the Moscow Committee of the Party  
and the Moscow Soviet of Workers’ Deputies resolved to stop the  
and the Moscow Soviet of Workers' Deputies resolved to stop the  
armed insurrection on the night of December 18. In obedience to this  
armed insurrection on the night of December 18. In obedience to this  
order the squads operating in the Presnya District stopped fighting.  
order the squads operating in the Presnya District stopped fighting.  
Line 2,567: Line 2,567:
the revolutionary fighters.  
the revolutionary fighters.  


The tsar’s troops dealt frightfully with the ])oaceful popula-
The tsar's troops dealt frightfully with the ])oaceful popula
tion, the workers and their families, ilundroda of thorn wore shot  
tion, the workers and their families, ilundroda of thorn wore shot  
without trial or investigation. Over a thousand workers perished in  
without trial or investigation. Over a thousand workers perished in  
the ooui'so of the suppression of the insuiToction. A punitive expe-
the ooui'so of the suppression of the insuiToction. A punitive expe
dition on the Mosoow-Kazanskaya Railway shot hundreds of workers  
dition on the Mosoow-Kazanskaya Railway shot hundreds of workers  
acooiding to a list which had been previously drawn upbyth'^  
acooiding to a list which had been previously drawn upbyth'^  
Line 2,579: Line 2,579:


===== Insurrections in Other Towns =====
===== Insurrections in Other Towns =====
The workers also rose to over-
The workers also rose to over
throw tsarist rule in a number of other towns; and so too did the  
throw tsarist rule in a number of other towns; and so too did the  
oppressed nationalities in Russia. In the Ukraine, the insurgent  
oppressed nationalities in Russia. In the Ukraine, the insurgent  
Line 2,587: Line 2,587:
were overthrown and replaced by representatives of the workers.  
were overthrown and replaced by representatives of the workers.  
The insurgents were armed with home-made swords and daggers and  
The insurgents were armed with home-made swords and daggers and  
a small number of revolvers. Although so poorly armed, 4,000 revo-
a small number of revolvers. Although so poorly armed, 4,000 revo
lutionaries heroically fought a 5-hour battle with Cossacks, losing  
lutionaries heroically fought a 5-hour battle with Cossacks, losing  
300 men during the encounter. Battles with police and troops  
300 men during the encounter. Battles with police and troops  
Line 2,593: Line 2,593:
were formed and the strike was led by K. E. Voroshilov. Tim gendannos  
were formed and the strike was led by K. E. Voroshilov. Tim gendannos  
had arrested Voroshilov in the summer of 1905, but in December  
had arrested Voroshilov in the summer of 1905, but in December  
thousands of workers marched to the prison where he was confined and released their “Eed General,as the workers, already at that time, called him.  
thousands of workers marched to the prison where he was confined and released their "Eed General," as the workers, already at that time, called him.  


In Novorossiisk power was captured by the local Soviet of Workers*  
In Novorossiisk power was captured by the local Soviet of Workers*  
Deputies, which was led by Bolsheviks. The City Governor and  
Deputies, which was led by Bolsheviks. The City Governor and  
authorities fled. People’s courts were elected and were recognized by  
authorities fled. People's courts were elected and were recognized by  
the whole population. The burden of taxation was placed entirely  
the whole population. The burden of taxation was placed entirely  
upon the propertied classes.  
upon the propertied classes.  
Line 2,605: Line 2,605:
of the Sochi Region power passed into the hands of the people. Soviets  
of the Sochi Region power passed into the hands of the people. Soviets  
were set up in all centres. The people of Sochi were helped by  
were set up in all centres. The people of Sochi were helped by  
"'Red Hundreds” sent from Guria.  
'"'Red Hundreds" sent from Guria.  


In Vladikavkaz, the Ossetinian cavalry unit rose in revolt in  
In Vladikavkaz, the Ossetinian cavalry unit rose in revolt in  
Line 2,612: Line 2,612:


In Guria, the insurgent people in many districts seized power and  
In Guria, the insurgent people in many districts seized power and  
the landlords’ land. Here the insurrection was led by the Caucasian  
the landlords' land. Here the insurrection was led by the Caucasian  
Bolsheviks, headed by Comrade Stalin.  
Bolsheviks, headed by Comrade Stalin.  


In Tiflis, the Mensheviks, by arrangement with the tsar’s Viceroy,  
In Tiflis, the Mensheviks, by arrangement with the tsar's Viceroy,  
undertook to maintain *‘order” against the armed insurrection, and  
undertook to maintain *'order" against the armed insurrection, and  
to enable them to carry out this police function the Viceroy provided  
to enable them to carry out this police function the Viceroy provided  
them with 500 rifles and quantities of ammunition.  
them with 500 rifles and quantities of ammunition.  


In Siberia — in Krasnoyarsk and Chita — troops joined the in-
In Siberia — in Krasnoyarsk and Chita — troops joined the in
surgent workers and, as a consequence, seats in the Soviets of these  
surgent workers and, as a consequence, seats in the Soviets of these  
two cities were also occupied by Soldiers’ Deputies. In Krasno-
two cities were also occupied by Soldiers' Deputies. In Krasno
yarsk, the soldiers, jointly with the workers, barricaded themselves  
yarsk, the soldiers, jointly with the workers, barricaded themselves  
in one of the railway workshops, and fighting a regular battle, bravely  
in one of the railway workshops, and fighting a regular battle, bravely  
Line 2,632: Line 2,632:
of General Moller-Zakomelsky, moved up from European Russia,  
of General Moller-Zakomelsky, moved up from European Russia,  
while the other, under the command of General Rennenkampf, moved  
while the other, under the command of General Rennenkampf, moved  
to meet the former from Harbin. Shootings without trial or investi-
to meet the former from Harbin. Shootings without trial or investi
gation marked the trail of these punitive expeditions. One of those  
gation marked the trail of these punitive expeditions. One of those  
who were shot, by direct order of Moller-Zakomelsky, was the old  
who were shot, by direct order of Moller-Zakomelsky, was the old  
Bolshevik and Lenin’s pupil I. V. Babushkin, who was caught while  
Bolshevik and Lenin's pupil I. V. Babushkin, who was caught while  
transporting arms.  
transporting arms.  


Ruthless operations by punitive expeditions were also conducted  
Ruthless operations by punitive expeditions were also conducted  
in Central Russia, in the Ukraine, in Poland, Latvia, Estonia, Trans-
in Central Russia, in the Ukraine, in Poland, Latvia, Estonia, Trans
caucasia and Siberia. "Make fewer arrests, shoot more,” “Don’t
caucasia and Siberia. '"Make fewer arrests, shoot more," "Don't
argue, shoot,such were the orders issued by those butchers, the tsar’s
argue, shoot," such were the orders issued by those butchers, the tsar's
ministers, and by the tsar himself . Thousands were executed and tens  
ministers, and by the tsar himself . Thousands were executed and tens  
of thousands were arrested and sentenced to penal servitude or exile.  
of thousands were arrested and sentenced to penal servitude or exile.  
Line 2,648: Line 2,648:
Tlio l>oiirgeoi,sio wolt'-oiiicd the su]>|)mswion of the iosurreobioii.  
Tlio l>oiirgeoi,sio wolt'-oiiicd the su]>|)mswion of the iosurreobioii.  
The MonsheviliH ccoHiiml the inniurgont worhiM'H. Plokhanov wrote:  
The MonsheviliH ccoHiiml the inniurgont worhiM'H. Plokhanov wrote:  
"‘They should not h«avc taken to orins/To this Loniu rctortt^cl: “‘On
"'They should not h«avc taken to orins/' To this Loniu rctortt^cl: "'On
tlio eontrary, we Hhould have taken to arniMmoro rowolutely, onergot-
tlio eontrary, we Hhould have taken to arniMmoro rowolutely, onergot
ically and aggi'OHsivtdy; w'c should have oxplaim^d to the masses that  
ically and aggi'OHsivtdy; w'c should have oxplaim^d to the masses that  
it was impossible to coniine oursclvc^s to a pc'atu'ful strila^ and  
it was impossible to coniine oursclvc^s to a pc'atu'ful strila^ and  
that, a f<'a-rless iuul relentless arim'd light was indispensable'
that, a f<'a-rless iuul relentless arim'd light was indispensable'"
(V. L Loiiin, Mected Works, Voi. HI, IMosoow, lOol-, p. lUS),  
(V. L Loiiin, Mected Works, Voi. HI, IMosoow, lOol-, p. lUS),  


Tile l^cceinbor insurrection elided in defeat. 'Pho reasons i‘or the  
Tile l^cceinbor insurrection elided in defeat. 'Pho reasons i'or the  
defeat were tlio following: the peasants faih^d to siqiport the insurrec-
defeat were tlio following: the peasants faih^d to siqiport the insurrec
tion ill time. The major part of tJie army was on the side of tsarism.  
tion ill time. The major part of tJie army was on the side of tsarism.  
The insurrection was not sufficiently organized, and it broke out in  
The insurrection was not sufficiently organized, and it broke out in  
Line 2,666: Line 2,666:
authorities to suppress the insuri'cctiou.  
authorities to suppress the insuri'cctiou.  


Tlio December insurreetiou marked tho ‘jieak of tho revolution.  
Tlio December insurreetiou marked tho 'jieak of tho revolution.  
.After its (hdeat the revolutionary tide gradually subsided.
.After its (hdeat the revolutionary tide gradually subsided.


Line 2,684: Line 2,684:
before 1905,  
before 1905,  


The strike struggle waged by the agricultural labourers bore a revolu-
The strike struggle waged by the agricultural labourers bore a revolu
tionary character; the labourers organized a boycott of the landlords. Tho  
tionary character; the labourers organized a boycott of the landlords. Tho  
peasant movement spread very widely and affected about three hundred  
peasant movement spread very widely and affected about three hundred  
counties, including many that had not been affected by tho move-
counties, including many that had not been affected by tho move
ment in 1005. In many cases the peasants drove the landlords from  
ment in 1005. In many cases the peasants drove the landlords from  
their estates.  
their estates.  


In tho spring of 1906 umost became more frequent in tho army  
In tho spring of 1906 umost became more frequent in tho army  
.as well, and oven affected tJio tsar’s guards.  
.as well, and oven affected tJio tsar's guards.  


Simultaneously with tlie X)easaut moviuncnt in nK)6, the movement  
Simultaneously with tlie X)easaut moviuncnt in nK)6, the movement  
for national liberation assumed wider proportions in the Ihiltic Provinces and iu Transcaucasia. Here regular battles took place between the peasants and the tsar’s forces.
for national liberation assumed wider proportions in the Ihiltic Provinces and iu Transcaucasia. Here regular battles took place between the peasants and the tsar's forces.


===== The Elections to the First State Duma =====
===== The Elections to the First State Duma =====
While crushing the  
While crushing the  
revolution by armed force, the autocracy also began, as Lenin put it.  
revolution by armed force, the autocracy also began, as Lenin put it.  
"‘to crush popular liberties bv means of a monarchist ‘constitu-
"'to crush popular liberties bv means of a monarchist 'constitu
tion.’”
tion.'"


On December 11, 1905, during the armed insurrection, a law  
On December 11, 1905, during the armed insurrection, a law  
Line 2,710: Line 2,710:
workers and peasants, they contained considerable restrictions.  
workers and peasants, they contained considerable restrictions.  
The suffrage was far fjom un*versal. Agricultural labourers, day  
The suffrage was far fjom un*versal. Agricultural labourers, day  
labourers and many other categories of workers “were not granted the vote  
labourers and many other categories of workers "were not granted the vote  
at all, nor were women, the men in the armed forces, students or  
at all, nor were women, the men in the armed forces, students or  
persons under the age of twenty-five. The suffrage was not equal. For  
persons under the age of twenty-five. The suffrage was not equal. For  
Line 2,716: Line 2,716:
that they had to be in receipt of large incomes from the renting of  
that they had to be in receipt of large incomes from the renting of  
liouses or from commercial or industrial enterprises. The voters were  
liouses or from commercial or industrial enterprises. The voters were  
divided up into four curiae or voters’ groups: landowning (landlords),  
divided up into four curiae or voters' groups: landowning (landlords),  
urban (the bourgeoisie), peasants and workers. The rate of rexire-
urban (the bourgeoisie), peasants and workers. The rate of rexire
sontation for the different curiae was not the same. The landowning  
sontation for the different curiae was not the same. The landowning  
groiij) could elect one elector for every 2,000 voters, the urban groui>  
groiij) could elect one elector for every 2,000 voters, the urban groui>  
could elect one for every 7,000 voters, the peasants’ group one for  
could elect one for every 7,000 voters, the peasants' group one for  
every 30,000 voters and the workers’ group one for every 90,000 voters.  
every 30,000 voters and the workers' group one for every 90,000 voters.  
The elections were not direct, but went through a series of inter-
The elections were not direct, but went through a series of inter
mediary stages. For the peasants there were actually four stages.  
mediary stages. For the peasants there were actually four stages.  
First, the peasants in each village elected electors to a volost  
First, the peasants in each village elected electors to a volost  
Line 2,730: Line 2,730:
secret.  
secret.  


Witte calculated that with the aid of the peasants, who still re-
Witte calculated that with the aid of the peasants, who still re
tained some faith in the tsar, he would succeed in securmg the election  
tained some faith in the tsar, he would succeed in securmg the election  
of a monarchist State Duma, and therefore, in the electoral law he draft-
of a monarchist State Duma, and therefore, in the electoral law he draft
ed he allowed the peasant electors 40 per cent of the total number of  
ed he allowed the peasant electors 40 per cent of the total number of  
seats. In February 1906, the government issued a supplementary regu-
seats. In February 1906, the government issued a supplementary regu
lation governing the elections to the State Duma, which still further  
lation governing the elections to the State Duma, which still further  
restricted the electoral rights of the workers and urban demoerati4*  
restricted the electoral rights of the workers and urban demoerati4*  
Line 2,740: Line 2,740:


The elections to the State Duma took x>lace in March and April  
The elections to the State Duma took x>lace in March and April  
1906, in an atmosphere of the most brutal police terrorism. The Bolshe-
1906, in an atmosphere of the most brutal police terrorism. The Bolshe
viks adhered to the decision which was adoiited by the xinited Central  
viks adhered to the decision which was adoiited by the xinited Central  
Committee of the Party to boycott the elections. Nevertheless, they  
Committee of the Party to boycott the elections. Nevertheless, they  
^poko at election meetings and exx>osed the decox)tioii perxietrated by the tsar and tlio troacliorons role played by the liberals, and agitated for armed insurrection. The organized class-conscious workers took no  
^poko at election meetings and exx>osed the decox)tioii perxietrated by the tsar and tlio troacliorons role played by the liberals, and agitated for armed insurrection. The organized class-conscious workers took no  
part in the voting. The Mensheviks in the Caucasus violated the Party’s
part in the voting. The Mensheviks in the Caucasus violated the Party's
boycott decision and secured the return of their leaders to the First  
boycott decision and secured the return of their leaders to the First  
State Duma. In BaJeu, however, the only largo industrial ceutro in tlu‘.  
State Duma. In BaJeu, however, the only largo industrial ceutro in tlu'.  
Caucasus, the Bolsheviks cllecfccd the boycott of the election.
Caucasus, the Bolsheviks cllecfccd the boycott of the election.


Line 2,757: Line 2,757:
The split in the Party, however, was preventing the establishment  
The split in the Party, however, was preventing the establishment  
of working-class unity. And so, when the demand arose among  
of working-class unity. And so, when the demand arose among  
the workers for Party unity it received the support of the Bolshe-
the workers for Party unity it received the support of the Bolshe
viks. The Mensheviks, unable to resist the pressure of the masses  
viks. The Mensheviks, unable to resist the pressure of the masses  
of the workers, were also obliged to agree to unity. To this end,  
of the workers, were also obliged to agree to unity. To this end,  
the Fourth Congress (known as the Unity Congress) of the R.S.D.L.P.  
the Fourth Congress (known as the Unity Congress) of the R.S.D.L.P.  
was hold in Stockholm in April 1900, At this congress the Bolsheviks  
was hold in Stockholm in April 1900, At this congress the Bolsheviks  
and Mensheviks formally united, but luaintainod their independ-
and Mensheviks formally united, but luaintainod their independ
ent organizational existence as two factions within the Party*  
ent organizational existence as two factions within the Party*  
The Bolshevik organizations had sufFcu’cd sovoroly from police  
The Bolshevik organizations had sufFcu'cd sovoroly from police  
raids and arrests after the December insurrection. The Menshe-
raids and arrests after the December insurrection. The Menshe
viks, on tho other hand, had gained strerngth by accepting int<>  
viks, on tho other hand, had gained strerngth by accepting int<>  
their ranks numerous roprosentativos of tho petty-bourgeois intelli-
their ranks numerous roprosentativos of tho petty-bourgeois intelli
gentsia who had nothing in common with tho proletariat. Tliat was  
gentsia who had nothing in common with tho proletariat. Tliat was  
why tho Mensheviks had a majority at this congress. When the  
why tho Mensheviks had a majority at this congress. When the  
congress discussed the agrarian question the Bolsheviks uphold  
congress discussed the agrarian question the Bolsheviks uphold  
Lenin’s program for the confiscation of the landlords* estates and  
Lenin's program for the confiscation of the landlords* estates and  
the nationalization of all tho land. Tho Mensheviks, however, sup-
the nationalization of all tho land. Tho Mensheviks, however, sup
ported a program for tho ‘‘municipalization of the land.This  
ported a program for tho "municipalization of the land." This  
was aimed at a compromise with the remnants of serfdom and with  
was aimed at a compromise with the remnants of serfdom and with  
tsarism, for it proposed that the land should be transferred to thc^  
tsarism, for it proposed that the land should be transferred to thc^  
Line 2,783: Line 2,783:
===== The First State Duma =====
===== The First State Duma =====
Although the December insurrection  
Although the December insurrection  
was suppressed, the tsar’s government was compelled to convene  
was suppressed, the tsar's government was compelled to convene  
the State Duma. The autocracy, 1 owevor, did all it could to  
the State Duma. The autocracy, 1 owevor, did all it could to  
restrict its powers. Thus, at the end of April 1906, three days  
restrict its powers. Thus, at the end of April 1906, three days  
before tho Duma was to open, so-called ‘‘Fundamental State Laws,
before tho Duma was to open, so-called "Fundamental State Laws,"
were published, in which it was affirmed that "‘supremo auto-
were published, in which it was affirmed that "'supremo auto
cratic state power is vested in tho Emperor of all tho Russias.
cratic state power is vested in tho Emperor of all tho Russias."
The tsar retained the right to amend tho fundamental laws and to  
The tsar retained the right to amend tho fundamental laws and to  
issue a number of exceptionally important laws without submitting  
issue a number of exceptionally important laws without submitting  
Line 2,799: Line 2,799:
in the Manifesto of October 17, were almost nullified. Witte, with  
in the Manifesto of October 17, were almost nullified. Witte, with  
whose name the Manifesto of October 17 was associated, could not be  
whose name the Manifesto of October 17 was associated, could not be  
used to carry out this avowedly reactionary policy and he was there-
used to carry out this avowedly reactionary policy and he was there
fore dismissed. Goremykin, a representative of the reactionary bu-
fore dismissed. Goremykin, a representative of the reactionary bu
reaucracy, became President of the Council of Ministers.  
reaucracy, became President of the Council of Ministers.  


Line 2,807: Line 2,807:
some extent limit the powers of the tsarist autocracy.  
some extent limit the powers of the tsarist autocracy.  


The composition of the Duma after the elections also proved to hf‘
The composition of the Duma after the elections also proved to hf'
unfavourable for the tsar’s government. Of the 624 Deputies 204 were  
unfavourable for the tsar's government. Of the 624 Deputies 204 were  
peasants, hut these were not the sort of peasants Count Witte had  
peasants, hut these were not the sort of peasants Count Witte had  
counted on. The majority of the peasant Deputies formed what was called  
counted on. The majority of the peasant Deputies formed what was called  
Line 2,816: Line 2,816:
was that of the Constitutional Democrats (Cadets) who numbered 179  
was that of the Constitutional Democrats (Cadets) who numbered 179  
D puties. In their hunt for peasant votes during the elections, the Cadets  
D puties. In their hunt for peasant votes during the elections, the Cadets  
had described themselves as the “Party of Popular Freedom.The  
had described themselves as the "Party of Popular Freedom." The  
Rights (from the Black Hundreds to the Octobrists) had 44  
Rights (from the Black Hundreds to the Octobrists) had 44  
Deputies.  
Deputies.  


As a result of the constitutional illusions spread among them by the  
As a result of the constitutional illusions spread among them by the  
Cadets, Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, the peasants be-
Cadets, Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, the peasants be
lieved that they would be able to get land by peaceful means through the  
lieved that they would be able to get land by peaceful means through the  
Duma and had therefore elected their Deputies with keen expectations.  
Duma and had therefore elected their Deputies with keen expectations.  
The Cadets proposed that only a part of the landlords* land be trans-
The Cadets proposed that only a part of the landlords* land be trans
ferred to the peasants, and then only at a “fair assessment. ”The peasants  
ferred to the peasants, and then only at a "fair assessment. "The peasants  
kn^w from their own experience that the “fair assessment” of the land-
kn^w from their own experience that the "fair assessment" of the land
lords was two or three times higher than the market price of the land,  
lords was two or three times higher than the market price of the land,  
and as the attitude of the government and of the Cadets, as the leading  
and as the attitude of the government and of the Cadets, as the leading  
party in the Duma, towards their urgent demands for land became clear,  
party in the Duma, towards their urgent demands for land became clear,  
their constitutional illusions were dispelled. The awakening of the class-
their constitutional illusions were dispelled. The awakening of the class
consciousness of the peasant Deputies was quickened by the unceasing  
consciousness of the peasant Deputies was quickened by the unceasing  
propaganda of the Bolsheviks who, by their policy, enabled the work-
propaganda of the Bolsheviks who, by their policy, enabled the work
ers’ Deputies in the Duma to take a correct proletarian class stand on a  
ers' Deputies in the Duma to take a correct proletarian class stand on a  
number of questions.
number of questions. '


Lenin and Stalin denounced the Cadets as enemies of the working  
Lenin and Stalin denounced the Cadets as enemies of the working  
peasantry and called upon the peasants to act in unison with the work-
peasantry and called upon the peasants to act in unison with the work
ers, to form and strengthen a proletarian and peasant alliance, for, they urged, only hucIi iin iilliioice conJd bring the p(JAsantM victory iii tlicir struggle for land . As a result of the ju’opagauda conducted by tlie Social-
ers, to form and strengthen a proletarian and peasant alliance, for, they urged, only hucIi iin iilliioice conJd bring the p(JAsantM victory iii tlicir struggle for land . As a result of the ju'opagauda conducted by tlie Social
Democrats, the Trudovik group introduced a land bill in the Duma [)ro-.  
Democrats, the Trudovik group introduced a land bill in the Duma '[)ro-.  
viding for the coni]>uls()ry alienation of all landlord laud; it proposed tlie  
viding for the coni]>uls()ry alienation of all landlord laud; it proposed tlie  
uatioiialization of all the land, including peasant allotments. Tlio im])as-
uatioiialization of all the land, including peasant allotments. Tlio im])as
sumeds])ecehes delivered by the peasant Deputies during the discussion  
sumeds])ecehes delivered by the peasant Deputies during the discussion  
of the agrarian question in tlio Duma I'cvcTberatod tliroughout the  
of the agrarian question in tlio Duma I'cvcTberatod tliroughout the  
country and had a rousing elTcct upon the ]u>asantry. In the ])eriod from  
country and had a rousing elTcct upon the ]u>asantry. In the ])eriod from  
May to August 1000, ])oasant unrest siiroad to 50 })cr cent of all the coun-
May to August 1000, ])oasant unrest siiroad to 50 })cr cent of all the coun
ties in the country. The growth of revolutionary activity among the  
ties in the country. The growth of revolutionary activity among the  
jicasants greatly alarmed the tsarist govennnont. It issued an official  
jicasants greatly alarmed the tsarist govennnont. It issued an official  
statement to the peasants in which it declared that while it would nev-
statement to the peasants in which it declared that while it would nev
er agi'oe to tlie comxuilsory alienation of tlie landlords* land, it was  
er agi'oe to tlie comxuilsory alienation of tlie landlords* land, it was  
willing to buy at state expense plots 'of land voluntarily sold bv'  
willing to buy at state expense plots 'of land voluntarily sold bv'  
landownersandrcselltlieseplotsto the peasants at a jirice within their  
landownersandrcselltlieseplotsto the peasants at a jirice within their  
means. In answer to this declaration of war -upon the peasantry the Tru-
means. In answer to this declaration of war -upon the peasantry the Tru
dovik grou]> tried to get carried through the Duma an a])peal to the peo-
dovik grou]> tried to get carried through the Duma an a])peal to the peo
ple, but this was defeated .by the Cadets. The government was scared by  
ple, but this was defeated .by the Cadets. The government was scared by  
the turn which the discussion of the land question liatl talnm and deeidod  
the turn which the discussion of the land question liatl talnm and deeidod  
to disj)orso the Duma. On duly 8, 14)0(), it ])roclaiine(l the dissolution  
to disj)orso the Duma. On duly 8, 14)0(), it ])roclaiine(l the dissolution  
of the Dinna on tlio grounds that tiie peasants “in a number of gubernias,  
of the Dinna on tlio grounds that tiie peasants "in a number of gubernias,  
had taken the ])uth of o])eii plunder, the seizure of other jicoxile^sprop-
had taken the ])uth of o])eii plunder, the seizure of other jicoxile^sprop
<^rty and disobediencse to th(> hw and the lawful authorities.’’ After  
<^rty and disobediencse to th('> hw and the lawful authorities." After  
the disioersion of the First State Duma, the Minister of the Interior  
the disioersion of the First State Duma, the Minister of the Interior  
Stolypiu was ap])ointcd Frosideut. of tlie Couneii of Ministers in ])lace  
Stolypiu was ap])ointcd Frosideut. of tlie Couneii of Ministers in ])lace  
of Goremykin, who was (umshlered incapable of waging a deter-
of Goremykin, who was (umshlered incapable of waging a deter
mined struggle against the revolution, Lenin summed up Btolyjiin’s
mined struggle against the revolution, Lenin summed up Btolyjiin's
political biography iu the following brief terms: "A landlord and a mar-
political biography iu the following brief terms: '"A landlord and a mar
shal of thonobilty, he was appointed governor in 1002, under Plelive.  
shal of thonobilty, he was appointed governor in 1002, under Plelive.  
gained ‘fame* iu the eyes of the tsar and the reactionary court clique  
gained 'fame* iu the eyes of the tsar and the reactionary court clique  
by his brutal rojirisals against tlie peasants ami the cruel punishment  
by his brutal rojirisals against tlie peasants ami the cruel punishment  
he meted out to them (in the Saratov Province), organized Black Hun-
he meted out to them (in the Saratov Province), organized Black Hun
<ired gangs and pogroms in 1005 (the iiogrom in Balashov), became Min-
<ired gangs and pogroms in 1005 (the iiogrom in Balashov), became Min
ister of the Interior in JOOG and Presulent of tlio Council of Ministers  
ister of the Interior in JOOG and Presulent of tlio Council of Ministers  
after the dispersal of tlio First State Duma” ( V. 1 . Lenin, Selected W orks^  
after the dispersal of tlio First State Duma" ( V. 1 . Lenin, Selected W orks^  
Two-Vol. ed., VoL I, Moscow, 1940, p. 486).  
Two-Vol. ed., VoL I, Moscow, 1940, p. 486).  


The situation in the country remained revolutionary. In the sum- •
The situation in the country remained revolutionary. In the sum•
mor of 1006 large-scale revolts of soldiers and sailors broke out in  
mor of 1006 large-scale revolts of soldiers and sailors broke out in  
»Sveaborg and Kronstadt. The Bolshevik military organization made  
»Sveaborg and Kronstadt. The Bolshevik military organization made  
extensive preiDaratious for an insuiTCction among the naval and military  
extensive preiDaratious for an insuiTCction among the naval and military  
forces stationed in Finland, but the iusurrootioiH in Svoaborg and Kron-
forces stationed in Finland, but the iusurrootioiH in Svoaborg and Kron
stadt broke out ^irematurely, before these ])reparations wore eomplotod.  
stadt broke out ^irematurely, before these ])reparations wore eomplotod.  
Warships and artillery were sent against the insurgent saihws and the  
Warships and artillery were sent against the insurgent saihws and the  
Line 2,891: Line 2,891:
In an, endeavour to split the ranks of the peasantry who had been  
In an, endeavour to split the ranks of the peasantry who had been  
united in their struggle for land during the revolution, Stolypin, on  
united in their struggle for land during the revolution, Stolypin, on  
November 9, 1906, in the period between the First and the Second Du-
November 9, 1906, in the period between the First and the Second Du
mas, issued a decree granting the peasants the right to leave the peas-
mas, issued a decree granting the peasants the right to leave the peas
ant communities and to acquire definite ownership of their allot-
ant communities and to acquire definite ownership of their allot
ments.  
ments.  


Owing to the intensification of the peasants’ struggle for land,  
Owing to the intensification of the peasants' struggle for land,  
the tsar’s government again entered into negotiations with the govern-
the tsar's government again entered into negotiations with the govern
ments of Germany and Austria for their intervention in Russian  
ments of Germany and Austria for their intervention in Russian  
affairs.  
affairs.  
Line 2,903: Line 2,903:
On July 7 (20), 1906, on the very eve of the dispersion of the First  
On July 7 (20), 1906, on the very eve of the dispersion of the First  
State Duma, the Bolshevik newspaper Echo published an article by  
State Duma, the Bolshevik newspaper Echo published an article by  
Lenin entitled “The Plots of the Reaction and the Threats of the Po-'  
Lenin entitled "The Plots of the Reaction and the Threats of the Po-'  
grom-mongers” in which he exposed the machinations of the tsar and  
grom-mongers" in which he exposed the machinations of the tsar and  
of his German and Austrian friends. After quoting the rapture the govern-
of his German and Austrian friends. After quoting the rapture the govern
ment newspaper Eossiya had expressed over the forthcoming interven-
ment newspaper Eossiya had expressed over the forthcoming interven
tion, Lenin went on to say: “These measures consist in preparing the  
tion, Lenin went on to say: "These measures consist in preparing the  
armed forces of Germany and Austria for the invasion of Russia if the  
armed forces of Germany and Austria for the invasion of Russia if the  
cause of freedom is victorious or on the point of victory. The Berlin  
cause of freedom is victorious or on the point of victory. The Berlin  
government is already in communication with the Austrian govern-
government is already in communication with the Austrian govern
ment on this question. Both governments have admitted that ‘under
ment on this question. Both governments have admitted that 'under
certain circumstances active intervention in the internal affairs of'  
certain circumstances active intervention in the internal affairs of'  
Russia with the object of suppressing or restricting this [Lp., revolu-
Russia with the object of suppressing or restricting this [Lp., revolu
tionary] movement may become desirable and useful. . . .
tionary] movement may become desirable and useful. . . .'


“Thus, there can be no doubt about the plot that is being hatched  
"Thus, there can be no doubt about the plot that is being hatched  
by international counter-revolution. The Russian government is call-
by international counter-revolution. The Russian government is call
ing in the aid offoreign troops against the Russian people. Negotiations  
ing in the aid offoreign troops against the Russian people. Negotiations  
for this have been and are being conducted, and have aheady resulted  
for this have been and are being conducted, and have aheady resulted  
in a fairly definite agreement” (’V. I. Lenin, Collected Worhs, Vol.  
in a fairly definite agreement" ('V. I. Lenin, Collected Worhs, Vol.  
IX, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 411).  
IX, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 411).  


Line 2,930: Line 2,930:
that the Duma could be used as a platform from which to expose the  
that the Duma could be used as a platform from which to expose the  
crimes of tsarism and the treachery of the liberals, and also to fight for  
crimes of tsarism and the treachery of the liberals, and also to fight for  
the leadership of the peasants. Consequently, on Lenin’s proposal, the  
the leadership of the peasants. Consequently, on Lenin's proposal, the  
Bolsheviks decided to take part in the elections to the Second State Du-
Bolsheviks decided to take part in the elections to the Second State Du
ma.Theresult of the part^'cipation of the Left-wing parties in the elections  
ma.Theresult of the part^'cipation of the Left-wing parties in the elections  
was that the Second Duma was more radical than the First. The Cadets  
was that the Second Duma was more radical than the First. The Cadets  
won only about half the seats they had held in the First Duma (98-
won only about half the seats they had held in the First Duma (98
as against 170). TheTrudovik group, together with the Socialist-Revolutionaries, bad 157 scats, compared with 94 in the First Duma. The  
as against 170). TheTrudovik group, together with the Socialist-Revolutionaries, bad 157 scats, compared with 94 in the First Duma. The  


Line 2,949: Line 2,949:


At the Fifth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. which was hold in London  
At the Fifth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. which was hold in London  
in April and May 1907, the Bolsheviks strongly denounced the treach-
in April and May 1907, the Bolsheviks strongly denounced the treach
erous tactics which the Mcnshevilcs pursued in the Second State Duma.  
erous tactics which the Mcnshevilcs pursued in the Second State Duma.  
At this congress the Bolsheviks were in the majority, and the congress  
At this congress the Bolsheviks were in the majority, and the congress  
Line 2,955: Line 2,955:
<nowiki>*</nowiki>of the counter-revolutionary tactics of the liberals.  
<nowiki>*</nowiki>of the counter-revolutionary tactics of the liberals.  


Tho election to the Second State Duma had shown that the ex-
Tho election to the Second State Duma had shown that the ex
isting electoral law, oven though it did greatly restrict the franchise  
isting electoral law, oven though it did greatly restrict the franchise  
for tho working })eoplo, could not ensure tho election of a Duma that  
for tho working })eoplo, could not ensure tho election of a Duma that  
Line 2,962: Line 2,962:
electoral law with tho object of still further restricting the franchise  
electoral law with tho object of still further restricting the franchise  
for the workers and peasants. To provide an excuse for dispersing the  
for the workers and peasants. To provide an excuse for dispersing the  
Duma, the tsar’s govornmont resorted to outright provocation,  
Duma, the tsar's govornmont resorted to outright provocation,  
accusing the Social-Democratic group in the Second State Duma  
accusing the Social-Democratic group in the Second State Duma  
of hatching a “plot against tho state.The char.^o was a deliberately  
of hatching a "plot against tho state." The char.^o was a deliberately  
false one, and had been fabricated by the secret police. On  
false one, and had been fabricated by the secret police. On  
June 1, 1907, Stolypin demanded the impeachment of tho Social-
June 1, 1907, Stolypin demanded the impeachment of tho Social
Democratic Deputies. Tlie Cadets were already willing to yield to the  
Democratic Deputies. Tlie Cadets were already willing to yield to the  
government’s demand, but on Juno 3, 1907, the government dissolved  
government's demand, but on Juno 3, 1907, the government dissolved  
the Duma and promulgated a now electoral law that was calculated  
the Duma and promulgated a now electoral law that was calculated  
to ensure a majority in the next Duma for a bloc of tho landlords  
to ensure a majority in the next Duma for a bloc of tho landlords  
and the big bourgeoisio. Since then that day has been known as tho  
and the big bourgeoisio. Since then that day has been known as tho  
coup d'itat of June 3, for tho tsar’s government had violated its  
coup d'itat of June 3, for tho tsar's government had violated its  
own Manifesto of October 17, 1905, according to which no laws  
own Manifesto of October 17, 1905, according to which no laws  
could be passed without the consent of the Duma. The Social-Dem-
could be passed without the consent of the Duma. The Social-Dem
ocratic Deputies in the Second Duma were arrested and tried by a  
ocratic Deputies in the Second Duma were arrested and tried by a  
tsarist court and sentenced to penal servitude and exile.
tsarist court and sentenced to penal servitude and exile.
Line 2,980: Line 2,980:
===== Reasons for the Defeat of the Revolution of 1905 =====
===== Reasons for the Defeat of the Revolution of 1905 =====
Tho coup  
Tho coup  
d*4tat of Juno 3, 1907, signified the temporary defeat of tho revo-
d*4tat of Juno 3, 1907, signified the temporary defeat of tho revo
lution.  
lution.  


Already at that time the Bolsheviks attributed the defeat of the  
Already at that time the Bolsheviks attributed the defeat of the  
first Russian revolution to the fact that a linn alliance between the  
first Russian revolution to the fact that a linn alliance between the  
workers and peasants had not yet been formed. As Lonin wrote: “This alliance was si3ontaneous, not formulated, and often unconscious” (V. I. Lenin, Gollected Works, Vol. XIV, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed.,  
workers and peasants had not yet been formed. As Lonin wrote: "This alliance was si3ontaneous, not formulated, and often unconscious" (V. I. Lenin, Gollected Works, Vol. XIV, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed.,  
]). 15). The peasants did not yet sufficiently understand that the tsar  
]). 15). The peasants did not yet sufficiently understand that the tsar  
and the landlords constituted a smgle gang of the bitterest enemies  
and the landlords constituted a smgle gang of the bitterest enemies  
Line 3,007: Line 3,007:
on strike no less than four or five times in 1905, in the districts of the  
on strike no less than four or five times in 1905, in the districts of the  
Moscow Gubernia every worker went on strike only once in the year,  
Moscow Gubernia every worker went on strike only once in the year,  
and in a number of industrially less-developed gubernias, some work-
and in a number of industrially less-developed gubernias, some work
ers had not struck at all. In 1906, the number of strikers dropped in  
ers had not struck at all. In 1906, the number of strikers dropped in  
the more-mdustrialized gubernias, whereas in the least-industrialized  
the more-mdustrialized gubernias, whereas in the least-industrialized  
Line 3,017: Line 3,017:
unity necessary for the victory of the revolution. At first the Party  
unity necessary for the victory of the revolution. At first the Party  
was split into two factions; later it united, bub only formally. The  
was split into two factions; later it united, bub only formally. The  
Bolsheviks pursued a consistent revolutionary policy, but the Men-
Bolsheviks pursued a consistent revolutionary policy, but the Men
sheviks still exercised influence among a certain section of the workers  
sheviks still exercised influence among a certain section of the workers  
and retarded the development of the. revolution.  
and retarded the development of the. revolution.  
Line 3,024: Line 3,024:
peasants and soldiers, had not yet merged in one common torrent.  
peasants and soldiers, had not yet merged in one common torrent.  


The tsar’s government received the assistance of the foreign impe-
The tsar's government received the assistance of the foreign impe
rialists, who were apprehensive about the fate of their investments in  
rialists, who were apprehensive about the fate of their investments in  
Russia and feared that the revolution would spread to Western Europe.  
Russia and feared that the revolution would spread to Western Europe.  
Line 3,032: Line 3,032:
to invade Russia in support of the tsarist autocracy. An important  
to invade Russia in support of the tsarist autocracy. An important  
factor that helped tsarism was the conclusion of peace with Japan,  
factor that helped tsarism was the conclusion of peace with Japan,  
which strengthened the position of the tsar’s government. Moreover,  
which strengthened the position of the tsar's government. Moreover,  
to suppress the revolution the tsar could use the military forces that  
to suppress the revolution the tsar could use the military forces that  
were released from Manchuria.
were released from Manchuria.
Line 3,042: Line 3,042:
and compelled it to make concessions. All its iittcjiupts to restore the  
and compelled it to make concessions. All its iittcjiupts to restore the  
oonditious that had existed in llnssia hetoro tlu^ nwohd-ion ]>rovod  
oonditious that had existed in llnssia hetoro tlu^ nwohd-ion ]>rovod  
futile, it could not recover from the blows which tlu^ revolution inflict-
futile, it could not recover from the blows which tlu^ revolution inflict
ed n])on it.  
ed n])on it.  


For the workers and iu\isauts of Itiissia, the revolution of 1005-
For the workers and iu\isauts of Itiissia, the revolution of 1005
1907 served as a great schooling in ])olltical struggle, it roused  
1907 served as a great schooling in ])olltical struggle, it roused  
millions of working people to political life and riw<ialed to them  
millions of working people to political life and riw<ialed to them  
the relations of all classes to each other. The masses acquired  
the relations of all classes to each other. The masses acquired  
enormous exjierionco in employing the general strike and armed in-
enormous exjierionco in employing the general strike and armed in
surrection, and this they utilized in their subsequent struggles. The  
surrection, and this they utilized in their subsequent struggles. The  
working class created the Soviets of Workers’ Deputies, the embryonic  
working class created the Soviets of Workers' Deputies, the embryonic  
form of the dictatorship of the proletariat. This experience helped  
form of the dictatorship of the proletariat. This experience helped  
the workers and peasants to achieve victory twelve years later, in  
the workers and peasants to achieve victory twelve years later, in  
Line 3,060: Line 3,060:
very groat. The first Russian revolution took place thirty-five years  
very groat. The first Russian revolution took place thirty-five years  
after the sup])rossion of tlio Paris Oommnne. It took jilacc in the e])och  
after the sup])rossion of tlio Paris Oommnne. It took jilacc in the e])och  
of imiiorialisin. As Comrade Stalin wrote: ‘‘Tims, the revolution  
of imiiorialisin. As Comrade Stalin wrote: "Tims, the revolution  
against tsarism verged on and had to pass into a revolution against  
against tsarism verged on and had to pass into a revolution against  
imperialism, into a proletarian revolution” (J. Stalin, Problems of  
imperialism, into a proletarian revolution" (J. Stalin, Problems of  
Leninisyn^ Moscow, 1945, p. 37). A direct result of the Russian revolu-
Leninisyn^ Moscow, 1945, p. 37). A direct result of the Russian revolu
tion was the development of the political struggle in Austria in October  
tion was the development of the political struggle in Austria in October  
1905, in Germany in January 1900, in France in May 1900, and in  
1905, in Germany in January 1900, in France in May 1900, and in  
Line 3,082: Line 3,082:
of the temporary industrial revival of 1903-1907.  
of the temporary industrial revival of 1903-1907.  


In tsarist Russia the crisis of the early 1000 ’s lasted much longer  
In tsarist Russia the crisis of the early 1000 's lasted much longer  
than the ordinary periodical crises in Europe, and in 1904 it was .  
than the ordinary periodical crises in Europe, and in 1904 it was .  
followed by a depression.
followed by a depression.
Line 3,089: Line 3,089:
contracts and railway construction, and a series of crop failures which  
contracts and railway construction, and a series of crop failures which  
eaused the already restricted home market to shrink still further, had  
eaused the already restricted home market to shrink still further, had  
all served to prolong the industrial crisis of the early 1900’s. The new  
all served to prolong the industrial crisis of the early 1900's. The new  
world economic crisis aggravated the industrial depression in Eussia.  
world economic crisis aggravated the industrial depression in Russia.  


The course of the crisis may bo illustrated by the output of pig  
The course of the crisis may bo illustrated by the output of pig  
Line 3,098: Line 3,098:
rose in 1904 to 102, but in 1905-1906 it dropped again, to 93, and in the  
rose in 1904 to 102, but in 1905-1906 it dropped again, to 93, and in the  
period of depression from 1907 to 1909 it did not rise above 97. Only  
period of depression from 1907 to 1909 it did not rise above 97. Only  
in 1910, after a ten years’ state of crisis, did the output exceed that  
in 1910, after a ten years' state of crisis, did the output exceed that  
of the beginning of the century.  
of the beginning of the century.  


All the basic industries, including the oil industry, were in a state  
All the basic industries, including the oil industry, were in a state  
of stagnation. The coal industry of the Donetz Basin alone was some-
of stagnation. The coal industry of the Donetz Basin alone was some
what less aifected by the crisis and the depression. The textile industry,  
what less aifected by the crisis and the depression. The textile industry,  
the output of which had risen somewhat by 1907, remained stagnant  
the output of which had risen somewhat by 1907, remained stagnant  
Line 3,108: Line 3,108:


After the revolution of 1905, important changes took place in  
After the revolution of 1905, important changes took place in  
industry. The concentration of industry increased. Capitalist com-
industry. The concentration of industry increased. Capitalist com
bines — trusts and syndicates — ^grew rapidly. During the period of the  
bines — trusts and syndicates — ^grew rapidly. During the period of the  
industrial depression the big banlcs became more powerful and took  
industrial depression the big banlcs became more powerful and took  
a direct part in the reorganization of industry, strengthening and enlarg-
a direct part in the reorganization of industry, strengthening and enlarg
ing some plants, closing down others, and combining and reorganizing  
ing some plants, closing down others, and combining and reorganizing  
still others. For the pimpose of financing Russian industry the French  
still others. For the pimpose of financing Russian industry the French  
banlters promoted the formation of a banking S 3 mdicate known as the  
banlters promoted the formation of a banking S 3 mdicate known as the  
Russo-French Finance Company. Capitalism in Russia became in-
Russo-French Finance Company. Capitalism in Russia became in
creasingly monopolistic, imperialist capitalism.  
creasingly monopolistic, imperialist capitalism.  


Line 3,127: Line 3,127:
force the workers back to the conditions of labour that had existed before  
force the workers back to the conditions of labour that had existed before  
the revolution of 1905. The working day was lengthened to ten and  
the revolution of 1905. The working day was lengthened to ten and  
even to twelve hours. Piece rates for all categories of work were re-
even to twelve hours. Piece rates for all categories of work were re
duced, and fines again became the rule. The cost of living steadily rose.  
duced, and fines again became the rule. The cost of living steadily rose.  


The large federations of employers that sprang up in 1906 and  
The large federations of employers that sprang up in 1906 and  
1907 in St, Petersburg and Moscow formed a united front with  
1907 in St, Petersburg and Moscow formed a united front with  
tsarism against the workers. The employers’ organizations discharged  
tsarism against the workers. The employers' organizations discharged  
the more class-conscious and militant workers. These workers were  
the more class-conscious and militant workers. These workers were  
blacklisted and could not fi.nd employment anywhere. The factory  
blacklisted and could not fi.nd employment anywhere. The factory  
Line 3,139: Line 3,139:
===== Counter-Revolution Rampant =====
===== Counter-Revolution Rampant =====
After tlireo years of revolution,  
After tlireo years of revolution,  
Russia passed thro\ijfj;li years of blootlshod and rani])aiit cpimtcr-rcv-
Russia passed thro\ijfj;li years of blootlshod and rani])aiit cpimtcr-rcv
olution. Lon ill described this period as years ‘‘of tiio black Duma,  
olution. Lon ill described this period as years "of tiio black Duma,  
rampant violence and opju'essiou, the onslauglit of the ea])italists  
rampant violence and opju'essiou, the onslauglit of the ea])italists  
upon the workers, tJie Joss of tJio gains wliich ilu* workers had won'"'  
upon the workers, tJie Joss of tJio gains wliich ilu* workers had won'"'  
Line 3,153: Line 3,153:
government feared to return to tlieir regular stations the troops  
government feared to return to tlieir regular stations the troops  
which had been sent to suppress the revolution. Tlio troops in the central  
which had been sent to suppress the revolution. Tlio troops in the central  
gubernias wore reinforced with ti’oops drawn from the frontier regions,  
gubernias wore reinforced with ti'oops drawn from the frontier regions,  
as the tsarist axitocraoy believed that the "^internal enemy” was more  
as the tsarist axitocraoy believed that the '"^internal enemy" was more  
dangerous than the foj’oigii foe.  
dangerous than the foj'oigii foe.  


Tlie field courts-martial that o])oratod in 1 000 and 1 907 Avere replaced  
Tlie field courts-martial that o])oratod in 1 000 and 1 907 Avere replaced  
by military courts. The entire country Avas dotted with gallows,  
by military courts. The entire country Avas dotted with gallows,  
which the people dubbed ^Stolypin ne<}kties,iiftor the head of the  
which the people dubbed "^Stolypin ne<}kties," iiftor the head of the  
tsar’s govo 3 'nment, Stolypin. Lenin wrote regarding this period; “There
tsar's govo 3 'nment, Stolypin. Lenin wrote regarding this period; "There
has never before been in Russia such rampant ])orsoeution by tsarism,  
has never before been in Russia such rampant ])orsoeution by tsarism,  
and during these Jive years tlu^ gallows boat tlu^ record of three centuries  
and during these Jive years tlu^ gallows boat tlu^ record of three centuries  
of Russian history.Rundmls of thousands of people Avero flung into  
of Russian history." Rundmls of thousands of people Avero flung into  
prison, and there the revolutionaries wore siibjecsted to torture and  
prison, and there the revolutionaries wore siibjecsted to torture and  
limtal ill-treatment, I^or having j)articipatod in strikes or revolution-
limtal ill-treatment, I^or having j)articipatod in strikes or revolution
ary demonstrations woi'kors Avero sonteiieod to long years of penal  
ary demonstrations woi'kors Avero sonteiieod to long years of penal  
servitude.  
servitude.  
Line 3,175: Line 3,175:
rubber truncheons and revolvers and boating up ])assers-by. Not a year  
rubber truncheons and revolvers and boating up ])assers-by. Not a year  
passed but what the Black Hundred hooligans organized a bloody  
passed but what the Black Hundred hooligans organized a bloody  
pogi‘om against the Jews. Throughout the country x^i^^datory raids  
pogi'om against the Jews. Throughout the country x^i^^datory raids  
by the police and gendarmes upon the workers’ organizations became  
by the police and gendarmes upon the workers' organizations became  
more frequent. In 1907, 169 trade unions wore sujjprcssed, in 1908,  
more frequent. In 1907, 169 trade unions wore sujjprcssed, in 1908,  
over 100 wore sux)X)resscd, in 1909, 96 Avere siq^xwcssed. Workers’
over 100 wore sux)X)resscd, in 1909, 96 Avere siq^xwcssed. Workers'
newspapers and magazines were banned. The workers’ cultural and  
newspapers and magazines were banned. The workers' cultural and  
educational organizations that managed to survive dragged out a  
educational organizations that managed to survive dragged out a  
miserable existence.  
miserable existence.  
Line 3,188: Line 3,188:
landlords (first among whom is Romanov) which has turned Russia into the terror not only of Europe, but now also of Asia, the gang which has developed tyranny, robbery and embezzlement of state funds by  
landlords (first among whom is Romanov) which has turned Russia into the terror not only of Europe, but now also of Asia, the gang which has developed tyranny, robbery and embezzlement of state funds by  
government officials, systematic violence against the ^common people/  
government officials, systematic violence against the ^common people/  
torment and torture of political opponents, etc., to absolutely excep-
torment and torture of political opponents, etc., to absolutely excep
tional dimensions” (V. I. Lenin, Collected Worhs, Vol. XV, Moscow,  
tional dimensions" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Worhs, Vol. XV, Moscow,  
1937, Euss. ed,, p. 247).
1937, Euss. ed,, p. 247).


===== The Third State Duma =====
===== The Third State Duma =====
The cou'p d’etat of the 3rd of June  
The cou'p d'etat of the 3rd of June  
marked the opening of the offensive which tsarism launched against  
marked the opening of the offensive which tsarism launched against  
the gains won by the revolutionary masses; but it could not  
the gains won by the revolutionary masses; but it could not  
Line 3,203: Line 3,203:
reason which dictated the necessity of maintaining the semblance of  
reason which dictated the necessity of maintaining the semblance of  
a representative institution in Russia was the growth of capitalism,  
a representative institution in Russia was the growth of capitalism,  
the growing strength of the Russian bourgeoisie, and the unstable inter-
the growing strength of the Russian bourgeoisie, and the unstable inter
national position of tsarism, wffiich was compelled to manoeuvre and  
national position of tsarism, wffiich was compelled to manoeuvre and  
give Europe the impression that Russia was a constitutional country.  
give Europe the impression that Russia was a constitutional country.  
Above all, however, tsarism aimed at making the Third Duma a new  
Above all, however, tsarism aimed at making the Third Duma a new  
class bulwark for itself by forming a bloc with the counter-revolu-
class bulwark for itself by forming a bloc with the counter-revolu
tionary Russian bourgeoisie.  
tionary Russian bourgeoisie.  


In the endeavour to <nowiki>''</nowiki>retain power and revenues” for the rul-
In the endeavour to <nowiki>"</nowiki>retain power and revenues" for the rul
ing class of feudal landlords, tsarism — following the 1905 revolu-
ing class of feudal landlords, tsarism — following the 1905 revolu
tion — took the second step (the first was taken in 1861) towards  
tion — took the second step (the first was taken in 1861) towards  
establishing a bourgeois monarchy, by consolidating the bloc with  
establishing a bourgeois monarchy, by consolidating the bloc with  
Line 3,220: Line 3,220:


In conformity with this law, the landlords were allowed to elect  
In conformity with this law, the landlords were allowed to elect  
one elector from every 230 voters, the bourgeoisie one from every thou-
one elector from every 230 voters, the bourgeoisie one from every thou
sand, the peasants one from every 60,000, and the workers only one  
sand, the peasants one from every 60,000, and the workers only one  
from every 125,000. This law increased the number of landlord elec-
from every 125,000. This law increased the number of landlord elec
tors almost fivefold, that of bourgeois electors sevenfold, compared  
tors almost fivefold, that of bourgeois electors sevenfold, compared  
with that provided for by the law of December 11, 1905, while the  
with that provided for by the law of December 11, 1905, while the  
Line 3,229: Line 3,229:
still further restricted. The peoples of Central Asia were totally  
still further restricted. The peoples of Central Asia were totally  
deprived of representation in the Duma. Poland was entitled to send  
deprived of representation in the Duma. Poland was entitled to send  
only 12 Deputies instead of 35, and of these, two — ^the represent-
only 12 Deputies instead of 35, and of these, two — ^the represent
atives of Waisaw and the Kholm Region — ^had to be Russians.  
atives of Waisaw and the Kholm Region — ^had to be Russians.  
European Russia was granted 403 seats in the Duma, but the “border
European Russia was granted 403 seats in the Duma, but the "border
regions” were given only 39,  
regions" were given only 39,  


Thus, the new electoral law ensured that the Third State Duma would consist of landlords and the bourgeoisie. In other words, it was not so much an olocted body as a body carefully chosen to suit  
Thus, the new electoral law ensured that the Third State Duma would consist of landlords and the bourgeoisie. In other words, it was not so much an olocted body as a body carefully chosen to suit  
Line 3,240: Line 3,240:
The state of the parties rejircsontod in the. Duma also clearly proved  
The state of the parties rejircsontod in the. Duma also clearly proved  
that it was a bourgeois and landlord body. Tho Right-wing parties  
that it was a bourgeois and landlord body. Tho Right-wing parties  
had 40 per cent of the seats, tho Octobrists 25 ])cr cent, the Cousti-
had 40 per cent of the seats, tho Octobrists 25 ])cr cent, the Cousti
tutional-Domoorata (Cadets) 23 per cent and tho Left-wing parties a  
tutional-Domoorata (Cadets) 23 per cent and tho Left-wing parties a  
little over 7 per cent. Tho rest of tho Deputies declared themselves  
little over 7 per cent. Tho rest of tho Deputies declared themselves  
Line 3,254: Line 3,254:
the Cadets,  
the Cadets,  


Tlio head of tho govormnnnt during tho 3rd of June bloc was Stoly-
Tlio head of tho govormnnnt during tho 3rd of June bloc was Stoly
pin, one of tho most jmunincut rojirosontativos of the landed nobility,  
pin, one of tho most jmunincut rojirosontativos of the landed nobility,  
who were organized in the countor-rovoliitiouary organization known  
who were organized in the countor-rovoliitiouary organization known  
as tho Council of the United Nobility. With tho support of tho Octo-
as tho Council of the United Nobility. With tho support of tho Octo
brists and Constitutioual-Domoorats, Stolypin launched an offensive  
brists and Constitutioual-Domoorats, Stolypin launched an offensive  
against the workers and peasants and tJio working people in tho non-
against the workers and peasants and tJio working people in tho non
Russian national regions. The keynote of Stolyj)iii’s domestic policy  
Russian national regions. The keynote of Stolyj)iii's domestic policy  
was: “First pacification and then reforms.Stotyxiin achieved “paci-
was: "First pacification and then reforms." Stotyxiin achieved "paci
fication” by moans of tho criiolost terrorism. Fearing another outburst  
fication" by moans of tho criiolost terrorism. Fearing another outburst  
of revolution, however, ho was obliged to introduce an agrarian refonn.  
of revolution, however, ho was obliged to introduce an agrarian refonn.  


Line 3,276: Line 3,276:
owned 70,000,000 desyatins of land, while an almost equal amount  
owned 70,000,000 desyatins of land, while an almost equal amount  
belonged to 10,600,000 poor peasant households. The distribution of  
belonged to 10,600,000 poor peasant households. The distribution of  
the land in this fashion kept agriculture in a state of extreme back-
the land in this fashion kept agriculture in a state of extreme back
wardness.  
wardness.  


Line 3,288: Line 3,288:
ajid 192 in Denmark. In respect to the mechanization of agriculture,  
ajid 192 in Denmark. In respect to the mechanization of agriculture,  
Russia was equally far behind the advanced countries. The greater part  
Russia was equally far behind the advanced countries. The greater part  
of the peasants’ lands were ploughed with wooden ploughs, and grain  
of the peasants' lands were ploughed with wooden ploughs, and grain  
was sown and threshed by hand. In 1910, there were employed in  
was sown and threshed by hand. In 1910, there were employed in  
agriculture throughout the empire 3,000,000 primitive wooden  
agriculture throughout the empire 3,000,000 primitive wooden  
Line 3,295: Line 3,295:
not even thought of.  
not even thought of.  


After the revolution of 1905, the utter destruction of the old mediae-
After the revolution of 1905, the utter destruction of the old mediae
val system of landownei ship in Russia became particularly urgent. Still  
val system of landownei ship in Russia became particularly urgent. Still  
more acute than in 1861 became the struggle for one or the other of  
more acute than in 1861 became the struggle for one or the other of  
the two possible paths of development of capitalism in agriculture —  
the two possible paths of development of capitalism in agriculture —  
the Prussian or the American. In 1907, Lenin wrote that there were two  
the Prussian or the American. In 1907, Lenin wrote that there were two  
possibilities: “Either the Prussian type of evolution: the feudal landlord  
possibilities: "Either the Prussian type of evolution: the feudal landlord  
will become a Juiil?:er. The power of the landlords in the state will be  
will become a Juiil?:er. The power of the landlords in the state will be  
consolulated for decades. Monarchy. ^A military despotism clothed  
consolulated for decades. Monarchy. ^A military despotism clothed  
in })arliamentary forms’ instead of democracy. The utmost inequality  
in })arliamentary forms' instead of democracy. The utmost inequality  
among the rural and among the rest of the population. Or the American  
among the rural and among the rest of the population. Or the American  
tyx^e of evolution. Abolition of the landlord system. The peasant  
tyx^e of evolution. Abolition of the landlord system. The peasant  
becomes a free farmer. Sovereignty of the people. A bourgeois-democrat-
becomes a free farmer. Sovereignty of the people. A bourgeois-democrat
ic system. The utmost equality among the rural population as the  
ic system. The utmost equality among the rural population as the  
stai‘ting point and condition for free capitalism” (V. I. Lenin, Collected  
stai'ting point and condition for free capitalism" (V. I. Lenin, Collected  
Works, Vol. XI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 188).  
Works, Vol. XI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 188).  


The peasant revolts in the period of the revolution showed that  
The peasant revolts in the period of the revolution showed that  
the peasantry refused to tolerate their present conditions any longer,  
the peasantry refused to tolerate their present conditions any longer,  
wanted to sweep away the old system of landownership by revolu-
wanted to sweep away the old system of landownership by revolu
tionary means, and were in fact taking the American path of develop-
tionary means, and were in fact taking the American path of develop
ment of capitalism in agriculture.  
ment of capitalism in agriculture.  


The tsarist government, the landlords and the counter-revolu-
The tsarist government, the landlords and the counter-revolu
tionary bourgeoisie wanted to bring about this change in a way that  
tionary bourgeoisie wanted to bring about this change in a way that  
would serve the interests of the landlords, they wanted the Prussian  
would serve the interests of the landlords, they wanted the Prussian  
way. The govermnent therefore decided to split the peasantry, even at  
way. The govermnent therefore decided to split the peasantry, even at  
the cost of ruining the countryside, and to encourage the rise of a pros-
the cost of ruining the countryside, and to encourage the rise of a pros
perous class of small landowners — “new landlords” who would fight  
perous class of small landowners — "new landlords" who would fight  
for the protection of private property in land and for the preservation  
for the protection of private property in land and for the preservation  
of the tsarist autocracy.  
of the tsarist autocracy.  


The government, therefore, abandoned its former policy of preserv-
The government, therefore, abandoned its former policy of preserv
ing the village C' minunities and the mediaeval forms of land tenure  
ing the village C' minunities and the mediaeval forms of land tenure  
connected with it, such as tying the peasants to the village community,  
connected with it, such as tying the peasants to the village community,  
Line 3,334: Line 3,334:
estates.  
estates.  


While the “reform” (“emancipation of the serfs”) of 1861 enabled  
While the "reform" ("emancipation of the serfs") of 1861 enabled  
the landlords to rob the peasants of their land, the new reform  
the landlords to rob the peasants of their land, the new reform  
provided the kulaks with the opportunity to do so.
provided the kulaks with the opportunity to do so.
Line 3,340: Line 3,340:
===== Destruction of the Village Community =====
===== Destruction of the Village Community =====
Stolypin devised three  
Stolypin devised three  
groups of measures with which he hoped to avert an agrarian revolu-
groups of measures with which he hoped to avert an agrarian revolu
tion and strengthen the rule of tsarism. These groups were: 1) destruc-
tion and strengthen the rule of tsarism. These groups were: 1) destruc
tion of the village community, 2) introduction of ‘‘kiiufcor” and  
tion of the village community, 2) introduction of "kiiufcor" and  
^‘otrub” farms in the countryside, and 3) resettlement of the peasants  
^'otrub" farms in the countryside, and 3) resettlement of the peasants  
in other regions.  
in other regions.  


Stolypin ’s ukase of November 9, 1906, which initiated the destruc-
Stolypin 's ukase of November 9, 1906, which initiated the destruc
tion of the village community, became, after it was amended by the  
tion of the village community, became, after it was amended by the  
Third State Duma, the law of June 14, 1910, which was to complete  
Third State Duma, the law of June 14, 1910, which was to complete  
Line 3,365: Line 3,365:
community could remain in the village and become permanent  
community could remain in the village and become permanent  
owner of his plots, which could be exchanged for one continuous  
owner of his plots, which could be exchanged for one continuous  
plot, the “otrub.Or he could transfer his home and his property  
plot, the "otrub." Or he could transfer his home and his property  
to a plot of land outside the village, and set up a farm there, a  
to a plot of land outside the village, and set up a farm there, a  
“khutor.In either case the setting up of a farm entailed expend-
"khutor." In either case the setting up of a farm entailed expend
iture. The government granted loans io kulaks to purchase land  
iture. The government granted loans io kulaks to purchase land  
and organize “khutor” farms. It demanded that thebest of the vil-
and organize "khutor" farms. It demanded that thebest of the vil
lage community’s land be allotted to the kulak “khutor” -farmers.  
lage community's land be allotted to the kulak "khutor" -farmers.  
The establishment of “khutor” and "otrub” farms was frequently ef-
The establishment of "khutor" and ""otrub" farms was frequently ef
fected by force, with the help of the rural prefects. The tsarist govern-
fected by force, with the help of the rural prefects. The tsarist govern
ment sent a whole army of mounted police to the rural districts  
ment sent a whole army of mounted police to the rural districts  
and gave Provincial Governors power to send troops to suppress  
and gave Provincial Governors power to send troops to suppress  
the peasants who resisted land assignment from community land.  
the peasants who resisted land assignment from community land.  
However, among “khutor” -farmers the kulaks were in a minority^  
However, among "khutor" -farmers the kulaks were in a minority^  
There was a majority of another category of “khutor ’’-farmers, the ruined and impoverished peasants who, having no means to escape from want, said: “There’s nowhere to go, so let’s take up  
There was a majority of another category of "khutor "-farmers, the ruined and impoverished peasants who, having no means to escape from want, said: "There's nowhere to go, so let's take up  
a "khutor’ farm.But having no means with which to make such  
a "khutor' farm." But having no means with which to make such  
farms work, they would sell their allotments to the kulaks. In  
farms work, they would sell their allotments to the kulaks. In  
this way the kulak farms within and without the villages grew  
this way the kulak farms within and without the villages grew  
into real estates where wage labour was employed on a large scale.  
into real estates where wage labour was employed on a large scale.  
The process of dijfferentiation of the peasantry into classes was acceler-
The process of dijfferentiation of the peasantry into classes was acceler
ated. A section of the peasants who had been deprived of their land  
ated. A section of the peasants who had been deprived of their land  
went to seek a livelihood in the towns and became proletarians.  
went to seek a livelihood in the towns and became proletarians.  
Line 3,389: Line 3,389:
householders, with an area of land amounting to 18,000,000 hectares,  
householders, with an area of land amounting to 18,000,000 hectares,  
left the village communities and took over the land ls their private  
left the village communities and took over the land ls their private  
property. Of this number, 54.7 per cent set up “khutor” and “otrub”
property. Of this number, 54.7 per cent set up "khutor" and "otrub"
farms, but three- jfifths of these subsequently sold their allotments.  
farms, but threejfifths of these subsequently sold their allotments.  


The buying and selling of land was transacted through the Peasant  
The buying and selling of land was transacted through the Peasant  
Bank. Prom 1906 to 1910 the peasants acquired through this bank a  
Bank. Prom 1906 to 1910 the peasants acquired through this bank a  
total of 6,000,000 hectares of land. The bank concerned itself exclu-
total of 6,000,000 hectares of land. The bank concerned itself exclu
sively with the setting up of “khutor” and “otrub” farms, and during  
sively with the setting up of "khutor" and "otrub" farms, and during  
the ten years it was in operation, from 1906 to 1916, it helped to form  
the ten years it was in operation, from 1906 to 1916, it helped to form  
200,000 of these. The Peasant Bank operated in the interests of the  
200,000 of these. The Peasant Bank operated in the interests of the  
Line 3,403: Line 3,403:
79 rubles, but the bank sold the latter at 140 to 150 rubles i^er hectare.  
79 rubles, but the bank sold the latter at 140 to 150 rubles i^er hectare.  
When it sold land to be paid for in instalments it demanded high  
When it sold land to be paid for in instalments it demanded high  
interest on the mortgage. Frequently pleasant s who had become “khu-
interest on the mortgage. Frequently pleasant s who had become "khu
tor” -farmers fell into arrears in the payment of interest and principal on  
tor" -farmers fell into arrears in the payment of interest and principal on  
loans received from the bank. In such cases their property was sold under  
loans received from the bank. In such cases their property was sold under  
the hammer and they were compelled to seek a livelihood in the towns.  
the hammer and they were compelled to seek a livelihood in the towns.  


Stolypin also extensively applied the policy of resettlement. His  
Stolypin also extensively applied the policy of resettlement. His  
aim was to form a class of “sturdy” and “prosperous” peasant owners  
aim was to form a class of "sturdy" and "prosperous" peasant owners  
in the Central regions of Russia and to shift the discontented poor and  
in the Central regions of Russia and to shift the discontented poor and  
middle peasants further out — to Siberia and other border regions*  
middle peasants further out — to Siberia and other border regions*  
Line 3,422: Line 3,422:
resettlement commissions, Prefects and Provincial Governors. The  
resettlement commissions, Prefects and Provincial Governors. The  
commissions packed off whole contingents of poor and middle peasants  
commissions packed off whole contingents of poor and middle peasants  
in cattle trucks which bore the inscription: “Forty persons, eight  
in cattle trucks which bore the inscription: "Forty persons, eight  
horses.The settlers with their wives and children, healthy and sick,  
horses." The settlers with their wives and children, healthy and sick,  
travelled for months to their new places of settlement, living in thesis  
travelled for months to their new places of settlement, living in thesis  
cattle trucks, in which they cooked their food and did their washing; and when they reached their destination they were bundled out and left ill the open field, in the rain or snow. To create some shelter for  
cattle trucks, in which they cooked their food and did their washing; and when they reached their destination they were bundled out and left ill the open field, in the rain or snow. To create some shelter for  
Line 3,434: Line 3,434:
be seen from the following excerpt from the report of Prince Lvov,  
be seen from the following excerpt from the report of Prince Lvov,  
whom the Z3m3tvos sent on a mission of inspection to the Far East.  
whom the Z3m3tvos sent on a mission of inspection to the Far East.  
‘Tsolabion from the world, living as if on an uninhabited island among  
'Tsolabion from the world, living as if on an uninhabited island among  
the marshes in the dense taiga, in the marshy valleys and muddy  
the marshes in the dense taiga, in the marshy valleys and muddy  
hills, absolutely wild conditions of life, labour and sustenance, naturally  
hills, absolutely wild conditions of life, labour and sustenance, naturally  
Line 3,441: Line 3,441:
his struggle against stern nature in building his wretched habitation.  
his struggle against stern nature in building his wretched habitation.  
Scurvy and typhus attack his exhausted frame and carry him to the  
Scurvy and typhus attack his exhausted frame and carry him to the  
graveyard. In many settlomfiiits, in 1907, the death rate was posi-
graveyard. In many settlomfiiits, in 1907, the death rate was posi
tively incredible, amounting to 25 and 30 per cent. In the settlements  
tively incredible, amounting to 25 and 30 per cent. In the settlements  
there are as many gravestones as there are households, and many of  
there are as many gravestones as there are households, and many of  
the settlements will have to bo shifted to new sections otherwise they  
the settlements will have to bo shifted to new sections otherwise they  
will be transformed into graveyards.
will be transformed into graveyards."


Miny of the settlers abandoned their newly acquired allotments in  
Miny of the settlers abandoned their newly acquired allotments in  
Line 3,456: Line 3,456:
of the border regions. The land intended for colonization was  
of the border regions. The land intended for colonization was  
forcibly taken from the natives. The Kirghiz, for example, were  
forcibly taken from the natives. The Kirghiz, for example, were  
driven wholesale from their winter pastures. The Caucasian highland-
driven wholesale from their winter pastures. The Caucasian highland
ers were pushed from their fertile lands into the rocky gorges. In  
ers were pushed from their fertile lands into the rocky gorges. In  
Central Asia, magnificent orchards, that were situated in an area  
Central Asia, magnificent orchards, that were situated in an area  
Line 3,462: Line 3,462:


The ruined and impoverished native inhabitants of the border  
The ruined and impoverished native inhabitants of the border  
regions became revolutionary and augmented the ranks of the fight-
regions became revolutionary and augmented the ranks of the fight
ers against tsarism.
ers against tsarism.


===== The Result of Stolypin’s Agrarian Reform =====
===== The Result of Stolypin's Agrarian Reform =====
When he introduced  
When he introduced  
his agrarian reform Sbolypin stated that his object was to wi*est tlie  
his agrarian reform Sbolypin stated that his object was to wi*est tlie  
peasantry out of the hands of revolution and to convert the kulaks into  
peasantry out of the hands of revolution and to convert the kulaks into  
a class of “small landlords” which was to serve as a firm bulwark for  
a class of "small landlords" which was to serve as a firm bulwark for  
the autocracy in its struggle against the revolution.  
the autocracy in its struggle against the revolution.  


“Give me twenty quiet years and I will reform Russia,he said.  
"Give me twenty quiet years and I will reform Russia," he said.  


In an article entitled “The Last Safety Valve,Lenin showed  
In an article entitled "The Last Safety Valve," Lenin showed  
that Sbolypin’s agrarian policy brought neither “reform” nor quiet.
that Sbolypin's agrarian policy brought neither "reform" nor quiet."
In 1910, an outbreak o£ cholera in the south of Russia carried away 100.000 persons. Plague broke out in the steppes of Astrakhan.  
In 1910, an outbreak o£ cholera in the south of Russia carried away 100.000 persons. Plague broke out in the steppes of Astrakhan.  
Ruination, poverty and starvation roused the anger of the peasants and  
Ruination, poverty and starvation roused the anger of the peasants and  
Line 3,482: Line 3,482:
Another crop failure in 1911, and the famine which affected  
Another crop failure in 1911, and the famine which affected  


30.000. 000 peasants showed that the Stolypin reform had not abol-
30.000. 000 peasants showed that the Stolypin reform had not abol
ished the fundamental causes of the backwardness of agriculture.  
ished the fundamental causes of the backwardness of agriculture.  
Tj^hus and other epidemic diseases ravaged the famine-affected  
Tj^hus and other epidemic diseases ravaged the famine-affected  
areas.  
areas.  


Stolypin ’s reform did not abolish mediaeval landownership. The  
Stolypin 's reform did not abolish mediaeval landownership. The  
royal family, the landlords and the monasteries still retained over  
royal family, the landlords and the monasteries still retained over  


150.000. 000 hectares of the best and most fertile land in the country.  
150.000. 000 hectares of the best and most fertile land in the country.  
The landlords continued to keep the peasants in bondage, compelling  
The landlords continued to keep the peasants in bondage, compelling  
them to cultivate their, the landlords’, land with their wretched horses  
them to cultivate their, the landlords', land with their wretched horses  
and primitive implements. “This is not capitalism,wrote Lenin,  
and primitive implements. "This is not capitalism," wrote Lenin,  
describing the state of landlord and peasant farming that resulted from  
describing the state of landlord and peasant farming that resulted from  
Stolypin ’s reform. “This is not the European method of farming. . . .  
Stolypin 's reform. "This is not the European method of farming. . . .  
This is the old Chinese way. This is the Turkish way. This is the feudal  
This is the old Chinese way. This is the Turkish way. This is the feudal  
waif^ (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works^ Voi. IV, Moscow, 1934, p. 239).  
waif^ (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works^ Voi. IV, Moscow, 1934, p. 239).  


The reform did not even abolish the open-field system and other  
The reform did not even abolish the open-field system and other  
survivals of serfdom which reduced the productivity of the peasants’
survivals of serfdom which reduced the productivity of the peasants'
labour. The peasants, with bitter irony, described Stolypin ’s policy  
labour. The peasants, with bitter irony, described Stolypin 's policy  
of land settlement as “land unsettlement.
of land settlement as "land unsettlement."


Stolypin ’s reform merely postponed the doom of serfdom; it did  
Stolypin 's reform merely postponed the doom of serfdom; it did  
not eliminate the profound contradictions that constituted the basis  
not eliminate the profound contradictions that constituted the basis  
of the Russian bourgeois-democratic revolution. It still further accel-
of the Russian bourgeois-democratic revolution. It still further accel
erated the process of differentiation among the peasantry and  
erated the process of differentiation among the peasantry and  
intensified the class struggle in the rural districts. The agrarian ques-
intensified the class struggle in the rural districts. The agrarian ques
tion, the fundamental question of, the Russian revolution, could be set-
tion, the fundamental question of, the Russian revolution, could be set
tled only by abolishing the landlord latifundia and by transferring the  
tled only by abolishing the landlord latifundia and by transferring the  


70.000. 000 hectares of landlord land to the peasants without compen-
70.000. 000 hectares of landlord land to the peasants without compen
sation. But only another revolution could do this.
sation. But only another revolution could do this.


Line 3,522: Line 3,522:
in Finland at the time, went abroad. To board the ship unobserved by  
in Finland at the time, went abroad. To board the ship unobserved by  
the police he, one night, crossed the ice in the Gulf of Finland on foot  
the police he, one night, crossed the ice in the Gulf of Finland on foot  
to a near-by island, accompanied by two Finnish peasants. The Decem-
to a near-by island, accompanied by two Finnish peasants. The Decem
ber ice was frail and Lenin was almost drowned in an icehole, out of  
ber ice was frail and Lenin was almost drowned in an icehole, out of  
which he managed to extricate himself with diifioulty. He got safe on board at last and left Finland for Switzerland. His second period abroad as an exile lasted nearly ten years.  
which he managed to extricate himself with diifioulty. He got safe on board at last and left Finland for Switzerland. His second period abroad as an exile lasted nearly ten years.  
Line 3,530: Line 3,530:
to prepare the Party and the working class for another revolution.  
to prepare the Party and the working class for another revolution.  


In 1907, Comrade Stalin left Titiis for Baku, where he led the rev-
In 1907, Comrade Stalin left Titiis for Baku, where he led the rev
olutionary struggle of the Baku ‘proletariat.  
olutionary struggle of the Baku 'proletariat.  


Under the blows of reaction the strike movement in Russia con-
Under the blows of reaction the strike movement in Russia con
tinued to subside. In 1908, 176,000 workers were involved in strikes,  
tinued to subside. In 1908, 176,000 workers were involved in strikes,  
in 1909, the number was 64,000, and in 1910, it was only 46,000. The  
in 1909, the number was 64,000, and in 1910, it was only 46,000. The  
strilces were of a defensive character. Only in Baku did the working-
strilces were of a defensive character. Only in Baku did the working
class movement, led by Comrade Stalin, bear a clearly expressed polit-
class movement, led by Comrade Stalin, bear a clearly expressed polit
ical character. To divert the workers from the revolutionary struggle,  
ical character. To divert the workers from the revolutionary struggle,  
the oil employers invited the workers in the oil plants and oil fields  
the oil employers invited the workers in the oil plants and oil fields  
Line 3,544: Line 3,544:
to boycott this conference.  
to boycott this conference.  


At the end of 1907, when reaction was raging throughout tlie coun-
At the end of 1907, when reaction was raging throughout tlie coun
try, a sort of worl^ers parliament was in session fur nearly two weeks in  
try, a sort of worl^ers ' parliament was in session fur nearly two weeks in  
Baku, at which the workers drew up their demands to be presented to  
Baku, at which the workers drew up their demands to be presented to  
the oil employers. When these demands were rejected the Bolsheviks  
the oil employers. When these demands were rejected the Bolsheviks  
called for a general strike. During the preparations for this strike the  
called for a general strike. During the preparations for this strike the  
twenty-two-year-old Azerbaijan worker Hanlar, a splendid orator  
twenty-two-year-old Azerbaijan worker Hanlar, a splendid orator  
and leader of the masses, was foully assassinated. Hanlar ’s funeral  
and leader of the masses, was foully assassinated. Hanlar 's funeral  
developed into a powerful political demonstration. Speaking at the  
developed into a powerful political demonstration. Speaking at the  
graveside of the fallen fighter, Comrade Stalin called upon the Azer-
graveside of the fallen fighter, Comrade Stalin called upon the Azer
baijan workers to continue the struggle. Hanlar, he said, was the first  
baijan workers to continue the struggle. Hanlar, he said, was the first  
sacrifice the Azerbaijan people had made for the Russian revolution.  
sacrifice the Azerbaijan people had made for the Russian revolution.  


Commenting on the militant character of the Baku strikes, Lenin  
Commenting on the militant character of the Baku strikes, Lenin  
wrote: “In 1908, at the head of the list of gubernias showing a large  
wrote: "In 1908, at the head of the list of gubernias showing a large  
number of strikes stands Baku with 47,000 strilters. The last of the  
number of strikes stands Baku with 47,000 strilters. The last of the  
Mohicans of the mass political strike!(V. I. Lenin, Collected Works,  
Mohicans of the mass political strike!" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works,  
Vol. XV, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed,, p. 33.)  
Vol. XV, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed,, p. 33.)  


Line 3,567: Line 3,567:
Bolsheviks was sent off from the prison to penal servitude. From  
Bolsheviks was sent off from the prison to penal servitude. From  
his prison window Comrade Stalin called out to them as they went:  
his prison window Comrade Stalin called out to them as they went:  
“Keep your manacles, we shall want them for the tsar’s government!
"Keep your manacles, we shall want them for the tsar's government!"


In the autumn of 1908, Comrade Stalin was sentenced to two years
In the autumn of 1908, Comrade Stalin was sentenced to two years '
exile in Solvychegodsk, but in tho summer of 1909, he escaped from  
exile in Solvychegodsk, but in tho summer of 1909, he escaped from  
there.
there.


===== Ideological Confusion among the Intellectuals =====
===== Ideological Confusion among the Intellectuals =====
Describing the po-
Describing the po
litical life of Russia dining the period of the Stolypin reaction, Com-
litical life of Russia dining the period of the Stolypin reaction, Com
rade Stalin called it “an abomination of desolation.” “Fettered public opinion,’’ he went on to say, ^"general weariness and apathy, want and despair among the workers, a downtrodden and intimidated peasantry  
rade Stalin called it "an abomination of desolation." "Fettered public opinion," he went on to say, ^"general weariness and apathy, want and despair among the workers, a downtrodden and intimidated peasantry  
and with the police- landlord-cax)italist hounds running riot — such  
and with the policelandlord-cax)italist hounds running riot — such  
are the characteristic features of Stolypin’s Opacification.’” ("On the  
are the characteristic features of Stolypin's Opacification.'" ("On the  
Occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of Pravda,'^ Stalin’s article pub-
Occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of Pravda,"^ Stalin's article pub
lished in Pravda No. 98 of May 5, 1922.)  
lished in Pravda No. 98 of May 5, 1922.)  


Line 3,586: Line 3,586:
the revolution deserted to the camp of its open enemies. Others found  
the revolution deserted to the camp of its open enemies. Others found  
jobs for themselves in the legal working-class organizations, condemned  
jobs for themselves in the legal working-class organizations, condemned  
all revolutionary activity, and called upon the workers to adjust them-
all revolutionary activity, and called upon the workers to adjust them
selves to reaction and reconcile themselves to tsarism. This section  
selves to reaction and reconcile themselves to tsarism. This section  
of the intellectuals believed that Stolypin’s reforms had already con-
of the intellectuals believed that Stolypin's reforms had already con
verted Russia into a bourgeois state and had made revolution super-
verted Russia into a bourgeois state and had made revolution super
fluous. More hostile to the revolution than any other section of the  
fluous. More hostile to the revolution than any other section of the  
intellectuals was the bourgeois (Cadet) intelligentsia who united around  
intellectuals was the bourgeois (Cadet) intelligentsia who united around  
the symposium entitled VeJcM (Lmidmarhs) which was published  
the symposium entitled VeJcM (Lmidmarhs) which was published  
in 1909. The contributors to this symposium were prominent repre-
in 1909. The contributors to this symposium were prominent repre
sentatives of the bourgeois intelligentsia, former legal Marxists and  
sentatives of the bourgeois intelligentsia, former legal Marxists and  
Constitutional-Democrats. They proclaimed war on Marxism, re-
Constitutional-Democrats. They proclaimed war on Marxism, re
nounced the struggle for democracy and called for conciliation with  
nounced the struggle for democracy and called for conciliation with  
tsarism. VekJii advocated the doctrines of the Orthodox Russian  
tsarism. VekJii advocated the doctrines of the Orthodox Russian  
Line 3,608: Line 3,608:


The Mensheviks were of the opinion that the revolution was over  
The Mensheviks were of the opinion that the revolution was over  
and that Stolypin had put Russia onto the path of bourgeois develop-
and that Stolypin had put Russia onto the path of bourgeois develop
ment. They tried to adjust themselves to the Stolj^in regime and  
ment. They tried to adjust themselves to the Stolj^in regime and  
urged that the old militant Social-Democratic Party, which tsarism  
urged that the old militant Social-Democratic Party, which tsarism  
had driven underground, should be liquidated. For this reason the  
had driven underground, should be liquidated. For this reason the  
Menshevilcs were called Liquidators. Lenin called the Liquidators the  
Menshevilcs were called Liquidators. Lenin called the Liquidators the  
"Stolypin Labour Party” because they had become the servants  
"Stolypin Labour Party" because they had become the servants  
and coadjutors of the 3rd of June monarchy.  
and coadjutors of the 3rd of June monarchy.  


The Socialist-Revolutionary Party split in two. The Right Social-
The Socialist-Revolutionary Party split in two. The Right Social
ist-Revolutionaries had as early as 1906 formed a semi-Cadet Work-
ist-Revolutionaries had as early as 1906 formed a semi-Cadet Work
ing People’s Socialist Party and were referred to briefly as Popular  
ing People's Socialist Party and were referred to briefly as Popular  
Socialists. The Popular Socialists advocated the payment of compen-
Socialists. The Popular Socialists advocated the payment of compen
sation for landlords’ land alienated for the benefit of the peasantry and  
sation for landlords' land alienated for the benefit of the peasantry and  
entered into a bloc with the Cadets. The "Left” wing of the Socialist-
entered into a bloc with the Cadets. The "Left" wing of the Socialist
Revolutionary Party formed a semi-anarchist group known as the Maxi-
Revolutionary Party formed a semi-anarchist group known as the Maxi
malist Socialist-Revolutionaries. They proposed economic and political terrorism as the j)rincipal wea]ion in the struggle and soon deteriorated into an unprincipled group of exproiiriatora.  
malist Socialist-Revolutionaries. They proposed economic and political terrorism as the j)rincipal wea]ion in the struggle and soon deteriorated into an unprincipled group of exproiiriatora.  


Line 3,631: Line 3,631:
of innocent people to the gallows. A sensational event of that period  
of innocent people to the gallows. A sensational event of that period  
was the exposure of the agent provocateur Azof who, since 1903, had  
was the exposure of the agent provocateur Azof who, since 1903, had  
been at the head of the ‘hnilitant organization” of the Socialist-Revolu-
been at the head of the 'hnilitant organization" of the Socialist-Revolu
tionary Party. The Azef a. 'fair vividly demonstrated that the terroristic  
tionary Party. The Azef a. 'fair vividly demonstrated that the terroristic  
tactics of the Socialist-Revolutionaries were useful to the secret police  
tactics of the Socialist-Revolutionaries were useful to the secret police  
and harmful to the masses.
and harmful to the masses.  
 
==== The Decline in the Working-Class Movement and Ideological Confusion in the Period of Reaction ====
 
==== The Bolsheviks during the Period of Reaction ====


===== The Bolsheviks Fight to Preserve the Party =====
===== The Bolsheviks Fight to Preserve the Party =====
The Bolsheviks alone  
The Bolsheviks alone  
were able to retreat in perfect order. They were aware that the vic-
were able to retreat in perfect order. They were aware that the vic
tory achieved by tsarism was a temporary and unstable one and contin-
tory achieved by tsarism was a temporary and unstable one and contin
ued to rally the forces for another revolution. They were fiercely  
ued to rally the forces for another revolution. They were fiercely  
persecuted by the tsarist government and were liable to be sentenced  
persecuted by the tsarist government and were liable to be sentenced  
Line 3,645: Line 3,649:
and tirelessly continued their revolutionary activities. They formed  
and tirelessly continued their revolutionary activities. They formed  
Bolshevik cells in factories and, combining legal with illegal forms  
Bolshevik cells in factories and, combining legal with illegal forms  
of activity, they made use of every legal possibility, such as trade un-
of activity, they made use of every legal possibility, such as trade un
ions, workers’ clubs, adult Sunday schools and co-operativo societies,  
ions, workers' clubs, adult Sunday schools and co-operativo societies,  
for the purpose of maintaining contact with the masses. The Bolshevik  
for the purpose of maintaining contact with the masses. The Bolshevik  
Deputies in the State Duma utilized the tribune of the Duma to  
Deputies in the State Duma utilized the tribune of the Duma to  
further the interests of the revolution. The aim of the Bolsheviks was  
further the interests of the revolution. The aim of the Bolsheviks was  
still, as in 1905, to overthrow tsarism and to complete the bourgeois-
still, as in 1905, to overthrow tsarism and to complete the bourgeois
democratic revolution in order to pass on to the socialist revolution.  
democratic revolution in order to pass on to the socialist revolution.  
They continued to advocate the old and tried slogans: A democratic  
They continued to advocate the old and tried slogans: A democratic  
Line 3,656: Line 3,660:
day.  
day.  


Amidst the stern conditions of the Stolypin reaction the Bolshe-
Amidst the stern conditions of the Stolypin reaction the Bolshe
viks waged a struggle on two fronts — against the Menshevik Liquida-
viks waged a struggle on two fronts — against the Menshevik Liquida
tors and against the Otzovists. The latter term was applied to a  
tors and against the Otzovists. The latter term was applied to a  
section of former Bolsheviks who demanded the recall (i-n Russian  
section of former Bolsheviks who demanded the recall (i-n Russian  
— otozvat) of the workers* Deputies from the State Duma and the  
— otozvat) of the workers* Deputies from the State Duma and the  
cessation of all work in legal organizations, Lenin called the Otzovists  
cessation of all work in legal organizations, Lenin called the Otzovists  
‘‘Liquidators inside-out,because their tactics would have resulted in  
"Liquidators inside-out," because their tactics would have resulted in  
the Party becoming isolated from the masses and, consequently, in  
the Party becoming isolated from the masses and, consequently, in  
the liquidation of the revolutionary Party. Por this reason the Otzo-
the liquidation of the revolutionary Party. Por this reason the Otzo
vists were expelled from the Bolshevik organization,  
vists were expelled from the Bolshevik organization,  


Trotsky and the Trotskyites took a Liquidatorist stand on all ques-
Trotsky and the Trotskyites took a Liquidatorist stand on all ques
tions . Lenin said that Trotsky was more despicable and harmful than the avowed Liquidators because he deceived the workers by asserting that he was "‘above factions/whereas actually he supported the Menshe-
tions . Lenin said that Trotsky was more despicable and harmful than the avowed Liquidators because he deceived the workers by asserting that he was "'above factions/' whereas actually he supported the Menshe
vik Liquidators. It was in that period that Lenin called Trotsky “Judas Trotsky,In 1912 Trotsky organized the so-called “August bloc,
vik Liquidators. It was in that period that Lenin called Trotsky "Judas Trotsky," In 1912 Trotsky organized the so-called "August bloc,"
which consisted of all the anti-Party elements which were united in  
which consisted of all the anti-Party elements which were united in  
their struggle against Bolshevism.  
their struggle against Bolshevism.  
Line 3,676: Line 3,680:
Zinoviev and Pv.ykov. Concealing their alliance with Trotsky, they  
Zinoviev and Pv.ykov. Concealing their alliance with Trotsky, they  
succeeded in getting the Bolshevik newspaper Proletary closed down  
succeeded in getting the Bolshevik newspaper Proletary closed down  
and in securing support for Trotsky’s newspaper. Kamenev joined  
and in securing support for Trotsky's newspaper. Kamenev joined  
the editorial board of Trotsky’s newspaper and tried to turn it into  
the editorial board of Trotsky's newspaper and tried to turn it into  
the organ of the Central Committee of the Party.  
the organ of the Central Committee of the Party.  


Despondency and lack of faith infected a section of the intellectuals  
Despondency and lack of faith infected a section of the intellectuals  
who regarded themselves as Marxists but who had never taken a firm  
who regarded themselves as Marxists but who had never taken a firm  
Marxian stand. They launched a “criticism” of the theoretical prin-
Marxian stand. They launched a "criticism" of the theoretical prin
ciples of Marxism. Some of the intellectuals who had deserted Marx-
ciples of Marxism. Some of the intellectuals who had deserted Marx
ism even began to urge the necessity of creating a new religion (the  
ism even began to urge the necessity of creating a new religion (the  
so-called “God-seekers” and “God-builders”).  
so-called "God-seekers" and "God-builders").  


In his famous book Materialism and Empirio^Criticism, which ap-
In his famous book Materialism and Empirio^Criticism, which ap
peared in 1909, Lenin trounced these degenerates in the sphere of  
peared in 1909, Lenin trounced these degenerates in the sphere of  
Marxist theory and fully substantiated the basic theoretical principles  
Marxist theory and fully substantiated the basic theoretical principles  
Line 3,694: Line 3,698:
===== The Bolsheviks Form an Independent Marxist Party =====
===== The Bolsheviks Form an Independent Marxist Party =====
The fight  
The fight  
against the Liquidators, Otzovists and Trotskyites confionted the Bol-
against the Liquidators, Otzovists and Trotskyites confionted the Bol
sheviks with the task of uniting all the Bolsheviks and forming them into  
sheviks with the task of uniting all the Bolsheviks and forming them into  
an index^endent Marxistparty.This was necessary in order to be able to  
an index^endent Marxistparty.This was necessary in order to be able to  
Line 3,710: Line 3,714:
Mensheviks both ideologically and organizationally, and after expelling  
Mensheviks both ideologically and organizationally, and after expelling  
them and the Otzovists from the Party; it retained the old name of  
them and the Otzovists from the Party; it retained the old name of  
Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party but added the word “Bolshe-
Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party but added the word "Bolshe
viks” in brackets. This name it retained up to 1918.  
viks" in brackets. This name it retained up to 1918.  


In its decisions the Prague Conference pointed to the inevitability  
In its decisions the Prague Conference pointed to the inevitability  
of another revolutionary upsurge and urged the necessity of intensifying  
of another revolutionary upsurge and urged the necessity of intensifying  
activities among the masses. For th.r puipoae of diiecting the Par-
activities among the masses. For th.r puipoae of diiecting the Par
ty’s revolutionary activities in Russia, a centre for practical work  
ty's revolutionary activities in Russia, a centre for practical work  
was set up known as the Russian Bureau of the Central Committee.  
was set up known as the Russian Bureau of the Central Committee.  
This Bureau was headed by Comrade Stalin. On Lenin’s instructions. Sorgo Orjonikiclzc travelled to the })]ace where Comrade Stalin was in exile in order to infonn him of the conference’s decisions and  
This Bureau was headed by Comrade Stalin. On Lenin's instructions. Sorgo Orjonikiclzc travelled to the })]ace where Comrade Stalin was in exile in order to infonn him of the conference's decisions and  
to arrange for his escape. In February 3912, Comrade Stalin escaped  
to arrange for his escape. In February 3912, Comrade Stalin escaped  
from exile for the fourth time. Ho visited a number of cities in Russia  
from exile for the fourth time. Ho visited a number of cities in Russia  
and headed tiie growing revolutionary movement in iSt. Petersburg.
and headed tiie growing revolutionary movement in iSt. Petersburg.


==== The Decline in the Working-Class Movement and Ideological Confusion in the Period of Reaction ====
===== The Bolshevik Iron Guard =====
Under the guidance of Lenin and Stalin
many of the Bolsheviks who were active underground during the stern
period of reaction dcvclo])od into outstanding professional revolution
aries and Party leaders.


==== The Bolsheviks during the Period of Reaction ====
One of these was the indomitable revolutionary Yakov Mikhail
ovich Sverdlov, whom Lenin described as "the most finished type
of lorofessional revolutionary." Sverdlov commenced his underground
revolutionary activities at the early age of fifteen among the workers
of Nizhni Novgorod and Sermovo. In 1902, after organizing a polit
ical demonstration in Sormovo, he was arrested and imprisoned for
the first time; after that the whole of his life consisted of strenu
ous revolutionary activity, ever dogged by danger, and frequently
interrupted by arrests, exile and escape from exile. In 1905 ho engaged
in Bolshevik activities in Kazan and in the Urals wliere he became the
beloved leader of the masses of the workers. For two years after the
defeat of the revolution ho was incarcerated in a fortress. His sentence
expired during the period of reaction and soon after his release he was
arrested again and exiled to the district of Maximkin Yar, in the
Narjnn Region. Five times lie tried to escape from this remote place
where even the mails wore received only twice a j^-oar. In the autumn
of 1912, he tried to cross the river Yenisei in a canoe and was nearly
drowned. At the end of 1912, he reached St. Petersburg.


==== The Foreign Policy of the Stolypin Government ====
Another staunch Bolshevik fighter was Mildiail Vassilyevich Frun
ze. In 1905, he led the strike of the Ivanovo-Voznesensk workers. In
March 1907, he was arrested and put in prison to await trial on a charge
that made him liable to sentence of death. At the trial his counsel
said to him: "Renounce your proletarians and you will be pardoned
forthwith." Frunze indignantly told the court that he refused to have
a lawyer like that to defend linn. The tsarist court sentenced him to
ten years' penal servitude.


==== The Growth of National and Colonial Oppression during the Period of the Stolypin Reaction ====
In this period extensive Party work was also conducted by Sergei
Mironovich Kirov. Kirov joined the Bolshevik Party in Tomsk
when still a youth of eighteen and took a most active part in the  
revolution of 1905. He was arrested three times. On the third occasion
he was arrested on the charge of conducting revolutionary activities and
of organizing a secret printing i^lant. He was tried and sentenced
to confinement in a fortress. Immediately he was released from
prison he flung himself with his customary energy into Party work
in Vladikavkas, WiiCre he organized and trained new cadres of
revolutionary Bolsheviks.


=== Years of Revolutionary Advance (1912–1914) ===
<nowiki>A no less ardent and outstanding young revolutionary of that time
was the pupil of Lenin and Stalin — Grigori Konstantinovich Orjonikidze,
whose Party pseudon;VTn was Sergo. The son of a Georgian peasant'
he commenced revolutionary activity at the age of seventeen. In 1903
he joined the Bolslicvik Party. During the first Russian revolution he
took part in preparing the armed insurrection but was arrested
in December 1905 wliilo unloading a eousignment of arms which
had been received . He succeeded in esca]nng abroad but subsequently re
turned to Baku. In 1900, ho made his way into Persia and took part in
tlic Persian revolution. After lepeated a. rests Sergo Orjonikidze went
to Lon'n in Paris, where he attended a Party schooi organized by
Lenin, At the Prague Conference he was elected a member of the Cen
ri*al Committee of the Bolshevik Party and he returned to Russia to
conduct underground Bolshevik activity. He was arrested shortlv
after this, however, and sentenced to three years ^ confinement in the
Schliisselhurg Portress.


==== The New Upswing of the Revolutionary Movement ====
In this }}eriod too, Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov became a
]>rofessional revolutionary. He joined the Bolslicvik Party in 1006
while still a high-school student, and at the age of sixteen
already conducted Marxist ])ropaganda among the student youth.
This activity he continued during tlie ])eriod of reaction. At the
age of ninotoeii, not having yet gimluatol from high sebooh he
Wtis depoi'ictl to Vologda (hibeniia, but lie continued his revolu
tionary activities evi-n while in t^xile and cojiiliated the views of the
iMcnslieviks and So(*ialist-Revolubionaries. Like the other Bolsheviks,
V. M. Molotov sjient liis tinu^ in ('xile inqiroving his knowledge of rev
olutionary theory and in studying the classical vwks of Marxism.
In Vologda he established contact with and conducted revolutionary
•jiropaganda among the railway w'orkers. When his iieriod of exile ex
})ircd he returneil to St. Pctcu'sburg to conduct underground Bolshevilv
activity and took an ae,tivc part in all the im^iortant measures under
taken by the St. IV'tersburg Bol lievik organization.


==== The Fourth State Duma ====
During tlu'])criod of i'ea,(l.ion the w'orkingmen Bolsheviks Mikhail
Ivanovich Kalinin and Kliment Efromovich Voroshilov worked as
professional underground rovolutionarms.


== The Second Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution ==
M. 1. Kalinin, a metal turner by ti*aclo, had led tlie arduous life
of a professional rcvoliitiouary since the 1890 's and had known the in
side of many jirisous in tsarist Russia. Ho had been a member of the
»St. Petersburg Li'agiio of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Work
ing Class and one of the active agents of Iskm. In 1910, after com
])loting a prison stmtonco, bo went to work at an ordnance works in St.
Petersburg, and in 1911, lie became the leader of the Bolshevik organi
zation in the Vyborg District of that city. At the Prague Conference
he was eloctod as an alternate member of the Bolshevik Central
0onvmittt'(^ of tlu* Pai'ty.</nowiki>


=== Tsarist Russia during the First World War (1914–March 1917) ===
Equally arduous was the life of K. E. Voroshilov, who was a
fitter in Lugansk. He started work in the factory at the age of fifteen
and by the end of the 1890 's he was already an active participant in
illegal meetings and workers' demonstrations. In 1903, he joined the
Bolshevik Party. During the 1905 revolution he prepared the workers
of Lugansk for insurrection, formed fighting squads, procured arms,
and taught the workers to handle firearms. At a meeting he addressed
in 1906, he urged the workers to learn the art of armed fighting and to
train their own commanders. One of the workers at the meeting called
out: "We appoint you our Red General." "You are going too far,"
answered Voroshilov laughing. "I don't know anything about military
matters." None of the workers, nor Voroshilov himself, then suspected
that the "Red General" whom the workers appointed in 1906 would
become a Marshal of the most powerful army in the world and a
foremost expert in military matters.


==== Russia's Part in the War ====
Voroshilov was arrested after the revolution of 1905, and in  
1907 he was exiled for three years. Three months later he escaped
to Baku and together with Comrade Stalin took part in the strug
gle that was waged by the Baku workers. He was again arrested
and deported to the Archangel Gubernia, but he escaped again and
with great difficulty succeeded in reaching his native Donetz Basin
in 1912,


==== Brusilov's Breakthrough ====
Self-sacrificing and heroic work under the severest conditions of
tsarist reaction was also conducted by other leaders of the Bolshevik
underground in preparing the working class for another revolutionary
upsurge.


==== Growth of the Revolutionary Crisis ====
==== The Foreign Policy of the Stolypin Government ====


==== The Revolt of the Peoples in Central Asia in 1916 ====
===== The Anglo-Russian Agreement =====
The defeat of tsarism in the Russo
Japanese War led to a further decline of its international prestige and
importance. After it had concluded the Portsmouth Peace Treaty with
Japan, the autocracy wanted to muster its forces for the purpose of
crushing the revolution, but it could do that only on two conditions:
that it received a huge foreign loan, and that it secured itself
against foreign attack. At first, Nicholas 11 placed his hopes upon an
alliance with Germany which Wilhelm II was urging him to conclude.
This plan, however, was frustrated by a group of Cabinet Ministers
headed by Witte. Witte was aware that if Russia concluded an
alliance with Germany, financial assistance from Prance would
cease, the Pranco-Russian alliance would be broken, and Russia would
become completely dependent upon Germany in Europe and upon
Japan in the Par East. As a consequence of his opposition, the secret
treaty which Nicholas 11 and Wilhelm n had signed in Bjdrke was
annulled.


==== Education and Culture in Russia before the Revolution (1907–1917) ====
In 1906, Great Britain and JVance granted the tsarist autocracy
loans amounting to 2,500,000,000 francs and thereby saved it from
financial bankruptcy. These countries also helped the autocracy
finally to settle its relations with Japan, which, on the pret xt
of impl menting certain clauses of the Portsmouth Treaty, continued
to present Russia with unacceptable demands and threatened to resume
the war. After the recent losses, however, and after the demobilization
of the Russian army in the Far East, tsarist Russia was totally inca
pable of waging another war with Japan. The British and French gov
ernments took advantage of Japan's need of a foreign loan to compel
her to make concessionsto Russia and to conclude, in the summer of 1907,
an agreement guaranteeing the security of Russia's Far Eastern fron
tiers. The tsarist government, in its turn, pledged itself to support
France in her struggle against Germany over Morocco, and agreed to
a demarcation of spheres of influence between Great Britain and
Russia in the Middle East (Persia, Afghanistan and Tibet). Thus,
simultaneously with the signing of the Russo-Japanese agreement,
a political agreement between Russia and Great Britain was signed.
By the treaty of 1907, Northern Persia, the most densely populated
part of the country, was recognized as Russia's sphere of influence,
and Southern Persia, the strategical cover of the approaches to
India, with its naval ports and rich oil deposits, was proclaimed
Great Britain's sphere of influence. Central Persia was proclaimed a
neutral zone.


=== The February Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution ===
The Anglo-Russian agreement suppl mented the Franco-Russian
Treaty of 1893 and the Anglo-French agreement of 1904 and thus con
summated the formation of the Triple Entente between Great Britain,
France and Russia. Herein lay its immense political importance. This
Triple Entente was directed against the Triple Alliance that was headed by Germany.


==== Overthrow of Tsarism ====
===== The Bosnia Crisis =====
The definite formation of these two coalitions
brought the prospect of a European war very much nearer.


==== The Dual Power ====
From the very outset Russian tsarism occupied a subordinate posi
tion in the Entente. Russia's national interests called for the strengthen
ing of her influence in the Balkans and in the Near East to counter
balance the growing Austro-German menace. But Russia was hindered
by the international treaties which prohibited Russian warships from
passing through the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. Russia failed to
receive the diplomatic support of her allies, who preferred to leave
the question unsettled in order to keep Russia dependent upon
. them.


== The Great October Socialist Revolution ==
In May and June 1908, a meeting between the King of England
and the Tsar of Russia took place in Revel at which the two monarchs
agreed to make joint preparations for war against Geimany. They also
agreed on the joint introduction of reforms in Macedonia, which, in fact, nieatit prej)iiriii!^ to wrest that rcg'ou from Turkey. As regards the question of the Htraits, however, the meeting in Jlcvel failed to
produce t]\o results the Russiau government desired.


=== Preparations for the Great October Socialist Revolution ===
First and foremost in accoieratiiig the outbreak of the European
war wore Gornuiny, who w'as bc^tter ariued tlian any other country,,
and her satellite Austria-Hungary. Tiio latter, a iiiultinational state,
was su'fering from internal disintegration and iioped i.o strengthen h('r
position by pushing into the Balkan Peninsula,


==== The Beginning of the Crisis of the Provisional Government ====
Jn tlie autumn of 1908, a meeting took placid between tlie Russian
and Austro-Hungarian Foreign Ministers at whicli it was agreed that
the tsarist govorranonb would raise no objecitioii to tlu^ annexation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austria-Hungary, who had occupied
those regions since the Berlin Congress of 1878. In return for this,
Austria-Hungary promised to support the Russian government's dt'
mand for the free ]>assage of Russian warshi] is through the Turki"jli
Straits.


==== The June Crisis ====
Tsarism's claims in the Balkans, however, were strongly 0[)posed
by Great Britain. Omijileicly ignoring her promise to llussia, Austria
Hungary hastened to pnic.laim the annexation of Bosnia aiul Herze
govina, which wore iiihahitod by Herbs. ^Jhis caused an outburst erf
jiatriotio indignation in Serbia. Tsarist lliissia, whieb regardetl lierself
as Serliia's prote('tress, demanded that the annexation of Bosnia an<l
Herzegovina anrl the question of the Htiuits bo discussed at a con
ference of the Kiin)])eau Powers, but in March 1909 Germany intervened
ill the conflict and in terms that sounded like an ultimatum demand
ed that Ivussia and Serbia should o'jficially recognize the u-iuiexation
»if Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Bosnian crisis of 1908-1909 almost led
to an armed confl ct biitween the Powers; but tsarism was imt ])re[>ared
for another war and therefore gave way itself and compel let I Heiliia
to do the same. The Eights in the Third Buma deseriheil this defeat
sustained by tsarist diplomacy as a "diplomatic Tsushima/*'


==== The National-Liberation Movement of the Oppressed Nationalities in Russia after the Overthrow of Tsarism ====
===== Tsarism's Policy in the Orient =====
The tsartst government also lost its
independence iii pursuing its policy in ivlation to the eountries of tlu'
Orient. In Persia, Turkey and Cliina, Russian tsarism played the i'ea.e
tionary role of suppressor of movements f^ir national liberation anil oi'
revolutions.


==== The July Crisis ====
The Russian revolution of 1906-1907, the. first bourgois-democrat
ic revolution in the epoch of imperial ism , had wide rcpercuss ions among
the colonial and somi-colonial peoples which wore o])i)ressed by impe
rialism, primarily among the Oriental peoples who lived in ]U'opiu(iuity
to Russia. Ill 1900, the bourgeois revolution in Persia began. Yield
ing to the demand of the people, the Shah of Persia instituted a parlia
ment (the Mejlis); but Russian tsarism, whom the western imperialists
allowed "freedom of action" in Persia, decided to (*rush the Persian
revolution.
In the summer of 1908, Colonel Lyakhov, who was in command of a Cossack brigade in Persia, bombarded the Mejlis with artillery and
established a reign of White terror in Teheran. The tsarist government
compelled the Shah to dissolve the Mejlis; many members of the Mej
lis were executed and others were flung into prison. But the Persian
revolution continued in spite of this, and in 1909, the Shah was obliged
to flee to Russia, leaving a boy successor. Great Britain and Rus
sia instituted a financial blockade of revolutionary Persia. In December
1911, the Persian reactionaries, supported by Great Britain and Rus
sia, carried out a counter-revolutionary coup. The Persian revolution
was crushed. By agreement with Great Britain, Russia retained her
troops of occupation in Northern Persia.


==== The Suppression of General Kornilov's Counter-Revolutionary Revolt ====
In 1908, a military coup, led by the party known as the Young Turks,
was brought about in Turkey with the object of saving the integrity
of the Turkish empire. This coup resulted in the introduction of a
constitutional form of government. The flrst blow at the Young
Turk revolution was struck by Austria-Hungary, which annexed
Bosnia and Herzegovina. The tsarist government too helped
to strangle the Young Turk revolution by the Balkan policy it
pursued. In 1909 it consented to Italy's annexation of Tripolitania
and Cyrenaica, Turkey's provinces in Africa. It also supported the
claims of Prance and Great Britain to Arab territory. Under the
leadership of Russia, a league of Balkan countries was formed to attack
Turkey. All this served to weaken the Young Turk revolution and to
turn the Young Turks towards rapprochement with German imperialism.


==== Organization of the Assault ====
The biggest revolution in the Orient was the Chinese revolution
of 1911, which was directed against the feudal rulers of China and
against the foreign imperialists.


=== The Victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution ===
Russian tsarism also acted as the supp'^essor of the Chinese rev
olution by entering the bloc of six Powers (Great Britain, France,
Russia, Germany, Japan and the United States), which subjected rev
olutionary China to a financial boycott and helped the counter-revolu
tionary President Yuan Shih-kai to suppress the revolution.


==== The October Armed Insurrection ====
===== Tsarism, the Reserve ot Western Imperialism =====
Although Russian
tsarism pursued its own imperialist aims in the world war that was
in preparation, the subordinate and dependent place it occupied in
the Triple Entente converted it into the military reserve of Western
imperialism.


==== The Organization of the Soviet State ====
The operations of the tsar 's army in the impending war were deter
mined by the military interests of Great Britain and Prance. At a con
ference of Chiefs of General Sta.Ts held in 1911, the representative of
Prance saidt "The object which the Russian forces must pursue is to
compel Germany to maintain the largest possible forces on the Eastern
Front." The Russian Army was to launch an o.Tensive against Germany
simnltaueonsly with the Anglb-Prench offensive.
At a conference of Chiefs of General Staffs held in 1912, France demanded that; in conformity with the Franoo-Russian military con
vention of 1892, Russia should concentrate no less than 800,000 men on
the Austro-German frontier, and that she should launch an attack on
the sixteenth day of mobilization irrespective of what the situation
on the Anglo-French front might be. To transport troops to the Ger
man frontier. tsarist Russia was to build new strategical railways, and
it was stipulated that the next loan to bo granted the tsarist government
was to be used exclusively for this purpose.


==== The Triumphal March of Soviet Power ====
All this indicated that tsarism was gradually losing its independence
even in purely military matters.


==== Soviet Power Brings Liberation to the Oppressed Nations ====
Emphasizing Russia's dependence upon the WestEuropean im
perialists, Comrade Stalin wrote: "Tsarist Russia was an immense
reserve of Western imperialism, not only in that it gave free entry
to foreign capital, which controlled such basic branches of Russia's
national economy as the fuel and metal industries, but also in that it
could supply the Western imperialists with millions of soldiers"
(J. Stalin, Problems of Lenmism>^ Moscow, 1945, p. 17)
==== The Growth of National and Colonial Oppression during the Period of the Stolypin Reaction ====


==== The World-Historic Importance of the Great October Socialist Revolution ====
===== Tsarism's National Policy in the Period of Reaction =====
The law of
June 3, 1907, drastically reduced the franchise of a number of non
Russian nationalities and the Third State Duma passed a series of laws
which still further restricted their elementary rights. The Stolypin
government decided first of all to restrict the rights of those "border
regions" where the movement for national liberation was strongest
at that time — ^Finland, Poland and the Caucasus. ♦


=== The Brest-Litovsk Peace. The Struggle for a Respite ===
In 1910, the Third Ktate Duma, on the proposal of Stolypm,
passed a law which i rovided that all fundamental questions affect
ing Finland should be discussed in the Duma, and that the meas
ures passed in conn otionwith them should receive the sanction of the
tsar's government. Thus, the Finnish Sejm was converted into a  
mere advisory b dy on matt* rs of legislation.


==== The Brest-Litovsk Peace ====
The Polish bourgeois nationalist parties in the Third State Duma
had fo msd a separate Pol'sh bl-^o, but this bloc oiffeied only passive
resistance to a bill introduced in the Duma frr the institution in the
western gubernias of Zemstvos, in which the Russian landlords were to
be predominant.


==== The Struggle of the Soviet People against the German Occupation Forces in 1918 ====
Tsarism was able to rob Finland and Poland of the liberties they
had won thanks to the her ic struggle waged by the Russian proletariat
in 1906 because of the treache ry of the Finnish and Polish bourgeoisie,
whose hatred of the revolution united them with tsarism. As Lenin wrote; *'The experience of the 1905 revolution showed that even in these two nations the ruling classes, the landlords and the bourgeoisie, are re
nouncing the revolutionary struggle for freedom and are seeking rap
prochement with the ruling classes in Russia and with the tsarist mon
archy out of fear of the revolutionary proletariat of Finland and Po
land" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works^ VoL XVI, Moscow, 1937, Russ,
ed., p. 508).


==== The Beginning of Socialist Construction ====
The Third State Duma also discussed a bill providing for the ex
tension to the Caucasus of the regulation of 1881, by which all peasants
working under temporary obligation were released from serf labour
with payment of compensation to the landlords.


== Military Intervention. The Civil War ==
Thus, serfdom in the Caucasus was abolished only in 1912; sur
vivals of it continued right up to the revolution of 1917.  


=== The Beginning of Military Intervention ===
In the period of reaction the tsarist autocracy dropped its former
policy of protecting the Moslem clergy who cultivated ignorance and
fanaticism in their schools. The Rights in the Third State Duma demand
ed that all Moslem schools be closed in order to "Russify all the non
Russians, and to bring all the unorthodox into the Orthodox fold."
The tsarist ofiS.cials and the Orthodox Church intensified their perse
cution of Moslems, and Moslem schools and charitable institutions
were banned.


==== The Respite Ends ====
The Black Hundreds in the Duma also succeeded in depriving the
Ukrainians, Byelorussians and Jews of the right to have schools con
ducted in their own languages. In the Ukraine all the "Prosvity" were
closed, and concerts and theatrical performances in the Ukrainian lan
guage were prohibited. High-school teachers and college professors
suspected of having a 'TJkrainian trend of thought" were dismissed.
Minstrels were even prohibited from singing Ukrainian folk songs at
fairs. Exceptionally fierce, however, was the Stolypin government's
persecution of the Jews. It deliberately fomented anti-Semitism
among the backward sections of the population. Six million Jews were
herded in the "Pale," or ghettos, and yet the Black Hundreds in the
Third Duma let loose a campaign about "the impermissibility
of giving equal rights to the Jews" and demanded still further restric
tions for the Jewish population in Russia. The pogrom-mongers
among the higher tsarist officials staged the antiJewish trial known
as the Beilis case. This case was framed up in the following way. In
1911, a gang of thieves in Kiev killed a Russian boy. The tsarist
officials pounced upon this murder as a pretext for increasing the
persecution of the Jews. The Public Prosecutor, supported by official
experts who had been bribed for the purpose, charged a Jew named
Beilis witn the murder, alleging that he had committed the crime for
"religious ends." This trial, which took place in 1913, roused a storm
of protest among the entire progressive population of Russia and in all
other countries. The jury acquitted Beilis.


==== The Defence of Tsaritsyn ====
Explaining why tsarism resorted to pogroms against the Jews
and to the savage persecution of Jews, Lenin wrote: "The monarchy
had to defend itself against the revolution; and the semi-Asiatic, feu
dal Russian monarchy of the Romanovs could not defend itself by
any other but the most infamous, most disgusting, vile and cruel
means. The only honourable way of combating the pogroms, the only
rational way from the standpoint of a socialist and a democrat, is
not to express high moral condemnation, but to assist the revolution
selflessly and iti every way, organize the revolution for ihQ overthromal
of this monarchy" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. I,
Moscow, 1946, p, 488).


==== The Entente Armies Attack Soviet Russia ====
=== Years of Revolutionary Advance (1912–1914) ===


=== Defeat of the Three Entente Campaigns ===
==== The New Upswing of the Revolutionary Movement ====


==== The Defeat of Kolchak ====
===== Growth of Monopolistic Capitalism in Russia =====
In 1910 the pro
longed depression in Russia began to give way to an industrial boom.
This was brought about by the considerable accumulation of home capi
tal in the country and the growth of the home market due, partly, to th(^
operation of Stolypin's agrarian reform. The kulak upper stratum of
the peasantry which had established itself after the reform was intro
duced created an increased demand for iron goods, building materials,
leather, textiles, sugar, etc. In 1909, a series of relatively good harvests
began. Peasants' savings-banlc deposits increased and from 1900 to
1914 rose by over a billion rubles.


==== The Defeat of Denikin ====
The growth of the war industries, and of shipbuilding in particular,
ensured the heavy industry of big government contracts. Prom 1905
to 1913, the government placed army contracts to the amount of
2,600,000,000 rubles; in two years of the boom period over 3,600 kilo
metres of railway were laid and a corresponding amount of rolling
stock was built. Such were the main reasons for the industrial boom
in Russia. The boom was also facilitated by the general economic re
vival in the western capitalist countries, due largely to the race for
armaments and increase in war contracts.


==== Socialist Construction during the Civil War ====
During the period of the boom the monopolist organizations —
trusts and syndicates — continued to grow and gain strength. The
predominant form of monopolist organization in Russia was the syn
dicate. During the decade from 1900 to 1910, these syndicates gained
control of the major part of the mining and metallurgical industiy
in Russia. The Prodamet, which combined from twelve to fifteen of the largest metallui'gieal plants in the country, controlled two-thirds of the sales, of the entire metallurgical industry. The
Produgol, the abbreviated name of the Russian Company for Trading
in the Mineral Fuel of the Donetz Bn-sin, which was formed in 1906,
gained control of about 60 per cent of the coal output of the Donetz
Basin. The Prodarud Syndicate, which was formed in 1908, controlled
fourfifths of the ore output of the south of Russia. The growth of syn
dicates in light industry was slower and feebler. In 1908 the syn
dicate known as the Cotton Manufacturers' Company (in Moscow) con
trolled 4;7 cotton mills. The organization of syndicates was accompa
nied by a rise in the prices of the goods manufactured by the indus
tries they controlled.


==== The Defeat of the White Poles and Wrangel ====
The banks increasingly became the owners of the manufacturing
enterprises. The small and medium banks merged and formed powerful
banking combines. In 1908, for example, the St. PetersburgAzov, the
Orel, and the South Russian Banks combined to form the United
Bank. In 1910, the Northern Bank merged with the Russo-Chinese
and RussoAsiatic Banks. More than half the total bank capital in
Russia was controlled by seven big banks.


=== The Civil War in the Border Regions ===
The concentration of industry and the banks was accompanied
by the rapid fusion of bank capital with industrial capital. The banks
financed joint-stock companies and helped them to reorganize. This
had been exceptionally marked during the crisis. The biggest industrial
and financial magnates were simultaneously chairmen of bank di
rectorates and directors of syndicates. Thus, Putilov, the owner of
numerous metallurgical plants, was chairman of the Board of the
big Russo-Azov Bank and also director of the Prodamet, to which his
plants were affiliated. In the textile industry enormous influence was
exercised by the finance capital magnates Ryabushinsky, Prokhorov,
Morozov and others.
 
In this period too finance capital rapidly merged with the state ap
paratus. The financial magnates felt quite at home in the Ministries
of Finance, Industry and Trade, while prominent government officials,
and even members of the royal family, held shares in banks and in in
dustrial undertakings. Many retired ministers left then ministerial
armchairs to take up positions* as directors of the banks and joint-stock
companies of which they were shareholders.
 
The influence of foreign capital in the Russian banks and industry
increased after the revolution of 1905-1907. By 1914, out of a total cap
ital amounting to 435,500,000 rubles belonging to eighteen of the chief
joint-stock banks, 185,500,000 rubles, or 42.6 per cent, was foreign
capital, divided as follows: German capital 17 per cent, SVench capital
21.9 per cent, and British capital 3 per cent. Thus, British and French
capital tog 3 ther constituted the largest share. Foreign capital gained
control of Russian industry by forming joint-stock companies through Biissian and sometimes directly through foreign banks. Foreign capital gained control of nearly the whole of tha Russian fuel industry and
of the whole of the metallurgical industry.
 
===== The Economic Backwardness of Russian Industry =====
Although large
scale capitalist industry made considerable progress in Russia during
the period of the boom, it nevertheless lagged behind the industry of
Western Europe. As regards output of pig iron, Russia occupied fifth
place in the world; as regards the technique of production and, in partic
ular, consumption per head of the population, she was almost at the
bottom of the list. Describing the backwardness of Russia, Lenin wrote:
'"During the half century that has passed since the peasants were liber
ated, iron consumption in Russia has increased fivefold, but still Rus
sia remains an incredibly, unprecedentedly backward country, poverty
stricken and half savage, equipped with modern implements of produc
tion to the extent of only one-fourth of that of England, onefifth of
Germany and one-tenth of America" (V. I. Lenin, Oollected Wo7*IcSt
Vol. X^, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 543).
 
One of the indices of the technical and economic backwardness of
tsarist Russia was the state of railway transport. The total length of
railways in Russia in 1913 was about 65,000 kilometres. Of this, 43,500
kilometres belonged to the state and over 19,000 kilometres belonged
to private companies. As regards density of railways, Russia was
almost at the bottom, of the list.
 
In 1910, the total industrial output in Russia was one-ninth of
that of the United States, and the average wage of the Russian worker
was one-fourth of that of the American worker.
 
Stolypin and the Minister of Finance Kokovtsev made it a practice
to borrow from the Paris bankers and hospitably opened the door wide
for foreign capital, for they hoped, with the aid of French and British
gold, to save landlordism and the tsarist system in the country in which
capitalism was rapidly developing. To pay the interest on these loans
the tsarist government annually squeezed hundreds of millions of ru
bles out of the population. Before the First World War Russia *s national
debt amounted to 8,800,000,000 rubles. Tsarist Russia's chief creditor
before the war was France.
 
In tsarist Russia a number of leading branches of industry, such as
electr cal engineering, turb'ne building, machine-tool building, heavy
-engineering, and the automobile and chemical industries, did not exist.
 
The oil industry was controlled by foreign capital, who stopped
at nothing in exploiting the rich deposits of Russian oil, wastefully
utilizing only "gushers" and eschewing deep boring, extensive explo
ration of new fields, etc.
 
===== The Lena Shootings =====
The industrial boom was accompanied by
the growth of the Russian proletariat and of the working-class
movement. The general upswing of the revolutionary proletarian struggle was stimulated by the events that occurred in the remote gold fields in
Siberia that belonged to the Lena Gold Fields Company. This company
was formed in 1908. Three-fourths of the shares belonged to British
capitalists and the rest belonged to big Russian capitalists and high
tsarist officials. Among the shareholders were capitalists like Putilov,
bank directors like Vyshnegradsky, and a number of high St. Peters
burg dignitaries. The British and Russian shareholders in the Lena
Gold Fields Company drew profits amounting to over 7,000,000 rubles
per annum. The gold-field workers were cruelly exploited and, in addi
tion, were totally bereft of rights.
 
The gold fields were situated in the remote taiga, 1,700 kilometres
from the railway. It was possible to get away from the place only during
the navigation season on the river Lena. Ihe conditions of labour were
fixed by harsh contracts, and although the workers had no right to leave
their jobs before the expiration of the contract they could be discharged
at any time. Wages were paid only on the expiration of the contract;
the provisions issued to the men at the company stor3s on account of
wages were of the worst quality. The working day was fixed by contract
at 10 to 11^/2 hours, but it was often extended at the arbitrary will of
the management. The workers were completely in the power of the
management who, to keep the workers in hand, had at their command
a police force paid by the company. The Lena Gold Fields Company
behaved like a feudal ruler. Byelozerov, the manager of the Lena Gold
Fields, was called the uncrowned king of the taiga. In 1912, the gold
fields were, as Lenin described them, one of "those corners where it
seems as though serfdom existed -but yesterday."
 
The atrocious conditions of labour, the holding up of wages, the
sale of bad-quality provisions at exorbitant prices and the violence and
tyranny of the management and the police often gave rise to unrest
in the gold fields.
 
At the end of February 1912, a strike broke out on one of the sec
tions where the conditions of the workers were exceptionally hard. It
would have paid the management to close the section, but that would have
meant breaking the contract, which was due to expire only in September.
The management therefore set out to provoke the workers to break the
contract themselves. The immediate cause of the strike was the issue
of bad horse meat. The workers downed tools in protest and sent dele
gates to the other fields to bring the men out there. On March 1, the
strike spread to a number of other sections. A strike committee was set
up with the object of making the strike general. Strike committees were
also set up in all the fields, and stewards were appointed in the living
quarters. The Central Strike Committee opened negotiations with the
management. Tulehinsky, the Regional Engineer, received the deputa
tion with great courtesy and persuaded the Menshevik delegates to agree to call off the strike. Tlic BoLshevik-niimlccl members of the Strike Committee condneted propaganda among the masses against
calling off the strike. .
 
It was decided to settle the question by a secret ballot of the work
ers. In the morning of March 25, two sugar barrels were ])laeed opposite
each other in one of the fields, one bearing the inscription "Will go
back to work" and the other the inscription "Will not go back to work."
The workers filed between the barrels holding a pebble in one hand.
As they passed they dipped their hands into both barrels and dropped
the pebble into one barrel or the other. Soon the barrel bearing
the inscription "Will not go back to work" was full to the brim. In
the other barrel only seventeen pebbles were found.
 
On March 27, the strike became general and over 6,000 workers
were involved. Under the leadership of the Bolslievik-minded workers
the strike proceeded in a unanimous and organized manner; but notwith
standing the peaceful cliarfeicter of the strike the management called
for troops, and a largo force was sent to the gold fields. For the delib
erate purpose of creating disorders Captain of Gendannes Tresliehenkov
ordered the i^rrest of the members of the Strike Committee and told the
troops not to hesitate to "use force" against the workers if they attempt
ed to release their comrades. On April 4 (17), 3,000 workers sigiaed a
statement to the effect that they had gone on strike on their own ac
cord and had not been instigated to do so by anybody, and they marched
in procession to the Nadczhdinsk Section of the gold fields to hand this
statement to the local prosec'.uting attorney.
 
On this frosty morning of April 4, long lines of workers streamed
from various parts of the gold fields » to Nadezhdinsk, and on nearing
that centre they linked up in one long, dark ribbon stretching for three
or four kilometres. The road along which the procession wended its
way was flanked on the one side by the steep bank of the river Bodaibo
and on the other by stacks of timber. Near Nadezhdinsk the road was
blocked by a cordon of treoj^s in full fighting kit. Engineer Tulchinsky
stepped out to the workers and told them to disperse. The workers
at the head of the procession halted, but the rest, stretched out
along the narrow road, continued to press forward. Suddenly shots
rang out, volley after volley; 260 workers were killed and 270 were
wounded.
 
This new atrocity committed by the tsarist autocracy roused a
unanimous outburst of anger among the workers. A wave of protest
strikes swept the country. Revolutionary demonstrations took place
in the cities. On the demand of the Social-Democratic Deputies the
State Duma was compelled to (liscuss the Lena events, but Makarov,
the Minister of the Interior, explained the matter to the Duma in
his own way. He said: "So it was, and so it will bo."
 
This insolent statement of the tsar's minister, was answered by the rise of an immense mass political movement of the working class in protest against the I/ena shootings. As Lenin wrote: "The Lena
shootings . . . were an exact re fleet ion of the regime of the Third
ofJune monarchy." He went on to say that it was not the demand for
certain particular rights but the general lack of rights that prompted
the workers to enter into decisive struggle against tsarism. "It is
precisely this general tyranny in Russian life," he wrote, "it is pi ecisely
the hopelessness and impossibility of waging a struggle for particular
rights, precisely this incorrigibility of the tsar's monarchy and of its
entire regime, that stood out so clearly against the background of the
Lena events that they fired the masses with revolutionary ardour"
(V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. I, Moscow, 1946,
p. 550).
 
Emphasizing the historical significance of the Lena events, Comrade
Stalin wrote in the Bolshevik newspaper Zvezda in 1912:
 
"The Lena shooting has broken the ice of silence and the river of
the people's movement has begun to flow.
 
"The ice is broken! , . .
 
"All that was evil and pernicious in the present regime, all the ills
of much-suffering Russia, were focussed in the one fact, the events
on the Lena.
 
"That is why it was the Lena shootings that served as a signal for
strik<='S and demonstrations."
 
===== The Mass Revolutionary Movement During the Revival =====
The wave
of political strikes called in protest against the shooting down of the
workers in the I^ena gold fields swept over the whole country with ex
traordinary rapidity. Hundreds of thousands of workers downed tools.
In St. Petersburg the strikes were accompanied by street demonstra
tions. The struggle of the St. Petersburg workers was led by Comrade
Stalin, but soon he was again arrested. Protest strilces against the Lena
diootings merged with a powerful First of May movement. The Lena
events revealed that the working class had accumulated enormous rev
olutionary energy. In April 1912, over 300,000 workers were involved
in strikes, but the First of May strike affected about 400,000 workers.
The movement spread and affected even the most backward strata of
the workers. Strikes took place in every district in the countiy. At
the head of the stiike movement marched the revolutionary proletariat
of St. Petersburg; then came the workers of the Baltic Provinces,
Moscow, the Ukraine and the Caucasus. According to official figures,
the total number of workers involved in strikes in 1912 was 726,000
and in 1913, 861,000, Actually, the number was considerably higher.
Economic strikes were interwoven with the political strikes. Lenin
described these mass strikes as revolutionary strikes, for they were
directed against the autocracy and were of nation-wide importance.
The strikes enjoyed the sympathy of the majority of the working population. They stimulated the peasants to fight against the landlords and tsarism. The factory owners retaliated to the strikes by lockouts. The
police and the secret police intensified their persecution of the
strikers.
 
The strikes proceeded under the Bolshevik slogans of: "An 8-hour
day, confiscation of the landlords' estates, and a democratic republic."
These slogans were calculated to rouse for the struggle against tsarism
not only the workers, but also the peasants and the men in the
army.
 
The peasant movement, which had subsided after 1907, began to
flare up again. The introduction of the Stolypin reform accelerated the
process of class diTerentiation among the rural population. The
conditions of the rural poor still further deteriorated, partic
ularly after the famine of 1911 which a,Teoted about 30,000,000
peasants. The peasant movement directed against the landlords and
the kulaks assumed the militant forms of incendiarism, trespass,
tree felling, refusal to pay taxes, etc. Collisions between poor peas
ants and kulak "khutor^-farmers became more and more fre
quent.
 
Revolutionary outbreaks occurred also in the army. In 1912, a
revolt broke out among the troops who were stationed in Turkestan,
and fierce reprisals were taken against the mutineers. In June 1913,
62 sailors of the Baltic Fleet were tried by naval court-martial
in Kronstadt on the charge of conspiring to cause a revolt. Strikes in
protest against this trial of the revolutionary sailors broke out, and
this indicated that the class-conscious working-class movement in tsar
ist Russia constituted a powerful political force.
 
As Comrade Stalin said, the mass revolutionary strikes showed
that ". . . in Russia a tremendous popular revolution was rising,
headed by the most revolutionary proletariat in the world, which
possessed such an important ally as the revolutionary peasantry of
Russia" (J. Stalm, Problems of Leninism^ Moscow, 1945, pp. 17*18).
 
===== The Bolshevik "Pravda" =====
The struggle that was waged by the pro
letariat was led by the Bolsheviks and proceeded imder Bolshevik
slogans. The revolutionary upswing created the urgent need for a mili
tant daily political newspaper that could be read by the broad masses
of the workers. Under the direction of Comrade Stalin, who had escaped
from exile in Vologda, preparations were made for the publication
of a popular daily newspaper, the Pmvda.
 
In January 1912, the workers began to contribute funds
for the purpose of starting such a workers^ newspaper. Contributions
came in from all parts of Russia. As Lenin wrote . the creation of
Pravda remains outstanding proof of the class consciousness, energy
and solidarity of the Russian workers" (V. I, Lenin, Collected
Works, Vol. XVI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 46).
 
Tlio tilvt ir^aiio uf Pravda, vyhiclj Cojiirade Staliu edited, appeared on April 22 (May 5 new ntyle). That is why wo now o'.dcbrate May 5
as Workers' Press Day. The work of tht^ Pravda was gnided from
abroad by Lenin. Its first editor was Comrade Staliu and its first
editorial secr^taiy was V. M. Molotov, who devoted much time
and energy to the paper. Among the mem hers of the staff wore
K. E. Voroshilov, M. 1. Kalinin and Y. M. Sverdlov. Maxim Gorky also
eontribiiied to tlie paper.
 
Fmvda was the organizer of the revoiutionary masses and directed
all the mass campaigns that were organized by the Bolsheviks. Of
considerable ijnportance among these eampaigtis was the insurance
campaign. In Juno 1912, an act was ])assed to insure the workers in
(5ase of sickness and accidents. The insurance Lmd was to be managed
by insurance boards on which the workers wore to be represented.
Notwithstanding the grave defects of this law, Pravda called ni)on the
workers to take j)art in the election of the insurance boards and the
elections ])assod n.T successfully. This insurance campaign was of gi*eat
importance l>ecauso it helped to organize very wide masses for the
revolutimmry siruggle.
 
Pm?Y/a. trained a whoh^ generation of worker-Bolshcvike who liel)>ed
Ijenin and Wtaliu to rei^reate the mass Bolsluwik .Party in the pcwiod
of the revohition.ary ujmwing. As Oomnide Staliu wrote: "The old
Pravda was undoubttully the hai'bingor of tlie coming of glorious
victories of the Russian ] proletariat"" ("On the Occasion of the Tenth
Anniversary of Pravda Stalin's article publislied in PrnrdaNo. 08 of
May T), 1922).
 
Pravda w^as eonstantly subjected to the ]Pcrsecution of the poli(ie.
In the lirst year of its oxistonco the police raided the ] printing })lant
and destroyed the current issue of the pa[)er no less than forty
times. To prevent this, the workers would come to the jprinting plant
at niglit and take the fi'eshty printed iicwsjpapcrs away b('fore the police
arrived. The newspaper often had to change its name. In July 1914,
just before the First World Wai*, Pmrda's jpremises wore wrecked and
its staff was arrostfnL.
 
==== The Fourth State Duma ====
 
===== The Elections to the Fourth State Duma =====
In 1912, the fcerm
of the Third State Duma expired. The tsar's government dissolved it
and appointed elections to tlie Fourth Duma. These elections took
place in an atmosphere of repression and persecution, which had
become exceptionally intense after the assassination of Stolyiiin in
1911.
 
The Bolsheviks decided to utilize the elections for the purpose
■of conducting a new mass campaign against tsarism.
To be nearer to Russia, and to direct the election campaign, Lenin, in the summer of 1912, removed from Paris to Cracow. In Russia the
Bolshevik election campaign was led by Comrade Stalin who, in Sep
tember 1912, had again escaped from exile and had returned. to St.
Petersburg. The editorial ojSces of Pravda were used as stafr head
quarters for organizing the working class for the campaign. The
Bolsheviks issued a document, drafted by Comrade Stalin, entitled
"The Mandate of the Workingmen of St. Petersburg to Their Worker
Deputy."
 
At election meetings the Bolsheviks denounced and exposed the
compromising tactics of the Liquidators, and emerged victorious at
the elections. Often the police came to the assistance of the Liquida
tors and baimed meetings of workers' representatives. The workers
voted in their separate curiae, apart from the rest of the popula
tion. Pive Bolsheviks were elected by the workers to the State
Duma — ^in the St. Petersburg, Moscow, Vladimir, Kharkov, Ekate
rinoslav and Kostroma gubernias. A sixth Deputy elected on the
Bolshevik panel turned out to be an agent provocateur. The Menshe
viks secured the election of seven of their candidates, but these were in
gubtrnias where there were no workers' curiae.
 
Tiie Fourth State Duma, which assembled at the end of 1912,
was as much a Black Hundred and Octobrist Duma as the Third Duma
had been. Of a total of 410 Deputies, 170 were Eights. The Octobrists,
who constituted the government party and had nearly 100 Deputies,
were adherents of the Eights. The Cadets had 50 Deputies. They
differed from the Octobrists only in that they indulged in "Lfffc^
phrases and in the Duma they acted jointly with the Octobrists. The
petty bourgeoisie was represented by ten Trudoviki and seven Men
shevik.
 
===== The Bolsheviks in the Fourth State Duma =====
At first the Bol
sheviks in the Fourth State Duma formed a single group with the
Mensheviks, but the latter, taking advantage of their majority of one
vote, systematically prevented the Bolsheviks from speaking in the
Duma. In conformity with the decision of the Central Committee
of the Party, the Bolshevik Deputies left the joint group and formed
an independent Bolshevik group. The group maintained close contact
with the masses of the workers and conducted extensive activities
among them; it received numerous letters, declarations, reso
lutions, instructions and greetings from workers in all parts of Russia.
One of the most effective means it employed for using the floor of the
Duma was to interpellate the government in cases of acts of lawless
ness and tyranny. The Bolshevik Deputies conducted their activities
in the Duma under the direction of the Party Central Committee and
of Lenin. The Deputies used to receive directives from Lenin and
on several occasions went abroad to consult with bim, Comrade Stalin, who was in St. Petersburg, directly guided the activities of the Bolshevik gi'oup in the Duma.
 
===== The Works of Lenin and Stalin on the National Question =====
The growth of jingoism among the bourgeois and petty-bourgeois
nationalist parties duo to the intensification of national oppression
during the period of reaction made it particularly necessary for the
Bjlshevik Party to explain to the masses the essence of the national
question and its role in the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat.
 
In 1913, two classical works on the national question appeared:
Lenin's Critical Notes on the National Question, and Stalin's Marxism
and the National Question. These two books provided the proletariat
with the theoretical basis of the Bolshevik program on the national
and colcnial problem.
 
In the autumn of 1913, Lenin convened a conference of the Central
Committee in the village of Poronino, in Galicia, whe-re ho then lived,
to discuss the national question. This conference adopted a resolution,
which Lenin had drafted, and endorsed the slogan which had been
substantiated in the works of Lenin and Stalin, namely, the right of
nations to self-determination, including secession. The conference
also emphasized that the preservation of the militant and solid Party
of the proletariat, undivided by national barriers, was an essential
condition for victory in the struggle for the liberation of the oppressed
nations.
 
===== The Preparation of the World War =====
In the epoch of imperialism
great changes took place in the relations between the capitalist coun
tries. As a result of the process of uneven economic development,
Ge.Tnany, at the beginning of the twentieth century, outpaced France
and Great Britain in the sphere of industry. The magnates of
German finance capital, in conjunction with the Prusso-German mili
tarists, made energetic preparations for a European war. They dinned
it into the minds of the German people that Germany's powerful war
industry, the superior armament of her vast army and her navy would
make victory certain, and held out the prospect of Germany
becoming the ruler of the world. Tlie Pan-Gkrman League, the
imperialist organization which they formed, was convinced that Ger
many could achieve victory over France and Bussia as long as Russia
was fettered by the autocratic system. The chief obstacle to German
domination, particularly on the sea, in the opinion of the German
imperialists, was Great Britain, and against that country they pre
pared for a ruthless naval war. On the other hand, the chief obje ct of
Groat Britain's foreign policy was to crush Germany's might with the
aid jDf . France, with whom she had concluded an agreement on this
soQre'in 1904;.
 
in the forefront stood the conflict of interests of British and
Ge^an imperialism, of which the latter was particularly aggressive.
 
Second^ to that came the conflict of interests of imperialist Ger
many and tsarist Russia.
 
^rman imperialism was driving towards the Near East, into
Turkey. The German banks gained control of the building of the rail-^
way that was to link Germany with Turkey, and German military
instructors directed the organization of Turkish military forces in
preparation for war against Russia and Great Britain.
 
The growth of Germany's economic and political influence in
the Turkish empire would have placed her in control of the Black Sea
Straits.
 
Ruling circles in Russia became increasingly imbued with the
thought that "the road to Constantinople lies through Berlin, " that is to
say, through the destruction of the German empire.
 
Lenin described Great Britain, Germany and tsarist Russia as
"three big highway robbers" and the chief factors in the world Wt'-.ir,
while the other countries were merely "non-independent allies." He
emphasized that while the war for the redivision of the world affected
the interests of all the imperialist powers, the chief instigator was
Germany.
 
In the struggle for the redivision of the world all the participants
in the world slaughter drew up predatory plans.
 
The plans of the German imperialists included the creation of a
great German empire that was to embrace so-called "Middle Europe,"
to seize the Baltic Provinces and Poland, dismember Russia, deprive
her of the Ukraine, subjugate the Balkan Peninsula and Turkej^,
deprive Great Britain of Egypt and India, and push France away from
the English Channel, etc.
 
The plans of Austria, Germany's ally, were, with the aid of Ger
many, to dismember Serbia, annex Russian Poland and to subjugate
the Ukraine and the Balkan Peninsula.
 
Great Britain's plans were to crush her principal rival, Germany,
to destroy her navy and mercantile fleet, to seize the German colonies,
and also to deprive Turkey of Mesopotamia and Palestine and finally
annex Egypt.
 
The plans of France were to regain Alsace-Lorraine and seize the
left bank of the Rhine, to crush Germany's military power, share the
German colonies with Great Britain, and take part in the partition of
the Turkish empire.
 
The plans of tsarist. Russia were to gain possession of the Bospho
rus and the Dardanelles, to seize Turkish Armenia, to dis
member Austria-Hungary, and establish her influence in the Balkan
Peninsula. . \
 
Japan's plans were to take advantage of the war in Europe, to
seize China with the assistance of Russian tsarism, and in the.^s^ent.
of Russia's defeat to seize the Russian Par East.
 
Notwithstanding fierce repression by the police and the gendarmes, the Baku workers, supported by the workers of St. Petersburg and
other industrial centres, staunchly continued the struggle for two
months.
 
In response to the appeal of the Bolsheviks, 90,000 workers in
St. Petersburg struck work in solidarity with the Baku workers. On
July 11, 200,000 workers were out on strike in that city. Meetings
Avere continuously held under the slogans; ""Comrades of Baku, we arc
with you!'*, "'Victory for the workers of Baku is victory for us," etc.
One such revolutionary demonstration ended in the shooting down
of workers at the Putilov Works.
 
In retaliation to this outrage, the whole of the working class of
St. Petersburg rose in protest; the workers of all the big plants downed
tools and poured into the streets for a revolutionary demonstration.
Collisions occurred between workers and troops which developed into
barricade fighting. The caj^ital was transformed into a military camj).
Pravda was suppressed.
 
When these events were at their height Poincare, President of
France, arrived in St. Petersburg to conduct negotiations with the
tsar. During these negotiations the tsarist government agreed that
France and Russia should jointly counteract Austria-Hungary's attack
on Serbia, -which was likely to lead to a world war.
== The Second Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution ==
 
=== Tsarist Russia during the First World War (1914–March 1917) ===
 
==== Russia's Part in the War ====
 
===== The Beginning of the World War =====
In July 1914, the world
imperialist war, of which Germany was the instigator, broke out.
This war was fought between two . groups of imperialist countries;
one, headed by Germany, constituted the Quadruple Alliance (Ger
many, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey); the other, headed
by the British and French imperialists, constituted the Triple Entente
(Great Britain, France and Russia, and also Serbia and Belgium).
In 1914, Japan joined the Triple Entente; Italy did the same in 1915,
and the United States joined it in 1917. In alL 33 countries were
involved in the war, and 74,000,000 men were mobilized for the
various armies. The war cost 30,000,000 human lives and about
300,000,000,000 rubles in money.
 
As regards the number of cormtries that were involved all over
the globe it was a world war, but in its aims it was an imperial
ist war, a war for the forcible redivision of the world.
 
As Lenin wrote: 'Tn its real nature this war is not a national but
an imperialist war.
 
, The war is being waged between two groups of oppressors,
between two robbers, to decide how to divide the booty, who is to
plunder Turkey and the colonies" (V. I. Lenin, Collectf^d WorJcs^ Vol.
XIX, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 200).
 
This predatory war for the redivision of the world was prepared
for in the course of decades and affected the interests of all the impe
rialist countries. Its immediate cause was Austria-Hungary's plan
to crush Serbia, a plan that was supported by Germany, who counted
on securing a redivision of the world in her own favour as the result
of the development of the Austro-Serbian war into a world war.
The spark that ignited the conflagration of the world war was the assassination of the Austrian Crown Prince Francis Ferdinand
in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia. Mae assassination was committed
on Juno 28, 1914, by a nineteen-year-old student named Gavrila
Princip on tho instructions of a Serbian army officers' nationalist
organization. Austria-Hungary, instigated by Germany, presented
Serbia wiiJi an ultimatum that was couched in terms that made its
rejection by the Serbian government inevitable. On the advice of tlie
Russian government, however, the Serbian government agreed to
nearly all of the terms of the ultimatum, but in spite of this the Austrian
Minister, who aheady had his trunlis packed, left Belgrade, and
Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. After receiving the assur
ances of President Poincare that France was ready to sujiport Russia
and Serbia, the tsarist goveriunent intervened in tho conflict
 
Proclaiming her solidarity with Serbia, Russia began to mobilize.
Germany called upon the tsarist government to stop mobilizing. Tlie
tsarist government refused to do so, whereupon, Germany, on August 1,
declared war on Russia. France began to mobilize. On August 3, Ger
many declared war on France, and on that same day German trooiis
crossed the Belgian frontier. Next morning the British government
presented an ultimatimi to Germany demanding lier withdrawal from
Belgian territory, but without waiting for a reply fche British govern
ment, in tho aftenioon of August 4, issued an order to mobilize the
British army. At midnight it declared war on Germany. Thus com
menced tho first world imperialist war of 3914-1918.
 
===== The War on the Eastern Front =====
At the very beginning of
August three fronts were formed in belligerent Europe: a Western
Front, which stretched from the North Sea to Switzerland; an Eastern
or Russian Front, which* stretched from the Baltic Sea to Rumania,
and the Balkan Front, which ran along the Danube. The Russian
Front was split up into two almost independent operative sectors —
the Northwestern and Southwestern sectors. The Northwestern Front
ran from the Baltic Sea to the lower reaches of the river Bug, and tho
Southwestern Front ran along the Russo-Austrian frontier to Rumania.
On the Balkan Front the Serbian army fought the Austro-Hungarian
army.
 
After violating the neutrality of Belgium the German army made
a drive towards Paris. The French government called upon Russia
forthwith to launch an offensive on the Eastern Front with the object
of diverting the largest possible number of German troops from the
Western Front. Accordingly, two Russian armies, under tho com
mand of Generals Samsonov and Rennenkampf, were sent to invade
East Prussia. Rennenltampf's army launched a successful offensive
and won a big victory in the battle of Gumbinnen, but this victory
was not followed up. Rennenkampf 's army failed to develop its offensive and this enabled the German Command to throw the whole weight of its forces against General Samsonov's army. The oj)er
ations of the two Russian armies were not co-ordinated. From inter
cepted and decoded telegrams sent by General Samsonov and Rennen
kampf, and also through its own spies, the German Command learned
of all the movements of the Russian troops. A large part of General
Samsonov's army was surroimded by the Germans in the marshy and
wooded region of the Masurian Lakes and was wiped out. Tens of
thousands of Russian soldiers perished. General Samsonov com
mitted suicide.
 
After defeating Samsonov's army, the Germans hurled their
troops against Rennenkampf's army, which had remained inactive.
Rennenkampf retreated to Russian territory, losing 110,000 men.
But Paris was saved. By taking the blow upon herself, Russia saved
her ally France from defeat.
 
In August 1914, simultaneously with the unsuccessful offensive
in East Prussia, four Russian armies launched an offensive against
Austria-Hungary on the Southwestern Front. The armies commanded
by General Brusilov and Ruzsky defeated the Austro-Hungarian
armies, occupied Lvov and Gorlice and surrounded the fortress of
Przemysl. Nearly the whole of Galicia was occupied by the tsarist
forces.
 
In the middle of September the German armies came to the assist
ance of Austria-Hungary by launching a wide offensive from the
foothills of the Carpathians. In the middle of December 1914, the
offensive was halted on both sides.
 
In the autumn of 1914, a new front was formed — ^the Caucasian
Front. Two German warships, the Ooehen and the Breslau, stole their
way from the Mediterranean into the Black Sea and bombarded Foo
dosia and Odessa. After this, Turkey, who was bound by a military
alliance with Germany, went to war against Russia. In December
1914, the Turkish army was defeated in the battle of Sari Quamish,
after which the Russian troops on the Turkish Front slowly pushed
forward. On the Austro-German Front, however, the belligerent sides
were extremely exhausted and consequently passed over to trench
warfare, meanwhile mustering forces for new decisive blows. At the
end of April and the beginning of May 1916, a German army, under
the command of General Mackenzen, supported on both flanks by
Austrians, pierced the Russian Front between Gorlice and Tarnov thus
compelling the Russian armies to beat a hasty retreat. The Austro
Hungarian troops occupied Przemysl and Lvov. In July, another
German army occupied the fortress of Ivangorod. At the end of July
German troops occupied Warsaw and Brest-Litovsk. The Germans
developed their offensive and occupied Grodno and Vilna. Thus,
by the autumn of 1916, Poland, Lithuania, part of tlie Baltic Provinces a.nd VoUiynia had fallen into the hands of Germaiiy and Austria-Hungary. From May to October 1915, the Russian army lost over
150,000 men in killed and more than 1,000,000 in wounded and pris
oners. Towa^rds the end of September 1915, operations on the Eastern
Front were reduced to trench warfare. This front now stretched in an
ahnost straight Ime from the river Dniester to the Gulf of Riga. Thus,
in the first period of the world war tsarism sustained grave military
defeats.
 
Military operations on the Eastern Front in 1914-1915 ended
in the defeat of the Russian armies. This made the loss of the war
by Russia a foregone conclusion. Thus, tsarist Russia's unprepar
edness for war made itself felt at tlie very outset. The Russian ^army
was inadequately supplied with ammunition, heavy artillery, air
craft, materials for chemical warfare and equipment. There were cases
when men went to the front without weapons and had to pick up ibose
left by the men who were killed in battle. Sometimes a unit had' only
one rifle for every three men. The army was supplied with boots with
rotten-lcathor soles, with greatcoats which bebame useless after the
first downpour of rain, with provisions thaWiad gone bad, and so
forth. All sorts of sliarpers and swindlers speculated in war contracts
and made fabulous i)rofits. Military headquarters, army supply
departments and munition plants swarmed with spies, adventurers,
scoundrels and j)rofiteers, incompetent generals and downright
traitors.
 
A German and Austrian espionage organization, headed by Colonel
of Gendarmes Myasoyedov, was already operating in Russia before
the war. Even the War Minister Suldiomlinov was accused of espio
nage. The effect of sabotage and espionage was severely felt at the
very outset of the war. The stocks of military su]pplies were exhausted
during the first month, and no new supplies were forthcoming. The
Ministry of War had not supplied the army with shells and small
arms ammunition. Output in the government small-arms factories
had been reduced by three-fourths and of the ordnance works by one
half. Treachery and espionage caused the death of thousands of men
at the front. Sometimes vital orders were communicated by radio
uncoded and were intercepted by the Germans, who were thus able
to follow the movements of the Russian armies. Headquarters staffs
were incompetent and the orders they issued only caused anarchy
and confusion. But even under these conditions the Russian army,
as always, displayed magnificent fighting qualities. The courage,
endurance, heroism and initiative of individual soldiers and units
often saved the situation and helped to extricate a force from encircle
ment in which it was threatened by complete extermination.
 
===== The Treachery of the Second International =====
From the very
first days of the war the imperialist bourgeoisie in all the belligerent countries tried to deceive the masses and make them believe that the war had been caused by the aggression of the enemy and was there
fore a defensive war. The parties that were affiliated to the Second
International betrayed the principles of internationalism and Sociah
ism and helped the bourgeoisie to perpetrate this deception upon the
masses. Playing upon the natural love of the common people for their
country, they did all in their power to rally the masses for the impe
rialist war by concealing its true character and lU'ging the necessity
of defending the bourgeois fatherland.
 
On August 4, 1914 j the German Social-Democrats, in defiance
of the resolutions passed at international congresses of the Second
International, voted with the German bourgeoisie in the Reichstag
in favour gi war credits. That same day, the French Socialists also
voted for the war credits. "We are being attacked, we are defending
ourselves," they assured the workers and peasants. In a number of
countries ^(France, Belgium, Great Britain) the leaders of the socialist
parties entered the upper ialist governments. Thus, as Lenin wrote:
 
Overwhelmed by opportunism, the Second International has died"
(V. I. Lenin, Collected Worlds, Vol. XVIII, New York, 1930, p. 89).
It broke up into separate social-chauvinist parties, engaged in war
with one another. By the time the war broke out the opportunists
degenerated into socialchauvinists.
 
===== The Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries as the Vehicles of Chauvinism in Russia =====
At the beginning of the war chauvinist
fever ran as high among the petty bourgeoisie in Russia as it did in
other countries. In Petrograd, as St. Petersburg was renamed after
the outbreak of war, university students who were called up for mili
tary service marched in procession to the Winter Palace to pay homage
to the tsar. The Cadet-minded bourgeoisie called for the cessation
of "internal controversy" for the duration of the war. At the very
first session of the State Duma that was held after the outbreak of
the war, the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Trudoviki associated
themselves with the solemn declaration made by the Octobrist Rodz
yanko, the President of the Duma, who called for "unity between the
tsar and his faithful people." Behind the guise of socialist phrases,
the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks helped the
bourgeoisie to deceive the people by calling upon them to "defend
the fatherland," hence the term "Defencist" that was applied to the
Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries. In the autumn of 1914,
the Belgian Socialist Cabinet Minister Vandervelde sent a telegram
to the Russian Socialists calling upon them to help in the prosecution
of the war. In answer to this the Mensheviks wrote; "By our activities
in Russia we are not hindering the prosecution of the war." Thus,
the Russian Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, like all the
social-chauvinists of the Second International, openly spread chauvinistic propaganda among the masses. The most dangerous to the* cause of the proletariat were the concealed social-chauvinists, the so
called Centrists, like Kautsky, Martov, Trotsky and others, who,
like the avowed social-chauvinists, stood for the defence of the hour
geois "fatherland," called for the cessation of the class struggle against
the bourgeoisie for the duration of the war and, deceiving the masses^
as regards the actual war criminals, covered up their own treachery
with "Loft" phrases about fighting for peace.
 
===== The Bolsheviks' Fight against the War and the Social-Chauvinists =====
The only party in the International which saved the honour
of the international proletariat was the Bolshevik Party, headed by
Lenin and Stalin. Prom the very outset of the war the Bolsheviks ex
posed its imperialist character and the treacherous conduct of the
Second International.
 
Lenin was in Austria when the war broke out. The Austrian im
perialists hastened to arrest the leader of the world proletariat and
then deported him from the country. Lenin went to Switzerland and
there launched a campaign to expose the predatory, imperialist char
acter of the war, and also the treachery of international social-chau
vinism.
 
"The Bolsheviks hold that there are two kinds of wars:
 
"a) Just wars, wars tliat are not wars of conquest but wars of liber
ation, waged to defend the people from foreign attack and from at
tempts to enslave them, or to liberate the people from capitalist slav
ery, or, lastly, to liberate colonies and dependent countries from the
yoke of imperialism; and
 
"b) unjust wars, wars of conquest, waged to conquer and enslave
foreign countries and foreign nations" {History of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union [Bolsheviks]^ Short Course, Moscow, 1945,
pp. 167-168).
 
Lenin regarded the World War of 1914 as an unjust war of conquest
and called for a determined struggle against it to the extent of over
throwing the imperialist governments by means of revolution. Ho ad
vanced the slogan of transforming the imperialist war into civil war and
called upon the proletarians of each country to wage a revolutionary
struggle for the defeat of "their own" government. The slogan "Por the
defeat of the tsarist government" issued by the Bolsheviks meant not
only the 'fulfilment of their international duty as Socialists. The
Bolsheviks* fight for their slogans was one to save their country,
to preserve its independence, which could be guaranteed only if the
workers and peasants won victory over tsarism and imperialism.
The Russian social-chauvinists and the Centrists headed by Trotsky '
opposed Lenin's slogan calling for the defeat of tsarism. Rebutting
their arguments, Lenin said that . to justify participation in
the imperialist war, to advance in this war the slogan 'against defeat^ means to act not only as an anti-socialist, but also as an anti-national politician" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Worlcs, VoL XVIII, New York,
1930, p. 190).
 
From the very outbreak of the war Lenin set out to form a new.
Third International in place of the Second International, which had
suffered a shameful collapse.
 
Lenin's poiicj'of a complete rupture with the imperialists and
of waging a determined struggle against the social-chauvinists and
Centrists was vigorously carried out in Russia by the Bolshevik mem
bers of the Duma. They constituted the only legal group of Bolsheviks
that had the opportunity of appealing to the masses, for with the out
break of the war all the Bolshevik newspapers were suppressed, the
prominent Partyworkers were arrested and exiled, the workers' orga
nizations were wrecked and the more classconscious and advanced
workers were called up for military seivice and bent to the fiont.
The five Bolshevik members of the Duma toured the country, visiting factories, holding tail^is with the workers and explaining to them the aggressive and predatory nature of the war. In the Duma itself
the il^lslievik nicinhers openly proclaimed their opposition to the
war and refused to vote for the war credits.
 
In November 1914, all the Bolshevik members of the Duma were
arrested by the jiolice just when they were holding a secret conference
with Party workers, and in February 1915, they were put on trial. At
the trial they conducted themselves like staunch fighters for the cause
of the proletariat. Only Kamenev, who had been arrested with the
Duma Deputies, behaved at the trial like a renegade. He declared that
he differed fundamentally with the Bolsheviks on the question of the
war and that he agreed with the Defencists. On receiving a report of
this trial Lenin expressed his approval of the conduct of the workers'
Duma Deputies and denounced the disgraceful, craven and despicable
conduct of Kamenev.
 
The tsarist court sentenced the five Bolshevik members of the
Duma to lifelong exile in Siberia.
 
But even while in exile the Bolsheviks continued to oppose the
war and to combat social-chauvinism. Comrade Stalin who, in 1913,
had been exiled (for the sixth time) to the remote Turukhansk Region,
although cut off from Lenin and the central Party bodies, took
Lenin's stand on the question of war, peace and revolution.
 
Tho hamlet of Kureika, whore Comrade Stalin lived, was two
hundred kilometres from tho nearest village of Monastyrskoye and
newspapers arrived there very rarely; the mail came once in two or
three months and letters from comrades were delivered with great
difficulty. Nevertheless, at the end of 3914, Comrade Stalin received
Lenin's theses in which he formulated the Bolshevik attitude towards
the war. In the summer of 1915, Comrade Stalin called a conference in
Monastyrskoye of the Bolsheviks in exile. This conference denounced
Kamenev's craven and treacherous conduct at the trial. In 1916 Com
rade Stalin received copies of the Bolshevilc magazine Insurance
Questions^ whereupon he sent greetings to the editorial staff of that
magazine in which he emiDhasized that in his opinion the chief task
of the Bolshevik press was ideologically to insure the working class of
Russia against the corrupting, anti-proletarian, chauvinistic propa
ganda of the Menshevik Defencists.
 
A similar attitude of imcompromising opposition to opportunism
in every form was displayed by Y. M. Sverdlov, who was in exile with
Comrade Stalin, by G. K. Orjonikidze, who was serving a sentence of
penal servitude, and by the other Bolsheviks.
 
==== Brusilov's Breakthrough ====
 
===== The Military-Strategical Situation in the Beginning of 1916 =====
Germany's plans for a blitzkrieg collapsed; the war became a prolonged
one. Germany had less chance of winning a prolonged war than the
Entente, as the latter possessed large resources of manpower and ma
teriel. In 1915, the 6e man High Command concentrated its main
forces on the Eastern Front and strove to defeat the Russian army and
compel Russia to conclude a separate peace. Its aim was to rid it
self, in this way, of the second front in the East and to concentrate
all its forces for the struggle in the West. The Germans did succeed
in capturing a large area of Russian territory, but they failed to rout
the Russian armies and the second front was not liquidated.
 
By the autumn of 1915, the German High Command came to the
conclusion that it was useless to continue active operations against
Russia and therefore began to make preparations for decisive opera
tions on the Western Front. Leading Entente circles also realized
that the respite the. Entente had received in 1915 at Russia's expense
had ended, and they too began to prepare for the anticipated German
offensive on the Western Front. The military situation comj)elled the
Allies to decide to smash their opponents in the Western and Eastern
theatres of war by a series of successive decisive blows.
 
In the beginning of 1916, tsarist Russia intensified military oper
ations on the Caucasian Front. In spite of the incredibly dijficult
fighting conditions in mountain terrain the Caucasian army stormed
and captured Erzerum in February and Trebizond in April. Another
Russian army launched a drive in the direction of Persia. But the
offensive against Turkey was not pressed home as the Allies did not
wish Turkey to be utterly defeated by Russia.
 
The strategical position of the Entente countries had now consid
erably improved. Their military technical forces had grown. The
French and British armies were equipped with splendid artillery, and
having succeeded in organizing the mass production of shells they now
had a plentiful supply of these. Particularly well equipped was the for
tress of Verdun, which covered the road to Paris. Lacking adequate
forces for an offensive on other parts of the front the Germans, in Feb
ruary 1916, launched a drive precisely against this fortress in the
hope of breaking through and gaining a decisive success. Within a
short space of time the Germans fired against the Verdun fortifica
tions over 2,000,000 shells. At the crucial moment they even resorted
to asphyxiating gases, for it was the Germans who first used poison
gas in the First World War.
 
To divert some of the German forces from Verdun the Allies de
manded that the Russian armies should launch an offensive on the Eastern Eront. This offensive had the added object of preventing the defeat of Italy, against whom the Anstro-German command was
preparing to strike a blow at Trent ino.
 
===== The Russian Army's Offensive on the Southwestern Front =====
In conformity with the plans of the Russian High Command the offen
sive operations wore to comniL'nce on the Russian Western Front from
the region of Molodeczno and drive towards Oszmiana-Vilna. A supple
mentary blow was to be struck on the Northern Front in the region
of Dvinsk. The Southwestern Front was to kcc]) on the defensive. But
General Brusilov, who shortly before had been appointed Commander
in-Chief of the Southwestern Front, was stiongly opposed to this
plan. At the conference held at General Headquarters in Mogilev on
April 14, 1916, ho argued that all the fronts should launch an offen
sive, and do so simultaneously. The war, he said, could not be won
by defensive tactics, and the Russian army and its allies now
possessed all the facilities for launching a general and decisive
offensive.
 
Brusilov, an outstanding loader in the Russian army in the period
of the First World War, held the view that military objectives could
be achieved only by active methods. In this iCvspcct he was ono of the
last representatives of the Suvorov school in the old Russian army.
What distinguished him as a military leader was his constant striving
to employ new methods on the basis of a study of the oxperien.co of
war. He demanded thorough preparation for an operation and a clear
understanding of the general strategical tasks. Hd was of the opin
ion that preparations for an offensive should be made along the whole
front and that blows should be struck on several sectors simultane
ously so that the enemy should not know where the main blow was to
be struck.
 
Brusilov drew up the following plan of operation. He decided to
strike the main blow in the Luck direction, on the right flank of his
front, which was capable of rendering most assistance to the Russian
Western Front where offensive operations wore about to begin.
Making clever use of camouflage, he did all possible to ensure
that his preparations were concealed from the enemy. All troop
movements were performed at night. No conversations about the
preparations were conducted over the telephone. Not a single person
unconnected with the forthcoming operations knew anything about
them. All this ensured not only thorough preparation but also that
the enemy would be taken completely by surprise.
 
Brusilov's army launched its offensive at dawn on June 4, 1916.
After artillery preparation lasting twenty-nine hours, the infantry
charged the AustroGerman positions. After ten days' fighting the
enemy's defensive system was breached on a front of ninety kilomelTcs
and Luck was captured. Within a few days the army captured the whole of Bukovina and part of South Galicia and reached the passes of the Carpathian mountains. Brusilov's successful offensive compelled the
enemy to transfer his reserves from the Italian and French Fronts to the
Eastern Front. The German High Command effected such a transfer.
 
Brusilov's blow saved the Italians from defeat and eased the position
of the French at Verdun. The whole Austro-German Front from Pole
sie to the Bumanian frontier was disorganized, and this created the
possibility of inflicting decisive defeat upon the German coalition.
But neither the Allies nor the Russian High Command followed up
Brusilov's success in time. The Anglo-French troops failed to pass to
the offensive at this crucial moment for the German army, thus
enabling the German High Command to transfer considerable forces
from the Western to the Eastern Front. Failing to receive the support
of the other armies, Brusilov's offensive was checked, after fierce
fighting involving heavy casualties, in the marshy terrain near the
river Stokhod. This lack of co-ordination of active Allied operations
v/as one of the factors which helped to prolong the war and to ease
Germany's position in 1916.
 
==== Growth of the Revolutionary Crisis ====
 
===== Economic Chaos in the Country =====
Despite the successes the
Russian armies achieved on the Turkish and Southwestern Fronts it was
already evident that tsarist Russia had lost the war. The main reason
for the defeat of tsarism was Russia's economic and technical backward
ness. The technically backward war industry was incapable of sup
plying the army with the munitions of war. In the rear, economic chaos
reigned. Although the number of workers employed in industry almost
doubled, the productivity of labour steadily declined.
 
Shortage of fuel led to the cutting down of production in the fac
tories and mills. In 1916, thirty-six blast furnaces were blown out.
The steel mills produced only half the metal that was needed for the
war industry and metal deliveries to plants were rationed.
 
The railways could not cope with the traffic. The transport system
was dislocated, as a result both of repeated militar^'^ withdrawals
and of the flood of refugees who poured from the regions occupied by the
Germans into the hinterland of Russia. During hasty retreats large
quantities of rolling stock were left in the hands of the enemy. Wrecked
cars and locomotives blocked the roads. To allow trains to pass,
trains ahead of them were sometimes thrown over the railway embank
ment. Owing to the lack of transport facilities even urgent supplies of
war materiel obtained from the United States, Great Britain and
France were not delivered on time. The military port of Archangel was
so congested with war materiel that the lower oases literally sank into
the ground under the weight of those on top of them.
 
The utter dislocation of the transport system intensified the food
crisis. Over a billion poods of grain from preceding harvests lay rotting
at remote railway stations while the population of the towns were
living; on meagre bread rations. The army received only half the regu
lation rations. The price of bread rose over 50 per cent. In the autumn of
1916, fixed grain prices were introduced, but the landlords and kulaks
ignored them. Profiteering in grain increased, while long queues of
starving people lined up outside the bakeries.
 
■ Agricultural output dropped considerably during the period of
the war. About 14,000,000, or 47 per cent, of the adult male popula
tion had been conscripted for the army, and it was the most able-bodied
section of the rural population that was taken. Agriculture also suf
fered from the continuous requisition of horses and cattle; during the
period of the war the number of horses in the coimtry was reduced by
5,000,000.
 
Tn 1916 the sown area in the country was 85 per cent of that
of 1909. Landlord farming, deprived of the cheap labour of day labour
ers and peasants, deteriorated. The landlord farms were largely cul
tivated by prisoners of war, but their labour was very unproductive.
 
Particularly disastrous were the effects of the war upon the cur
rency of the country. The colossal expenditure entailed by the war
was covered by the issue of paper currency. The value of the ruble
dropped and the cost of living steadily rose. To meet the war expend
iture the tsarist government floated internal loans and also appealed
again and again for loans to the Allies. To pay for war contracts placed
abroad it received from Great Britain, France and the United States
sums amounting to 7,769,000,000 rubles.
 
The defeats at the front and economic chaos at home roused the
alarm of the bourgeoisie. The bourgeoisie had been making unprece
dented profits out of war contracts. Since tsarism proved to be inca
pable of organizing a victorious war, the Russian bourgeoisie tried
to take charge of the organization of the war effort and achieved
great influence in affairs of state.
 
In the summer of 1915, the bourgeois representatives in rural and
urban local government bodies formed an organization, known as
the "Zemgor, " which demanded a voice in the distribution of sup
plies for the army. At about the same time so-called War Industry
Committees were set up which undertook to fulfil part of the war
contracts. Proclaiming the slogan of "everything for the war, all for
the war," the bourgeoisie launched a campaign to increase output
in the factories.
 
The bourgeois opposition during the war years was led by a
body set up in the State Duma in August 1915, and known as
the Progressive bloc. It included nearly all the bourgeois parties,
the Octobrists, Progressives, Cadets and part of the Nationalists.
 
Backed by the Mensheviks and the Trudovik ^^roup, tliis bloc demanded
the" formation of a "Cabinet of confidence," that is to say, the ap
pointment of Cabinet Ministers who would enjoy the confidence of
the bourgeois majority in the Duma. The tsarist government, however,
refused to make any concessions and in September 1915, it issued a
decree to prorogue the Duma "for recess."
 
During the war Russia's economic dependence upon British and
French capital greatly increased. In return for credits amounting
to 3,000,000,000 rubles, Great Britain demanded that the tsarist gov
ernment should transfer to London a part of Russia's gold reserve as
security for payment on war contracts. At the same time the Allies
continuously kept demanding fresh reinforcements fiom^Russia. In April
1916, the French "Socialists" Albert Thomas and Viviani were sent
to Russia to demand the despatch of 400,000 Russian soldiers to
France. Only a proletarian revolution could save Riissia from being
utterly converted into a colony of foreign imperialism.
 
===== The Revolutionary Situation in the Country =====
At the end of
1915, a revolutionary situation began to develop in iche country. The
war and the economic chaos caused extreme discontent among the
masses of the working people who were obliged to bear the whole
brunt of the war. The conditions of the working class had greatly dete
riorated during the period of the war. The insignificant "war bonus"'
was insufficient to cover the rising cost of living. High prices, shortage*
of food and the eternal queues, particularly wore out the women workers who were obliged to maintain their children without the assistance of their husbands who were away at the front. About 40 per cent of
the industrial workers had been conscripted for the war and it was the
more class-conscious and j)rogrcssive workers, and also 3 ^oung workers,
who were sent off first. Their j)laces in the factories were taken by work
ers from the rural districts and by women and juveniles. To compel
the workers to work harder and to rouse their supportfor the war, the
War Industry Committees formed "workers' groups." In September 1915,
at a meeting of representatives of the workers of the factories of
Petrogr«^.d, the Bolshevilis secured the adoj^tion of a resolution against
the election of such a gi'oup to the Central War Industries Commit
tee. The result was that only an insignificant number of workers took
part in the election of the "workers' group" which took place in No
vember. The Menslievilvs, who advocated "class peace" between the
workers and the bourgeoisie, supported the "workers' group," and
the Menshevik Kuzma Gvozdev, an arrant Defencist, became the
head of it.
 
Ill the spring of 1916, the strike movement began to assume wide
proportions and the strikes in the central industrial region were
exceptionally tiTrbulent, At the Novo Kostroma Linen Mills the work
ers demanded an increase in wages and marched in procession to the
offices of the mill to present this demand. They were met by troops
who fii'ed at them, killing and wounding scores of them. The Commander
of the Cor])S of Gendarmes sent a telegi'amto the Governor of Kostroma
stating; "Apiirove your action. Find ringleaders. Court-martial them."
 
The same brulal treatment was meted out by troops and police
to the workers of Ivanovo-Voznesensk who marched to the Town Hall to
XDresent their demands. The shooting down of the workers in Kostroma
and Ivanovo-Voznesensk called forth a wave of protest strikes. The
strike of the workers of the Putilov Works, which was engaged on war
orders, assumed a militant character, and was joined by the new work
ers, among whom the Bolsheviks employed at the ]3lant had been very
active. The Putilov strike was supported by the entire proletariat of
Petrograd. In the autumn, mass strikes began to spread all over the
country.
 
January 9, 1916, the anniversary of Bloody Sunday, was com
memorated by the workers by a political strike. The political strike
wave reached its peak in October 1916, when these strikes were accom
panied by demonstrations in which the workers carried the revolution
ary slogans: "Down with the war!", "Down with the autocracy!"
 
The movement among the workers stimulated the struggle of the
peasants. The imperialist war had finally divorced the peasants from
the bourgeoisie, for it revealed to them how utterly groundless were
their hopes of receiving land and peace from the tsar and his bourgeois
allies. The impoverishment and ruin created in the countryside by the war strengthened anti-war temper in the most backward and remote villages. The Department of Police noted the growth of
propaganda conducted by peasants against the further recruitment
of soldiers for the war. One such rural propagandii^t is reported to have
said: "Our tsar is throwing the people into the war like an extrava
gant cook throwing logs in the stove."
 
Information rhout the disastrous condition of peasant farming
reached the army. Worn out by the protracted war and enraged by
the ruination of their farms at home the soldiers refused to go into
action against the enemy, voluntarily surrendered, inflicted wounds
upon themselves and deserted in masses. In 1916 the number of de
serters was estimated to have exceeded 1,500,000.
 
===== The Activities of the Bolsheviks During the War =====
The Bolshe
viks developed extensive activities in the aimy and in the navy. They
formed underground military organizations m the army units and
printed and distributed revolutionarj'leaflets in which they called for
fraternization between the soldiers of the belligerent armies and
stressed that their common enemy was the imperialist bourgeoisie,
and that the only way they could end the war was by turning their
weapons against the bourgeoisie and their governments.
 
In the autumn of 1915, fraternization commenced at the front.
The Bussian soldiers left their trenches to mingle with the enemy
soldiers. Tlio soldiers of both sides treated each other to cigarettes and
understood each other perfectly even though they did not know each
other's language. This fraternization strengthened the international
unity of the working people in both lines of trenches.
 
By the end of 1916, the letters vrhich the soldiers sent home
from the front reflected their growing hatred of the vrar and of tsar
ism. One soldier wrote: "The soldiers today are not what they were
during the Japanese War; under the mask of slavish obedience there
bums frightful anger. It is enough to light a tiny match for this mass
to flare up." The conscripted workers, many of whom had taken part
in the revolution of 1905, conducted propaganda in favour of another
revolution.
 
A number of leading Bolsheviks were active in the army.
M, V. Frunze, who escaped from prison in 1915, secured a situation
in the Union of the Zemstvos under the assumed name of
Mikhailov. He formed an underground Bolshevik organization in Minsk
and established close contacts with the soldiers on the Russian Western
Front. A. A, Zhdanov, mobilized into the armyj» conducted energetic
Bolshevik propaganda among the troops. V. V. Kuibyshev was
active in the pipe works in Samara, and S.M. Kirov was active
inthe Caucasus, rousing the most backward and downtrodden
highlanders for the struggle against tsarism. In Kiev, and later in
Ekaterinoslav, L. M. Kaganovich conducted propaganda among the workers and soldiers. In the spring of 1915, V. M. Molotov arrived in Moscow to organize a Bolshevik conference. He was arrested and ex
iled to Siberia, but he escaped shortly afterwards, went to Petrograd,
and there directed the preparations for a new revolution.
 
Never had the lives of the Bolsheviks working underground been so
full of danger as during the imperialist war, when those conduct
ing revolutionary propaganda were liable to be coiirt-martialled and
shot. But the Bolsheviks were not daunted by dijOSiculties or
dangers; they knew how to be with, and at the head of, the masses, no '
matter what conditions prevailed.
 
In the endeavour to rally all the revolutionary forces for the struggle
against the imperialist war the Bolsheviks conducted intense activity
among the youths and workingwomen who had taken the places in
industry of the men who had gone to the front.
 
The theoretical basis for the activities of the Bolsheviks during
the period of the war was provided by Lenin's works on imperialism.
In 1916, he wrote that work of genius, Im'periaUsm^ the Highest Stage of
Capitalism in which he showed that imperialism is the last stage in
the development of capitalism and is the eve of the proletarian revo
lution. In this book, and in the articles he wrote in 1916-1916, he
showed that imperialist wars weaken the forces of imperialism and ren
der possible the breaking of the chain of imperialism at its weakest
link. In his articles "The United States of Europe Slogan" and "The
War Program of the Proletarian Eevolution" he showed that it was
quite possible for the proletariat to break the chain of imperialism
at some one point, that Socialism could not be victorious in all coun
tries simultaneously, that it would iii'st achieve victory in a few coun
tries, or even in only one country, while the other countries would for
a time remain bourgeois countries. This was a new and complete
theory of the socialist revolution, a theory the fundamentals of which
were outlined by Lenin as early as 1906. This theory opened up a
revolutionary perspective for the proletarians of the various countries,
taught them to utilize the war situation for a revolutionary onslaught
upon the bourgeoisie in the given country, and strengthened their
confidence in the victory of the world proletarian revolution.
 
==== The Revolt of the Peoples in Central Asia in 1916 ====
 
===== The National Question During the Period of the War =====
The bourgeoisie in all eountries proclaimed the imperialist war a war
for the protection of weak nations, but actually, during the war the
oppressed nationalities were forced into, greater dependence than ever
upon the imperialist bourgeoisie. The colonial peoples served, as
the source from which the belligerent armies received replenishments
of "cannon fodder."
During the period of the war the movement for national liberation was rapidly heading towards a revolutionary uprising against
imperialism. Lenin and Stalin pointed out that the revolutionary
movement for national liberation of the oppressed nationalities was
a reserve of the proletarian revolution. The Bolsheviks waged a
determined struggle against national oppression in Russia and in other
oountries, and upheld the right of nations to self-determination and
the international unity of the working class in its struggle for
Socialism.
 
The Bolsheviks denounced the policy of national oppression pur
sued by tsarism and the imperialist bourgeoisie. As far as Russia
 
is concerned," wrote Lenin at this time, "the war is doubly reaction
ary and hostile to national liberation" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works,
Vol. XVIII, New York, 1930, p. 226).
 
===== The Revolt in Central Asia and Kazakhstan =====
The war imposed
great suffering upon the oppressed peoples of tsarist Russia, la its
quest for fresh sources of revenue for the purpose of financing the
war, the tsarist government imposed additional taxes on the inhab
itants of the outlying regions. The peoples of Central Asia were sub
jected to exceptionally cruel exploitation. In the settled cotton-grow
ing regions, the exploiters enmeshed the entire population in a net
of enslaving contracts. During the period of the war the area under
cotton increased 50 per cent, but the peasant growers could not enjoy
the produce of their labour. They delivered the greater part of
their crop to the landlords in payment for rent, and sold the remainder
at ridiculously low prices fixed by the government to the disadvantage
of the poor peasants . Meanwhile, the price of manufactured goods rose to
an enormous extent. The Uzbek peasant cotton growers were threat
ened by famine, as they grew scarcely any grain themselves and
little grain was shipped into the region owing to the dislocation of
the railways.
 
Conditions in the nomadic and semi-nomadic regions of Central
Asia and Kazakhstan were even worse. The government continued to
drive the Kirghiz and Kazakh herdsmen from their pastures in order
to provide land for Russian settlers. In 1915, 1,800,000 hectares of
the best land of the Kazakh and Kirghiz were granted to Russian land
lords, government offtcials and kulaks. The continuous requisition
of horses, cattle and wool for war purposes utterly ruined the herdsmen.
The tyranny of the local authorities and the levies they imposed still
further worsened the hard lot of the people.
 
The immediate cause of the extensive revolt of the working people
in Central Asia was the order issued by the tsarist government in
June 1916, conscripting the inhabitants from the age of nineteen to
forty-three for the purpose of digging trenches and performing other
work at the front, in spite of the fact that according to the laws of tsarist Russia the noii-Riissiau population was not liable to military service.
 
The Uzbeks, Ivazaldis, Kirghiz and Turkmen refused to obey thi.s
harsh order, the more so that it was issued just when t]ie harvest was
being taken in. The fii^st to rise in revolt were the peoples of Uzbekistan
and Kazakhstan. Crowds of excited Uzbeks in the towns and villages
of the Tashlient and Samarkand counties attacked the rural admin
istration ofliccs and demanded that the conscription lists should be
destroyed. By the middle of July 1916, the revolt had spread over the
whole of Ferghana. Near Jizak, in the Samarkand Region, regular
battles with the tsarist troops took place, in which the latter employed
artillery. The rebels cut eommunications between Verny (now Alma-Ata)
and Tashkent, caj^tured a trainload of arms that w^as being sent to
be used against them , armed the peasants and entered into battle with
the Russian troops. The revolt was suppressed only in October, after a
punitive army had been sent against the rebels of the Somirechensk
Region.
 
The revolt of the Kazakhs in the Turgai (now Aktyubinsk) Re
gion which broke out in September 1916 was exceptionally iirolonged
and stubborn. The revolt was headed by Aniangeldy linanov. When
the Kazakhs of the Turgai Region refused to obey the tsar's conscription
order, the Governor of the region went to them in person to jjorsiiade
them to obey. Amangeldy turned to him and said: "Permit me,
worthy chief, to put one question to you. In our ignorance we do not
understand; whom shall we defend in this war?" The Governor ordered
the arrest of Amangeldy, but he went into hiding among the poorest
sections of the Kazakhs. Sliortly afterwards Amangeldy Imanov
organized a large force of rebels which entered into battle with one
of the punitive units at Lake Kizil-KuL The battle lasted a whole
day and the troops were forced to retreat.
 
At the end of October 1916, the rebels headed by Amangeldy
Imanov besieged the town of Turgai, but failed to capture it. Aman
geldy retreated from Turgai and fortified himself in the village of
Batbakara. Here workshops were set up where armourers worked
day and night making swords and other side arms. The Ka
zakhs were trained in the use of firearms and in military exercises.
The local inhabitants supplied the rebels with food, and with fodder
for their horses. A large punitive army was sent against Amangeldy,
and in the middle of February 1917 this army captured Batbakara.
The rebels retreated into the steppe. Later their brave leader Aman
geldy took part in the revolution, joined the Bolshevik Party and died
like a hero in the Civil War.
 
The revolt in Turkmenistan also lasted a considerable time. Tlie
Turkmen herdsmen, moving from place to place, easily evad
ed the tsar's troops sent against them. A special punitive expedition of Cossack troops sent against them succeeded in forcing the rebels to cross the frontier into Persia. The revolt was
suppressed with ruthless cruelty. The punitive army burned down
the herdsmen's encampments, and seized their property and cattle.
In a number of counties more than half the population was wiped
out. The Governor General, Kuropatkin, put 347 of the rebels
on trial, and of these 51 were executed. In the case of the
others sentence of death was commuted to penal servitude. Several
hundred rebels were exiled without trial . After the revolt was sup
pressed many thousands of Khghiz and Kazakli refugees, with
their families and herds, wandered into China and Mongolia, while
the Turkmens crossed over into Persia. On leaving their habitations
the refugees sold the remnants of their jjroperty to the rich and to
the bai (kulaks) for a mere song; but in the countries in which they had
taken refuge they were also subjected to persecution. After Soviet rule
was established in Kussia many of the refugees returned home.
 
==== Education and Culture in Russia before the Revolution (1907–1917) ====
 
===== Education and Science =====
The revolution of 1905-1907 had roused
among the masses of the people a tremendous thirst for knowledge.
During the period of the revolution a large number of educational
societies were formed, and adult schools and study coxirses, libraries,
people's universities, etc., were oj^ened. During the period of reaction,
however, the tsarist government suppressed most of these educational
societies and institutions. The first to suffer were the educational so
cieties which had been formed by the workers and the iion-Russian
nationalities. Among these were the Ehiowledge Is Strength Society,
The Educational Society, The Self-Educational Society, The Voluntary
High School, which had been organized by P. E. Lesgaft, a number of
educational study courses, nearly all the People's xmiversities, and
many of the elementary educational societies. But the tsarist govern
ment was unable to crush the people's desire for knowledge.
 
The needs of developing capitalism, the growing economic and
political intercourse with the more cultured European countries, and
lastly, the steps which the tsarist government itself was taking towards
a bourgeois monarchy, compelled the government to increase the
extremely insignificant funds hitherto allocated for education in
Russia.
 
The industrial boom of 1912-1914 confronted the bourgeoisie
with the need for training technical personnel which were practically
non-existent in tsarist Russia. The number of students in technical
colleges in 1914 was twice that in 1903.
 
With funds provided by the Zemstvo and private capitalists teclinioal and commercial schools, and trade and agricultural schools were opened
 
Duriiig tho six years from 1907 to 1913 the 'estimates of the Min
istry of Education were trebled, from 46,000,000 rubles to 137,000,000
rubles; but the latter was an insignificant sum considering the real
needs of a civilized country. The tsarist government spent on educa
tion 65 kopeks per head i)er annum, whereas Great Britain, Prance
and Germany spent three to four rubles, and the United States nine
rubles per head per annum. On the eve of the war the number of
pupils attending educational establishments of all types was about
7,000,000, which was less than 60 per 1,000 ofthe population. Only
about one-fourth of the children of school age attended school. Accord
ing to official figures, before the revolution of 1917, only 21 per cent
of the population of Russia was literate. In the non-Russian national
regions the percentage of literacy was even lower: in Transcaucasia
12 per cent, in Central Asia about 5 per cent. Of Uzbek, Turkmen and
Tadjik children only 42 per 1,000 attended school. This explains
why entire nationalities, such as the Bashkirs, Kirghiz, Turkmens,
Yakuts and many others were totally illiterate. As Lenin wrote: "No
such barbarous country in which tho masses of the people have been
so completely robbed of education, light and knowledge has remained
in Europe except Russia" (V. I. Lonin, Oollected Works, Vol. XVI,
Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed,, p, 410).
 
Lonin pointed to the conditions of schoolteachers as an index ofthe
backwardness and barbarism of tsarist Russia. Teachers* salaries were
miserably low, they wore continuously subjected to the carping crit
iciam and persecution of the higher officials, and were constantly
harassed by the police and secret service agents.
 
The tsarist school, "the school of drilling and learning by rote"
as Lenin called it, dinned into the minds of the children knowledge
of which nine-tenths was useless, while the other tenth was distorted.
High-school students were prohibited from forming self-educational
circles.
 
After defeating the revolution of 1906, the tsarist government
came down heavily on the universities. In 1910 and 1911,
in connection with the death of Leo Tolstoy, the students
resumed their political meetings and protest demonstrations.
In retaliation to this the tsarist government issued an order
iabolishing university autonomy which had been won by the 1906
revolution, and suppressing student organizations which hitherto
had been permitted to exist. Largo numbers of students were
expelled from the universities and deported for taking part in tho
students' movement. In 1910 the newly appointed Minister of Edu
cation, the reactionary Kasso, dismissed all the liberal and radical
professors and he also discharged the Principal of the Moscow University and his assistants for failing to take adequate measures against the "mutinous" students. In protest against this act of
bureaucratic tyraimy 125 professors and lecturers of the Moscow
University, among whom were K. A. Timiryazev, Professor of
Physics P. N. Lebedev, and others, resigned.
 
To combat the revolutionary student movement the government
encouraged the formation in the higher educational establishments
of Black Hundred student organizations, such as the Academic Union,
and others, which were connected with the Union of Russian
People.
 
The state of the universities to some extent detennined the state
of science in Russia. The university chairs trained an inadequate num
ber of scientific research workers and there were few scientific research
institutes in tsarist Russia. The Imperial Academy of Sciences pro
duced no works of any great scientific value, and the President of the
Academy was the tsar's uncle Konstantin Romanov, who knew nothing
about science.
 
The genuine scientists who sprang from the ranks of the people
received neither recognition nor assistance. The great genetics se
lectionist, I. V. Michurin, was not recognized as a scientific researcher,
in spite of the fact that scientists from other countries came to him to
study his methods. The same applied to another great scientist,
K. E. Tsiolkovsky, who constructed a dirigible airship ten years before
the Zeppelin appeared, and who formulated the principles of the jet
propelled engine; he was obliged to remain a teacher of mathematics in
Kaluga and conduct his scientific researches with his own very modest
resources. The outstanding mechanic, the father of Russian aviation,
N. E. Zhukovsky, devoted himself to the study of aerial dynamics and
the theory of the flight of aircraft, but the results of his work found
application only under the Soviet regime. The first Russian airmen,
Rossinsky, Utochkin and others, performed their flights at the risk of
their lives in badly constructed aeroplanes provided by professional
showmen for the purpose of public entertainment.
 
The plan proposed by the Arctic explorer, G. Y. Sedov in 1912,
for an expedition to the Korth Pole was met with hostility and
ridicule. It was only with great dijfiSlculty that Sedov, with
the aid of private contributions, fitted out the St. Phoca and
started out on his expedition, which was inadequately organized.
Eventually, the ship was caught in the ice and Sedov, accompanied
by two sailors, abandoned the ship and attempted to reach the Pole on
foot, but they only succeeded in reacliing Rudolf Island, where,
in the winter of 1914, the brave explorer died of hunger and cold.
The remains of Sedov's grave on Rudolf Island were only recently
discovered.
 
Thus, scientific discoveries, research and expeditions were treated by the tsiirist govoriiiiient and the bourgeoisie with cold indifference, and sometimes oven with ignorant contempt.
 
===== Literature and Art =====
<nowiki>The ideological disintegration that set in
among the bourgeois intelligentsia found most vivid rejection in the
decadence that cliaraoterized the literary world in the last decade be
fore the revolution.
 
Tlie Cadet proff^ssors and philosopliers, such as Bulgakov, Berdj^aev
and others, intensified, in their philoso];>hical works, their attacks on
Marxism and revolution and preached idealism and mysticism.
Reactionary idealistic philoso])hy exercised considerable inlluenc(.'^
upon the Russian petty-bourgeois intelligentsia who frequently sought
escape from reality in the world of abstract ideas and emotions.
 
The individualist intellectual, disillusioned with life, became the
lu'incipal hero in fiction.
 
Social reaction opened the way for numerous literary trends such
as the symbolists, futurists, acme-ists, etc., and while these various
groups, schools and coteries were at loggerheads with each other, they
all agreed in reimdiating realism in art. The predominating jirinciplc
in literature was formalistic searching. The literature and poetry of
that time was distinguished for its intellectual shallowness and }}essi
inistio moods. Thus, tho works of Leonid Aiidrcyov breathed profound
}>essimism and fatalism. Life for him was "madness and horror" and
man was "a plaything in tho hands of fate." Artsybashev argued that
a man "could do anything ho pleased since Death stood at everyone's
back." Merezhkovsky and Zinaida Hippius advocated "seeking for
a God" and denounced the Russian revolution. Undoubtedly talent
ed poets like Balmont, Theodore Sologub and others, withdrew from;
public life and sanli into extreme individualism, or into the world
of abstract fantasy, "from constricting borders into a wonderful
world, to unlmown beauty" as Balmont wrote. Pessimism even affect
ed tho work of progressive poets like Alexander Blok and Valeri
Bryusov.
 
Tho Bolsheviks combated this state of decay in the literary world.
Amidst the gloom of that period the wonderful stories that were
written by the great proletarian author Maxim Gorky breathed cheer
ful confidence and strength. "Man — ^there is a proud ring about that
word," said Gorky. He had confidence in the new man and in his lofty
mission as fighter for and builder of the new way of life. At that time
Gorky came out as the bard of socialist democracy. In his novel Mother ^
he put into the month of his hero the following words about the new
generation of Russian workers: ^VPhen you look at them you can see
that Russia will be tho brightest democracy on earth."
 
Maxim Gorky became tho favourite author of tho proletariat,
and from his works the proletarians imbibed new strength for the
struggle. Lenin wrote that "Gorky is undoubtedly the greatest representative of proleia^'ian art, who has done a great deal for this art and is capable of doing still more in the future" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Worhs,
Vol. IV, Moscow, 1934, p. 36).
 
Another challenge to the old decaying world was the poetry of
the young poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. His poem "Cloud in Pants,"
written in 1914, was a hymn to life, love and the struggle, Mayakovsky
proclaimed himself the "drummer boy of the revolution" and welcomed
its coming.
 
The call for the struggle for the new way of life was also sounded
ill the works of the Ukrainian autlioress Lesj^a Ukrainlva, whose art
reached its peak in the darkest years of reaction. The writer's fate was
a tragic one: she was bedridden with tuberculosis in a severe form,
but her work, which was strongly influenced by Puslikin's poetry,
breathed ardent sjunpathy for the people who were rising against
the autocracy, and sounded a call for the struggle against the oppres
sors.
 
In 1913, untimely death carried away another great artist in the
field of literature in the person of M. M. Kotsyubinsky. Kotsyubinsky
commenced his literary career in the 1880 's and 1890 's by ruthlessly
denouncing the liberal Narodnik intelligentsia and the monstros
ities of peasant life. In the period of the 1905 revolution he
definitely became the mouthpiece of revolutionary peasant democracy.
In his most important work, Fata Morgana, he describes with pro
found sympathy the revolt of the peasants and reveals his hatred for
the landlords and the kulaks.
 
In 1916, the most popular of Jewish authors, Sholem Alechem,
the nom de plmne of Sholem Rabinovich, died. Maxim Gorky described
him as an "artist in melanchol 3 " and grave humour." In his series of
humorous tales: Tobias the MUhtnan, The Memoirs of a Commer
cial Traveller, and others, he described with great artistic realism and
sincere sympathy the joyless life of the Jewish poor.
 
Art in this period reflected the same ideas and moods as were
reflected in literature. In painting, decorative themes came to the
forefront (the "World of Art" group represented by Roerich, Benois
and others). The same tendency to escape from realism into the world
of inner emotions and external formalistic searchings was reflected
in sculpture (P. P. Trubetskoy, Konenkov, and others).
 
The work of the outstanding composer A. N. Scriabin (1871-1915)^
an innovator of musical form, contained elements of mysticism and'
symbolism ("A Divine Poem," and others).</nowiki>
 
=== The February Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution ===
 
==== Overthrow of Tsarism ====
 
===== Two Conspiracies =====
Hie last years of tsarism in Russia were the
years of its utter decay and decomposition. During the period of the
war, the rascal Gregory Rasputin, formerly a peasant from Siberia,
gained exceptional influence at the tsar's court. In his youth Rasputin
had been a horse thief and later he roamed from monastery to monastery
with pilgrims and alms-beggars. Skilfully posing as a "seer,^" he
became extremely poxmlar among ignorant religious people and partic
ularly among women. Rumours about him and the ^'"miracles" he
performed reached the tsar's comt. The tsar and the tsarina who were
extremely superstitious believed these rumours. The tsarina, who was
fanatically religious, invited Rasputin to the court in the hope that
he would bo able to cure the Crown Prince Alexei of the illness which
the physicians had iDronounoed incurable. Rasputin was shrewd
and brazen and gained enormous influence over the tsarina, and
through her, over the tsar. The tsarina constantly induced Nicho
las II to follow the advice of Rasputin, to whom, she believed, "God
reveals everything." In obedience to Rasputin's illiterate messages
the tsar appointed and dismissed ministers. With his assistance shady
businessmen, profiteers, swindlers and foreign spies obtained important
posts, profitable concessions, enormous subsidies and lucrative war
contracts. The ascendancy of Rasputin most vividly reflected the
obscurantism, the superstition, the intellectual poverty and mor
al decay of the tsarist regime.
 
The defeats sustained at the front and the revolutionary situation
in the country created panic in governmental circles. To have their
hands free to crush the growing revolution, the tsar and the court
clique wanted to conclude a separate peace with Germany, and arrange
ments for negotiations for such a peace were made by the tsarina
through her Geiman relatives. The scheme to conclude a separate peace
with Germany was also supported by Rasputin,
 
Rumours that the court was secretly preparing to conclude a sepa
rate peace with Germany leaked out and this, together with the fact
that tsarism was obviously incapable of coping with the revolutionary
movement in the country, stimulated the opposition of the bourgeoisie.
At the Olid of 1915, the government began to meet with increasingly
vigorous and sharp criticism in the State Duma. True, as Shulgin, one
of the Deputies of the Right explained, this criticism was merely an attempt to transform "the seething revolutionary energy into words" and to "substitute resolutions for revolution." Nevertheless, bourgeois
circles had lost their former "confidence" in the government. The
government became panic-stricken and began to indulge in what was
called "Ministerial leapfrog," i, e., constantly dismissing ministers
and replacing them by others. During the period of the war there
were no less than four Presidents of the Council of Ministers, six Minis
ters of the Interior, four Ministers of War, three Ministers of
Foreign Affairs, four Ministers of Agriculture and four Ministers of
Justice. As was said in the Duma, the changes were so fast that
it was impossible to "get a good look at the faces of the Ministers
who fell."
 
In November 1916, the Fourth State Duma reassembled after
the summer recess in an atmosphere of extreme political tension.
The revolutionary crisis in the country was growing with catastrophic
speed. The time had come when the ruling classes could no longer
govern in the old way and the working people would no longer live
in the old way. In its report on the political situation in the country,
the Department of Police was obliged to admit that "opiDosition tem
per has now reached such exceptional dimensions that it far exceeds
that which prevailed among the broad masses in the turbulent period
of 1905-1906."
 
Even the Grand Dukes and the higher aristocracy sensed the im
pending collapse of tsarism and demanded the removal of Rasputin,
whom they regarded as the chief cause of all the trouble in the country.
On the night of December 17, 1916, Rasputin was killed by conspirators,
among whom were relatives of the tsar, and his body was thrown into
an ice hole on the river Neva. The assassination of Rasputin, however,
could not, of course, alter the situation in the country. The tsarist
government resolved to take drastic measures to crush the revolu
tionary masses. Its plan was to conclude a separate peace with Ger
many, dissolve the Duma, and then concentrate its main blow against
the working class. It intended to draw troops, including artillery,
to the capital and to do so in good time. The war factories were to be
militarized in order to place the workers under military law. The
Petrograd Military Area, which came within the area of the
Northern Front, was formed into a separate military area under
the command of General Khabalov, a most reactionary general. The
police force in the capital was put on a war footing and supplied
with machine guns. Maklakov, formerly Minister of the Interior,
wrote to the tsar demanding that the sternest measures be
taken to combat the revolutionary movement in order "to restore order
in the state at all costs and ensure victory over the internal enemy who
has long been becoming more dangerous, more fierce and more insolent
than the external enemy."
Concurrently witli this plot, another plot was being hatched by the imperialist bourgeoisie and the militarists. Giving up all hope of
reaching an agreement with tsarism, the bourgeois plotters decided that
the best means of averting a revolution would be a palace revolution.
They plofcted to capture the tsar's train while it was on the
way from Army Gonoral Headquarters in Mogilev to Tsarskoye Solo,
compel the tsar to abdicate in favour of his son Alexei and appoint
the tsar's brother, J\Tiehacl Romanov, who sjuapathized with "English
ways," regent until Alexei came of age. A part in tliis plot to bring
about a palace revolution was idaj^'ed by the British and French im
perialists who were afraid that the autocracy would conclude a separate
]3oace with Germany.
 
But neither the plot of the tsarist autocracy nor that of the
bourgeoisie fructified. They could not avert revolution. The working
class and the peasants in soldiers' uniforms thwarted these plans by
their mass revolutionary actions.
 
===== The Insurrection in Petrograd =====
At the beginning of 1917, the
general crisis in the country became extremely acute. The railways
almost ceased to function. The factories and mills failed to receive
raw materials and fuel and came to a standstill. The food problem
grew into an acute political problem. Ou January 9, 1917, the anniver
sary of Bloody Sunday, a huge anti-war demonstration took place in
Petrograd. Similar demonstrations took place in Moscow, Baku, Nizhni
Novgorod and other towns. In Moscow two thousand workers came into
the streets carrying red flags and banners bearing the slogan "Down
witli the war! " Mounted police dispersed the demonstrators. In a number
of towns strikes broke out, and in some, the people spontaneously
began, to raid the baker shops. The government lost its head and
began to intensify its measures of repression. The Mensheviks and
the Socialist-Revolutionaries tried to prevent the revolution
from developing by calling upon the workers to organize a demonstra
tion in defence of the State Duma; but on February 14, the day
on which the Duma was to open, a large section of the workers,
in response to the call of the Bolsheviks, came into the streets,
carrying the slogans "Down with the autocracy! ", "Down with
the war!"
 
In the latter half of February the revolutionary movement in
Petrograd grew with exceptional rapidity. On February 18, 30,000
workers employed at the Putilov Works came out on strike.
 
In the morning of February 23 the Putilov workers came
out in a demonstration and were joined by the workers of other
plants and by women waiting in the queues outside the baker
shops. The Petrograd Committoo of the Bolshevik Party had
issued an appeal for February 23 (March 8 new style) —
International Workingwomen's Day — ^to be marked by a political strike. In all, 90,000 men and women workers struck work that day. The political strike began to develop into
a general political demonstration against tsarism.
 
Next day, February 24, 200,000 workers were on strike. Revo
lutionary meetings were held in all parts of the city. The police
occupied the bridges across the Neva, but the workers streamed towards
the centre of the city over the ice. On February 25, the political
strikes in the different districts of Petrograd developed into a
general political strike of the workers of the whole city. From
General Headquarters the tsar sent the officer commanding the Petro
grad Military Area the following order: 'T command you to put a
stop to the disorders in the capital not later than tomorrow." The
police began to fire upon the demonstrators with machine guns that
were posted on the roofs of houses. The streets and squares in the centre
of the city were occupied by troops. Large numbers of workers and Bol
sheviks were arrested and flung into prison, among them members of
the Petrograd Committee of the Bolshevik Party. The revolt at
that time was directed by the Bureau of the Central Committee
headed by Comrade Molotov.
 
V. M. Molotov had returned to Petrograd in 1916, after escaping
from the Irkutsk Gubernia, where he had been exiled in 1915. On
Lenin's instructions he was appointed to the Russian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, which was directing the preparations for the February revolution. It was he who edited the
leaflet issued by the Petrograd Committee of the Bolshevik Party on
February 25, the last before the revolution — openly calling for insurrec
tion. This leaflet ended with the words: "Ahead of us lies struggle,
but victory awaits us. Let everybody rally under the Red flags of the
revolution! Down with the tsarist monarchy!"
 
On February" 26, the Vyborg Side of Petrograd was entirely in the
hands of the insurgent workers. The Vyborg District Committee of
the Bolshevik Party called upon the workers to arm themselves by
seizing the arsenals and disarming the police. Meanwhile the workers
intensified their propaganda activities among the troops; they forced
their way into the barracks and called upon the soldiers to join them.
In the morning of February 26, some military units were still firing at
the people, but by noon the soldieis w'ere firing not at the people, but
at the mounted police who were attacking the workers. An important
part in winning the soldiers over to the side of the people was played
by the workingw'omen who ardently pleaded with the soldiers to help
the workers to overthrow the hated autocracy.
 
On February 27, the troops in Petrograd began to go over to the
side of the insurgents. Thg men of the Volhynsky and Lithuanian Regi
ments joined the workers in the Vyborg District. The workers captured
an arsenal containiug 40,000 rifles and armed themselves. Political
prisoners were liberated from the prisons.
 
General Khabalov proclaimed martial law in Petrograd, but the
tsarist authorities were no longer capable of checking the revolution.
The insurgent workers marched to the Taurida Palace, where the State
Duma met. During these daysRodzyanko, the President of the State
Duma, had been sending the tsar at General Headquarters in Mogilev
telegram after telegram begging him to make concessions to the people
and thus "save the country and the dynasty"; but the tsar regarded
the Duma as the principal hotbed of the resolution and therefore, on
February 26, had issued a decree dissolving the Duma. The members
of the Duma submitted to the tsar's decree, but they remained in the
Taurida Palace.
 
The tsar at General Headquarters continued to receive reassuring
telegrams from the tsaripa who was in the capital, "It is a hooligan
movement," the tsarina wrote, "young boys and girls are running about
and screaming that they have no bread — only to excite. ..." The
tsar ordered troops to be withdrawn from the front and sent to
Petrograd, but a troop train under the command of General Ivanov
scarcely managed to reach Tsarskoye Selo, near Petrograd, where
the soldiers fraternized with the revolutionary soldiers and want
ed to arrest the General. The tsar left General Headquarters
for Petrograd, but the royal train barely reached Dno, where it was obliged to turn and make ior Pskov, the Headquarters of the Northern Front.
 
Everywhere the troops went over to the side of the revolution.
 
==== The Dual Power ====
 
===== The Formation of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies =====
On February 27 (March 12 new style), the revolu
tion triumphed.
 
Armed workers and soldiers liberated political prisoners from
the prisons. The victorious workers and soldiers marched to the Taurida
Palace where the members of the dissolved Duma were gathered. Hardly
had the fighting ended than Comrade Molotov, member of the Russian
Bureau of the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, andved
a-t the palace.
 
The idea of Soviets lived on in the minds of the people ever since
the days of the 1905 revolution, and they put this idea into effect
immediately on the overthrow of tsarism. Even while fighting was
still in progress in the streets the workers in the factories and mills
were already electing their first Deputies to the Soviets. Comrade
Molotov sent Bolshevik soldiers to the various regiments of the
Petrograd garrison with instructions to organize the election of Depu
ties to the Soviet from each military unit.
 
Thus, unlike what occurred in 1905, when only Soviets of Workers'
Deputies were formed, in February 1917, a joint Soviet of Workers' and
Soldiers' Deputies was formed. The &st meeting of the Petrograd
Soviet took place in the evening of February 27.
 
The Petrograd Soviet and its Executive Committee proved to be
under the control of representatives of the compromising parties — ^the
Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries — ^who managed to secure
election while the Bolsheviks were in the streets leading the workers'
insurrection. Another factor that infiuencedthe elections was that most
of the leaders of the Bolshevik Party were still in prison or in exile.
Tsarism had tom the leaders of the Bolshevik Party out of the ranks of
the working class: Lenin was a political emigrant abroad, Stalin was
in exile in distant Siberia. The Mensheviks, however, had remained
at large, and posing as the champions of freedom they deceived the
workers and soldiers and got themselves elected to the Soviets as their
representatives. The rate of representation also helped the Mensheviks
and the Socialist-Revolutionaries to obtain a majority in the Soviets;
the rate of representation for large plants was one Deputy per 1,000
workers, but plants employing less than 1,000 workers could
also elect one Deputy. The result was that the big plants, where Bol
shevik influence was strongest, received only as many seats in the Soviet
as the small plants in which Menshevik influence predominated. The army units, wliicli consisted largely of peasants, elected mainly Socialist-Revolutionaries or their sympathizers to the Soviet.
 
===== The Provisional Committee of the State Duma =====
On February
27, after backstairs negotiations between the bourgeois members of
the Duma and the leaders of the Menshevik and Sooialist-Eevolutionary
parties, a Provisional Committee of the State Duma was set up, headed
by the President of the Fourth Duma, Eodzyanko. The latter en
tered into communication with General Headquarters with the view
to obtaining the consent of Nicholas II to the formation of a Cabinet
that would be responsible to the Duma. The bourgeoisie were still
trying to save the monarchy. As Comrade Stalin wrote in appraising
the stand that was taken by the bourgeoisie at the time of the Feb
ruary revolution, they "wanted a little revolution for a big war,"
The first thing the Provisional Committee of the State Duma did was
to issue an order to the troops to retmn to barracks immediately and
obey their officers. At a meeting of the Soviet of Workers' Deputies
the soldiers' representatives raised a protest against this order. Yield
ing to the pressure from the masses of soldiers the Soviet issued Or
der No. 1, which defined the rights of the revolutionary soldiers. It
provided for the elect'on of Soldiers' Committees in all units of the
Petrograd garrison, abolished the rule of addressing officers and gener
als as "Your Honour," "Your Excellency," etc., prohibited officers
from using the degrading form, "thou," in addressing soldiers, and
granted the latter the same political and civil rights as those enjoyed
by officers.
 
Order No. 1 was an important factor in organizing the revolu
tionary forces of the army and in finally swinging the soldiers at
the front to the side of the revolution.
 
===== The Revolution Victorious Throughout the Country =====
Follow
ing on the successful revolution in Petrograd, the revolution swept
in triumph over the whole country. On February 27, the Moscow or
ganization of t e Bolshevik Party called upon the workers and soldiers
in that city to support the revolution in Petrograd. In the morning
of February 28, the workers of the biggest plants came out on
strike and were joined by the soldiers of the Moscow garrison. In the
evening of March 1, the workers liberated imprisoned Bolsheviks.
Among these was F. E. Dzerzhinsky.
 
The victory of the revolution m Petrograd was the signal for
a revolt against tsarism also in the city of Nizhni Novgorod. The
workers of the Soxmovo and other plants started a general strike,
liberated political prisoners, disarmed the police and marched to
the barracks and fraternized with the soldiers.
 
On March 2, the workers employed at the small-arms and ammuni
tion factories in Tula rose in revolt, set up Soviets and arrested the
local tsarist authorities. Similar scenes occurred in February and Marcli all over Russia. As Lenin figuratively expressed it, the blood-and mud-stainerl cart
of the Eomanov monarchy was overturned at one stroke.
 
===== The Provisional Government =====
The revolution was brought
about by the workers and the peasants in soldier's uniform, but they
were robbed of the fruits of their victory. The Socialist-Eevolution
aries and the Mensheviks were of the opinion that the revolution was
already over and that the main thing now was to set up a '"normal"
bourgeois government. On the night of March 1, behind the backs of
the Bolsheviks, they reached an agreement with the members of the
Duma to form such a government. In the morning of March 2, the
appointment of a Provisional Government headed by Prince Lvov, a
big landlord, was announced. Among the members of this government
was Milyukov, leader of the Cadet Party, prof3ssor of history, who
was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs; Guchkov, leader of the
Octobrist Party, a manufacturer and banker, head of the War Indus
try Committees, who was appointed Minister of War and Marine;
Konovalov, member of the Progressive Party and textile mill ower,
was appointed Minister of Commerce and Industry; and the millionaire
sugar manufacturer Tereshchenko was appointed Minister of
Finance, Of the eleven Ministers only one was a "Socialist," the Peo
ple's Socialist (later Socialist-Revolutionary) Kerensky, a lawyer, who
received the minor post of Minister of Justice.
 
In his first "Letter from Afar," Lenin described this government
in the following words: "This government is not a fortuitous assem
blage of persons. They are representatives of the new class that has
risen to political power in Russia, the class of capitalist landlords
and bourgeoisie, the class that for a long time has been ruling our
country economically. ..." (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol.
ed., Vol. I, Moscow, 1947, p. 739.)
 
The first steps the new bourgeois government took were directed
towards saving the monarchy. Behind the back of the Petrograd So
viet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, Guchkov and Shulgin went
to the deposed tsar in Pskov, and in the name of the Provisional Govern
ment urged him to abdicate in favour of his son Alexei. The tsar con
sented to abdicate in favour of his brother Michael. The bourgeoisie
were willing to accept even this new tsar. On his return to Petrograd
Guchkov addressed a meeting of the workers in the railway workshops
and after reading the manifesto announcing the abdication of Tsar
Nicholas 11 he concluded with the cry: "Long live Emperor Mi
chael!" The indignant workers demanded Guchkov's immediate arrest.
"Horse-radish is no sweeter than radish," they said.
 
Realizing that it was impossible to save the monarchy, the Provi
sional Government sent a deputation to Michael Romanov to request
him to abdicate and transfer power to itself. On March 3, Michael Romanov signed iiis abdication, and in a manifesto to the people he called upon them to obey the Provisional Government.
 
===== The Class Nature of the Dual Power =====
At the very outset of the
revolution a dual power arose in the country; the dictatorship
of the bourgeoisie, rej)resented by the Provisional Govemment; and the
revolutionary-democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the
peasantry, represented by the Soviets of Deputies. Both these powers
existed side by side.
 
After victory was achieved over tsarism Soviets of Workers' Depu
ties were set up in all the towns of Russia, even in the most remote
parts of the country. Somewhat later, in the latter half of March,
Soviets of Peasants' Deputies began to spring up. At first, the Petro
grad Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies served as the all
Russian centre of the Soviets. The Soviets were virtually a second
government. They controlled the armed forces of the revolution.
Armed workers formed units of Red Guards. The Soviets enjoyed the
undivided confidence and support of the army and of the masses of
the working people. Nevertheless, the Soviets voluntarily surren
dered all state power to the bourgeoisie and its Provisional Government .
 
Lenin wrote the following: "The class origin and the class signifi
cance of this dual power consist inthe fact thab the Russian revolu
tion of March 1917 not only swept away the whole tsarist monarchy,
not. only transferred the entire power to the bourgeoisie, but also
approached very closely to the point of a revolutionary-democratic
dictatorship , of the proletariat ' and peasantry. The Petrograd
and the otW, the local, Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies
represent precisely such a dictatorship (that is, a government power
resting not on law but on the direct force of armed masses of the
population), a dictatorship precisely of the above-mentioned classes"
{V. I. Lenin, Selected Worlcs, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947,
pp. 27-28).
 
The existence of a dual power in 1917 was due to the fact that
Russia was a petty-bourgeois country. During the revolution, millions
of people who had had no previous experience in politics were awak
ened to political life, and this petty-bourgeois tide swept to the political
forefront the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary parties which
entered into a compromise with the bourgeoisie.
 
As a class, the bourgeoisie was better organized than the workers
and peasants, who had not had the same legal opportunities to organize
as the bourgeoisie had enjoyed. After 1906, and particularly during
the war, the capitalist class was able to build up for itself the machinery
of its future power, and it easily set this machinery in motion at the
time of the revolution.
 
During the war the petty-bourgeois stratum of the proletariat also
gained in strength as a consequence of the fact that numerous small property owners, handicraftsmen, shopkeepers and kulaks had poured into the factorit-s in order to escape military service. It was
this petty-bourgeois stratum of the workers, together with the small
"labour aristocracy," that served as the main prop of the Mensheviks
and the Sooialist-E.evolutionaries.
 
The politically mature and most class-conscious section of the
proletariat belonged to the Bolshevik Party; but during the war most
of these were either in prison, in exile, or at the front.
 
The vast masses of the workers, soldiers and peasants, formerly
downtrodden by tsarism, betrayed naive confidence in the Provisional
Government, which, they believed, had been created by the revolu
tion, and in the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks, who
were the worst enemies of peace and Socialism.
 
== The Great October Socialist Revolution ==
 
=== Preparations for the Great October Socialist Revolution ===
 
==== The Beginning of the Crisis of the Provisional Government ====
 
===== The Imperialist Policy of the Provisional Government =====
The
masses of the working people expected that the government which
came into power as a result of the revolution would put a stop to
the war, transfer the land to the peasants, introduce an 8-hour day
for the workers and take measures to combat hunger and economic
chaos. But, as Lenin wrote, the Provisional Government could "give
to the peoples of Russia (or to those nations to which we are bound
by the war) neither peace, nor bread, nor complete freedom. . .
 
(V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XX, Bk. I, New York, 1929, p. 24.)
 
The Provisional Government, which consisted of representatives
of the landlords and capitalists whose interests were bound up
with the war, had no intention of terminating the war. On the
contrary, it tried to utilize the revolution for the purpose of stimulat
ing military operations and of giving effect to the plans of the
imperialists.
 
Russia's British and French allies also demanded that the Provi
sional Government prosecute the war "to a victorious j&nish." The Brit
ish government recognized the Provisional Government on the condition
that it "remained faithful to the obligations undertaken by its prede
cessors." The French government sent the Provisional Government
a note wishing it success in its determination to prosecute the war
"honestly and tirelessly to a victorious finish," but made no mention
of official recognition.
 
With the assistance of the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolu
tionaries, the Provisional Government deceived the masses by assur
ing them that after the overthrow of tsarism the war had ceased to
be an imperialist war and was now a war for a free and democratic Russia. The bourgeois, landlord, Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary newspapers proclaimed in different keys that "without victory
at the front there can be no freedom."
 
The workers, soldiers and peasants, however, persistently demand
ed the termination of the hated war, and as a result of their pressure
the Petrograd Soviet on l\Iarch 14 issued an appeal to the peoples of
Europe calling for a "just democratic peace without annexations or
indemnities." This appeal did not, however, indicate any concrete
measures for the struggle for peace; it merely fostered the illusion
that an imperialist war can terminate with a "just peace" without
the overthrow of the imperialist governments. But even this compromise
appeal of the Soviet roused the protests of the Entente governments.
 
The Provisional Government hastened to assure the Allies of its
readiness to prosecute the war to a victorious finish. Eor the purpose
of continuing the war it floated a "Liberty Loan" to the amount of
6,000,000,000 rubles, and the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolution
aries supported this measure.
 
The bourgeois Provisional Government tried to preserve the old
order after the revolution; the land remained in the possession of the
landlords, and the factories in the possession of the capitalists. Protect
ing the interests of the employers, it refused to pass a law introducing
an 8-hour day; the workers instituted the 8-hour day on their own
accord. Protecting the interests of the landlords, the government, in
March, sent troops to the Kursk, Mogilev and Perm Gubernias to
suppress the incipient peasant movement there. In April it circulat
ed an order to Gubernia Commissar calling upon them to crush revolu
tionary actions of the peasants "by all means, including the calling
out of military forces." At the same time it passed a law on the
protection of grain fields, which provided for the payment of compensa
tion to landlords for damage caused by "popular unrest." The Ministry
of Agriculture, of which the Cadet Shingaryov was the head, set up
Conciliation Boards consisting of peasants and landlords for the
purpose of settling disputes between them "by voluntary agree
ment." The Provisional Government introduced no reforms what
ever; it postponed all reforms until the "convocation of the Con
stituent Assembly," which, however, it was in no hurry to con
vene.
 
The Provisional Government left intact the entire administrative
machinery of the old regime. The Provincial Governors were replaced
by Provincial Commissars, these posts being filled by chairmen
of gubernia and county Zemstvo Administrations, most of whom were
landlords and arrant monarchists. The Minister of Justice, the Social
ist-Revolutionary Kerensky, left all the tsarist procurators in their
posts. The former tsarist ministers and high government offieials contin
ued to receive huge pensions. Neither titles (prince, count, baron, etc.) nor tsarist decorations were abolished. The nobility continued to enjoy all their caste and property rights and privileges. The Provi
sional Government even tried to save the royal family by sending it
to England, and it was only the determined intervention of the workers
and soldiers that compelled the government to abandon this plan
and arrest the tsar.
 
The imperialist Provisional Government neither could nor would
give the people peace, land, bread and freedom; but a section of the
workers and a considerable section of the soldiers and peasants still
had confidence in the compromising parties — the Mensheviks and the
Socialist-Eevolutionaries — ^whioh called upon them to support the
Provisional Government. Lenin called these misguided people "honest
Defencists" as distinct from the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary"
leaders who deliberately advocated the continuation of the imperialist
war.
 
===== Lenin's April Theses =====
As a result of the victorious revolution
Russia, which only recently had been the most oppressed country in
the world, became a free country compared with other countries. The
masses of the people made full use of the democratic rights and the
freedom of speech, press, combination, demonstration and assembly
which they had won.
 
All over the country the workers set up factory committees and
formed trade unions; the peasants began to organize land committees;
in conformity with Order No. 1 the soldiers democratized the army.
To develop the revolution further, it was necessary to guide the activi
ties of these broad masses who had just been awakened to political
life and to help them to understand the situation that had arisen in
the country. This was the task that the Bolshevik Party set itself
after the victory of the Eebruary revolution.
 
On March 5, 1917, the first issue of the revived Bolshevik newspaper
Pravda appeared. On March 12, Comrade Stalin returned to Petrograd
from exile in Turukhansk, and on March 14, his first article on the
Soviets appeared in Pravda, In this article Comrade Stalin urged that
the Soviets should be strengthened in every way as the organs of the
revolutionary power of the people. The change from •underground to
legal conditions caused semi-Menshevik wavering among some of the
members of the Bolshevik Party. Thus, Kamenev, on his return to Petro
grad, took the Menshevik stand of supporting the Provisional Govern
ment and the policy it pursued. But the Petrograd Bolsheviks, headed
by Comrade Stalin, strongly combated the attempts of Kamenev and
his group to divert the Party to the path of opportunism.
 
The entire Party eagerly awaited the return to Russia of the leader
of the revolution, V. I. Lenin.
 
Lenin was an exile in Switzerland when he received the newsoftho
second revolution in Russia. He wanted to return home at once, but the imperialist governments of Prance and Great Britain put every obstacle in his way. From this "accursed afar" as he called it, he closely
watched the development of events in Russia, and in letters to com
rades and articles in Pravda (his "Letters from Afar") indicated to
the Party the fundamental tasks of the proletariat in the revolu
tion.
 
It was not until April 3 (16), 1917, that Lenin succeeded, after
overcoming great difficulties, in returning to Pi,ussia. At Byelo-Ostrov,
near Petrograd, he was met by Comrade Stalin . Thousands and thousands
of workers, soldiers and sailors assembled at the Finland Railway Sta
tion in Petrograd to welcome the beloved leader of the revolution. The
station square and the adjoining streets were crammed with people
and scores of Red flags bearing the inscription "Welcome to Lenin"
fluttered in the light of flaming torches. On his appearance outside the
station Lenin was greeted with thunderous cheers. Mounting an ar
moured car he delivered a brief speech of greeting which he concluded
with the cry: "Lo7ig live the Socialist EevolutionV^
 
In the morning of April 4, Lenin attended a meeting of Bolsheviks
at which he expounded his theses entitled "The Tasks of the
Proletariat in the Present Revolution." These were Lenin's celebrated
April Theses.
 
In these theses Lenin emphasized that "the specific feature of
the present situation in Russia is that it represents a transition from
the first stage of the revolution — ^which . . . placed the power in the
hands of the bourgeoisie — to the second stage, which must place the power
in the hands of the proletariat and the poorest strata of the peasantry"
(V. I. Lenin, Selected WorJcs, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. 11, Moscow, 1947,
 
p. 18).
 
The Bolshevik Party came to the new stage with the plan for
developing the bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist
revolution which Lenin had worked out as far back as 1906. It
launched its struggle for the new stage of the revolution on the basis
of Lenin's theory that Socialism could be victorious in a single
country. Formerly, Social-Democrats had regarded the parliamen
tary democratic republic as the best political form for the transition
to Socialism; now, however, Lenin proposed that the demand for a
democratic republic should be superseded by the demand for a Soviet
republic. In his theses he proclaimed the slogan: "A republic of Soviets
of Workers', Agricultural Labourers' and Peasants' Deputies through
out the coimtry, from top to bottom." As regards the Provisional
Government he proclaimed the slogan: "No support for the Provisional
Government."
 
In his theses Lenin also put forward the demand for the confisca
tion of the landlords' estates and the nationalization of all the land,
the immediate merging of all the •banks in one national bank to be controlled by the Soviets of Workers' Deputies, and
the immediate institution
of Soviet control over the
social production and distri
bution of products.
 
Another of Lenin 's pro
posals was that the Bolshe
vik Party should drop the
name of Social-Democratic
Party, which had been dis
credited and disgraced by
tfe opportunists, traitors to
Socialism, and adopt the
name of Communist Party,
as Marx and Engels had
called the proletarian party.
 
By adopting this name
the Party emphasized that
its ultimate goal was
Communism.
 
Lenin also set the task
of forming a neWj Third, Communist International.
 
Kamenev, Rykov and the other opportunists who were opposed
to the transition to the socialist revolution joined the Mensheviks in
opposing Lenin's theses. The entire Party, however, unanimously adopt
ed Lenin's theses which outlined a masterly plan of the party s'
struggle for the transition from the bourgeois-democratic revolution to
the socialist revolution.
 
Lenin's April Theses served as the basis for all the decisions that
were adopted by the Seventh All-Russian Conference of the Bolshevik
Party that was held in April 1917 (hence known as the April Con
ference). At this conference Kamenev, Rykov and Zinoviev opposed
Lenin's plan for the development of the bourgeois-democratic into
a socialist revolution. They repeated the Menshevik argument that
Russia had not yet matured for a socialist revolution, and that only
bourgeois rule could be established. The conference, however, supported
Lenin's theses and denounced the enemies of Socialism.
 
The conference adopted a resolution demanding that the landlords'
estates be confiscated and placed at the disposal of the Peasant Com
mittees,
 
Comrade Staliir delivered a report on the national question in
which he substantiated the Bolshevik program demands for the right
of nations to self-determination, including the right to secede and form independent states. Pyatakov, who, with Bukharin, had taken a national-chauvinist stand during the imperialist war, opposed grant
ing nations the right to self-determination. Pollowing the lead of
Lenin and Stalin, the conference rebuffed this attempt at the oppor
tunist revision of the Party's program on the national question. In
the speech he delivered at the conference, Lenin advanced the slogan
of "All power to the Soviets." The fact that the Party put forward this
slogan meant that it was setting out to abolish the dual power and to
secure the transfer of all power to the Soviets. The fulfilment of
this slogan would mean expelling the representatives of the landlords
and capitalists from the organs of power.
 
The Apxil Confeience was of tremendous significance in the his
tory of the Bolshevik Party. It headed the Party for the fight to
develop the bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolu
tion, for the fight for the dictatorship of the proletariat.
 
===== The April Crisis =====
The Bolsheviks did not at this time call upon
the masses immediately to overtlirow the Px'ovisional Government,
in so far as it was still supported by the Soviets. They set out to win
a majority in the Soviets, which were controlled by the Mensheviks and
Socialist-Revolutionaries and through the Soviets to bring about chan
ges in the composition and the policy of the Provisional Government.
The propaganda of the Bolshevik Party and experience itself soon
helped the workers and soldiers to realize tliat the bourgeois Provision
al Government was deceiving them on the most vital question, namely,
the question of the war.
 
On April 18 (May I new style), when huge May Day demonstra
tions were taking place all over the country in support of universal
peace, Milyukov, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, sent a note to the
Allies in which he pledged the Provisional Government "to continue
the war until a decisive victory is achieved" and promised that the
Provisional Government would honour to the full the obligations
undertaken towards the Allies.
 
When, on April 19, Milyukov's note became known to the workers
and soldiers it caused profound indignation among them.
 
On April 20, the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party called
upon the working people to protest against the Provisional Govern
ment's imperialist policy. In the morning of that day the "Finland"
Regiment marched to the Mariinsky Palace, where the Provisional
Government was sitting, carrying the slogan: "Down with the policy
of conquest!" Late in the afternoon columns of workers marched
to the palace carrying banners on which were inscribed; "All power
to the Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies!", "Down with
the war!"
 
On April 20 and 21 (May 3 and 4) over 100,000 people
took part in the protest demonstration against the 'Provisional Government's imperialist policy. The bourgeoisie in their turn organized a demonstration of armed officers, cadets^
university students and shopkeepers who carried the slogan:
'<nowiki>"</nowiki>Confidence in the Provisional Government!" General Kornilov,
Commander of the Petrograd Military Area, issued an order to
the troops to fire on the demonstrating working people, but the
soldiers refused to obey the order of this counter-revolutionary
general.
 
The April demonstration showed that the masses were beginning
to waver in their confidence towards the Provisional Government and
the compromising parties, but that it was still premature to set the
task of immediately overthrowing the Provisional Government.
 
The April demonstration of the masses signified a crisis of the
Prov'-sional Government. When the bourgeoisie saw that they
would be unable to secure complete power through the medium of
the Cadet and Octobrist Ministers, they resorted to a manoeuvre: they
removed from the government the ministers that were most hateful to
the people and agreed to the appointment of several representatives of
the compromising parties to posts in the government.
 
On May 2, Milyukov and Guchkov were removed from the Provi
sional Government. The reorganized government consisted of represent
atives of the bourgeoisie and a number of Mensheviks and Social ist
Pevolutionaries . Thus, V. M. Chernov, the head of the Socirlist
Revolutionary Party, became Minister of Agriculture, the Menshevik
Tsereteli became Minister of Post and Telegraph, the Menshevik
Skobelev became Minister of Labour. That was Low the first coalition
Provisional Government was made up. The entry of Mensheviks and
Socialist-Revolutionaries into the coalition government signified the
open desertion of the compromising parties to the camp of the
coxmter-revolutionary bourgeoisie.
 
As Lenin wrote: "The bourgeoisie has begun to use them [the
compromisers] as its oat's paw; it has started doing such things through
them as it could never have done without them" (V. I. Lenin, Collected
Works, Vol. XX, Bk. 2, New York, 1929, p. 230).
 
The policy of the coalition government differed in no way from
that of the Milyukov and Guchkov government. The '^Socialist" Minis
ters acted in conformity with the instructions of the imperialist bour
geoisie. The Socialist-Revolutionary Kerensky, who took Guchkov's
place as Minister of War, on the demand of the Entente began to
prepare for an offensive. The Socialist-Revolutionarj" Chernov, the
Minister of Agriculture, ordered stronger measures to be taken to
combat the seizure of the landlords' land by the peasants. The Men
shevik Minister of Labour, Skobelev, while helping the capital
ists, called upon the workers to display "self-denial" and complained
that their "wages were too high." The People's Socialist Peshekhonov, Minister of Food, in every way protected the landlords and kulaks, who were proiiteering in grain, and dared not put into effect the law
introducing a state grain monopoly which had been passed in March.
Casting off all restraint, the landlords and the kulaks even sabotaged
the census of grain stocks in the country which had been ordered.
Profiteering in grain assumed vast proportions.
 
==== The June Crisis ====
 
===== The June Demonstration =====
Tlie policy directed against the in
terests of the people that was pursued by the coalition government
showed that the petty-bourgeois Menshevik and Socialist-Revolu
tionary parties had become the most important social prop of impe
rialism in Russia. Hence, the exposure and isolation of these compro
misers became the fundamental aim in the activities of the Bolsheviks.
 
As Comrade Stalin wrote: "Naturally, the Bolsheviks at that time
directed their main blows at these parties, for unless these parties were
isolated, there could be no hope of a rupture between the labouring
masses and imperialism, and unless this rupture was ensured, there
could he no hope of the Soviet revolution achieving victory" (J. Stalin,
Problems of Leninism^ Moscow, 1945, pp. 112-113).
 
In pursuance of the decisions of the April Conference, the Bolshevik
Party launched an extensive campaign to explain the Bolshevik
slogans and to expose the policy of the Mensheviks and Socialist
Revolutionaries. The effect of this was that the workers began to
carry through new elections of the Soviets, out of which they swept
the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary Deputies, replacing
them by Bolsheviks.
 
The Bolsheviks also ousted the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Rev
olutionaries from posts in the trade union organizations, particularly
in the factory committees. On May 30 (June 12), the first conference
of factory committees was held in Petrograd at which three-fourths of
the delegates voted for the Bolsheviks.
 
Indicative of the growth of Bolshevik influence among the masses
were the letters to Lenin and to Pravdu that were sent from villages,
factories and the trenches. "Comrade, friend Lenin," wrote the sol
diers to Lenin, "remember that we soldiers are prepared to a man to
follow you anywhere, and that your ideas truly express the will of
the peasants and workers." The growth of political consciousness among
the workers and soldiers was exceptionally rapid in Petrograd.
 
In the provinces the liberation of the masses from the
influence of the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries was
slower. This is shown by the fact that of the 1,000 delegates who
assembled at the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets that was
held in June 1917, only 105 were Bolsheviks. But even though in the minority, the Bolsheviks were successful in exposing the
compromising policy of the
Mensheviks and the Socialist
Revolutionaries .
 
The main item on the agen
da of this congress was the ques
tion of the attitude to be taken
towards the coalition Provision
al Government. The Menshevik
Tsereteli tried to scare the con
gress by stating that the rev
olution would be doomed if
the coalition with the bourgeoi
sie were abandoned. "There is
no political party in Russia at
the present time," he said,
 
"that would express its readi
ness to take entire power upon
itself." Lenin at once shouted
from his seat: "There is such
a party!" And then, mounting
the platform, he said: "I say
there is! . . . Our party does
not refuse it; it is prepared at
any moment to take over entire power" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works,
Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, pp. 59-60).
 
Lenin strongly denounced the compromising policy that w^aa
pursued by the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries, who
were helping to prolong the war and assisting the bourgeoisie in
every way, and he concluded his speech with the demand that all
power be transferred to the Soviets.
 
While the congress was in session the Bolsheviks were making
preparations for a demonstration of Petrograd workers and soldiers
under the slogans of "All power to the Soviets!", "Down with the ten
capitalist Ministers!", "Bread, peace and freedom!" Dreading the
growing influence of the Bolsheviks, the Menshevik and Socialist
Revolutionary leaders of the congress secured the passage of a resolu
tion prohibiting all demonstrations for three days. At the same time
the Executive Committee of the Petrograd Soviet called for a general
demonstration on June 18, with the intention of making its
watchword "Confidence in the Provisional Government!" The
compromisers anticipated that th*s would l^e a patriotic demonstration
to mark the launching of the offensive at the front. The Bolsheviks
called upon the workers and soldiers to join in this demonstration, but to inscribe Bolshevik slogans on their banners. Over four hundred thousand workers took part in the demonstration.
 
Comrade Stalin described this demonstration in Pravda in the
following words: "A bright sumiy day. An endless string of demon
strators. From morning to night the procession moves towards the
Field of Mars. An endless forest of banners . ... A feature that struck
the eye: not a single mill, not a single factory, not a single regiment
displayed the slogan 'Confidence in the Provisional Government!'
Even the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Eevolutionaries forgot (or rather
did not dare) to display this slogan. . . . Only three groups had the
courage to display the slogan of confidence, but even they found causo to
regret it. These were a group of Cossacks, the * Bund' group, and Plekha
nov's Yediifistm group. *The Holy Trinity! ' the workers on the Field of
Mars ironically called them. Two of them (the Bund and the Yedinstvo)
were compelled by the workers and soldiers to furl their banners amidst
cries of 'Down with them! ' The Cossacks refused to furl their banner,
so it was torn to shreds. And one anonymous banner of 'confidence'
stretched 'in mid-air' across the entrance to the Field of Mars was
tom down by a group of soldiers and workers amid the approving
comments of the public: 'Confidence in the Provisional Government
is hanging in mid-aiP^ (Lenin and Stalin^ 1917, Selected Writings
and Speeches, Russ, ed., pp. 156-157).
 
Thus, the demonstration of June 18, turned into a demon
stration of no confidence in the Provisional Government. It served as an index of the growing revolutionary spirit of the workers
and soldiers of Petrograd, of
their readiness to fight for the
Bolshevik slogans. It was a de
feat for the Menshevik and So
cialist-Revolutionary parties
which supported the Pj ovisional
Government.
 
===== The June Offensive =====
On the demand of the Brit
ish and French imperialists,
the Provisional Government prepared to launch an offensive at
 
the front. In April 1917, the United States entered the World
War, but considerable time was required to transport the Amer
ican troops to the theatre of war. The governments of the Entente
countries wanted at all costs to keep the Russian Front active in order
to prevent the Germans from transferring troops to the Western Front,
and they threatened to deprive the Provisional Government of loans
and subsidies if it did not immediately launch an offensive and so
draw German troops away from the Western Front. In addition, the
Russian bourgeoisie saw in an offensive the only way of putting a stop to
the revolution. They calculated that if it failed they could throw the
blame on the Soviets and the Bolsheviks and crush them,
 
Kerensky, the Minister of War, speeded up the preparations for
the offensive. Troop trains carrying reinforcements and trains loaded
with ammunition and supplies were sent to the front lines, and Keren
sky himself toured the different fronts haranguing the soldiers
and urging them to fight. That was why the soldiers dubbed him
"Persuaderin-Ohief. "
 
The offensive was launched on June 18, and at first proceeded
successfully, particularly in the case of the Eighth Army, which pierced
the Austrian Front and moved its divisions into the breach, A few
days later, however, the offensive petered out. Reinforcements arrived
slowly, and the army command w'as unable to develop the first suc
cesses. The offensive came to a halt.
 
Shortly afterwards the Austro-German troops launched a counter
offensive, inflicted defeat on the Russian army at Tarnopol and forced
it to beat a rapid retreat. During the ten days of the ' offensive
the Russian Southwestern Front lost about 60,000 men. War
weariness and discontent among the troops, their desire for peace,
and their distrust of and downright enmity towards the counter-revo
lutionary officers were factors which contributed to the failure of
the offensive.
 
==== The National-Liberation Movement of the Oppressed Nationalities in Russia after the Overthrow of Tsarism ====
 
===== The Provisional Government's National Policy =====
After it came
into power the imperialist bourgeoisie pursued the same great-power
policy of national oppression in the non-Russian regions as that pursued by tsarism, for it regarded the maintenance of its rule over the
non-Bussian regions as one of the bases of its economic and political
power. Backed by the petty-bourgeois parties, the Provisional Gov
ernment advanced the old tsarist slogan of "Russia, united and in
divisible,^' but covered it with the flag of "revolutionary democracy."
 
The Provisional Government met with hostility every attempt
at self-determination on the part of the nations, and called upon all
the oppressed peoples in Russia to wait until the Constituent
Assembly decided their fate. It made an exception only in the case
of Poland by adopting an official decision recognizing her independ
ence; but Poland had been occupied by German troops since 1915,
 
The movement for national liberation in the former tsarist colo
nies grew with increasing intensity in 1917,
 
Comrade Stalin wrote: "'Abolish national oppression' was the
slogan of the movement. In a trice, 'all-national' institutions sprang
up all over the border regions of Russia, The movement was headed
by the national, bourgeois-democratic intelligentsia, 'National Coun
cils' in Latvia, the Estonian Region, Lithuania, Georgia, Armenia,
Azerbaijan, the Caucasus, Kirghizstan and the Middle Volga Region;
the 'Rada' in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia; the 'Sfatul Tsarii' in
Bessarabia; the 'Kurultai' in the Crimea and in Bashkiria; the 'Auton
omous Government' in Turkestan — such were the 'all-national' in
stitutions around which the national bourgeoisie rallied its forces"
(J . Stalin, Marxism and the National and Colonial Question^ Moscow,
1940, p. 60).
 
The bourgeois nationalist intelligentsia tried to capture the leader
ship of the growing national movement and to take advantage of
the February revolution to form "their own" national states.
 
The national bourgeoisie in the border regions, however, demanded
not secession from Russia, but national autonomy within the Russian
state, with the bourgeois government of which they hoped they
could reach agreement.
 
===== The Provisional Government's Conflict with Finland =====
In the beginning of March 1917, the Provisional Govermnent issued a decree restoring the tsarist Constitution in Finland. Shortly after
that a coalition Senate was set up in that country, consisting of six
Social-Democrats and six representatives of the bourgeoisie. This
Senate was to act as the government. The Finnish Sejm, which had been elected in 1916, was convened. But actually, neither the Sejm nor the Senate were given any power. The Provisional Government
sent a Commissioner to Finland and refused to recognize her independ
ence.
 
Finnish army officers opened negotiations with Wilhelm II with
the object of obtaining his assistance in severing Finland from Russia.
The Finnish bourgeoisie hoped with the assistance of the German
imperialists not only to separate Finland from Russia, but also to
launch a civil war against the Finnish workers. In the guise of
athletic clubs they began to form reactionary "maintenance of order
squads."
 
The Finnish proletariat were emphatically opposed to an alliance
with German imperialism against Russia, where tsarism had .been
overthrown, and ardently supported the Russian revolution.
 
In the endeavour to achieve Finland's independence, the Finnish
Sejm, in July, passed a law defining the supreme powers of the Sejm.
In retaliation to this, the Provisional Government, following the
example of the tsarist government, dissolved the Sejm.
 
The Bolsheviks headed by Lenin and Stalin denounced the im
perialist policy of the Provisional Government and demanded
recognition of Finland's right to self-determination, including
secession.
 
===== Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia after the February Revolution =====
By the beginning of 1917, the greater part of Lithuania was oc
cupied by German troops. At a conference of representatives of Lith
uanian kulaks, landlords and the bourgeoisie that was held in Vilna,
a Taryba, or National Council, was formed. The German authorities
tried to convert the Taryba into an obedient tool of their own,
and wishing to entrench themselves in Lithuania they played up to the
Lithuanian bourgeoisie and promised to recognize the independence
of Lithuania if she officially seceded from Russia.
 
A considerable part of Latvia was also occupied by German troops
during the world wa^r. Latvia was the most capitalistically-developed
of the Baltic countries. The war had caused it great devastation. The
Northern Front ran through Latvia; more than half the country
was furrowed with trenches and affected by military operations.
The crops were destroyed, and cattle breeding had declined.
The commercial and economic life of the country was almost
at a standstill and industry was severely damaged. On the
outbreak of the war a number of the plants, and the workers employed
in them, were evacuated to the interior of Russia, and after Latvia
was occupied by the Germans the rest of the industrial plants were
either wrecked or transported to Germany. The conditions of the masses
of the working people were extremely hard during the occupation.
Relying on the support of the Latvian barons, the German imperialists aimed at converting Latvia into a German duchy. But even in the imocciipied part of Latvia the workers and peasants suffered a
great deal from the effects of the war and from exploitation by the
tsarist authorities and the local landlords and capitalists.
 
Consequently, the February bourgeois-democratic revolution in
Russia was welcomed with great rejoicing in Latvia. A movement
for national liberation sprang uij in the country, but the Latvian bour
geoisie, who were dependent upon the Russian market, counted on
the Provisional Government granting Latvia autonomy, and there
fore did not strive for the independance of that country. At the begin
ning of the revolution a kulak party which called itself the Peasant
Union was fonned, and in the middle of March 1917, this Peasant
Union convened a National Assembly, which passed a resolution de
manding Latvian autonomy within the Russian state. The Provision
al Govermnent, however, gave a hostile reception even to this mod
est demand.
 
The policy which the Provisional Government pursued agamst
the interests of the people roused discontent among the masses of the
Latvian working people. A conference of representatives of the Lettish
Eifle Regiment passed a Bolshevik resolution condemning the Provi
sional Government's policy and the imperialist war. A congress of
landless peasants that was held at about the same time passed a reso
lution demanding the confiscation of landlord and church land. The
masses demanded the transfer of all power to the Soviets.
 
Estonia, situated near Petrograd, was the first of the Baltic coun
tries to secure autonomy; the Provisional Government passed a law
granting that country self-government in April 1917. Not
withstanding this, however, the government continued to pursue the
old policy of Russification, In the summer of 1917, a National As
sembly consisting of representatives of the Estonian bourgeoisie,
landlords and kulaks, was convened in Eevel. After securing a few
political rights for the Estonian bourgeoisie this National Assembly
entered into a compromise with the Provisional Government. The
masses of the working people of Estonia were discontented with the
compromising policy pursued by the propertied classes and began to
go over to the Bolsheviks and demand the transfer of all power to the
Soviets.
 
===== The Ukrainian Central Rada and the Provisional Government =====
The Provisional Government also very strongly opposed the movement
for national liberation in the Ukraine. In the beginning of April 1917,
the Ukrainian bourgeois and petty-bourgeois nationalist parties set
up in' Kiev a Ukrainian Central Rada, or Council. The largest and most
influential party in the Rada was the Ukrainian Socialist-Rev
olutionary Party. The Rada had the support of the village kulaks. The
leading members of the Rada were Grushevsky, Vinnichenko andPetliura. In the beginning of June, the Central E,ada issued an address to the Ukrainian people, proclaiming the autonomy of the Ukraine.
The petty-bourgeois Central Eada did not dare to go to the
length of a rupture with the Provisional Government, as it feared to
remain alon3, face to face with the revolutionary masses of workers
and peasants; it therefore sought a compromise with the Russian bour
geoisie. On the other hand, the Provisional Government needed the
support of the Ukrainian bourgeoisie during the offensive, and it
therefore sent four Ministers, headed by Kerensky, to negotiate with
the Eada.
 
The upshot of these negotiations was that in the summer of 1917,
a new administrative body consisting of representatives of the Central
Eada was set up in Kiev. This body was known as the General Secre
tariat, and its ftinction was to co-operate with the Provisional Govern
ment's Commissioner in the Ukraine as the representative of the
supreme authority. The final settlement of the political structure of
the Ukraine was put off until the Constituent Assembly.
 
Lenin was of the opinion that the demand for Ukrainian autonomy
was 'Very modest and very legitimate." The Bolsheviks denounced
both the great-power policy pursued by the imperialist Provisional
Government and the compromising policy of the Central Eada, and
called upon the Ukrainian workers and peasants to fight jointly with
the Russian workers and peasants against the imperialist bourgeoisie
for the dictatorship of the proletariat.
 
===== The Byelorussian Central Rada =====
In the middle of March 1917,
the First Congress of Byelorussian nationalist parties and organiza
tions was held in Minsk. These bodies were united in the Byelo
russian National Committee headed by the landlord Skirmunt. In
June 1917, this committee convened a congress of representatives of
Byelorussian bourgeois and petty-bourgeois parties at which the Byelo
russian Central Eada was formed. Under cover of national slogans,
the nationalists tried to keep the Byelorussian workers and peasants
out of the revolutionary struggle, but at the same time they expressed
readiness to organize the administration of Byelorussia "in co-opera
tion with the Provisional Government." Like the bourgeois national
ists everywhere, those in Byelorussia concluded an alliance with the
bourgeoisie of the dominant, Russian nation for the purpose of combat
ing the revolutionary movement.
 
The Byelorussian Bolsheviks strongly combated the Byelorussian
Central Eada. An exceptionally important part in this struggle against
the bourgeois nationalists was played by M. V. Frunze, who was then
at the head of the Executive Committee of the Soviet of Peasants'
Deputies; at the First Congress of Peasants' Deputies of the Minsk and
Vilna Gubernias he exposed the counter-revolutionary nature of the
Byelorussian nationalists. The Bolsheviks established closer contacts with the front and the rural districts of Byelorussia, gained influence there and roused the B 3 "elorussian workers, peasants and soldiers to
the fight, with the slogans of the self-determination of nations and the
conversion of the land into the property of the people.
 
===== The Transcaucasian Committee and the "National Councils" =====
After the February revolution the leading position in Transcaucasia
was held hy the Georgian Mensheviks. Like the bourgeoisie and the
landlords, it was their aim to preserve the bourgeois system. When they
received the telegram announcing the overthrow of tsarism they kept
it from the masses, but hastened to express their loyalty to the Vice
roy of the Caucasus, the Grand Duke Nicholas. The old tsarist ad
ministration was allowed to remain intact. To govern Transcaucasia
the Provisional Government set up a Special Transcaucasian Commit
tee (pzahom) consisting of local bourgeois nationalists and Mensheviks.
The leading position in this committee was held by the Georgian
Mensheviks.
 
The Georgian Mensheviks, the Armenian Dashnaoks and the Azer
baijanian Mussavatists called upon the peasants to refrain from
"unauthorized action" and wait until the land question was settled
by the All-Russian Constituent Assembly. To organize their forces
and to conduct a struggle for power, the Transcaucasian bourgeoisie
set up National Councils, which fought against the movement for
national liberation of the Caucasian people being transformed into
a mass revolutionary struggle against imperialism.
 
The Bolsheviks were the only party to fight for the complete abo
lition of national oppression in Transcaucasia and to demand a com
plete rupture with the imperialist policy that was being pursued by
the Provisional Government.
 
===== The Provisional Government's Policy in Central Asia =====
On March 2, 1917, the railwaymen in Tashkent received the news of the
overthrow of the tsar and thereupon elected a Soviet of Workers'
Deputies; but the tsarist Governor General Kuropatkin, who had
crashed the popular movement in 1916, remained in power. At the
end of March, Kuropatkin was removed on the demand of
the workers and soldiers. But it was not until the middle of April that
the tsarist authorities were replaced by the Turkestan Committee,
a body representing the bourgeois Provisional Government.
 
The national movement in Central Asia was led by the reactionary
Moslem clergy. The dekhans (peasants) were downtrodden and igno
rant and still believed the hai and mullahs. In the towns, however »
the Moslem workers and other poor strata set up their Soviets of
Moslem Working People. In most cases these Soviets were organized
by Russian workers and soldiers, and also by active participants in
the insurrection of 1916 who returned home from exile.
 
In Khiva and Bukhara the old feudal rulers, the Khan and the Emir, remained in power after the February revolution. The Provisional Government sent a Commissar to Khiva who acted hand in hand
with the lOian. In Bukhara, the working people demanded the limi
tation of the power of the Emir. Fearing a popular insurrection, the
representative of the Provisional Government in Bukhara advised the
Emir to issue a manifesto promising reforms, but shortly afterwards
the Emir, with the knowledge of the Provisional Government, arrested
and executed the advocates of reform.
 
Thus, the peoples of Central Asia failed to achieve either social
or national liberation as a result of the February revolution.
 
Not only that. In Turkmenia the Provisional Government con
tinued, until it was overthrown, the punitive policy which the tsarist
government had pursued against the Yomuds, who rose in revolt
in 1916.
 
==== The July Crisis ====
 
===== The Demonstration of July 3–5 =====
The war was costing the
country 40,000,000 rubles per day. To cover this expenditure the gov
ernment issued a huge quantity of paper currency, the value of which
steadily dropped while the cost of living rose. There was a shortage
of raw materials and fuel for industry and of bread for the workers.
The transport system was completely dislocated. Factories and mills
closed down. In May, 108 plants employing 8,700 workers, in June, 125
plants employing 38,465 workers and in July, 206 plants employing
47,754 workers were closed. Iron and steel output dropped 40 per cent
and textiles 20 per cent. Unemployment grew. The strike movement
spread. The workers demanded an 8-hour day and higher wages. An
agrarian revolution began to sweep the country. By July, 43 out
of the 69 gubernias in the country were affected by peasant un
rest; the peasants seized the landlords* land and set fire to their man
sions. The movement of the workers and peasants was warmly welcomed
in the army. The soldiers, war weary and enraged by the continuation
of the war, threatened to leave the trenches and go home. The masses
of the people became more and more convinced that the Provisional
Government was deceiving them. The news of the launching of the
offensive and of its subsequent failure roused a storm of indignation
among the workers and soldiers in Petrograd.
 
At the end of June the situation in Petrograd became exceptionally
strained. In this situation the bourgeois parties called upon the Pro
visional Government to take determined measures to crush the revo
lutionary workers and soldiers of Petrograd, The government decided
to get rid of the revolutionary garrison of Petrograd and with this
object sent larger contingents of the garrison to the front on the pre
text that the units there needed reiuforceinents. In order to exert
pressure on the compromising parties and to force them to agree at last to the formation of a "strong government" the Cadets, on July 2, resigned from the government and thereby created a governmental
crisis.
 
The failure of the offensive, the govermnental crisis, and the pro
vocative tactics of the bourgeois parties and organizations, filled the
eup of bitterness of the workers and soldiers of Petrograd to overflow.
 
^ ing, and on July 3 (16), individual regiments and the workers of dif
ferent factories demonstrated in the streets. Soon these demonstra
tions grew into a general armed demonstration under the slogan of
"All power to the Soviets!"
 
The Bolshevik Party was of the opinion that to seize power at that
moment would be premature. Lenin and Stalin pointed out that the
Bolsheviks could easily capture power in Petrograd but would be
unable to hold it as they did not yet have a majority in the Soviets
throughout the country. In spite of these warnings, however, on
July 3, the Pirst Machine-Gun Begiment came out in full fighting kit
and marched to the Bolshevik headquarters. On the way other regi
ments, and also units of the workers' Red Guard, joined the Machine
Gun Regim nt. At 11 o'clock at night the workers of the Putilov
Plan came into the street. The demonstration assumed a mass charac
ter. When it became evident that this spontaneous demonstration
could not be stopped the Bolsheviks decided to take the lead of it
in order to keep it within peaceful and organized bounds, so as to
give the bourgeoisie no opportunity for provoking the workers and
soldiers to premature action with the object of crushing them.
 
In the morning of Jul}?^ 4, no less than 500,000 workers partici
pated in the demonstration. Strikes closed the . factories and mills.
Ninety delegates, representing all the factories and regiments in the
city, went to the Taurida Palace where the Central Executive Com
mittee that was elected by the First Congress of Soviets was in session,
and demanded that the All-Russian Central Executive Committee
should proclaim the transfer of 'power to the Soviets,
 
Meanwhile, the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries fe
verishly mustered troops for the purpose of suppressing the demon
stration. Cossack units were called in from the front. In the evening
of July 4, detachments of army cadets and Cossacks opened fire on the
demonstrators. On July 5 demonstrators were still being fired
on. After suppressing the demonstration of the workers and
soldiers, the counter-revolutionaries attacked the Bolshevik Party.
The editorial offices of Pmvda were raided and wrecked and all the
Bolshevik newspapers were suppressed. A detachment of cadets ar
rived at Lenin's lodgings with the object of arresting him and searched
the premises. Foreseeing this, Comrade Stalin had opportunely ar
ranged for Lenin's departure from Petrograd. After shaving off his
beard and moustaches and disguising himself as a Finnish peasant.
 
Lenin safely reached Raz
liv Station on the Ses
troretsk E,ailway, where
for several weeks he lived
in a shack on the shore
of a lake, hiding from
the spies of the Provi
sional Government.
 
The bourgeoisie were
determined to crush the
rising proletarian revolu
tion, and with this object
the authorities arrested
a number of prominent
Bolsheviks and wrecked
the printing plant where
the Party publications
were printed. The Bol
shevik Party became semi
illegal. The government
instituted proceedings
against Lenin on the
charge of "high treason"
and of organizing an
armed insurrection.
 
Rykov, Kamenev and
Trotsky, the masked ene
mies of the revolution,
demanded that Lenin should attend the court, but Stalin emphatically opposed this
treacherous proposal and warned that "the cadets will not
bring Lenin to the prison, they will kill him on the way." It
was proved subsequently that Stalin was right: the cadets had actu
ally received instructions to kill Lenin, ostensibly "while attempting
to escape." Thus, Comrade Stalin saved the life of the great leader
of the working people for the benefit of mankind.
 
The events of July 3-5 marked the third political crisis in
the country. As in the first two crises — in April and in June — the
cause of the third crisis was, as Lenin put it "... the overflowing
dissatisfaction of the masses, their indignation against the bourgeoisie
and ifs government" {Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and
Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 203), The July events marked the turning
point in the process of the development of the bourgeois revolution
into a socialist revolution. During the July events the Menshevik and
the Socialist-Revolutionary leaders, in conjunction with the monarchist generals, organized the shooting down of the workers' and soldiers' demonstration; and the All-Riissian Central Executive Committee,
which was controlled by the Socialist-Revolutionaries and Mensheviks,
even issued a special order authorizing the Socialist-Revolutionaries
Gotz and Avksentyev to assist General Polovtsev to "restore order."
 
After the July events the political situation in the country changed.
The Soviets lost the confidence of the masses and became impotent.
The dual power was superseded by the sole power of the bourgeoisie.
Appraising the situation in the country at the time, Lenin vTote: "A
peaceful development of the Russian revolution has now become im
possible, History puts the question thus: either complete victory for
the counter-revolution, or a new revolution" (V. I. Lenin, Collected
Works y Vol. XXI, Bk. 1, New York, 1932, p. 58).
 
In view of these circumstances, it became necessary to withdraw
the slogan of "All power to the Soviets! " for a time, because the Soviets,
which were controlled by the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolution
aries, were then acting as the accomplices of counter-revolution. The
party was faced with the new task of winning a majority in the So
viets and of converting the latter into organs of insurrection.
 
The offensive that was launched by the counter-revolutionary
bourgeoisie with the assistance of the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revo
lutionaries shook the confidence of the workers and peasants in those
parties. Discontent grew among the masses of the soldiers at the fipont.
Reports to headquarters read: "The masses are sullen. Hostility to
wards the officers continues. The bulk of the soldiers do not want to
fight. There are frequent cases of refusal to obey orders."
 
In the rural districts the peasants rose against the landlords. The
"Red Chanticleer" (incendiarism) was on the rampage among the land
lords' estates. Whereas in March, 34 counties had been affected
by the peasant movement, in July, 325 were affected. The workers in
the mills and factories went on strike and in many cases the}" drove
out the hated directors and managers and introduced workers' control of production.
 
===== The Sixth Congress of the Bolshevik Party =====
On July 26, the
Sixth Congress of the Bolshevik Party was opened in Petrograd. The
congress was held in secret.
 
Lenin, who was in h'dlng, was unable to attend the congress, but
Comrade Stalin kept him informed of its proceedings and received
instructions from him. The congress proceedings were directed by
Comrade Stalin.
 
Comrade Stalin delivered a report on the political situation in
which he emphasized that the revolution "had begun to assume the
character of a socialist vorkers' revolution," and that the only way to
achieve the victory of the socialist revolution was to prepare for and
carry out an armed insurrection.
 
The Bukharinites and Trotskyites at the congress opposed the
line for a socialist revolution. In denouncing their treacherous policy,
Comrade Stalin said: "The possibility is not excluded that Russia
will be the country that will lay the road to Socialism, . . . We must
discard the antiquated idea that only Europe can show us the way"
{History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union [Bolsheviks']^ Short
Course, Moscow, 1945, p. 197). *
 
The congress adopted a resolution that was submitted by Comrade
Stalin and endorsed the Bolshevik economic program — confiscation of
the landlords' estates and nationalization of all the land, nationali
zation of the banks and large-scale industry, and workers' control of
production and distribution. The congress also adopted a resolution
on the Youth Leagues in which the latter were regarded as the re
serves of the Party.
 
The Socialist Young Workers' League was formed in July 1917,
and all its branches were directed by the Bolshevik Party. The Petro
grad Committee of the Bolshevik Party set up a special committee
headed by N. it. Krupskaya to organize the young workers and to
concern itself with their interests.
 
The Sixth Congress of the Bolshevik Party was the congress of
preparation for the armed insurrection against the bourgeoisie. It
headed the Party for the socialist revolution.
 
==== The Suppression of General Kornilov's Counter-Revolutionary Revolt ====
 
===== The Bourgeois Counter-Revolutionary Plot =====
After the July
demonstration the bourgeoisie began to mobilize its forces for the
purpose of crushing the revolution. The petty-bourgeois parties which
controlled the Soviets obediently carried out the program of the coun
ter-revoluti onary bourgeoisie .
 
On July 8, 1917, the "Little Bonaparte," "the little braggart Ker
ensky," as Lenin called him, became the head of the government.
Kerensky introduced the death penalty at the front, and informed
the Allies that he had taken all measures to restore the fighting
efSiciency of the army. On the demand of the Allies, General Kornilov,
who was notorious for his uncompromising hostility to the revolution,
was appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief. He issued an order
prohibiting all meetings in the army. Field courts-martial intro
duced a reign cf terror at the front. Kornilov demanded the introduc
tion of the death penalty in the rear as well.
 
After Kornilov was appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief the
second coalition Provisional Government was formed. This government
was headed by Kerensky and included members of the Cadet Party.
 
The counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie set out to establish a mili
tary dictatorship and with this object organized a military monarch
ist plot. The instigator of this plot was the Cadet Party. As Lenin
wrote at the time; "The Cadet Party is the chief political force of the
bourgeois counter-revolution in Russia" (LeTiin arid Stalin^ 1917,
Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 359). The plot was
hatched at the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief
Kornilov, who was mustering troops for the purpose of marching them
against Petrqgrad.
 
On August 12, 1917, Kerensky convened in Moscow a Council
of State, which served as a sort of general review of the counter-revolu
tionary forces. Comrade Stalin characterized this council in the follow
ing words: "The 'way out' for the counter-revolution lies in conven
ing a conference of merchants and manufacturers, of landlords and
bankers, of members of the tsarist Duma and already tamed Men^e
viks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, in order, by declaring this con
ference to be a 'National Assembly,' to obtain from it approval for
the policy of imperialism and counter-revolution, and for transferring
the burdens of the war to the shoulders of the workers and peasants"
 
• {Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow,
1938, pp. 314-16).
 
The leaders of the counter-revolution intended to proclaim a mili
tary dictatorship at this council, but events developed differently
from the way they anticipated.
 
On the day the council was opened in
Moscow the Central Committee of the Bol
shevik Party called a general protest strike
and 400,000 workers downed tools. The Coun
cil of State sat without electric light; the
tramways did not run.
 
Next day, August 13, Kornilov arrived
in Moscow and the bourgeoisie organized an
official reception for him; but the heads of
the Council of State did not dare openly to
proclaim a counter-revolutionary dictator
ship; the situation in Moscow was too
unfavourable for this. Kornilov left for
General Headquarters in Mogilev and there
continued his preparations for a counter-rev
olutionary cowp. His plan was to capture
Petrograd with counter-revolutionary troops
that were to be drawn to that city and to
establish a military dictatorship in the
country.
 
A part in this plot against the revolution
was also played by the British and French imperialists. After the fail
ure of the June offensive, the ""allied" governments, who up to now had
intervened in the internal affairs of Russia through the Provisional
Government, now practically ignored that government and est ablished
closer direct connections with the counter-revolutionary leaders of
the Russian army. The representatives of the Entente promised Kor
nilov a loan of 5,000,000,000 rubles as soon as a "strong government"
was established in Russia.
 
On August 19, Kornilov treacherously surrendered Riga, thereby
opening to the German troops the road to Petrograd. The surrender
of Riga served as a new pretext for launching an offensive against
the revolutionary masses.
 
Kornilov prepared for his counter-revolutionary cm/p with the
knowledge and assistance of Kerensky, who ordered the revolutionary
Petrograd garrison to be sent to the front in order to make it easier
for the counter-revolutionaries to capture the capital. The Menshevik and
the Socialist-Revolutionary leaders actively helped Kerensky and Korni
lov to prepare for their cowp. When, however, Kornilov demanded that
all military and civil power be entirely concentrated in his hands Ke
rensky, fearing the anger of the masses, proclaimed Kornilov a traitor
to the state and issued an order for his dismissal from the post of Su
preme Commander-ia-Chief. Kornilov refused to obey this order and
on August 25, 1917, sent the Third Cavalry Corps, under the command
of General Krymov, against Petrograd.
 
The leaders of the compromising parties were terrified by this
turn of affairs and turned to the Bolsheviks for assistance, for they
were aware that the only force in the country that was capable of
organizing the defeat of Kornilov was the Bolshevik Party.
 
===== Mobilization of the Forces of the Revolution =====
The Bolsheviks
took the lead in the struggle against Kornilov. While calling for the
suppression of the mutinous general, the Bolshevik Party denounced
the Provisional Government, which consisted of masked Korni
lovites, and the entire policy of which had served to strengthen the
counter-revolution .
 
The proletariat rose to a man to defend revolutionary Petrograd.
In the course of three days 25,000 workers enrolled in the Red Guard.
The military organization of the Bolshevik Party enlisted the serv
ices of 700 army instructors to train the Red Guards. In the munition
factories the production of shells was speeded up and armoured cars
were fitted out. Within two days the workers at the Putilov Plant,
working 16 hours a day, turned out about 200 new pieces of ar
tillery. The railwaymen diverted Kornilov's troop trains to
sidings, blocked the stations with empty trains, tore up the rails on
railway bridges and removed vital parts fi'om locomotives. Thousands
of working people dug fortifications at the approaches to Petrograd.
 
Meanwhile, hundreds of Bolshevik agitators worked among Kor
nilov's troops explaining to them the object of Kornilov's mutiny.
Enormous influence upon Kornilov's so-called "Savage Division"
which consisted of Caucasian highlanders, was exercised by a del
egation of highlanders who, on S. M. Kirov's advice, were sent
to the division to explain the true objects of the counter-revolution.
The soldiers and Cossacks in Kornilov's force began to go over to the
side of the workers.
 
The Kornilov adventure collapsed. General Krymov committed
suicide. Kornilov, Denikin and other generals were arrested, but the
manner in which these monarchist generals were "held in custody"
was very strange. Kornilov and his accomplices were "imprisoned"
m the premises of a school known as Bykhov's High School, and the
Tekinsky Regiment which Kornilov himself had formed, and which
was loyal to him, was appointed to guard them. Actually, Kerensky
protected the mutinous generals from popular anger and judgment.
 
The civil war begun by the generals and the bourgeoisie rad
ically changed the relation of forces in the country. As Comrade
Stalin wrote at the time: "The Kornilov revolt merely opened the valve
for the accumulated revolutionary anger, it merely unbound the hith
erto fettered revolution, whipped it up and pushed it forward"
(J. Stalin, On the Eoad to October, Moscow, 1925, Russ, ed., p. 206).
 
The suppression of the Kornilov plot revealed that the position of
the bourgeoisie and of their stooges, the Mensheviks. and the Socialist-Revolutionaries, was a hopeless one. Their influence among the masses was completely undermined. The Bolsheviks unmasked the
Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries whose entire policy
had facilitated Kornilov's counter-revolutionary plot.
 
The suppression of the Kornilov plot also revealed that the
Bolshevik Party had become the decisive force of the revolution. The
masses saw that the Bolsheviks were the only effective force
that was capable of crushing the counter-revolution, and, as a result,
the Bolsheviks gained undivided influence in the factories and mills.
In the rural districts and at the front the influence of the Bolsheviks,
grew as it had never done before. The soldiers demanded that stern
retribution be meted out to the counter-revolutionaries. In connection
with the contemplated trial of Kornilov, soldiers wrote from the
front: "Dear comrades, don't make it a long trial; they betrayed us,
they spilled our blood. Make it short — in twenty-four hours, just as
they did to us."
 
Lastly, the suppression of the Kornilov revolt showed that after
abandoning the policy of compromise the Soviets were beginning to
revive and were becoming a great revolutionary force. A period of the
Bolshevization of the Soviets began. On August 31, the Petrograd So
viet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, by a majority vote, passed
a resolution proposed by the Bolsheviks; on September 5, the Moscow
Soviet did the same. The Bolsheviks gained control of the Soviets
in the two capitals and also in the decisive industrial centres.
 
In view of the Bolshevization of the Soviets the Party, in Sep
tember, brought forward again the slogan which had been withdrawn
after the events of July 3-5, namely, "All power to the Soviets."
 
As Comrade Stalin has written: "The slogan 'All power
to the Soviets!' was again put forward. But now this slogan had a
different meaning from that in the first stage. Its content had rad
ically changed. Now this slogan signified a complete rupture with im
perialism and the passing of power to the Bolsheviks, for the majority
of the Soviets were already Bolshevik. Now this slogan signified that
the revolution must march directly towards the dictatorship of the
proletariat by means of insurrection. More than that, this slogan now
signified the organization and shaping of the dictatorship of the pro
letariat as a state" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism^ Moscow, 1945,
p. 115).
 
The slogan "All power to the Soviets!" was a call for insurrection
against the Provisional Government for the purpose of transferring
all power to the Soviets controlled by the Bolshevilis.
 
Terrified by the revolution, the Mensheviks and the Sooialist
Bevolutionaries countered the slogan of "All power to the Soviets!"
by convening a Democratic Conference with the object of diverting
the revolutionary movement into a less dangerous channel. The Demo
cratic Conference which was made up of representatives of the com
promising parties, Soviets, trade unions, Zemstvos, army organiza
tions and co-operative societies, met on September 12, and rejected
the coalition with the Cadets. The Sooialist-Bevolutionaries and the
Mensheviks thereupon proposed that the Democratic Conference should
set up a Provisional Council of the Republic, known as the Pre-par
liament, for the purpose, as they said, of controlling the actions of the
government. Actually, however, their aim was to create another screen
for their coalition with the bourgeoisie. While the Democratic Confer
ence was in session, Kerensky obtained the consent of the Cadets
Kishkin, Buryshkin, Konovalov and others to enter the government.
The Pre-parliament remained a futile exercise in parliamenta
rism. The workers derisively called it the "Pre-bathhouse."
 
The Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party decided to boy
cott the Pre-parliament, but Kamenev and his supporters, wishing
to divert the Party from its preparations for an insurrection, insisted
that the Party should be represented in it. At a meeting of the Bol
shevik group in the Democratic Conference, Comrade Stalin strongly
opposed Kamenev's proposal and exposed the manoeuvre of the
compromisers.
 
==== Organization of the Assault ====
 
===== The Maturing Revolutionary Crisis =====
Comrade Stalin has de
scribed the months of September and October 1917 as the period of
preparation for the assault upon the rule of the bourgeoisie. "We must
regard as the characteristic feature of this period," he wrote, "the rapid
maturing of the crisis, the utter consternation reigning in ruling cir
cles, the isolation of the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks,
and the wholesale crossing over of vacillating elements to the side of
the Bolsheviks."
 
The revolutionary crisis matured while the imperialist war was
still in progress. The war aggravated the economic chaos which in the
autumn of 1917 assumed catastrophic dimensions.
 
The capitalists and landlords deliberately sapped the foundations
of the economy of the country. In August and September the
factory owners in Petrograd alone closed as many as 230 plants
employing 61,000 workers. In the Donetz Basin, in the Urals, in Mos
cow, all over the country, in fact, the capitalists declared lockouts and
threw hundreds of thousands of workers onto the street. The food
situation became exceptionally acute. The landlords and kulaks sabo
taged the state grain monopoly in spite of the fact that to please
them the government had twice raised the "fixed prices" of grain.
The grain profiteers, so-called "bagmen," overloaded the aheady
dislocated transport system. The workers' bread ration amounted to
less than 200 grams per day and hunger was making itself felt more
and more. The capitalist Ryabushinsky, one of the organizers of
the hunger and ruin, openly stated that the revolution would be
crushed only if "the gaunt hand of famine, the impoverishment of the
masses, clutches by the throat the false friends of the people — the
democratic Soviets and committees."
 
In his work "The Impending Catastrophe and How to Combat
It," written in September 1917, Lenin showed that the hunger and
ruin were due to the policy that was pursued by the Provisional
Government in obedience to the will of the capitalists. Lenin foimu
lated in this work the Bolshevik economic program, indicating
the first steps toward Socialism.
 
"The result of the revolution has been," he wrote, "that the political system of E»ussia has in a few months caught up with that of the advanced countries. But that is not enough. The war is inexorable;
it puts the alternative with ruthless severity: either perish, or overtake
and outstrip the advanced countries economically as tvelV (V.I. Lenin,
Selected Worhs^ Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, p. 117).
 
In August-September 1917, Lenin finished his book The State
and Revolution in which he developed the fundamental propositions
of Marx and Engels on the proletarian revolution and the dictator
ship of the proletariat and expounded the doctrine of the Soviets
as the state form of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
 
At the end of September 1917, the Mensheviks and the Socialist
Revolutionaries made another attempt to check the revolution by
forming a new coalition government. It included "six capitalist
ministers as the nucleus of the 'Cabinet' and ten 'Socialist' ministers
to be at their service as the vehicles of their will'^ (J. Stalin, On
the Road to October^ Moscow, 1925, Russ, ed., p. 223). Kerensky re
mained Prime Minister.
 
The counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie began secretly to plot
another blow against the revolution.
 
Large counter-revolutionary forces were concentrated around the
capital and shock battalions were formed of specially picked men
who wore allowed to join only on the recommendation of officers.
These battalions consisted of the sons of kulaks and the bourgeoisie.
More than ten such battalions were posted on the Northern and
Western Fronts, in proximity to Petrograd and Moscow. Cossack
and cavalry regiments which were regarded as exceptionally
"reliable" were withdrawn from the front to the rear. Polish
soldiers serving in the Russian army in Byelorussia were formed in a
separate Polish Corps under the command of General Dowbor-Musnicki
for the purpose of cutting the Western Front off from Petrograd and
of capturing all the railway jtmetions on the line to Petrograd. A simil
ar corps was formed in the Ukraine of Czech and Slovak prisoners of
war for the purpose of cutting off the Southwestern and Rumanian
Fronts from the revolutionary capital if this was found necessary.
 
===== The Bolshevization of the Masses =====
In September and
October 1917, the political influence of the Party of Lenin
and Stalin grew day after day and its membership steadily in
creased. Thus, in April 1917, the membership of the Bolshevik Party
was 80,000, in the middle of August it had risen to 250,000, and in the
beginning of October to 400,000. Under the leadership of the Bolshe
viks a strike movement commenced among the proletariat. One hun
dred thousand leather workers in Moscow went on strike and remained
out for two and a half months. Over 300,000 workers were involved in
the textile strikes in Ivanovo-Voznesensk and Kineshma. Strikes of
printers spread over nearly the whole country. The Baku workers waged a long and stubborn struggle for a collective agreement. The very forms of the strike struggle changed. The workers not only downed
tools butdrove the capitalists and their managers out of the factories
and took over the management of production themselves. The movement
for workers' control of industry spread over the whole country and
faced the workers with the struggle for power.
 
All over the country the overwhelming majcrlty of the proletariat
followed the lead of the Bolsheviks.
 
At the same time Bolshevik influence increased in the rural dis
tricts and in the army. Delegations of soldiers arrived in Petrograd and
called upon the Petrograd Soviet immediately to launch a struggle for
peace. The only organization which the war-weary masses of soldiers
trusted and now followed was the Bolshevik Party. Soldiers at the
front wrote the following letter to a Bolshevik army newspaper:
"Comrades, workers and soldiers! Keep your weapons. Let's go to
Petrograd and flght the bourgeoisie and the coalition government. The
soldiers have lost all patience with this miserable life in the trenches."
 
In regiments and divisions the men drove out the officers, elected
new army committees and in a number of localities even killed the
more detested of their officers. In their letters home the soldiers advised
their fellow villagers to drive out the landlords and to get Peasant
Committees to take over the land.
 
In the rural districts the relatively peaceful forms of fighting the
landlords, such as refusal to pay rent and seizing meadows and
pastures, we-'e superseded by the seizure of the landlords' land. Casting
ofl the influence of the Socialist-Revolutionaries, the local Soviets of
Peasants' Deputies adopted decisions to transfer all the land and all
the landlords' farm property to the peasants. The poorest stratum of
the peasants seized monastery and church lands. The peasant move
ment grew into a peasant insurrection.
 
The Provisional Government sent punitive expeditions to the coun
tryside to suppress the peasant revolts. From March to June there were
17 cases of the armed suppression of peasant revolts; in July and August
there were 39, "and in September and October the number grew to 105.
 
All over Russia members of Land Committees were arrested en masse
and put on trial for seizing landlords' land. This only served to excite
the masses of the peasantry still more.
 
Referring to these incidents Lenin wrote: "It is obvious that if in a
peasant country, after seven months of a democratic republic, matters
have come to the pass of a peasant revolt, it is irrefutable proof that the
revolution is suffering nation-wide collapse, that it is passing through
a crisis of unprecedented severity, and that the forces of counter-revolu
tion have gone the full (V. I, Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. VI,
 
Moscow, 1935, p. 227).
 
The peasantry began to cast off the influence of the Socialist-Revolutionary party which, had become, to use Lenin's words party hostile to the 'people, hostile to the peasants, and counter-revolutionary
 
In alliance with the poorest stratum of the peasantry, and with the
bulk of the peasantry supporting the Bolshevik slogans, the proletariat
inarched towards the proletarian revolution.
 
The maturing of the proletarian revolution caused wavering and
confusion in the ranks of the petty-bourgeois parties. After the July
events a "Left" wing calling itself '^Left" Socialist-Revolutionaries,
sprang up in the Socialist-Revolutionary Party. A group of "Lefts"
who called themselves Internationalists also sprang up among the Men
sheviks. In the endeavour to retain the masses who were rapidly desert
ing them, the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks came for
ward with the proposal to establish a republic in Russia. Hitherto, the
question of the form of government, like all other questions arising out
of the revolution, had been put ofiE imtil the convocation of a Con
stituent Assembly.
 
The confusion that reigned in the ranks of the Menshevik and the So
eialist-Revolutionary parties indicated that these compromising parties
— the main prop of the bourgeoisie — were becoming isolated from the
masses, and this brought nearer the victory of the socialist revolution.
 
The oppressed nationalities in Russia also rose up to fight the impe
rialist bourgeoisie; under the leadership of the Bolsheviks the movement
for national liberation developed into a struggle for power. This was
exceptionally evident in Central Asia. In September, a spontaneous
mass revolt of the workers broke out in Tashkent, and for two weeks pow
er was in the hands of the Soviet. The Provisional Government sent
a punitive expedition to Tashkent under the command of General Korov
nichenko, who dealt ruthlessly with the working population of
the city.
 
In the Ukraine the Bolsheviks won over the masses and made vigor
ous preparations for an armed insurrection. In Kharkov, Kiev and
Ekaterinoslav, Red Guard units were formed.
 
In Latvia, the Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies were
Bolshevik. In Estonia the Bolsheviks had a majority at the Congress of
Soviets that was convened in October. In Finland a Regional Congress
of Soviets which was held in the beginning of September adopted
resolutions submitted by Bolsheviks.
 
Not only Russia, but all the countries ofWestem Europe that were
suffering from the protracted war were passing through a revolutionary
orisis.
 
In France workers went on strike in protest against the im
perialist war. The anti-war movement spread to the army and in some
regiments Councils of Soldiers* Deputies were formed. Soldiers even
talked about marching on Paris to settle accoimts with the capitalists
and the government.
 
In Germany hunger riots were occurring all over the country. In the
autumn, the crews of four battleships that were stationed at the naval
fortress of Wilhelmshaven rose in armed revolt. The revolutionary pro
letarian organization known as the Spartacus Union conducted exten
sive activity among the masses.
 
Analyzing the events in Russia and abroad in an article he wrote at
the end of September 1917, entitled "The Crisis Has Matured," Lenin
said: "The end of September undoubtedly marked a definite turning
point in the history of the Russian revolution and, to all appear
ances, of the world revolution also" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol.
VI, Moscow, 1935, p. 224).
 
=== The Victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution ===
 
==== The October Armed Insurrection ====
 
===== Preparations for the Insurrection =====
In September Lenin lived in
Helsingfors, Finland, hiding from the sleuths of the Provisional Gov
ernment. From here he closely watched the development of the revo
lution and sent directives to the Central Committee of the Bolshevik
Party.
 
Between September 12 and 14, Lenin sent two remarkable letters
to the Central Committee, one entitled "The Bolsheviks Must Assume
Power" and the other entitled "Marxism and Insurrection." In the
first-mentioned letter he wrote that, having won the majority in the
Soviets of the two capitals, the Bolsheviks can and must take state pow
er into their hands. "The point is," he wrote, "to make the task clear
to the Party. Armed insurrection in Petrograd and Moscow (with their
regions), the conquest of power and the overthrow of the government
must be placed on the order of the day" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works
Vol. VI, Moscow, 1935, p. 216),
 
In the second letter Lenin urged that insurrection must be treated
as an art and that the conditions necessary for a successful outcome of
the iusurrection must be seriously studied. He outlined a general plan
for the organization of the insurrection in which he insisted that the
decisive forces must be concentrated at the decisive points, and that the
revolutionary forces should without fail take the offensive, for, he said,
defence means the death of armed insurrection.
 
On September 15, Lenin's letters were discussed at a meeting of the
Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party. The only one to oppose
Lenin's directives to prepare for insurrection was the traitor Kamenev. On Comi\ de Stalin's proposal, the Central Committee decided to send copies of the letters to the largest Party organi
zations. During the latter part of September the Bolshevik Party
developed extensive activities in preparation for the armed insurrec
tion, and on October 7, Lenin secretly arrived in Petrograd for
the purpose of directing it. Stalin informed him of the progress that
was being made in the preparations.
 
On October 10 (23), Lenin attended a meeting of the Central Com
mittee, for the first time since the July events, and delivered a report
on the preparations for the insurrection in which he proposed that anj'
suitable occasion be utilized for the purpose of launching it. He empha
sized that the entire external and internal situation of the country,
including the war situation, had prepared the ground for a political
insurrection: the Provisional Government had decided to send the
revolutionary garrison out of Petrograd and to surrender the capital
to the Germans, and the Pussian bourgeoisie he^d opened negotiations
for the conclusion of a separate peace with German imperialism in
order to crush the Pussian revolution. He said it was time to fix the
date for the insurrection and to make the military-technical prepa
rations for it.
 
Stalin, Sverdlov, Dzerzhinsky and the other members of the Cen
tral Committee supported Lenin's proposals. Those blacklegs of the
revolution, Zinoviev and Kamenev, were the only ones to oppose him.
 
The Central Committee condemned these defenders of capitalism
and passed a resolution, moved by Lenin, calling for the immediate
organization of armed insurrection and the subordination of all the
Party's activities to this task. The resolution read: "Considering
therefore that an armed uprising is inevitable, and that the time for
it is fully ripe, the Central Committee instructs all Party organiza
tions to be guided accordingly, and to discuss and decide all practical
questions (the Congress of Soviets of the Northern Pegion, the with
drawal of troops from Petrograd, the action of our people in Moscow
and Minsk, etc.) from this point of view" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works,
Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, p. 135).
 
After strongly rebuffing the capitulators, the Central Committee
continued with its preparations for the armed insurrection. A Pevo~
lutionary Military Committee of the Petrograd Soviet was set up
which served as a legal headquarters for the insurrection. The
main force of the insurrection was to be the Petrograd Red Guard,
which in October numbered 12,000 armed men. It was decided to call
the sailors of the Baltic Fleet from Helsingfors to assist the revolution
ary capital. Committees of Three were set up in every district of
Petrograd to guide the insurrection in the given district. Meanwhile,
congresses of Soviets were held in most of the regions throughout the
country, and these passed resolutions calling for the transfer of all power to the Soviets, On October 16 (29), on Lenin's recommendation, a second meeting of the Central Committee of the Party was held to
which representatives of the Petrograd Bolsheviks were invited in
order that a larger circle of Party members could be informed of the
plan for the insurrection. This meeting reaffirmed the decision to launch
the armed insurrection. Kamenev and Zinoviev again demanded that
the insurrection be postponed. Comrade Stalin spoke and denounced
these traitors. He said: "Objectively, what Kamenev and Zinoviev
propose amounts to giving the counter-revolution the opportunity to
organize."
 
That same day a Party Centre was set up, headed by Comrade
Stalin, for the purpose of exercising practical leadership of the
insurrection.


==== The Liberation of Kazakhstan and Central Asia ====
After sustaining defeat at the meeting of the Central Committee,
Zinoviev and Kamenev resorted to an act of unprecedented treachery.
They sent a statement to the Menshevik newspaper Novaya Zhizn,
which published it in its issue of October 18, declaring that they
disagreed with the decision of the Central Committee of the Bol
shevik Party to launch an insurrection. This was a downright betrayal.
Concerning this action Lenin wrote: "Kamenev and Zinoviev have
betrayed to Rodzyanko and Kerensky^ the decision of the Central  
Committee of their Party on armed insurrection and the fact that
preparations for armed insurrection and the choice of the date for the
aimed insurrection were being concealed from the enemy" (Lenin and
Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 605).
Following in the footsteps of Kamenev and Zinoviev, Trotsky too di
vulged the date of the insurrection by stating at a meeting of the
Petrograd Soviet that the Second Congress of Soviets that was to be
held on October 25 must take over power, Kerensky took advantage of
this betrayal to take a series of military measures for the purpose of
forestalling the insurrection.


==== Soviet Power Is Established in Transcaucasia ====
The Bolsheviks intensified their activities in preparing for the
armed insurrection. In conformity with the plan drawn up by Comrade
Stalin, the workers of the Urals were to come to the aid of Petrograd,
those of Ivanovo-Voznesensk were to go to the aid of Moscow, and in
Byelorussia the soldiers at the front, in the event of being sent against
Petrograd, were to be disarmed. In preparing for the insurrection Com
rade Stalin was assisted by Y. M. Sverdlov, F. E. Dzerzhinsky,
V. M, Molotov, G. K. Orjonikidze, M. I. Kalinin, A. A. Andreyev and
other comrades.


==== The Defeat of the Japanese Interventionists ====
In the provinces preparations for the armed insurrection were
made under the direction of those tried and trusted pupils of Lenin,


==== The Bolshevik Party, the Organizer of Victory at the Fronts ====
K. E. Voroshilov in the Donetz Basin, Artyom (Sergeyev) in Kharkov,  
V. V. Kuibyshev in the Volga Region, A. A. Zhdanov in the Urals,


== The Transition to the Peaceful Work of Economic Restoration ==
L. M. Kaganovich in the Polesie Region, M. V. Frunze in Ivanovo-Voznesensk and S. M. Kirov in the North Caucasus. The Bolsheviks intensified their activities in the Baltic Fleet and on the Northern
Front, the nearest front to the capital.


=== The Struggle to Restore the Country's Economy ===
In the factories feverish activities were conducted in arming and
drilling the workers. Units of the Bed Guard were quickly formed.
The workers of the Sestroretsk Small -Arms Factory delivered the
weapons they made to the headquarters of the Bed Guard. The workers
of the Schlusselburg Gun Powder Works sent by way of the Neva a
bargeload of grenades to the headquarters of the Bed Guard in Petro
grad. At the Putilov Works there was a Bed Guard miit of 1,500 men,
ready for action.


==== The Soviet State's Transition from War to Peaceful Economic Construction ====
Lenin called a conference of the leaders of the military organization
and discussed with them what ships and troops should be called in from
Kronstadt and Helsingfors. The Bevolutionary Military Committee
sent its Commissars to all the army units for the purpose of preparing
the soldiers for the insurrection.


==== The Economic Restoration of Soviet Russia ====
===== The Insurrection in Petrograd =====
Forewarned by the traitors
Kamenev, Zinoviev and Trotsky, the Provisional Government believed
that the proletarian insurrection would commence on October 25,
1917, the day the Second Congress of Soviets was to open, and took
measures to suppress it on that date.


==== The Formation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ====
The headquarters of the counter-revolution hastily drew up a plan
to capture the Smohiy Institute, where the Central Committee of the
Bolshevik Party had its headquarters. Military forces were drawn to the
capital and the cadet schools were prepared for action. The Provisional
Government ordered the revolutionary cruiser Aurora, which was under
going repairs on the Neva, to put out to sea immediately, as it was afraid
to allow the ship to remain in Petrograd. The bridges that connected
the working-class districts with the centre of Petrograd were ordered
to be raised.


==== Lenin's Behests ====
Early in the morning of October 24 (November 6), a detachment
of cadets arrived in motor trucks at the premises of Eabochi Put (the
temporary title of Pravda) with the object of confiscating the latest issue
of that newspaper. The workers in the printing plant managed to inform
Comrade Stal^ of this raid; soon a detachment of revolutionary sol
diers arrived on an armoured car and the cadets beat a hasty retreat.
The BabocJhi Put came out with an appeal for the overthrow of the Pro
visional Government. In a leading article in that issue entitled "What Do
We Need?" Comrade Stalin wrote: "The time has come when further
delay will be fatal for the whole cause of the revolution. The present
government of landlords and capitalists must be replaced by a new gov
ernment of workers and peasants. . . (Lenin and Stalin, 1917,
Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 611.)


==== The End of the Period of Restoration in the U.S.S.R. ====
Towards the evening of October 24 (November 6), Lenin, on learning
of the attack launched by the counter-revolution, sent the Central Committes of the Bolshevik Party his last letter demanding that the insurrection should be started forthwith, "We must at all costs, this very eve
ning, this very night, arrest the government, first disarming the cadets (de
feating them if they resist), and so forth," he wrote. "Under no circum
stances must power be left in the hands of Kerensky and Co, until the
25th — ^not under any circumstances; the matter must be decided with
out fail this very evening, or this very night" (V. I, Lenia, Selected
ITor&s, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, p. 159).  


=== The Struggle for Socialist Industrialization (1926–1929) ===
To prevent Kerensky from taking action on the 25th, the day the
Congress of Soviets was to open, the Central Committee of the Bolshe
vik Party instructed the Revolutionary Military Committee to start the
insurrection at once.


==== Steering a Course for Industrialization ====
In the morning of October 24 (November 6), the Revolutionary
Military Committee ordered the military units to prepare for action;
it also ordered that a close watch be kept on the army units that were
approaching the capital, and that the guard at bridges and railway sta
tions be reinforced. It decided to call in the assistance of the warships
and sailors of the Baltic Fleet and with this object sent the Central
Committee of the Soviets of the Baltic Fleet in Helsingfors a prear
ranged telegram containing the words: "Send regulations"; this meant
"the insurrection has commenced, dispatch ships and men."


==== The Difficulties and Successes of Socialist Industrialization ====
That evening Lenin, disguised as a workingman, with his face tied
up and wearing a wig, and accompanied by a comrade sent
from the Central Committee, arrived in the Smolny. Men from the Lithuanian Regiment and detachments of Red Guards were called to the Smolny, where they took up their posts, supported by
machine guns, at all the entrances and exits. Detachment after detach
ment of Red Guards kept arriving. Earlier in the day the Red Guards
were armed with weapons obtained from the arsenal in the Fortress of
Peter and Paul which had gone over to the Bolsheviks.


==== The First Five-Year Plan ====
In conformity with the prearranged plan, detachments of workers
proceeded to occupy state buildings; after midnight t-he Central
Telephone Exchange, the State Bank, the General Post Office,
the railway stations and the principal government offices were
occupied.


== U.S.S.R.—Land of Socialism ==
The Revolutionary Military Committee ordered the cruiser Aurora
to move up from the Franoo-Russian Shipyards on the Neva
to the Winter Palace. The commander of the Aurora refused
to obey the order on the plea that the Neva was too shallow,
whereupon the sailors took soundings, found that the fairway was suffi
ciently deep, arrested the commander and steered the ship in the ap
pointed direction. The Aurora's guns were turned on the last refuge
of the bourgeois government — ^the Winter Palace.  


=== The U.S.S.R. in the Period of the Struggle to Collectivize Agriculture (1930–1934) ===
The insurrection proceeded in an organized manner a-ocording
to plan. By 9 a. m. on October 25 (November 7), seven companies
of the Kexholm Regiment had occupied the approaches to the Winter Palace, where the Provisional Government was assembled. By this time it was evident that the government was completely isolated;
not a single military unit supported it. On the morning of the  
25th Kerensky fled from the insurgent capital in a motor car flying
the United States flag.


==== The Struggle for the Socialist Reorganization of Peasant Farming ====
At 10 am. on October 25 (November 7), the Revolutionary Mili
tary Committee issued a manifesto proclaiming the overthrow of the
Provisional Government, The manifesto, which had been drawn up
by Lenin, stated;


=== The Struggle to Complete the Building of Socialism. The Stalin Constitution ===
"The Provisional Government has been overthrown. The power of
state has passed into the hands of the organ of the Petrograd Soviet of
Workers* and Soldiers* Deputies, the Revolutionary Military Commit
tee, which stands at the head of the Petrograd proletariat and garrison.  


==== The Second Five-Year Plan for the Building of Socialism ====
"The cause for which the people have fought — the immediate proposal of a democratic peace, the abolition of landed proprietorship, workers* control over production and the creation of a Soviet govern
. ment — is assured.


==== The Great Stalin Constitution ====
"Long live the revolution of the workers, soldiers and peasants!"
{Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow,
1938, p. 613.)


==== The U.S.S.R. Enters the Phase of Completing the Building of Socialism ====
On October 25, a special meeting of the Petrograd Soviet
was held. The appearance of Lenin, the leader of the revolu
tion, was greeted with round after round of applause and cheers.
Addressing the meeting, Lenin said: "Comrades, the workers* and
peasants' revolution, about the necessity of which the Bolsheviks
have always spoken, has taken place. . . . From now on, a new phase
in the history of Russia begins, and this revolution, the third Russian
revolution, should in the end lead to the victory of Socialism" {Lenin
and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938,
p. 614).


==== The Cultural Revolution in the U.S.S.R. ====
The Petrograd Soviet adopted a resolution welcoming the pro
letarian revolution and expressing the conviction that the Soviet
government which the revolution created would march firmly along
the road to Socialism.  


==== The Fight for Peace amidst the Conditions of the Second World War ====
By this time the insurgents controlled the whole city except the
Winter Palace. Lenin ordered the Winter Palace to be captured before
the opening of the Congress of Soviets. The Provisional Government
was called upon to smrender forthwith, but it refused, whereupon,
at 9 p. m., the assault on the Winter Palace was launched. After the  
prearranged signal, the firing of a gun from the Fortress of Peter and
Paul and shots from the six-inch guns of the Aurora, the Red Guards,
sailors and soldiers, led by the Bolsheviks, stormed the Winter Palace.


=== The Great Patriotic War of the Soviet People ===
Almost the entire Petrograd Young Socialist Workers' League
(the future Young Communist League) had joined the ranks of the  
Red Guard, and the young proletarians constituted more than one
third of its strength.


=== Principal Dates in the History of the U.S.S.R. ===
The broad masses of the workers and soldiers were imbued with
tremendous enthusiasm and confidence in victory. The Provisional
Government that was besieged in the Winter Palace waited in vain
for the assistance that had been promised from the front.
[[Category:A History of the U.S.S.R.]]

Latest revision as of 21:37, 22 November 2024

The First Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution

The Eve of the Revolution

Russia's Transition to Imperialism

Tsarist Russia in the System of World Imperialism

By the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centurj', the development of capitalism had finally brought it to its highest and last stage, that of imperialism.

Under imperialism the concentration of lirodnction achieves its utmost development. Almost the entire industry of a given countrt^ is concentrated in a small number of gigantic enterprises. Individual capitalists and cajDitalist combines enter into agreement with each other to eliminate free competition, which is thus superseded by the rule of the monopolies. Lenin defined imperialism as monopolist capi talism.

At the same time an intense centralization of capital takes place. A considerable part of the free capital of a country is concentrated in a few banks which, from humble intermediaries in the exchange process become transformed into all-powerful monopolies. The banks utilize their enormous capital for the purpose of promoting the development of industry. Bank capital merges with industrial capital. Lenin called this new form of capital, which by the beginning of the twentieth century became dominant in all the biggest capitalist coimtries, finance capital.

Under imperialism the struggle for markets leads to an acceleration of the export of capital to backward countries, colonies and semi-colo nies. The capitalists strive to monopolize the sources of raw materials. This inevitably gives rise to a struggle for the redivision of the world, to a struggle for new territories . Comrade Stalin has defined this most impor tant feature of imperialism in the following terms: "Imperialism is the export of capital to the sources of raw material, the frenzied struggle for monopolist possession of these sources, the struggle for a redivision of the already divided world, a struggle waged with particular fury bynew financial groups and Powers seeking a 'place in ilic K\in' against the old groups and Powers which cling tightly to what they Iiavo grasped" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism ^ Moscow, 1945, p, 15).

Imperialism intensifies all the contradictions of capitalism to the utmost degree; those contradictions can bo solved only by the proletarian revolution. Under imperialism the contradictious be tween capital and labour become extremely intensified. The exploita tion of the working class assumes such a character that it realizes that the only way out is to overthrow the rule of the imperialists.

The contradictions between the various financial groui)s aiui imperialist Powers also become so acute as to lead to armed con flicts — imperialist wars. The contradictions between ruling nations and colonial and dependent peoples also become intensified to the utmost'. The inhuman oppression of the inhabitants of colonial and depen dent countries compel these vast enslaved masses to fight for their independence and freedom.

The process of formation of the imperialist system was completed all over the world by the beginning of the 1900'a.

In Russia, too, capitalism dcvolo 3 )ed into imperialism, but in Russia imperialism boro numerous distinctive features, Lenin and Stalin called it militarist-feudal imperialism. Mililarisi-feudal impe rialism bears all the characteristics of the imperialist system: in tense concentration of production, formation of mono])olioB, export, of capital, the merging of bank capital with industrial capital, struggle for the division and rodivision of the world, and the extreme intensi fication of class contradictions. Thus, militarist-feudal imperialism in Russia was, above all, imperialism, a part of the world imperial ist system.

The distinctive feature of imperialism in tsarist Russia was that Russian imperialism was enmeshed in a close not of feudal survivals. Remnants of feudal relationships survived in both industry and in agriculture and influenced the development of the various classes in society as well as the entire system of society and of stale in twen tieth century Russia.

Besides capitalist methods of exploitation, militarist and feudal methods wore employed in tsarist Russia. The country was ruled by the representatives of the big feudal landowners. Owing to the restrict ed nature of the home market, the Russian landlords and capitalists strove to conquer foreign markets, and with this object they seized the best lands in the border regions of Russia and plundered the native inhab tants.

In describing the nature of militarist-feudal imperialism in Russia, Comrade Stalin wrote: "To begin with, tsarist Russia was the of every kind of oppression — capitalist, colonial and militarist — in its most inhuman and barbarous form. Who does not know that in Russia the omnipotence of capital coalesced with the despotism of tsarisiUa the aggressiveness of Russian nationalism with tsarism's role of executioner in regard to the non-Russian peoples, the exploitation of entire regions — Turkey, Persia, China — ^with the seizure of these regions by tsarism, with wars of conquest? Lenin was right in saying that tsarism was ^militarist-feudal imperialism.' Tsarism was the (ioncontration of the worst features of imperialism raised to the second power" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism, Moscow, 1945, pp. 16-17).

Industry in Russia was very highly concentrated, but the methods of ])roduction remained backward. As regards concentration of production, Russia, at the begiiming of the twentieth century, occupied one of the foremost places in the world. In 1900, seven huge plants in the south of Russia produced 37.6 per cent of the entire pig-iron output of the country. Five huge firms in Baku produced 42.6 per cent of the entire output of oil in Russia. Factories employing over a thousand workers (constituted 11 per cent of the total number of factories in the country, and they employed about 50 per cent of the total workers in Russia.

The high concentration of industry was facilitated by the development of banks and joint-stock companies. By the beginning of the twentieth (Century eight big banks controlled 55.7 per cent of the total bank capi tal in Russia. The banks controlled 50 per cent of the capital invested ill the iron and stool industry, 60 per cent of that invested in the coal industry and 80 per cent of that invested in the electrical engineering industry. Bank capital merged with industrial capital.

Largo joint-stock companies occupied an important placse in the industrial life of the country. Trade, and to some extent industry, was controlled by syndicates, which began to arise in Russia at the end of the nineteenth century and were the typical form in this country of tho monopolist capitalist combine. Already at the end of the nineteenth (jentury the Sugar Syndicate compelled all the sugar manufacturers of the country to combine.

At the beginning of the twentieth century many of the Russian banks were under the control of West-European banks. In 1901, French banlrs established the Northern Bank in Russia. The Deutsche Bank, one of the largest banks in Germany, controlled the Russian Azov-Don Bank. West-European capitalists invested about a billion gold rubles in Russian industries and banks and began to concentrate in their own hands vital branches of industry, such as iron and steel, fuel, chemicals and also several branches of the transport industry.

Cheap labour power, high prices of manufactured goods in the home market and the system of subsidies and protection introduced by thci government ensured huge profits for both Russian and foreign capital, in the period from 1895 to 1904 foreign firms drew profits from Russia tio tho amount of over 830,000,000 gold rubles, a sum exceeding the capital they iuv^cfcifcecl during that decade. Kruiu iorcign linanciers, mainly French, the tHarist government obtained what for that tim<^ wore huge loans. In lOOJl tsarist Russia's foreign debt stood at tlu? enormous sum of 3,000,000,000 gold rubles. Ink*, rest alone on thest* loans amounted to 130,000,000 gold rubles per annum, and this im posed a heavy burden upon the working ])0ople of tlie cH)mitry. As a. result of the intense inlliix of foreign capital into llussia, llussjan tsarism and Russian capitalism became (l(*])cndeut upon West-Muro ]}ean hnper ialism .

The Russian and foreign ca])italivsts, aided and supported by tsarist authorities, sid)jected the workers of Russia to monstrous ex 2 )loitation.

The Industrial Crisis at the Beginning of the 1900's

TiiC' economic crisi^which broke out in Western Europe at tlic cud of tht^ nineteenth and iDeginning of the twentieth century very soon spread to Russia, The influx of foreign capital sharply diminished. Owing to the poverty of the mfcses of the peasantry and tlie low wages earned by the workens, the purchasing power of tlie po])ulation w'as low. This aggravated the crisis. Production diminished c uis'dorably, ])arb]e.nlarly in the iron and steel and fuel industries: in 1002, the output of ■|)ig iron, for example, dropped 16 ])er cent below that of J00().Th<% crisis mosi <lisasfcrously alTcetod.the more highly capital istieally-tlovoloped regions (the Douetz Basin and others), where as many as 3,000 plants were closed down. Railway construction greatly dim'inislied. Thtis, from 1805 bo 1900, ever 3,000 versts of railwa^'^ line were laid down annually, whereas in 1903 only 453 versts were laid down.

Only the largest entet'iJrises were able to sxirvive* thes t'r.isis. During this period huge capitalist monopolies were formed in Russia under tlu^ control of foreign finance capital. In 1902 the Prodam ot was formed. This was a huge syndicate for tlio sale of the products of the iron and steel industry which controlled 80 per cent of the entire iron and steel industry of Russia. In the oil industry there were two iaonoj)olist* groups — Nobel Brothers and Rothschild. In this ]xeriod too a sewing cotton syndicate wasfoimccl, consisting of only two firms which mouoj) olized the Russian sewing-cotton market. Jn 1004 the Prodvagon Syn dicate was formed which monopolized nearly the entire sale of railway cars in Russia.

Taking advantage of the droj) of share ]}ric;os during the (Jrisis, foreign banks bought up the shares of Russian enterprises and banks and thus became the owners of these enteiprises. This still further increased the clependeucc of Russian capitalism ui)on WestEuropean imperialism.

During the j)oriod of the crisis the number of factory workers great ly diminished. At some of the plants in the 'Donotz Basin more than half of the workers were discharged. This increase in unemploymont led to a worsening of the conditions of labour. The employers took advantage of the crisis to rob the workers of tlio gains they had won during the industrial boom. Every wliore piece rates were cut and the working day lengthened. Adult workers were rc])laccd by youths and children who received only a half, or a third, of the pay which adults had re ceived. The steady influx into the towns of starving peasants who const'tutod cheap labour-power also served to woi^seil the conditions of the workers.

The Beginning of the Mass Political Struggle in Russia

The Political Awakening of the Working Class and the Part Played by Iskra

The crisis hastened the political awakening of the working class. Their want and lack of riglits, the unbridled tyranny of the employers, who always received the support of the police, and the oppression to which they were subjected by the tsarist autliorities set the workers thinking about the causes of their hard conditions and compelled them to seek a way out. Tlianks to the propaganda carried among them by the revolutionary Social-Democrats, they began to understand that tlie worst enemy of the 3iooplo was the autocracy, which supported and encouraged the oruolost exploitation of the work ers by the capitalists. An enormous part in the political odneation of the working class and in the organization of its struggle against the autocracy was played by the all-llussian Sooial-Domoeratic newspa per Ishra, which was founded by Lenin.

Lenin, while still in exile in Siberia, drew up a plan for the publication of a proletarian newspaper which was to help in building up a revolutionary Social-Democratic party, for without such a party the prole tariat could not fight for its emancipation.

Emphasizing the important part a newspaper could play in the work of organizing a party,

Lenin, in an article entitled "Where to< Begin?" wrote: "A paper is not merely a collective propagandist and collective agi tator, it is also a collective organizer" (V. I. Lenin, Select ed Works, VoL II, Moscow,

1934, p. 21).

The newspaper was ceaselessly to expose the crimes of tsarism and the treachery of the liberals.

It was impossible, however, to publish such a newspaper in tsarist B/Ussia. Lenin therefore decided to publish the paper abroad, where, at that time, conditions were more favourable for conducting revolu tionary activities. The first issue of Iskra appeared in December 1900. On its title page it bore the motto "The spark will kindle a flame, words taken from the reply which the Decembrists in exile made to Pushkin's appeal to continue the struggle. This motto was Iskra^s pledge to carry to the end the revolutionary struggle that had been initiated by preceding generations.

Lenin edited Iskra in conjunction with Plekhanov and other Social Democrats. It was printed on tissue paper, smuggled into Russia, and there distributed among the advanced workers. Workers caught read ing Iskra were liable to imprisonment and exile, but this did not daunt the class-conscious workers. They became extremely devoted to Iskra, which they regarded as their guide in their political struggle. They impatiently awaited the appearance of every new issue of the paper, and when they received it they read and re-road it until it was literally worn to tatters. A weaver from St, Petersburg wrote to the paper saying: "When you read the paper you understand why the gendannes and the jx^bce are afraid of us workers and of those intollectiials whoso load we follow, • . . In the past every strike was a great event, but now everybody knows that strikes alone are nothing, that now we must win freodom by fighting for it" (Iskra No. 7).

Workers in different towns acted as J,s'7cm'.v corrospondonts. Among these wore I. V, Babushkin and other advanced workers whom Lenin had trained in Social-Democratic study circles in the 1890 's. In tlio beginning of 1901, copies of the first issue of Loniu's lakra reached Tifiis (now Tbilisi). On Comrade Stalin's proposal tho Tillis Committee of the Social-Democratic Party announced its solidarity with the policy of Iskra. In September 1901 tho first issue of an illegal Georgian newspaper entitled Brdzola {The Sfrvggle)^ edited by Comrade Stalin, appeared. This newspaper was printed in an underground printing plant that was set up in Baku by a colleague of Comrade Stalin, Lado Ketskhoveli. Brdzola was the best Iskra-ist newspaper in Russia. Pur suing the political line advocated by Lenin's Iskra, it undeviatiiigly fought for the unity of the working-class movement of Georgia with that of the whole of Russia.

After tho Tifiis Committoo had declared its solidarity with Iskra, other Social-Democratic Oomniittccs in Russia did tho same.

The First Political Demonstrations in 1900 and 1901

As a result of tho industrial crisis and thei)ropaganda (jouductod by tho revo lutionary Sooial-Domoorats, tho mass working-class movoinont took another step forward and i)assod from economic strikes to political strikes and demonstrations.

The first to como into tho vStroots with rod Hags and the slogan ^"Down with the autocracy!" were tho workers and students of Kharkov. This demonstration occurred on May Day 1900 and created a profound impression upon the workers all over Russia. In August 1900, after a strike of the workers employed in tho Tifiis railway workshops, Com rade Stalin issued a leaflet calling upon the workers to commenco an open revolutionary struggle. Tho first open revolutionary demonstra tion of the Tillis workers was organized by Comrade Stalin in April 1901, and about 2.000 workers took part in it.

In 1901, May Day demonstrations and strikes took i)laoo all over the country. Of exceptional importance were tho events that occurred at the State Obukhov Munitions Plant, near St. Petersburg (now tho Bol shevik Works), which have gone into history as the "Obukhov dofonco."

On May 1,' 1901, as a result of the propaganda conducted by the Social-Democrats, of the 6,000 workers employed at tho Obukhov Works, 1,200 stayed away from work. The management dis charged the most advanced and active workers at tlio ])laixt. This gave xiso to a protest strike which commenced on May 7. Tho workers dc^ mauded the roinstatomont of tho discharged worktu's and tho dismissal of a number of foremen whom they detested. In answer to tins demand the assistant manager said with a couteini)tuous sneer: "Next thing, perhaps, yon will demand the discharge of the Cabinet Ministers!" "Not only the ministers, but also the tsar!" retorted the workers. Police and troops were called out against the strikers. To bar their way the workers oroctod barricades, and when the soldiers arrived they wore greeted with a hail of stones, logs of wood and chunks of iron. The police and tho troops could not take tlio workers' living quarters exce])t by storm. An active part in tho defence was played by women, Tlie workers in neighbouring plants joined the strikers. The liglit lasted throe hours. The troops occupied all the streets and side streets adjacent to the fi^oto^y. Eight hundred workers wore arrested, of whom thirty-seven were put on trial. At the trial, the workers delivered vehement speeches denouncing .the autocracy. Several of them wore condemned to penal servitudck^d to terms of imprisonment; tho rest wore deported from the capital. These sentences evoked protests from workers all over Russia.

Appraising the "Obukhov defence" as a new form of the mass pro letarian struggle, Lonin wrote: "Street fighting is possible, it is not the position of tho fighters but the position of tho government thfit is hopeless if it has to deal with larger numbers than those employed in a single factory" {V. I. Lenin, Golhoied Work^, Vol. IV, Book I, Now York, 1020, p. 121).

Political Strikes and Demonstrations in 1902 and 1903

The mass working-class movement to an incroasiiig dogroo assumed a po litical character. In Transcaucasia tho political struggle of tho workers was led by Comrade Stalin. On tlio iiistrucjtions of the Tiflis Committees he went to Batmn (now Batumi), and taking up his quarters in thc» working-class suburbs ho conducted revolutionary activities among the Batum workers.

In Batnm, Comrade Stalin organized eleven study circles and formed a Social-Domncratic organization in that town. On tho night of December 31, 1901, in tho guise of a Now Year's Eve party, tho first Social-Democratic Conference was hold in Batum; at this coniorono(? the Batum Committee of tho Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party was elected.

In January 1902 Comrade Stalin organized and led the first strikes at the Batum oil plants. In tho beginning of March 1902 a fire broke out in the storehouse of the Rothschild plant. The workers spent two days and nights extinguishing tho fire, but tho management refused to pay the workers for this time. Tho workers threatened to go on strike and the management yielded. Encouraged by this victory, the work ers in other plants went on strike in support of economic demands. On tho night of March 7, tho police arrested thirty-two strikers. On March 9 a workers' demonstratioix was hold in response to Comrade Stalin's appeal. Tho workers marched in columns to the doT)ortatioa centre whore the arrested strikers were detained, and demanded, their roloaso, Soldiers, their rifles at the ready, barred the way of the demonstrators.

Comrade Stalin delivered an impassioned spooelx to the workers call ing upon them to resist. Just thou volleys of rifle firo rang out; fifteen men wore killed and fifty-four wore wounded. The funeral of the vic tims of this massacre that was hold next day developed into an immense political demonstration against tsarism. The j)C)lic(i arrested 450 work ers and made intense efforts to find Copirado Stalin, but the workers concealed him in their homos. As ho moved from one worker *s homo to another, the press used for the printing of passion ate appeals to the Batum workers anti to tho Ajar ])easants was re moved also. From time to time ho arranged mootings in the cemetery, the watchman of which S3unpathized with tho working-class move ment. Soon, however, it became impossible for Comrade Stalin to hide in Batum any longer and so, taking his printing press with him, he moved to. the village of-MalAmudia, near Batum, where an old Abkhazian peasant named Hasliim concealed him in his garret. Old Hashim was inspired with profound respect for tho young revolutionary and began to help him. Every day ho would take a large basket filled with vegetables and fruit, under which wore concealed pamphlets and leaflets, and taking up his stand at the factory gates to sell his produce he would wrap tho vegetables and fruit in those loalh^ts and hand them to workers whom ho know. Those, in turn, gave thorn a wide circulation. The m^^^sterious activities that wont on in Hashim 's house attracted the attention of neighbouring peasants and one day they came to Comrade Stalin and asked him what ho was doing. Comrade Stalin answered: "I print leaflets in which I describe what hard lives you arc loading and how tho trouble can bo mended." "That's fine," said the old peasants. "What you are doing is for our good. , . . Until today Hashim alone hid you . . . now wo shall all hide you and your work to the host of our power and ability."

Nevertheless, in Aju'il 1002, tho police managed to discover Com rade Stalin's hiding place and arrested him. In November 1903 he was exiled to tho village of Novaya Uda, in tho Irkutsk Gubernia; but^two months later ho escaped from there and returned to Tiflis to resume his revolutionary activities.

/. j The political struggle of the proletariat in 1902 and 1903 assumed ^vide dimensions in other towns of Russia too. In May 1902, a demon stration was held in Sormovo, near Nizhni Novgorod (now called Gorky) . The demonstrators were arrested and tried. At the trial tho banner bearer, a worker named Zalomov, delivered a passionate speech in which he described the conditions of tho workers and called upon them to wage a struggle against tho autocracy. Subsequently, this speech was illegally printed and distributed. The Sormovo demonstration is described in Maxim Gorky's novel in which Zalomov figuros^

under the name of Pavel.

An important factor in the political education of the work ing class was the railway strike in Rostov-on-Don in 1902, which developed into the first general strike in Russia. The workers of nearly all the trades and fac tories in the city were involved. The conditions of the workers in the Central Workshops of the Vladikavkaz Railway were extremely hard. All the workers, even those who had worked there for over twenty years, were regard ed as day workers, and according to the tsarist laws they could be discharged at any moment without notice. The payment of wages, low though they were, was systematically delayed. In the beginning of November 1902, the 4,000 workers put forward demands, drawn up for them by the Don Committee of the R.S.D.L.P., for a 9-hour day and a 30 per cent increase in wages.

The management rejected the cla m and the workers went on strike. The workers of other factories in Rostov joined the strike and about 30,000 were involved. The Don Party Committee organized meetings in a ravine outside the city at which Social-Democratic orators spoke and read out Social-Democratic leaflets. For the first time in the his


tory of Russia the views of the Social-Democrats on the tasks of the working class wore openly proclaimed at public meetings. The workers displayed fine staunchness and solidarity. At one meeting a Colonel of Gendarmes appeared and ordered the workers to disperse. The speaker who was addressing the meeting asked: '"'Shall we obey this order?" "No, we shall not!" came the loud and unanimous reply, "In that case remain where you are and let us continue our talk," said the speaker. Meetings continued to be held. The authorities were dis concerted by the organized resistance of the workers and called out the Cossacks from the near-by villages. But when the Cossacks attempted to disperse the meetings the assembled workers and their wives and children lay ilat on the ground. The horses would not step upon the prostrate people and the Cossacks were obliged to retire.

Several days later soldiers fired upon a crowd assembled at a meet ing and killed and wounded several workers. So incensed were the workers by this outrage that they turuod the funeral of the victims into a revolutionary domoiisiTation. Only after mustering troops from neighbouring towns did tho authorities succeed in suppressing the strike. The police arrested many of the advanced workers and deported them from Rostov.

Tho Rostov strike, which developed into a political demonstration, was an extromoly important fiictor in stimulating tho class conscious ness of the workers. As Lenin wrote: "For tho iirst time tho proletariat is standing up as a class against all the other classes and tho tsarist government" (V. Gollecdcd VoL VII, Moscow, 1937,

Russ, ed., pp. 105-106).

The workers were 1 aught by their own oxporionco tliat an armed struggle against tsarism was necessary.

They were led to this conclusion also by tho general strikes in Transcaucasia and in the Uluraino, in tho summer of 1903. At tho end of May 1903, a strike broko out among tho oil workers in Baku, The workers in the engineering shops and railway depots joined the strike. In June, 45,000 workers wore involved in tho strike, now a general strike. Even the bakers, bootmakers and tailors went on strike; shops wore closed and no newspapers ap peared. Tho workers demanded an B-hour day and an increase in wages. The strikes wore led by tho Baku Social-Domocjratio Committee. Meetings wore held at which political speeches wore deliv ered and revolutionary leaflets wore distributed. As there wore few troops in Baku, tho employers resorted to a manoeuvre and protended to accede to tho workers' demands; but as soon as more troops arrived they withdrew their concession. TIxo Caucasian Party Committee called upon the workers of Tiflis and of other towns to back the de mands of the Baku workers by moans of a solidarity strike. On July 14, a general strike broke out in Till is which lasted ton days. Soon this strike spread to all tho industrial centres in Transcaucasia and over 100,000 workers were involved. In a number of places the workers came into collision with the Cossacks and the police. At Mildiailovo (now Stalinisi) the workers tried to stop a train but wore shot down by the soldiers who wero guarding tho railway. This massacre resulted in the outbreak of new protest strikes.

The general strike spread to the XJl?:raino — to Odessa, Kiev and Ekaterinoslav (now Dniep^'opetrovsk). Noting the characteristic features of this general strike of 1903, Lenin wrote: "The strikes aifoot an entire area^ over 100,000 workers are involved, mass political meet ings are repeatedly held during strikes in a number of towns. One feels that we are on the eve of barricades, . . (V. I. Lenin, Coh

leoted Works^ Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, od., p. 106.)

The working-class movement rousod other strata of tho popula tion, From 1899 onwards, student unrest and strikes wore an annual occurrence, and at their meetings the students put forth political demands. Bogolepov, the Minister of Education, issued 'Temporary Regulations" ordering that students who were involved in this unrest be conscripted for the army. Notwithstanding the repressive measures taken against them, the student movement grew. In 1901, following the example of the workers, the students and radical intelligentsia in St. Petersburg held a demonstration near the Kazafi Cathedral. The demonstrators were brutally assaulted by the police. In 1901-1902 a general students' strike affected all higher educational establishments and 30,000 students were involved.

The Zubatov Stratagem

The tsarist government realized that it could not cope with the working class by means of repressive meas ures alone. Scared by the steady growth of the revolutionary working class struggle it tried to check the mass working-class movement with the aid of police-formed workers' organizations. Playing upon the economic needs of the workers, agents of Zubatov, the Chief of the Moscow Secret Police, called meetings of the more backward sections of them and told them that the tsar would support their peaceful eco nomic demands if they refrained from organizing strikes and took no part in political struggle.

Zubatov societies were formed in Moscow, Minsk and Odessa. In Mos cow Zubatov 's agents succeeded, on February 19 , 1902, the anniversary of the abortion of serfdom, in organizing a monarchist demonstration of workers to the monument of Alexander II. Soon, however, this insid ious movement utterly collapsed. The revolutionary Social-Democrats, followers of Lenin, exposed the fact that the police were behind the Zubatov organizations. In spite of the opposition of Zubatov 's agents, the workers backed their economic demands by strikes. Fearing that he would lose his influence over the workers, Zubatov sent police offi cials to the factory owners and compelled them to make concessions to the workers. This roused the ire of the Moscow factory owners and they protested against Zubatov 's activities. One of them, a Frenchman named Goujon, complained to the French Ambassador that Zubatov was supporting a strike at his plant. The ambassador communicated this complaint to the Russian government and soon after the Zubatov ' organizations in Moscow were dissolved.

The failure of the Zubatov stratagem as an attempt on the part of the government to "harmonize" the economic needs and demands of the workers with the "aims of the Russian autocracy" was most vividly revealed by the general strike in Odessa in 1903. Here an economic strilco which had been organized with the help of Zubatov agents devel oped into a political strike. Even the most backward workers became convinced that the Zubatov organizations wore a police affair and began to go ovor to the side of Social-Democracy. Plehve, the Minister of the Interior, made haste to dissolve these organizations. The chief reason for the failure of tlio Ziibatov organizations, however, was tho growth of tho working-class movement, which was not to bo checked by means of a barrier like tho Zubatov stratagem.

The Peasant Movement in 1902, The revolutionary struggle waged by the workers aifocted tho peasantry, among whom discontent continued to grow. Tlio chief reason Ibr this discontent was that when they wore "liberated" in 18()1 the landlords do])rivod them of the best parts of tho land which they had cull/ivatod. Hence, tho ]ioasants were obliged to rent land from the landlords, mak ng iiayment in tho shaj)© of work on tho landlord's estate or of half tho crop raised on tho land rented. Tho huge estates of tho landlords — ^tho latifundia — continued bo hinder tho dovolopment of peasant farming. As Lenin wrote: . .The sum and substance of tho matter is that at one pole

of Russian agriculture we have 10,500,000 households (about 50,000,000 inhabitants) with 75,000,000 desyatins of land and at the other polo we have thirty thousand families (about 150,000 inliabitants) with 70,000,000 desyatins of land" (V. I. Lenin, Golkcied Works, Yol. XII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, od., p. 224).

Thus, on the average, one peasant family had se\'en desyatins of land whereas the latifundia of a single squire amounted to 2,333 desyatins, i, e., 333 times as much. Tho old serf form of (^xjdoitation crushed and ruined tho peasants. After tho frightful famine of 1801-1802 the peasants, up to 1900, experienced another three famine years and two that were almost such. In the autumn and winter of 1001-1002 there was another famine , The kulaks took advantage of fcho liard straits of the peasantry to got tho poorer section of them into their clutches. In this way nearly hah' tho area of peasant lands, passed into their hands.

Owing to the growth of the peasant poxmlati on, the average peas ant allotment by the beginning of tho twentieth century was only half the size it had boon in tho past. Tho land hunger of the ]ioasants increased and obliged them to rent land from the landlords and kulaks at exorbitant rents. In some places the rent oxcood ed the income that could bo derived from tho land because, while rents, rose, income from the land dropped, particularly in bad harvest years.

The impoverishment of the bulk of the peasantry increased and this caused an increase in arrears in tho payment of taxes. In some counties the peasants were as much as three or four years in arrears. The ruined and impoverished peasantry began to fight for tho aboli tion of landlordism.

In the spring of 1002 considerable peasant unrest broke out in the Ukraine — in the Kharkov and Poltava (jubemias whore tho jieasants' land hunger was particularly acute. By tho beginning of the twen tieth century the average peasant allotment in tho I'oltava Gubornia. had shrunk to one desyatin, whereas tho landlords owned as much as 60 per cent of the entire land in the gubernia. The industrial crisis still further aggravated the poverty of the peasants as it deprived them of the opportunity of finding work in the towns. The peasants rose in revolt, raided the landlords* estates and shared their grain stocks and cattle among themselves. Landlords were killed by peasants who set fire to their farm buildings and other property.

Troops were called out against the peasants. After a wholesale flogging many of them were put on trial and sentenced to long terms of imprisonment. Pines were imposed upon them for the benefit of the landlords amounting to 800,000 rubles. Notwithstanding the stern punishment that was infl cted upon the peasants in the Ukraine, the revolutionary peasant movement spread to other gubernias and was particularly intense in the Saratov Gubernia. Here the peasants fought the landlords by setting fire to their mansions, trespassing on their land, cutting down their trees, setting fire to their crops, and so forth. Peasant riots also broke out in the Tambov, Voronezh and Ekaterinoslav Gubernias, and also in the Caucasus.

In 1903 the peasant movement assumed an exceptionally mass and militant character in Guria where, influenced by the Transcaucasian Bolsheviks, it assumed a political character. The peasants refused to de liver half their crops to the landlords, refused to pay the tithes for the maintenance of the clergy, refused to pay taxes, would not recog nize the tsar*s officials and refused in a body to perform labour rent. To assist the Transcaucasian landlords the tsarist government sent in Cossacks who dealt cruelly with the peasants; it also deport ed many of the peasants to Siberia

Taken on the whole, however, the peasant revolt of 1902 did not yet assume the character of an organized mass movement. Lenin attrib uted this failure to the following reasons: "The peasant revolt was crushed because it was a revolt of an ignorant, unconscious mass, a re volt without definite and clear 'political demands, i. c., without de mands for a change in the system of state. The peasant revolt was crushed because it took place withoiU 'preparation. The peasant revolt was crushed because the rural proletarians had not yet formed an alliance with the urban proletarians. These are the three rea sons for the first failure of the peasants" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. V, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 312).

Lenin dealt with the conditions of the peasants in Russia in his pamphlet To the Rural Poor in which he called upon the peasants to wage a determined struggle under the leadership of the workers against the tsar and the landlords.

The Struggle to Create a Revolutionary Proletarian Party

Preparations for the Formation of a Party of a New Type

In the epoch of iniporialiKin tho utter incapability of tho old Social-Democratic parties of Western Europe to organize tlio workers for a revolutionary struggle for tho proletarian revolution was clearly re vealed. Hence, Lenin anjl his supporters launchod a struggle for tho formation of a party of a now typo.

As Comrade Stalin wrote subsequently, the conditions prevailing under imperialism reveal '^tho necessity for a new party, a militant party, a revolutionary party, one bold enough to load the proletar ians in the struggle for power, sullicdontly oxporioncod to find its bearings amidst the complex conditions of the revolutionary situation and sufficiently flexible to steer clear of all submerged rocks in the path to its goal" (J. Stalin, Problems of Laninim,, Moscow, 1945, p. 81).

The new party that Lenin and Stalin and tlieir closest colleagues built up was armed with the weaj)on of Marxism-Loniiiism— tho most advanced revolutionary theory extant.

The most important task that confronted Lenin 's Ishra was to draw up a program around which the Party was to unite. This ])rogram indicated first and foremost tlie ultimate aim of tlio proletarian class Struggle Socialism. This was tho maximum program. It also formulated tho demands for which tho proletariat fought while on tho road to tlio ultimate goal. This was the minimum program.

Lenin unfolded his plan for building a party of a now typo in What Is To Be Done? In this work of genius he urged that tho nucleus of tho Party should consist of professional revolutionaries for whom Party work would be their main profession. Ajnidst the conditions prevailing under tsarism, theParty could not bo other than a strictly secret organization, but at the same time it must not isolate itself from the working class, of which it was the vanguard. The members of the Party must be united ideologically and organizationally; they must be united in their advocacy of Marxian theory, uphold the pro gram and tactics of tho Party, take an active part in the work of the Party organization and maintain Party discipline. Lenin pointed out that the task of the Marxist party was to combine Socialism with tho working-class movement. Only by disseminating tho great teachings of Marx among the working class, urged Lenin and Stalin, could the Party infuse socialist consciousness into tho spontaneous working-class movement and make the proletariat understand its world historic mission to build the new socialist society.

The Second Congress of the R.S.D.L.P.

Mm rallied around itself a compact organization of professional revolutionaries led by Lenin and Stalin. Among Iskra^s agents, as the supporters of Lenin were then called, were N. E. Bauman and I. V. Babushkin. After winning the support of the majority of the Social-Democratic Committees in B.ussia, the Ishra organization set to work to prepare the Second Congress of the Party. This congress took place abroad in July and August 1903, (in Brussels, and later in London).

The congress adopted the Party program as presented by Ishra. The opportunists at the congress opposed this program, in particu lar, the demand for the dictatorship of the proletariat. But Lenin answered them with crushing efiect. The sharpest disagreements at the congress arose over the formulation of point 1 of the Party Rules. Lenin's formulation of point 1 read as follows: "A member of the Party is one who accepts its program, and supports it both financially and by his personal participation in the work of one of its organizations." The formulation proposed by the opportunist Martov called merely for the acceptance of the program and the rendering of financial support, but did not make it obligatory to participate in the work of one of the Party organizations. Unlike Lenin's formulation, the one proposed by Martov opened the door of the Party to unstable non-proletarian elements. With the object of preventing the Party from being swamped by petty-bourgeois elements the Leninists made strict demands on those who wished to join the Party.

In appraising the essence of that struggle Comrade Stalin wrote: ^'By their formula on Party membership the Bolsheviks wanted to set up an organizational barrier against the influx of non-prole tarian elements into the Party. The danger of such an influx was very real at that time in view of the bourgeois-democratic character of the Russian revolution" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism ^ Moscow, 1946, p. 381).

The Leninists stood for a militant revolutionary proletarian party; the Martovites stood for a petty-bourgeois opportunist party.

At the elections of the central bodies of the Party, Lenin's support ers obtained a majority and from that time onwards were called Bolsheviks. The opportunist Martovites were left in the minority and were thenceforth called Mensheviks,* The Mensheviks, who took the place of the Economists, reflected the interests of the non-proletarian,

. petty-bourgeois strata of society.

The Second Congress of the Party played an extremely important role in the history of the Russian and international proletariat. At this congress was formed the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party (R.S.D.L.P.)j revolutionary party of the working class in our country.

To combat tho efforts of tlie Menshevilcs to turn the Party back to the old road of amateur and study-circle methods, Lenin wrote that splendid book Om Step Forward, Two Steps Back, in which, for the &st time in tho history of Marxism, ho expounded tho doctrine that the Marxist party is the proletariat's chief weapon in its struggle for the proletarian revolution.

Tsarism and the Bourgeoisie on the Eve of the Revolution

The Bourgeois Liberal Opposition

Tho mass movement of the proletariat and the peasantry in the beginning of the twentieth century helped to rouse the bourgeois liberals and the petty-bourgeois intelligentsia to political activity.

The stronghold of the liberal landlords wore the Zemstvo achninis trations which dealt with the local affairs of the rural population. The Zemstvo liberal landlords wore, connootod with tho liberal bour geoisie and were almost merged with them, for they themselves wore beginning to introduce capitalist methods in agriculturo. Political groups of tho liberal bourgooisio arosc^ and in tho Hummer of 1903 those groups united to form tho lioague of KmancipaLion, which claimed as its object tho ostablishinent of a constitutional monarchy in RmsHia. They accused tho workers and peasants who wore fighting for thoir economic and political emancipation;, of displaying "class egoism," and they attributed the poverty of tho peasants and the agrarian move ment to the "ignorance of tho peasants," Tho bourgeois liberals were hostile to revolution and wanted to achieve tho constitutional mon archy by peaceful moans.

In the columns of Iskra Lenin constantly denounced tho treachery and cowardice of the bourgeois-liberal opposition.

As a result of the peasant movement, Narodnilc organizations began to spring up again among a section of the potty-bourgoois intelli gentsia. In 1902 these groups united to form tho Socialist-Revolution ary Party (known for short as tho S.R.s), which revived the tactics of individual terrorism against the tsar's ministers. In April 1902 tho Minister of the Interior Sipyagin was assassinated. His place was taken by the arch reactionary Plehvo, who for many years liad been at the head of tho secret political police. Tho terrorist tactics of tho Socialist-Revo lutionaries caused enormous harm to the revolutionary movement, par ticularly in view of the development of the mass struggle. The terrorist section of tho Socialist-Revolutionary Party was hoailod by Azof, who was subsequently proved to bo an agent provocatenr. Ho direotod tho ■ entire terroristic activities of tho Socialist-Revolutionary Party under the instructions and in the interest of the tsarist secret police and betrayed the participants in projected acts of terrorism to the gendarmes.

The Socialist-Revolutionary Party claimed to be a socialist party and to champion the interests of the "working people" as a whole, drawing no distinction between the peasant poor and the kulaks. Actually, the Socialist-Revolutionaries were not socialists at all, but represented the Left wing of the bourgeois democrats. The 'bour geois liberals secretly supported and financed the terrorist activities of the Socialist-Revolutionaries.

In 1902, Lenin wrote that the Socialist-Revolutionary Party was a party of ."revolutionary adventurism" that stood apart from the working-class movement. He also said that "without the working people bombs are utterly useless." The Socialist-Revolutionaries picked out and adhered to everything that was fallacious in the theory and practice of the former Narodniks.

The Second Congress of the. Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party adopted a 'resolution on the Socialist-Revolutionaries which stated that it "regards their activities as harmful not only to the polit ical development of the proletariat but also to the general democratic struggle against absolutism."

Tsarism in the Struggle against the Movement for National Liberation

Influenced by the development of capitalism and the pro letarian class struggle at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century, the oppressed non-Russian nationalities which constituted 57 per cent of the entire population of Russia began to awaken to active political life. This awakening found expression in the formation of bourgeois and petty-bourgeois nationalist parties.

Tsarism cruelly suppressed the nascent movement for the libera tion of the oppressed nations in Russia. Towards the begimiing of the twentieth century national oppression became still more intense: the remnants of the cultural institutions of the oppressed nationalities were destroyed, instruction in the native languages in schools was pro hibited, and the national organizations of the non-Russian peoples were persecuted.

Characterizing the colonial policy of tsarism, Comrade Stalin wrote: "Tsarism deliberately cultivated patriarchal and feudal oppres sion in the border regions in order to keep the masses in a state of slav ery and ignorance. Tsarism deliberately settled the best areas in the border regions with colonizers in order to force the natives into the worst areas and to intensify national enmity. Tsarism restricted and at times simply suppressed the native schools, theatres and educational institutions in order to keep the masses in intellectual darkness. Tsar ism frustrated the initiative of the host members of the native population. Lastly, tsarism siip])rcssod all activity on tlio part of the massoK of the border regions" (J. Stalin, Mamm avd the National and Colonial Question, Moscow, 10*40, p. 71).

In all the non-Tliissian national regions the tsarist govornmoni pursued a policy of forcible Russification. This ])o]ioy found most viv id expression in the splicre of public education. Jn the Caiu^asus, at the end of the ninotoonth century, thoro was an average of one school for every 800 Russians, but the average for the native inliabit ants was one for every 4,800 Georgians, one for every 5,400 Armenians and one for every 17,300 Azerbaijanians. Instriuition in clemonlary schools was conducted exclusively in Russian. Thoro wore villages in which the entire population was illiterate. Thoro wore no higher edu cational establishments.

To crush the movement for national liberation the tsarist author ities incited the various nationalities against each other. In Transcau casia the tsarist police systematically fomented national strife between Armenians and Azerbaijanians. The Minister of the Interior Plohve took a direct hand in instigating bloody pogioras against the Jews. In April 1908 the police organized a frightful pogrom against the Jews in Kishinev. This crime of the tsarist clicpio evoked tlio loud protest of progressive people all over the world.

Finland was dein*ivod of her autonomy. By a law passed in I90J Finns were conscripted for the Russian anny and the Finnish national units wore abolished. Russian officials wore ap])ohitod to all ad ministrative posts in Finland and they pursued a ])oli('y of Russifica tion. In its struggle against the movement of the Finnish people for national liberation tho tsarist govornmont rtdied on the su})port of the Finnish and Swedish feudal landlords in l^'inland. The working class movement in Finland was led by tlio Finnish Social Democratic Party, of which the policy was similar to that of the Russian Mensheviks, and which was united in a bloc with tho Finnish bourgeoisie.

In Poland, in the middle of tho 1890's, two nationalist parties were foimcd: a party of the bourgeoisie and nobility known as tho People's Democratic Party ("'Narodovtsi") and tho petty-bourgeois Polish Socialist Party (P.P.S.). Fearing that if Poland became independent the Russian market would bo lost for Polish goods and that they would bo deprived of the support of Russian tsarism in their struggle against the workers and peasants of Poland, the ""Narodov tsi" (known as ^'Endeki") gave xrp tho demand for indopondonce in favour of autonomy within tho Russian empire. The aim of tho Polish Socialist Party wto to establish a botirgeois Poland indopond ent of Russia.

In Byelorussia a potty-bourgeois party knowii as tho Byelorus sian Socialist Gromada was formed and was entirely under the iufluonoe of the' P.P.S. It demanded autonomy for Byelorussia and her amalgamation with Lithuania.

In 1897, a Social-Democratic league, known as the Bund, was formed among the Jewish artisans in Poland, Lithuania and Byelorussia. The Bund was represented at the Second Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. and there it demanded recognition as the sole repre sentative of all the Jewish workers in Russia, no matter where they resided. Had this nationalistic demand been conceded, it would have meant isolating the Jewish proletariat from the Russian pro letariat and subordinating it to the influence of the Jewish bourgeoisie. The Second Congress rejected the demand and the Bund withdrew from the Party.

In 1900, thanks to the influence of the Ukrainian nationalist or ganizations in Western Ukraine, a bourgeois nationalist party was formed in the Ukraine known as the Revolutionary Ukrainian Party (R.U,P.). This party demanded Ukrainian independence under the protectorate of Austria.

In Georgia there was a party of Georgian Mensheviks, headed by Noah Jordania, which advocated unity among all Georgians irre spective of the class they belonged to.

All these bourgeois and petty-bourgeois nationalist parties adopted national-reformist programs, and wkile striving for increased political rights and privileges for their native landlords and bourgeoisie they fought against the workers and peasants of their respective na tions. Only the Bolsheviks led the revolutionary mass struggle of the working people of all the oppressed nationalities in tsarist Russia and demanded the complete abolition of all national oppression. They issued the slogan of the right of nations to self determination, including the right to secede from tsarist Russia and to form independent states.

The Bolsheviks incessantly maintained that the oppressed national ities could achieve genuine national liberation only as the result of the overthrow of tsarism and the abolition of the power of the land lords and cajpitalists. Hence, they called upon the working people of all the nationalities in Russia to rally round the Russian proletariat, the vanguard fighter and leader of the revolution ary struggle of all the numerous nationalities inhabiting Russia. Lenin and Stalin denounced the efforts of the nationalist parties to turn the working people of the oppressed nationalities away from joint struggle with the entire Russian people for democracy and for Socialism.

The Russo-Japanese War and the First Russian Revolution (1904–1907)

The Russo-Japanese War

Preparations for the Russo-Japanese War

TJio dovolopmont of imperialisiu at the end of the nineteenth and tlie beginning of the twentieth century caused an extreme intonsificatiou of the struggle among the imperialist countries for a redivision of the world.

Particularly intense became the struggle for the command of the Pacific and for the partition of China, the territory of which had not yet been seized by the imperialists, A participant in this struggle was Russian tsarism, which came into conilict with Japanese imperialism in Manchuria. The beginning of the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway which would greatly strengthen Russia's position in tlu^ Par East, prompted Japanese im])erialism to make liasto to carry out its long cherished designs of armed conquest at the expense of China.

In the SinoJapanese War of 1804-lS!)r> China was defeated and was conipollod to sign a peace treaty whicjli obligated her to i)ay Jai)an an enormous indemnity and to code to her the whole of the south coast of Manchuria, together with Liao-tung Peninsula, including Port Arthur and Korea.

Russia, however, jointly with Germany and Prance, compelled .Japan to modify these oppressive terms and in the end Mancluiria with the Liao-tung Peninsula and Port Arthur, and also Korea remained under Chinese rule. In 1896, Witte, tho tsar's Minister of Finances, concluded a treaty with China for tho construction of the Chi * neso Eastern Railway, which was to run through North Manchuria to shorten tho route to Vladivostok. The construction of this railway facilitated tho seizure of Manchuria and Korea by tsarist Rus sia. In 1898 Russia secured a lease of tho Liao-tung Peninsula, including Port Arthur, and thus secured an outlet to tho China Sea. Measures wore taken to speed up the construction of tho railway from Harbin through South Manchuria to Port Arthur.

Germany, by an agreement arrived at between Wilhelm II and Nicholas II, occupied tho port of Kiaochow, Groat Britain occupied the port of Weihaiwoi. Prance rounded off her Indo-Ohinoso posKses sions at the expense of China. Tlio United States of America domandcKl the "open door" in China, that is to say, equal freedom for all the capitalist countries to exploit China.

The systematic plunder of China by tho imperialist countries gave rise, in 1900, to a mass popular revolt against tho foreign invaders. This revolt was Imown as the Boxer, or Big Fist, Rebellion. The united forces of the imperialists, including those of tsarist Rus sia, were flung against the rebels, captured Peking and sacked the city. While crushing the rebellion, tsarist troops, on the pretext of protecting the Chinese Eastern Railway, occupied the whole of Manchuria, which the tsarist high government officials had already given the derisive nickname of "Yellow Russia."

A group of adventurers belonging to the circle that was close to Nicholas II formed a company which obtained a timber concession on the Korean River Yalu bordering on Manchuria. This con cession was intended to serve as a pZuce d^armes for the seizure of Korea, Port Arthur was converted into a naval fortress and base for the Russian Pacific Fleet, for the construction of which the tsarist government in 1899 allocated 90,000,000 rubles.

Meanwhile, Japan, which in 1902 concluded a military alliance with Great Britain against Russia, was actively preparing for war. Imperialist Japan strove not only to squeeze tsarist Russia out of Korea and Manchuria, but also to seize Sakhalin and the whole of the Russian Far East. British diplomacy set out to activize Russian policy in Europe and in the Near East, where the conflict between the German and Austro-Hungarian imperialists and Russia would inevitably bring about a rap]iroohoment between Russia and Great Britain against Germany. Wilhelm II, in his turn, tried hard to tempt Nicholas II with the prospect of the advantages to be gained from friend ship with Germany, in the hope of intensifying Anglo-Russian antag onisms and of destroying the alliance between Russia and Prance.

Among other things Russian tsarism regarded war as a means of diverting the attention of the workers and peasants of Russia from their real enemies, the landlords and capitalists. The police dictator Plehve said: "To avert a revolution in Russia we need a little victorious war."

The Outbreak and the Course of the War

Knowing that Rus sia was unprepared for war, Japan decided to strike a sudden blow. Spies provided the Japanese High Command with an exact plan of the disposition of the Russian warships in Port Arthur, On the night of January 26, 1904, when the entire commanding personnel of the Russian fleet were at a ball to celebrate the birthday of the wife of Admkal Stark, the Commander-in-Chief, Japanese destroy ers, without a declaration of war, stole up under cover of darkness to the outer roadstead of Port Arthur where the Russian squadron was lying at anchor, and blew up three of the finest Russian warships; the battleships Retmzan and Cesarevich and the cruiser Pallada. In the morning of January 27 the Japanese bombarded Port Arthur from the sea and damaged four more warships. That same day a Japanese squad ron damaged two Russian warships that were trying heroically to light their way out of the Korean port of Clio-ixiiihpo into the opoii sea. Notwithstanding the severe damage inflicted upon them, the two ships — the cruiser Varyag and tlio gunboat Koreyetz — entered into unequal combat with the Japanese squadron and perished heroically off the Korean coast. After weakening the [Russian (loot by this ti'cach erous attack, Japan secured command of the sea.

Japan had prepared herself well for wa?*. She Kcciired for herself international syiupatliy, assistance from the U.S.A. in protecting her rear, and financial assistance from her ally, Croat Britain, German instructors helped to train the Japanese army, which was equipped with weapons of German pattern: machine guns and riilcs, field and mounted artillery, and heavy Kruj;)p siege guns.

Hostilities on land did not commence immediately on the out break of war. Japan's main object was to destroy the Russian fleet and gain complete command of the sea routes. She therefore tried to isolate the Vladivostok squadron from the Port Arthur squadron and to impose a complete blockade upon Port Arthur. Meanwhile, the Russian High Command slowly mustered its forc*<ns in Manchuria. The transportation of troops, arms, ammunition and pi'ovisions tens of thousands of kilometres across the Great Siberian Road was a long and difficult task. Tho railway ended at Lakc^ Baikal and men and freight had to bo shipped across in boats or ic-ebrea leers, and further on Rus sian carts andhoims liad to struggle over the bad roads of Manchuria.

Tho army lacked mountain artillery and grenades, there was a shortage of machine guns, rifles and shells, and telegraph and tele phone communication wore extremely ])oor.

From tho very beginning of tlio war tsarist Russia sustained defoai» after defeat. General Kuropatkin, tho Commander-in-Chiof of tlu^ Russian land forces, carried with him to tho front several carloads of small icons which he distributed among tho troops to raise their spirits, but there was a shortage of shells with which to conduot tho war. The aims of tho wav were alien to tho soldiers wlio had been transported 10,000 versts from tho heart of Russia. All this made the war extremely unpopular.

After the first battles the Russian squadron found itself shut up ill Port Arthur; the Japanese warships blockaded tho port from the sea. The other small cruiser squadron was in Vladivostok, out off from Port Arthur.

The talented Admiral Makarov was ajjpointod Oommander-iu Chief of the Fleet in Port Arthur. The son of a sailor, his promotion was due entirely to his outstanding military capabilities. In Port Arthur he worked successfully to improve tho lighting efficiency of tho fleet with the object of engaging tho Japanese; but on March 31, 1004, as the fleet was glutting out to moot tho ommiy, his flagship, tlie battleship Pel/ito'pavlovsk, struck a mine and sank. Makarov ijorished together with 600 of the 700 men who constituted the crew. The famous Russian battle scene painter V. V. Vereshchagin, who was on board the Petropavlovsk at the time, perished too.

In April 1904, in a battle on the river Yalunear Chiu -Lien-Ch 'eng, a Russian force of 20,000 men that was barring the Japanese advance into Manchuria was defeated. In May the Japanese cut the lines of communication between Port Arthur and Manchuria and the fortress was thus invested on both land and sea. A Japanese army of 80,000 men conducted operations against Port Arthur and another army moved north into Manchuria. In August 1904 the Russian fleet that was blockaded in Port Arthur left the fortress and engaged the Japanese fleet in an endeavour to break through to Vladivostok. At first the battle went in favour of the Russians, but in the end the numerical superiority of the Japanese forces told and part of the fleet returned to Port Arthur, while those vessels which succeeded in breaking through made for neutral ports.

In Augusb 1904, a battle lasting several days was fought near LiaoYang. The Russian troops repulsed all the furious attacks launched by the Japanese upon the main LiaoYang positions. The Japanese command was already preparing to retreat southward when Kuropatkin,. having received false information to the effect that the Japanese were out flanking the Russian army on the left, himself ordered a retreat in spite of the fact that he still had two fresh a,Tmy corps ill reserve, whereas the Japanese had already expended all their reserves.

In September and October 1904, a second big battle took place near the river Shaho which lasted for nearly two weeks. The Rus sian troops held their position, but this time too the Russian Command failed to take advantage of the situation to achieve victory.

Port Arthur continued its resistance for eleven months. The defence of the fortress was organized by the talented General Kondratenko, a military engineer, who was appointed chief of the land defence. On his initiative improved fortifications and blindages were erected and the manufacture of grenades and observation balloons was organ ized on the spot. The guns and ammunition were removed from the sunken warships and utilized for the land defences, and the crews of these ships were transferred to the land. General Kondratenko appre ciated the enormous political and military importance of Port Arthur and devoted all his skill and resourcefulness to the task of holding it. He was popular among the soldiers, roused their fighting spirit, and awarded military decorations to those who displayed heroism. General Stcssol, the Gommander-in-Chief of the fortress, how ever, proved to bo a traitor and did all in his power to hinder the defence. On December 20, 1904, he treaclierously surrendered Port Arthur. During the period of the siege the defenders of the fortress inflicted heavy casualties upon the enemy amounting to about 130,000 killed and wounded. Considerable damage was also iu^l■i(^ted upon the Japa nese coastal fleet by the Russian coastal artillery and mines.

In this war too the Russian soldiers and sailors displayed heroism and high fighting qualities. Characteristic of this was the case that occurred in February 1904, when the destroyer SiwgmhcM engaged four Japanese destroyers and cruisers and sank one of them* On being called upon to surrender the crow refused. When the Ja]iancso ships closed in on the vessel in order to capture it, two sailors whoso names have remained unknown, ran below and opened the valves and thus flooded the ship to prevent it falling into the hands of the enemy. A monument to the memory of these two heroes of the SieregmlicM now stands in Leningrad. Many feats of heroism wore i>orformod by the soldiers and sailors in the battles of Shalio, LiaoYang and Mukden and during the defence of Port Aj'thur, but the blunders of the com manders nullified the heroic efforts of the army and ileot.

Significance of the Fall of Port Arthur

The fall of Port Arthur signified the inglorious end of the war against Ja]mn, although the tsarist government still made cjfforts to continue it. Tsarist Russia had held Port Arthur for six yoai's and had s])cnt millions of rubles on its fortification, but this stronghold was capturod yitliin a few months.

The condition of the army and the situation on the various fronts wore a reflection of the general rotiouness of the tsarist regime. General Grippoiiburg, tlio commander of one of the armies, after fosing a battle, deserted the army and lied to St, Polersbuig. Other geiici* als were concerned only with their own welfare. Gencial Stackle berg, while at the front, thought more of his own comfort than of any thing else. Ho had a special freight car attached to his train in which he kept a cow so that ho might have fresh cream with his morning coj'^ec . The officers of the army wore no bettor. Tho Commandcr-in-Chief Kuropatkiii wrote concerning them: "Large numbers of officers arc tired of the war, and many of them, oven those of high rank, feign sickness and try to get sent to tho roar." In speaking of tlic rank and file, Knropatkin could not help admitting that "the war is alien to them." Embezzlement, theft and corruption were rife in tho army. The military equipment of tho tsarist anny was far inferior to that of the Japanese. Port Arthur did not even have a radio telegraph, although it had been invented by tho Russian scientist A. S. Popov as far back as 1895, A whole series of available military inventions were not employed in the tsarist army. Tho army and its rear tconu^d with Japanese spies and saboteurs. Certain Polish socialists rendered Japan direct assistance by acting as spies for her, and a similar rol<ik was played by certain members of the Finnish bourgeoisie who re ceived financial assistance from Japan. In an article entitled "The Fall of Port Arthur" published on January 1, 1905, Lenin, summing up the military and political bank ruptcy of tsarism, wrote: "The fleet and the fortress, the field forti fications and the land forces proved to be obsolete and useless.

"The connection between the military organization of the country and its entire economic and cultural system has never been so close as it is at the present time" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 48).

Lenin drew the conclusion that the military defeat of Russia must become the starting point of a revolutionary crisis in the country and that the capitulation of Port Arthur was the prologue to the capitu lation of tsarism. He directly connected the further development of the revolution with the defeat of tsarism. "The cause of Russian freedom and of the struggle of the Russian (and world) proletariat for Social ism," he wrote, "depends on the military defeats suffered by the autoc racy" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 49). He called upon the revolutionary proletariat tirelessly to oppose the war. In this predatory and shameful wot, Lenin and the Bolsheviks stood for the defeat of the tsarist government, for such a defeat would facilitate the victory of the revolution over tsarism.

Comrade Stalin urged the need for the defeat of Russian tsarism in this war. In one of the leaflets he wrote against the war, he said: "We want this war to be more lamentable for the Russian autocracy than was the Crimean War. . . . Then it wras serfdom that fell, now, as a result of this war, we will bury the child of serf dom — ^the autocracy and its foul secret police and gendarmes!" (Beria, On the History of the Bolshevik Organizations in Transcaucasia, Moscow, 1939, p. 46.)

The Revolutionary Crisis on the Eve of 1905

The Russo Japanese War greatly aggravated the economic situation in Russia. The war called for the expenditure of enormous funds, and this expend iture was met by foreign loans obtained on exorbitant terms and by the raising of indirect taxes. As a consequence the cost of living rose considerably. The calling up of the reserves for the army struck a heavy blow at the peasant farms, for it deprived them of man power.

The industrial crisis became more acute, particularly in the textile industry. The capitalists cut wages. Strikes became more frequent.

The growth of the working-class movement and the defeat tsar ism sujBFored in the Far East revived the opposition of the liberal bourgeoisie, because, for one thing, they were afraid that the govern ment would not be able to cope with the gi^owing working-class and peasant movement. In 1904, Finnish nationalists assassinated Bobri kov, the dictator of Finland. In July of that year Socialist-Revolu tionaries assassinated Plehve. After its defeat in the battle of Liaoyang tlie tsarist govoruinout tried to win over to its side the moderate liberals, particularly the Zemstvo liberals, and in November 1904, it sanctioned the convocation of a Zemstvo congress. The majority at this congress ox])ressod itself in favour of the establishment of a parliament with legislative powers; the minority wanted a ])arliam(5nt with only advisory povVers. The Zemstvo liberals believed that the tsar would assemble the representatives of the Ziunstvos and town councils, who in their turn would form a })arliameut.

The Zemstvo liberals and bourgeois iiitelleetiials began l-o or ganize banquets at which, proposing toasts drunk in eham])agno, they timidly expressed the desire to receive political rights. The Mensheviks supported these political banquets, but the Bolsheviks denounced the traitorous conduct of the liberals and the policy of compromise pursued by the Mensheviks. In a pamphlet ho wrote entitled The. Zeinsivo Campa.i(jn and the Iskra Plan, Lenin pointed out that the main task of the proletariat was not to iiid nonce the liberals, but to prepare for a decisive battle against tsarism. He called upon the workers to ann and prepare for insurrootioii.

In November and Douembor 1904, the Bolslieviks organized street demonstrations in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Kharkov and other cities under tlie slogans of ^'Down witli the autocraty !*" 5 "\Dowu with the war!"

In that same ycuu* the Bolsheviks in TVanscaucasia developed considerable activity under Comrade Stalin's leadcu'ship. In Decem ber 1904, Comrade Stalin led a huge strike of the oil workers in Baku which lasted from December 13 to the end of the month and involved 8,300 workers employed in 21 plants. The Baku ])rolotarians drew up a series of demands which in the beginning of 1905 became the mili tant program of all the revolutionary workers of Russia. At the head of this list were th(5 demands for the convocation of a Constituent Assembly and for an 8-hour working day. During the strike the workons held numerous demonstrations under the slogans: "Down with the autocracy !'% "Down with the war!"

The police tried to disrupt the strike by fomenting national strife between the Azerbaijan and Armoniaii workers, but all their efforts in this direction failed.

The Baku strike ended in a brilliant victory for the workers. For the first time in the liistory of Russia the workers compelled the capi talists to conclude a collective agreement concerning the hiring of workers. The agreement established a 9-honr day (eight hours on the eve of holidays). "The Baku strike, ■"* wrote Comrade Stalin, "was the signal for the glorious actions in January aud February all over Russia" {History of the Communist Party of the /Soviet Union | Bol sheviks], Short Course, Moscow, li)45, p. 50).

At the end of 1904, the government, in its dccrcn* of December 12f promised to make some slight concessions, but declared that it would not permit any changes in the autocratic state system. But tsarism was incapable of averting the revolution.

January 9, 1905—The Beginning of the Revolution

Bloody Sunday

The approach of the revolution compelled the tsarist government to seek every possible means of diverting the workers from the political struggle. One of their instruments for the achievement of this object was the priest Gapon, an agent provo cateur, who, on the instruction of the secret police, attempted to repeat the Zubatov experiment and in 1904 formed the Assembly of Russian Factory Workers. This association organized pro monarchist lectures, theatrical performances and concerts for workers.

On January 8, 1905, the management of the Putilov Works (now the Kirov Works) discharged four workers. Next day 12,000 of their fellow-employees came out on strike in protest against these dismissals. The workers of other plants in St. Petersburg joined the strike and on January 8 the strike became a general one, involving 150,000 workers.

To keep the workers away from the revolutionary struggle the priest Gapon put forward a treacherous plan to draw up a petition to the tsar in the name of the St. Petersburg workers and to get all the workers to march in a body to tlic Winter Palace to present it. He infoi'inocl the sc(*ret police of this plan and ibo latter approved of it. The government decided to shoot down ilio workers and to drown the growing revolutionary movcuneiit in blood.

Tho petition read as follows: "Wo, tbo workingmen of St. Peters burg, onr wives, our ohildroii and our bolpk'ss old parents, have (jomo to Tlico, our Sovereign, to seek trtitb and ]>rotoetion. Wo are poverty-stricken, avo are o])pressed, wo are burdened with unendurable toil; wo suffer hiuuiliation and are not treated like human beings. . , . Wo have suffered in ]mtionce, but wo are being driven deeper and deeper into tho slough of poverty, lack of rights and ignorance; wo arc being strangled by despotism and tyranny, , . . Our patience is exhausted, Tho dreaded moment has arrived when we would rather die than bear these intolerable sufferings any longer "

Then followed a series of economic and political demands for the workers, chief of which was the demand for tho convocation of a Constituent Assembly.

In the original draft of the petition there were no political demands whatever; they wore introduced on tho proposal of tbo Bolsheviks when the petition was discussed at workers' mootings. TJie Bolsheviks urged tho workers to give up tho idea of marching in ])rocessiou to tho tsar and told them that freodoiu could not bo obtained by means of petitions, but a largo section of tho workers still believotl iii tho tsar. "Wo 'll try. Tho tsar cannot reject our just demands," they said.

Early in the morning on Sunday tlauuary 9 (22), 1005, 140,000 workei's carrying portraits of tho tsar, Hags and icons marched to the Winter Palace, ohautiug prayers on the way.

The tsarist government had decided to greet tho workers with bul lets and bayonets. Tho entire city was divided U]) into military areas, and police, Cossacks and troops wore posted every whore. Troops posted at the city gates began to fire at the workers, to ])re vent them penetrating into tho city. Nevertheless, large num bers of workers reached tho Winter Palace Square. The brutal tsarist troox)s shot d 9 wn tho approaching crowds of peaceful workers, and what is more, picked off children, many of whom were perched on the trees in tho Alexander Park adjacent to the square. That day over a thousand workers were killed and over two thousand were wounded. The Bolsheviks marched with the workers and many of them were killed or wounded.

The workers gave to January 9 tho name of Bloody Sunday. On that day even tho backward workers lost all faith in the tsar. "Wo have no tsar," said aged workers, destroying tho portraits of tho tsar that hung in their homes.

The Bolsheviks issued lea (lots headed: "To Arms, Comrades!" whereupon the workers raided gunsmiths' shops and workshops and seized the arms. In the afternoon of January 9, the first barricades were erected on Vasilyevsky Island, a district of St. Peters burg. The workers said: "The tsar gave it to us; weTl now give it to him !" Collisions with the police occurred in the streets. Cries were raised: '"Down with the autocracy!"

On January 9, 1905, the working class received a great lesson in civil war. As Lenin wrote: ". . . The revolutionary education of the proletariat made more progress in one day than it could have made in months and years of drab, humdrum, wretched existence" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 289).

Lenin heard of the events of Bloody Sunday in Geneva, where he was living at that time in exile. In an article entitled: "The Beginning of the Revolution in Russia," he appraised these events in the following terms: "The eyes of the proletariat of the whole world are turned with feverish impatience towards the proletariat of the whole of Russia. The overthrow of tsarism in Russia, begun so valiantly by our working class, will be the turning point in the history of all coun tries" \lhid,, p. 292). Lenin called upon the Party and the work ing class immediately to commence preparations for an armed insurrection.

Protest Strikes Throughout the Country

This massacre of the workers by order of the tsar called forth protest strikes all over the country. In January alone 440,000 workers were involved in strikes, compared with only 430,000 throughout the whole of the preceding ten years. As Lenin wrote: "It is this awakening of tremendous masses of the people to political consciousness and revolutionary struggle that marks the historic significance of January 22, 1905" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 2),

On January 11, strikes broke out in Moscow whence they spread to the textile districts around Moscow and to Ivanovo-Voznesensk,

Strikes also broke out in Poland, Finland, the Ukraine, the Caucasus and Siberia. In one of the leaflets he issued in the beginning of 1'905, Comrade Stalin wrote that as soon as the signal was heard from St. Petersburg the workers of all nationalities, "as though by common consent, responded with unanimous fraternal greeting to the call of the St. Petersburg workers and boldly challenged the autocracy" (Beria, On the History of the Bolshevik Ori^anizaiions in Transcaucasia, Moscow, 1939, p. 65).

On January 18, a general strike of the Tiflis workers commenced under Comrade Stalin's leadership. Bolshevik agitators distributed among the strikers leaflets in the Georgian, Armenian and Russian languages, calling upon thorn to prepare for an armed insurrection. In response to the appeal of the Caucasian Fade* al Committee of the Party, the workers of Baku, Batum, Chiaturi and other industrial centres in Transcaucasia also came out on strike. Everywhere meetings and demonstratioiis wore held, during which tlioro %vcro c.olliBioiis with tho police and troops.

At tho head of tho revolutionary movciuont inarehod the motal workers, and they were followed by workers of tho textile and other industries, lii declaring their ])rotest. striki^s, tho workers also put forward economic doniands. This conibinai-ion of economic demands with political doniands lent the strikes tremendous for(^o.

The massacre of tho workers on January 0 roused the indignation among tho working people in Western E\iropo too. Tho workers of Paris, London, Vienna and Brussels demonstrated outside ihe Rus sian embassies, their watchwords being: "Down with lsarisml'% "Down with the assassins !" "Long live tho revolution!"' The workers of Prance and Italy sent the Russian 'w^'orkci's fratorjial greetings and promised them their assistance.

Tsarism and the Bourgeoisie after January 9

To combat the incipient revolution, the tsar ap]iointod Tro]mv, formerly Chief of Police in Moscow, Governor General of St. Petersburg. Practically, Trepov became the militajy dictator; ho lu'oclaiincd martial law in the capital.

The tsar received a deputation of "workers*' wlio had boon espe cially picked by tho i)olico and tol<l tluMii that, ho believed in tlu^ "unshakable devotion of tho working ])oo]d(^"' and tlioroforo "forgave them." This cynical statonicut of the assassin-tsar roused indignation even among tlv » most backward workoi's.

In tho endeavour to divert tho worktu's from revolution, the tsarist clique resorted to downriglit clocoptiou. In rJaniiary 1005, a com mission was set up, under the chairmanship of Senator Shidlovsky, to in quire into the "causes of the discontent of tho workers in tho capital.*'*

It was intended to include several roprosoiitativos of the workers in this commission, in addition to government officials and capitalists. The Mensheviks wore ready to act on this tsar's oomniission, but the workers, on tho proposal of the Bolsheviks, boycotted tho election of representatives to it. Tho Bolsheviks took part only in tho first stage of these elections in order to i)ut forward political demands. After revolutionary manifestations of tho workers, who would have nothing to do with tlie (commission, the government dissolved it.

In tho endeavour to split the raiiliS of tho revolutionary workers the tsarist axithorities deliberately fomented strife among tlio various nationalities in Russia. The result of this was the frightful Armoni an-Azerbaijanian massacre in Baku on February 0 and 7, 1005. This pogrom was stopped by tho efforts of tho clasB-conscians workers undcjr the leadership of the Bolsheviks. In February, the ])olico, aided by hired bandits, organized an antiJo wish pogrom in Foodosia. In Kursk the police boat up highschool studontH in order to intimidate the radically-minded youth. But these pogroms and assaults only served to intensify popular hatred of tsarism

In February 1905, tsarism sustained military 'defeat in the battle of Mukden. On this occasion, too, the tsarist army command failed to take advantage of a series of partial successes which the Russian troops had achieved in the battle. The Russian army lost 120,000 men (out of a total of 300,000) in killed, wounded and taken prisoner. It was evi dent that tsarism had lost the war against Japan. Terrified by the steady growth of the revolution, and losing support even among the prop ertied classes, which did not believe that tsarism was capable of coping with the revolution, the autocracy endeavoured to strike a bargain with the bourgeoisie by offering slight political con cessions. In February 1905, a tsar's rescript, addressed to Bulygin, the Minister of the Interior, was promulgated, instructing the latter to convene a conference to draw up a scheme for the establishment of an advisory Duma.

The liberal bourgeoisie readily entered into this deal with the gov ernment and submitted its extremely moderate proposals for a con stitution. The constitutional proposals of the ^'Liberation" group and of the Zemstvo congress (held in April 1905), left the monarchist form of government intact and provided for the creation of a two-chamber parliament, the upper chamber to consist of representatives of the propertied classes. The liberals were willing to abandon universal suffrage. At the Zemstvo congress, 54 delegates out of the 120 voted against universal suffrage. *

Lenin denounced this "constitutional haggling," as he described this bargaining between the liberals and tsarism, and again and again called upon the workers to prepare for an armed insurrection.

The Mass Revolutionary Movement in the Summer of 1905

The Third Congress of the R.S.D.L.P.

The effect of the disrup tive tactics that were pursued by the Mensheviks was that at the deci sive stage in the development of the revolution the Party was split in two and lacked a single leadership and a common Party line in tac tics. Formally, the Party was imited, but actually the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks very much resembled two separate parties, each having its own central body and its own leading newspaper.

For the purpose of drawing up the Party's tactics in the revolution and of setting up leading bodies for the Party, the Bolsheviks convened the Third Congress of the Party. This congress was held in London in April 1905. The Mensheviks convened a conference of their own which was at bottom the party congress of a section that had broken away from the R.S.D.L.P.

Before tlio Third Coiigross Lonin wrote series of articles in the Bolshevik news])aper Vpcryod {Forward) in wliieli lie explained the character and the driving forces of the Russian revolution. Ho said this was liie hist bonrgoois-democratic revolution to take place inthoo])och of imporialisni. Its main task was to destroy the Russian autocracy and its econoinic foundation, serf-based landlordism. Hence, the slo gans of this revolution were: a democratic republic, confiscation of all landlords' estates and thoir transfer to the ])oasauts for cultivation, and the introduction of an 8-hour day in industry.

The Russian bourgeois-democratic revolution of 1905 differed radically from all bourgeois revolutions that had taken place in Europe. Those revolutions wore led by the bourgeoisie; the peasantry constituted the reserves of the bourgeoisie, while the proletariat was still weak and could not act indopoiidently. The driving forces of the Russian bourgeois-democratic revolution, however, wore the proletariat and the peasantry, and its leader was the ])roletariat. The jpeasants wore the allies of the proletariat, for the proletariat alone could helj) the peasants to solve the agrarian problem in a revolutionary way. The Russian bourgeoisie was counior-revolut ionary; it feared tlio prole tariat and wanted to strike a bargain with tsarism with a view to limiting the j)olitical rights and damaging the economic interests of the workers and peasants. It was therefore iKu^ossary to isolate the bourgeoisie from the masses of the ])easantry and to exi:)lain to the latter that the bourgeoisie were their cltiss cMioinios and that they were opposed to all the fundamental demands of the workers and peasants.

Lenin taught that after overthrowing tsarism, tlie i)rolotariat would not rest content with this victory, but would utilize it for the purpose of immediately passing, together with the i)oorost sec tions of the peasantry, to the socialist revolution. "From the democrat ic revolution," he wrote, "wo shall at once, according to the dogroo of our strength, the strength of the class-conscious and organized prole tariat, begin to pass over to the socialist revolution" (V. I. Lonin, lected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 145). Basing itself on Lenin's appraisal of the revolution in Russia, the Third Congress of the Party adopted a resolution "On the Provisional Revolutionary Government," which affirmed tliat after the victory of the bourgeois-democratic revo lution, this provisional revolutionary govermnent would become the organ of the revolutionary democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry. The task of this government was to carry the bour geois-democratic revolution in Russia to complete victory. Lonin and Stalin taught that the rovolutionary-dcmooratio dicjtatorslup of thoso two classes alone could ousiiro fundamental revolutionary changes in Russia and help the proletariat to pass on to the socialist revolution.

The Third Congress also laid down the Party's tactics, based on the Bolshevik appraisal of the character and prospects of the revolution. It resolved to sujiport the agrarian demands of the peasantry, including that for the confiscation of all the landlords' land.

The congress called upon the peasants to set up peasant committees for the i)ur2)ose of seizing the landlords' land in a revolutionary man ner. It particularly emphasized the importance of the general strike as a weapon in the struggle. Urging the necessity of an armed insur rection for the purpose of achieving the victory of the revolution, it called upon the Party organizations to proceed forthwith to prepare for such an insurrection.

The congress elected a Bolshevik Central Committee, headed by Lenin, and adopted the newspaper as the central organ of the

Party.

Thus, the Third Congress set up a Bolshevik general staff to lead the revolution, armed the Party with a strategical plan for developing the bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolution, and formu lated the main tactics of the proletarian party in the bourgeois-demo cratic revolution. Herein lies the enormous historical importance of the Third Congress of the Party.

Lenin expounded the Bolshevik tactics in a work of genius Tioo Tactics of Social-Democracy iii the Democratic Eevohitioii, which ap peared in July 1905.

The Mensheviks and Trotsky ite agents of the bourgeoisie tried to frustrate Lenin's plan for developing the bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolution.

The view spread by the Mensheviks was that as the revolution in Russia was a bourgeois revolution it must be led by the bouigeoisie, as had been the case previously in the West. The proletariat, asserted the Mensheviks, should ally itself not with the peasantry, but with the liberal bourgeoisie; it should march not at the head of the peasantry, but at the tail of the bourgeoisie.

Tsushima

Before Port Arthur fell the Baltic Fleet was sent on a long voyage to the Far Bast round the coast of Africa.

In an article entitled "A Debacle" Lenin wrote: '"A great armada, as huge, as unwieldy, as absurd, as impotent and as monstrous as the entire Russian empire itself, set out on its voyage, squandering heaps of money on coal and maintenance, and evoking universal ridicule in Europe" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. VII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 335). This "great armada" was destroyed by the Japanese fleet on May 14, 1905 (the anniversary of the coronation of Nicholas II) in a battle off the island of Tsushima, in the Korea Straits.

In tliis unequal battle, which was more like a massacre, the Russian sailors fought with unexampled staunchness and courage. The obsolete cruiser Dimitri Donskoy bravely held at bay ten up-to-date Japanese cruisers and put two of them out of action. It was called upon to surrender, but it refused, and continuing to bombard the enemy, it proudly sanlc into the depths of tlio sea.

The Revolutionary Struggle of the Proletariat In the Summer of 1905

The defeat which tsarism sustained at Tsushima gave an added impetus to the proletarian revolutionary struggle. Strikes broke out continuously all through the spring, summer and autumn. ]{lconomic strikes became interwoven with political strikes and dovolopod into mass revolutionary strikes. The lirst strike wave (January to Aj)ril) afFectod 659,400 workers. The second (in the spring of 1905) affected 362,600 workers. The third, covering the period from July to Sep tember, affected 264,800 workers.

The rh'st of May celebrations worc>> accompanied by strikes affecting 220,000 workers and developed into a huge demonstration against the autocracy.

The vanguard of these political strikes and demonstrations consist ed of the metal workers. The textile workers at first organized mainly economic strikes, but gradually they too entered the political struggle. A vivid example of this is provided by the strike of the textile workcu-s in Ivanovo-Voznesensk, lb began on May 12, 1905, with the presenta tion of economic doniands and soon affected the whole of the Ivanovo Voziiosousk textile region. The strike lasted a long time and about 70,000 workers, including many women, wore involved. To load the strike a Joint Strike Committee was oloctod in Ivanovo-Voznesensk, This ooiu mitteo was called Council of Reprosontativos, and it was in facst thcr first Soviet of Workers' Deputies in history. This eounoil formotl a workers' militia to guard the textile mills, established a strike fund to assist the families of strikers, demanded the closing of vodka shops, undertook the supply of provisions for the workers and made a' range ments for thisimrjjoso with the shopkeepers, and maintained order and discipline among the strikers. The strikers usually assembled on tlu*f bank of the river Tallca to hoar reports from members of tiio council on the progress of the strike. Here they also discussed political questions, and after the meetings they learned and sang revolutionary songs. One of their favourite speakers w^as the Bolshevik worker Dunay<n^ The general direction of the strike came from ilus Northern Commit tee of the Party, headed by Comrade Frunze and Py odor Afanasyev, au old weaver who had been one of the speakers at the First of May demon stration in St. Petersburg in 1891, and who was known as "Father."

These meetings wore broken up by the police and troops, and in tlie collisions scores of workers wore killed and many wounded . The work ers remained staunch, however, and continued tlio strike. Flungor alone comxiolled them to return to work, and this tJioy did in an or ganized manner.

This strike steeled the workers; it served as a militant scliool for their political education. In a leaflet they issued at the end of the strike, the Social-Democratic workers summed up the struggle as fol lows; "The strflse has taught us a great deal. Before it many of us were so ignorant that we did not want either to understand, to appreciate or to think about our conditions....

Do we not now see who is helping our enemies, the masters? We have realized that as long as power is in the hands of the tsar, who thinks only about the capitalists, we shall never be able to improve our con ditions."

A determined struggle against tsarism was also waged by the work ers in the industrial towns of Po land, The general strike which broke out in Lodz in June 1906, developed into an armed clash. Barricades were erected in the streets and for throe days a regular battle was fought between the workers and tho tsar's trooi)s. Lenin regarded the Lodz battles as the first armed action of the workers of Russia. In August a collision between police and demonstrators occurred in Byelostok, during which thirty-six per sons were killed and many were wounded. The strikers took to arms to wage a determined struggle against tsarism.

Thus, in the course of the strike movement the conditions were created for passing to the highest form of struggle — armed insurrection. The bourgeois-democratic revolution of 1906 was proletarian both in the methods by which the struggle was conducted and in the fact that the proletariat played the leading role in it.

The Peasant Movement

The strikes of the industrial workers aft er Bloody Sunday stimulated the revolutionary movement in the rural districts. In the beginning of 1905, the Bolsheviks conducted extensive propaganda work among the peasants and widely distributed leaflets among them. The peasant movement broke out almost simultaneously in the central regions of Russia, in Georgia and in the Baltic Provinces. In Pebruary 1005, tho peasants in the Orel, Kursk, Chernigov and other gubernias began to seize the landlords' estates. In the spring of 1905, the mass jioasant movement began to spread all over the country. The peasants wrecked landlords' mansions, seized their meadows and hay crops, and ploughed up their lands. Often, at night, the tocsin wa& sounded, or a haystack burst into flames — ^this was the signal for general action. Hundreds of peasants, armed with axes and clubs, marched to the landlord's estate, tore off the locks of the granary and took the corn, shared among themselves the landlord's cattle and poultry, \\Tecked the estate offices and burnt the office books, particularly the records of the peasants' debts and obligations. They burnt the land lord's mansion and farm buildings so that the landlord should have no place to return to. In most cases this movement bore a spontaneous character.

The Tliird Congress of the Party called upon the Party organ izations to conduct activities among the peasants, to hoi]) them in their struggle and to back their demands for the confiscation of the land lords ' land. The Party advised the peasants to seize the landlords ' lands, to expel the tsar's officials and to set up their own peasant committees, which were to be the embryo of the new revolutionary authority in thc^ countryside.

The struggle that was waged by the peasants in Guida under the leadership of the Bolsheviks was exceptionally determined and organ ized. Comrade Stalin had conducted Social-Democratic activities among

Georgian peasants, particularly the Ourian and Ajar peasants, as eaSly| as 1002. The tsarist authorities had deported many of the x^f^^i^lcii^ants in the Batum strikes and deinonstrations ol' 1902 to their homos in Guria. On arriving homo the dejiortees formed Social-Democratic organizations and under tho leadership of those organizations the Ourian peasants began to drive put the tsar's officials, refused to ])ay taxes and boycotted tho tsar's courts. All disputes tliat arose were tried by elected people's courts.

In March 1905, tho tsar's government sent General Alikhanov Avarsky to Guria with a force of 10,000 men of all arms to su])])r(^ss the revolt. At the same time a high official was sent to investigate tho causes of the revolt. The peasants everywhere |)resented the same demands to this official. The delegates from the village of Hidistavi said: '"Our demands can be expressed in tliree words: we want bread, justice and freedom. We are not asking for baked bread, all that wo are asking is that we should be allowed to enjoy the fruits of our labour." In another village a j)easant delegate delivered an impassioned political speech in the course of which he said: "We expect nothing from the government. We know very well how cruelly it treated the St. Petersburg workers. We are not so naive as to place any hopes in the government after these atrocities."

The punitive expedition headed by Alildianov-Avarsky failed to pacify Guria. At tho Third Congress of the Party tho delegate from the Caucasian Social-Democratic Federation, which 'was led by (Comrade Stalin, proudly related the story of the heroic struggle that was being waged by the Gurian peasants. The Gurian peasant movement was tins most organized and most politioally-conscious peasant movement in Eiussia. The revolutionary struggle of the Abkhazian peasants in Gudauti was led by Orjonikidze.

During the spring ploughing, strikes broke out among the agricul tural labourers. These strikes assumed particularly wide dimensions in Latvia, Estonia, Poland, and Byelorussia. The Latvian and Estonian labourers di*ove out the landlords, seized their estates and ploughed up the land for themselves. In the summer of 1905, the All-Russian Peasant Union was fonned. Notwithstanding the fact that the Socialist-Revolutionaries and lib era Ls had succeeded in capturing the central leadership of this Peasant Union, Lenin held that it was of great importance for the organization of the peasants. . Before the victory of the peasant insiirreotion, and for such a victory, the Peasant Union is a powerful and vital organization," he wrote. (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, VoL IX, Mos cow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 129.)

The peasants joined the Union in whole villages. The Socialist-Rev olutionaries wanted to subordinate the peasant movement to the lead ership of the bourgeoisie, but the Bolsheviks combated their efforts to do so. The j)easant movement did not, however, spread all over tho country at that time; in the spring of 1905 it had developed in only 85 counties, one-seventh of the total number of counties in Russia.

The Revolt on the Battleship "Potemkin"

Tsarism had but one proj) left — ^the armed forces; but the defeat in the war and the revolutionary struggle that was being waged by the workers and peasants stimulated revolutionary temper in tho army and in the navy. The revolt of the crow of the battleship Potemkin of the Black Sea Elect clearly revealed that even this prop of tsarism was shaken. The sailors of the navy, among whom there were many industrial workers, were the most class conscious and revolutionary section of the armed forces.

Li 1905 the Bolsheviks made energetic preparations for a general revolt in the Black Sea Fleet which was timed to break out during the assembly of the fleet for training purposes at the Island of Tendra, be tween Odessa and Sevastopol. The revolt on the Potemkin, however, broke out spontaneously on June 14, 1905, before the whole fleet had assembled. Its immediate cause was the issue to the men of borshch cooked with decayed meat that teemed with maggots. The crew refused to eat the borshcli. The commander assembled tho ringleaders, ordered a tarpaulin to be thrown over them and then ordered them to be shot. In protest against this order the whole crew mutinied. A colli sion occurred between tho officers and the men during which tho sailor Vakuliiichuk, tho leader of the mutiny, was killed by a senior ofidccr. Tho leadership passed to another revolutionary sailor named Matyushonko. Tho men killed many of tho officers and seized the bat tleship.

The PoUmhin made for Odessa where a general strike was in prog ress. The arrival of the revolutionary battleship flying the red flag stimulated the workers of Odessa to rise in armed revolt against tsarism, but the Mensheviks sabotaged the revolt and prevented tlie crew of the PoUmhin from landing a party to assist tjio workers. Tlio tsarist govern ment ordered the whole of the remaining ]7art of the Black Sea Fleet to attack the Poiemhin. The revolutionary battlcsliip wont out boldly to meet the fleet with the red flag at its masthead. The gunners of the other sliips refused to fire at the Potnnldn, and one battlcshij), the Georgi Pohedonosyets, went over to its side. The petty officers on this ship, however, intimidated and demoralized the crew hj assuring them that the revolt was hopeless. They ran the battleship aground and the PoUmhin continued to fight alone.

The revolutionary warship sailed the Black Sea with the red flag at its masthead for a whole week, but failing to receive support from the shore owing to the treachery of the Mensheviks, and rumiing short of coal and provisions, it was obliged to make for the Rumanian coast and surrender to the Rumanian authorities. The latter, in 1906, handed the revolutionary sailors over to the tsarist authorities, who had them either executed or sentoncod to penal sorvitudo.

Lenin attributed immenHo imj)ortanec to the revolt on the PoUth kin. ^'Por the first time," he wrote, "an importaiit unit of the armed forces of tsarism — an entire battleship — hm openly gone over to the side of the revolution" (V. I. Lenin, SelecUcl Works ^ Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 311).

As soon as he received the first news of the revolt on the PoU7nhin, Lenin sent a Bolshevik to Odessa to give it guidance, but he arrived too late. The ship had already left for Rumania.

The revolutionary movement in the anny and in the navy contin ued to grow. In 1905, cases of mutiny among the reserves increased and not infrequently these were accompanied by the killing of officers. This unrest revealed that the rank and file of the army wot*o wavering and wore becoming an unreliable pro]^ for the autocracy. The Bolsheviks formed military revolutionary organizations for the ])urpose of conduct ing activities in the army with the object of uniting the soldiers with the workers and peasants and of leading them on to the armed insur rection against tsarism.

The October General Strike

The Bulygin Duma

The rising tide of the revolutionary move ment in the country forced the tsarist clique to manoeuvre. It was compelled, while continuing its policy of repression, to take a stop towards meeting the wishes of tlie bourgeoisie who, in their turn, were seeking an alliance with it. In other words, it was obliged to strike a bargain with the bourgeoisie. With this object the tsar's government, on August 6, 1905, passed a law for the convocation of a State Duma. In conformity with this law the proposed State Duma was to be not a legislative but an advisory body; it was to have the right to express an opinion on the bills submitted to it by the government, but not to pass or reject them. Thus, the law of August 6 left the autocratic system com pletely intact. This Duma was referred to as the Bulygin Duma, after Bulygin, the Minister who had drafted the law. The landlords, who were an insignificant minority in the country, were to receive 85 per cent of all the seats. The workers were given no electoral rights at all. The bourgeoisie welcomed this Bulygin Duma and called upon the people to take an active part in the elections. The Mensheviks supported the liberals. The Bolsheviks alone called upon the people to boycott the elections to the Bulygin Duma. The further development of the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat, led by the Bolsheviks, prevent ed the convocation of this Duma.

The Peace of Portsmouth

After the rout of the tsar's fleet at Tsushima, the international bourgeoisie, fearing the further growth of the revolution in Russia, strongly urged the tsar's government to con clude peace. In their opinion peace with Japan would help to restore ^'internal peace" in Russia, particularly if the tsarist government made some moderate constitutional concessions to the people. On the other hand, the United States was apprehensive that Japan would become too strong and therefore urged the Japanese government to moderate its demands upon Russia.

Greatly exhausted and weakened by the war, Japan herself was interested in the speedy conclusion of peace.

At Japan's request, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, acted as mediator in the negotiations between Russig. and Japan.

To discuss the situation the tsar's government, on May 24 (June 6), 1905, called a council of war over which the tsar presided. The majority of those present at the council were in favour of concluding peace. "In ternal well-being is more important for us than victory. We are living in an abnormal condition: we must restore to Russia her internal repose," they said.

The government consented fco open peace negotiations and appoint ed a peace delegation, headed by Count Witte, who enjoyed the con fidence of the bourgeois governments of Europe and America. The peace negotiations were opened in the small town of Portsmouth, Maine, in the United States.

Japan presented very harsh peace terms. She demanded the Liao tung Peninsula, the South Manchurian Railway up to Harbin, the Is land of Sakhalin, and complete control of Korea. In addition, she coimt ed on receiving a large indemnity from Russia. The Russian delegation had received instructions not to yield' an inch of territory to the Japanes e and not to agre^ to the ]oaynient of any indemiiitios. The discussion of tho })eaco treaty became cxtrcnioly jn^otraotod . Roosevelt now exerted pressure upon tlio Japanese and now txpon the Russian delegation, urging tliem to make mutual concessions. At last, on August 23 (September 5), 1005, tho peace treaty was signed.

Tsarist Russia recognized Japan's predominant economic, military and political interests in Korea , ceded to Japan her lease of Port Ai'thur and Dalni, pledged herself to run tho Chinese Eastern Railway exclu sively for coininercial purposes and ceded to Japan tho southern part of SaHialin, with all its adjacent islands. In addition, she concluded a disadvantageous fishing convention with Japan. "'As wo know," said Comrade Stalin in an address to the people on September 2, 1945, "in the war against Japan, Russia was defeated. Jai:)an took advantage of tho defeat of tsarist Russia to seize from Russia the south ern part ofSaklialin and establish herself on the Kuril Islands, thereby putting the lock on all our country's outlets to the ocean in the East, which meant also all outlets to tho ports of Soviet Kani('.hatka and So viet Chukotka. It was obvious that tlapan was aiming to (lo])rivo Russia of tho whole of her Ear East" (J. Stalin, On the Omit Palrwiic War of the Soviet Unio7b, Moscow, 1945, ]>]). 208-209).

As Comrade Stalin obsorvofl in the same speech, tho defeat of tsar ist Russia in 1904-1905 . lay like a black stain upon our country.

Our people believed in and waited for tlio day when Japan would bo defeated and tho stain would bo wiped out."

Tho war with Japan cost tho Russian people dear: 400,000 men were killed, wounded and taken prisoner, and tho expenditure amounted to over 3,000,000,000 rubles.

The conclusion of peace with Japan was of considerable assist ance to the tsarist clique in its further struggle against tho revo lution. But the revolution was not to be halted. In the autumn and winter of 1905 the revolutionary movement rose to its peak.

The All-Russian Political Strike

On September 19, 1906, a gen eral printers' strike broke out in Moscow. The bakers, tobacco work ers and workers in other trades joined the printers. Cossacks and gen darmes broke up revolutionary demonstrations. The workers fired at the police with revolvers and wounded many of thorn. On September 25 a regular battle was fought in Tverskaya Street (now Gorky Street) out side Philippov 's bakery , A troop of Cossacks charged tho crowd that was blocking the street. Tho workers rushed into tho bakery, climbed to tho roof of this tall building and from there pelted tho troops with stones. Tho trooi^s surrounded tho whole block where tho bakery was situated and laid regular siege to it. Eventually, two companies of infantry got in through the back of tho house whore tho workers liad not placed a guard. Two of the workers were killed, eight were wounded and 192 were arrested.

The September strikes in Moscow raised the struggle to a higher :age. Lenin stated that the events in Moscow marked the beginning f the insurrection. "^The outbreak of the insurrection has been crushed gain. Again: long live the insurrection!" he wi*ote (V. I. Lenin, GoU 'Cted Works^ Vol. VIII, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 282).

On October 7, the railwaymen on the Moscow-Kazanskaya Railway ent bn strike, and on October 8, the men on all the other railways in uussia joined them. On October 11, the railway strike developed into a ation-wido general strike in which the workers of all trades were in olved. The intelligentsia — schoolteachers, office employees, lawyers, igineers and students — ^joined the workers. The strikers demanded the Dnvocation of a Constituent Assembly. The tsar's government tried 3 suppress the strike by armed force. On October 14, Trepov, the Gov :nor General of St. Petersburg and virtual dictator of Russia, issued 10 order: "Don't fire blanli shot; spare no bullets.'" But the govern lont was already powerless to stop the strilce.

Nearly a million industaual workers, not counting railwaymen, and weral hundred thousand office employees, were involved in the October political strike. Tlie entire economic life of the country was brought to a standstill. Trains and ships stopped running, factories were idle, the post and telegraph ceased to function, no newspapers or magazines a])pcared. In the towns street traffic ceased, shops and restaurants were closed. The universities and high scliools were closed. Only the water supply, city drainage and the hos]ntals functioned by order of tlie strike committees. On the railways only troop trains which were car-, rying demobilized soldiers who were hurrying homo from Manchuria were allowed to run.

The October strike x)aralyzed the forces of the government and at the same time demonstrated the strength of the proletariat as the vanguard fighter and organizer of the nation-wide struggle against the •autocracy. In a number of localities the general strike began to develop into armed insurrection.

In Kliarkov barricades wore erected around the University and as many as a thousand armed workers mustered to defend them. In the streets collisions occurred with troops. Artillery was called out. During the storming of the barricades and in street fighting 147 workers were killed.

In Ekaterinoslav the entire population of the working-class suburb 'of Chocholevka took part in building barricades. They threw down tel egraph ])obs and erected barbed-wire ontanglemonts. The barricades wore demolished by troo])s. Collisions with troops also occurred in Odo.s sa, Saratov, Rostov and other cities.

The strike wave (the fourth in that year) reached its peak in the -autumn and in tlie beginning of the winter of 1906. While about a million workers wore involved in October, in Doeembor only several hundred thousand wore affected.

The Tsar's Manifesto of October 17

Scared by the general strike, the tsar, on October 17, issued a manifesto, which had been drawn up by Count Witte who, shortly before that, had been ap]')ointed Chairman of the Council of Ministers. In this manifesto the tsar promised to grant freedom of speech, press, association and assembly, extension of the franchise, etc. The State Duma was proclaimed a legislative body. But this manifesto was only intended to deceive the masses. The tsar hoped by means of it to gain time to muster his forces for the purpose of crush ing the revolution. In appraising the tsar's manifesto, and utteiing a warning against exaggerating its importance, Lenin wrote: ^'The tsar's concession is indeed a very great victory for the revolution, but this victory does not yet by a long way decide the fate of the entire cause of freedom. The tsar has not yet by any means capitulated. The autocracy has not yet ceased to exist. It lias only retreated, . . (V, I. Lenin, GoU

lected WorJes^ Vol. VIII, Moscow, 1937, Russ. ed., p, 362.)

The manifesto of October 17 fully satisfied tlio bourgeoisie who, frightened by the nation-wide strike and the incipient insiirroction, began openly to oppose the revolutionary masses. The big industrial and commercial bourgeoisie formed an organization called the Union of October Seventeenth (laiown as the Octobrists). The Eightwing Zemstvoites and the various commercial and industrial ^^parties" that .sprang up in 1905 joined this organization.

The liberal Zemstvo-ites and the members of the Emancipation League officially inaugurated the abeady legally existing Constitution al-Democratic Party (known as the Cadets). The Cadets expressed the strivings of those sections of the bourgeoisie which were less interested than the Octobrists in feudal methods of exploitation. Unlike theavow 'Odly reactionary Octobrist bourgeoisie, the Cadets tried to manoeuvre between the revolution and the autocracy. When the tsar's manifesto was promulgated, the Cadets declared the revolution at an end and 'Called for co-operation with the Witte government.

The Mensheviks were also pleased with the manifesto of October 17 . The leaders of the Georgian Mensheviks in Tiflis even stated at meet ings: '^There is no longer an autocracy, the autocracy is dead. Russia is entering the ranks of constitutional monarchist states."

Comrade Stalin emphatically denounced this piece of Menshevik •deception. On the day the manifesto of October 17 was promulgated he said at a meeting in Tiflis: "What do we need in order to really win? We need three things: first — arms, second — ^arms, third — ^arms and arms again."

Tlie Bolsheviks urged the masses to place no confidence in the tsar 's Jinanifcsjo and to prepare for armed insurrection.

Stricken by mortal fear of tho revolution, Nicliolas II began to seek supjiort in Kaiser Germany and among the Baltic German barons. During tho general strike of October 1905 several Gorman destroyers appeared in tlu^ I'oadstcad off Fotorhof with tho objecrt of taking Ni cholas II and his lamily to Germany in the event of tho revolution being victorious. At this time the tsarist government conducted negotiations with Germany for intervention in Bussia for tho ]mrpose of siijiprc^ssing tho revolution and of restoring tsarist absolutism. Tl^his cons])iracy against tho revolution was ex])osed and frustrated by tlio proletariat of St. Petersburg.

In Poland martial law was declared as a consequoneo of tho growth of tho revolutionary movement. German troops were moved to tho Bus sian frontier in readiness to invade Bussia. Tho proletariat of St, Pe tersburg retaliated to this threat on tho part of German imperialism to intervene in tho internal affairs of Bussia by declaring a general strike. The result was that martial law in Poland was rescinded and intervention was rendered impossible. The satirical journals at that time published a cartoon depicting tho Governor General of Warsaw, Scalone, who was a German, zealously cleaning tlio boots of an army ofHccr whoso face was concealed, l)ut wlmso figure could bo recognized as that of Williohii II. The ca'})tiou to tlie cartoon rea<i: 'TTnfortunatoly wo had to rescind martial law, hut I shall continue to servo you ftiithfully and well."

Immediately after tho manifesto of October 17 was promulgated revolutionary demonstrations ocoiUTcd all over Bussia. Street mootings wore held at which impassioned revolutionary speeches were deliv ered. To combat tho revolution, tho government formed a hooligan or ganization called the Union of Bussian People, which united tlie cor rupt Black Hundreds which had already sprung U]) in many localities in tho beginning of 1905.

On tho direct instructions of tho tsar and the gendarmes tho Blade Hundreds, jointly with tho police, organized Jewish pogroms in over a hundred towns in all parts of tho country. Leaflets inciting to pogroms wore secretly printed in tho printing plants of tlie Department of Police. During a pogrom in Odessa several thousand Jewish working people were killed. In Tomsk, the Black Hundreds, with the blessing of the Bishop and in tho presence of the City Governor, surrounded the I'ail way administration ofi&ces where a workers' meeting was taking place and set fire to it. Many of the people present at the mooting perished in the flames, and it was only tlianlcs to tho heroic efforts of S . M. Kirov that some of tho revolutionaries were saved. In Tver (now Kalinin) tho Black Hundreds wrecked the promises of the Tver Zemstvo, which was a liberal body, and killed and injured many momberH of tlio ZcmiKstvo staff. In Ivanovo, the Black Hundreds brutally murdorod the veteran revolutionary worker and loader of tho textile strike, Fyodor Afanasyev, known as "Father." In Moscow the Black Hundreds arranged the assassination of the prominent Bolshevik N. E. Bauman, who had only just been released from the Taganskaya prison. Bauman's funeral devel oped into a huge revolutionary demonstration in which several hundred thousand people took part. These arrests, pogroms and assassination of revolutionaries served as striking illustrations of what the masses could expect from the manifesto of October 17. About this manifesto

the people sang the ditty:

The tsar caught fright, issued a Manifest: Liberty for the dead, for the living — arrest.

Soviets of Workers' Deputies

During the stormy days of the October general strike the working class created a new ty]>e of revolu tionary organization which played a leading role in the revolution. These organizations were the Soviets of Workers' Deputies. On OctoberlS, while the strike was in progress, the workers of St. Petersburg held meet ings in their factories and works and elected representatives to a Coun cil (Soviet) of Workers' Deputies for the purpose of leading the strike. Formed originally as a Joint Strike Committee, the St. Petersburg Soviet rapidly became the embryo of a new revolutionary authority. Thus, in November, the Soviet on its own authority proclaimed the introduction of an 8-hour day; it had its own organ, Izvestia, which was printed in the biggest printing plants of St. Petersburg and ap peared without the sanction of the tsarist censor. The Soviet began to in terfere in the orders of the tsarist administration. While the j)Ost and telegraph employees were on strike government telegrams were sent off only with the Soviet's sanction. The inliabitants of St. Petersburg came to the Soviet on every kind of business as if it were an official adminis trative body. Nevertheless, the St. Petersburg Soviet failed to take the lead of the revolution. The reason for this was that, taking advantage of the absence from St. Petersburg of Lenin, who was living abroad in exile, the Mensheviks captured the leadership of the Soviet and did all in their power to prevent it from becoming an organ of revolu tionary authority and, in particular, frustrated the preparations for armed insurrection.

Following the example of St. Petersburg, Soviets of Workers' Deputies were formed in all the other big cities of Russia during the period of October to December 1905. The Moscow Soviet was led by Bolsheviks and, as a consequence, it became an organ for the prepara tion of armed insurrection. In the Caucasus, in Latvia, and also in some parts of Central Russia (the Tver and Moscow Gubernia), representa tives of the soldiers, i. e., peasants in military uniform, were members of the Soviets. Thus, Lenin's idea of the revo ut ionary democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry began to take practi ('al shape.

When Lenin returned from abro<ad and studied the activities of the St, Petersburg Soviet, he pointed out to the Party the world his torical importance of the Soviets as the embryo of a new revolutionary popular authority. But in order that the Soviets might play their revolutionary role, ho urged, it was necessary to prepare to overthrow the rule of tlio tsar by organizing an armed insurrection. Purtlicr , in tlio course of the revolution of 1J)05 the Bussian ])roletariat ereatod a form of organization that was new in the history of tlio revolutionary movement, a form of organization that was the prototype of Soviet power, the embryonic foim of the ])roletarian socialist static, i. 6., the dictatorshix) of the proletariat. Tho Soviets marked a stei> forward compared with the Paris Commune of 1871. Comrade Stalin expressed his high axipreeiation of the historic im^iortance of the Soviets in the revolution of 1005 in the words . . the movement for the Soviets of Workers' Deputies begun in 1005 by the workers of Leningrad and Moscow led in the end to tho rout of cajiitalism and the victory of Socialism on one-sixth of the globe" (J. Stalin, Prohkms of Lenmism^ Moscow, 1045, ]>. 530).

The National-Liberation Movement of the Peoples of Russia in 1905

Finland's Fight for Autonomy

nio revolntiouary movement of the })rolotariat t'.ompolled the tsarist autocracy to make certain concessions on the national (piesbion. After Bloody Sunday (January 0) the struggle against tsarism liared up with exceptional vigour in thc^ regions inhabited by tho ox)prossed nationalities. Tho workers of Helsingfors, tho capital of Finland, wore among tho first to organize a general strike of xirotest against tho atrocities perpetrated by Nicho las II against the workers. The Fimiish bourgeoisie and its party of ^"active resistance" believed that tho tsarist autocracy would he eoin pellod by tho workers to make concessions and restore tlio Finnish constitution, which had boon abolished in 1002.

The tsar's government, however, made only slight concessions, for it calculated that the Finnish bourgeoisie wotilcl readily come to tenns in order to wage a joint struggle against the workers. Tho law of 1001 on comxiulsory military service was repealed and the regulation on the non-dismissal of judges was re-introduced. But these minor concessions failed to satisfy oven tho Finnish bourgeoisie. They <iemancled tho re:-torat'on of the Finnish Con-^titution.

The October x)olitical strike in Russia was backed by the Finnish worker, who xu'oclaimed a general strike in Finland. They formed a Rod Guard and x^i'oparcd for insurreebion.

The nation-wide strike of tho working class comptdled the tsarist autocracy to yield on the Finnish question as well. On October 22, 1 1)05, Nicholas II promulgated a manifesto restoring the constitution in Finland. The Finnish bourgeoisie was satisfied with this and began to make pieparations for the elections to the new Diet. The Finnish Mensheviks supported the bourgeoisie in everything; they spread constitutional illusions among the masses and assured the workers and peasants that the armed struggle against tsarism was over. Describ ing the opportunist stand taken by the Finnish Mensheviks during the revolution of 1905, Lenin said that *^they are not genuine Social Democrats."

The Struggle for National Liberation in Poland

After January 9, strikes were continuously in progress in Poland. Numerous mass meetings were held in the towns and villages at which resolutions weie adopted demanding autonomy for Poland. The peasants refused to pay taxes or perform military service, and expelled the Russian government officials and schoolteachers.

The Polish nobility and the Catholic clergy came out under the leadership of the nationalist parties which advocated the achievement of autonomy for Poland by means of a deal with the Russian bourgeoisie.

In the autumn the national movement in Poland assumed wide dimensions. The population proclaimed a boycott of the tsarist schools, and the educational society known as Matitsa collected voluntary contributions from the people and opened Polish schools. After the October general strike the revolutionary struggle of the Polish people reached the verge of armed insurrection. This frightened the Polish bourgeoisie, who betrayed the movement by entering into an agreement with the Russian liberals.

In the autumn of 1905 the tsarist autocracy proclaimed martial law in Poland, but the political strike proclaimed by the St. Peters burg workers compelled the government to rescind it. This demonstrated to the Polish people that the Russian proletariat alone was their faithful ally.

The National Movement in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia

Tlie revolutionary struggle of the workers of the Ukraine and Byelo russia in 1905 developed in complete unison with the struggle waged by the Russian proletariat.

Taking advantage of the weakening of the autocracy as a result of the revolutionary movement, the UlLrainians succeeded in publishing books and newspapers in the Ulcrainian language. A section of the Ukrainian petty-hourgeois nationalists who had formed the Revo lutionary Ula^ainian Party (R.U.P.) demanded autonomy for the Ukraine and the transfer of x:)Ower to an autonomous Ukrainian Sejm. In their program, which did not di.Ter from that of the Constitutional Democrats, they demanded the transfer of the land to the peasants with payment of compensation to the landlords. In addition to the R.U.P. thoro were in the Ukraine in 1005 the Ukrainian Social-Bomocratie Union, the Spilka (Loagno) wIiujIi was of a Menshevik trend, and the Ukrainian SocialistRevolutionary Party.

The Ukrainian nationalists were actually agents of Austria, whicli promised to sujiport their struggle for the "indopendonco" of the Ukraine. Th(^ nationalist slogans of those separatists {i, e., advocates of secession) found no favour among the Ukrainian workers and peasants wlio strove for the overthrow of Russian tsarism in fraternal alliance with tiic Russian workers.

In Byelorussia, the Byelorussian Socialist Oromada, which was supported by tlie kulak elements of the Byelorussian peasantry, tried to capture the leadership of the national movement. In January 1906, this party held a congress in Minsk at whicjh it demanded autonomy for Byelorussia and the formation of a federation consisting of Byelo russia, Lithuania, Latvia and the Ukraine with a common Sej in in Vilna. This party also demanded the allotment of land to the peasants with payment of comjicnsation to the landlords.

Both in tho Ukraine and in Byelorussia an important part in the national movement was ])layo(l liy t.ho schoolteaelHU's who formed their Spilki and Prosvity (eultiiral and educational societies). Tho Prosvity distributed litt'rafcure in tho Ukrainian and Byelorussian languages, opened village libraries and reading rooms ami organized theatrical performances, coiux^rts and literary evenings. Their main function was to conduct educational work in their native languages.

But tljose ])artios and gi'oipxs could not load tho broad movement for national liberation; they renounced the revolutionary straggle and a fighting allianco with tlio revolutionary Russian proletariat, and foiled to link tho aims of the national movomout with the struggle for land that was being waged by tho peasantry. While proclaiming the slogans of the national movement, they hid from tho masses the point that their chief enemy was tho tsarist autocracy , which could be ovei thrown only by tho joint efforts of tho workers and peasants of all nationalities.

The Revolutionary Struggle for Liberation of the Peoples of Transcaucasia

Tho national movement in Transcaucasia in 1905 assumed a more definitely class and revolutionary character than it did in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia. Thanks to the leadership of tho Social-Democratic organization, which had been trained by Com rade Stalin, the workers' and peasants' movement in Georgia, and particularly in Guria, rose to a considerable height. 0]3en prepara tions for an insurrection against tsarism wore made nob only in tlie towns, but also in tho rural districts.

All through 1905 mass strikes, demonstrations and meetings took place, funds wore collcotod for revolutionary purjioses and "Red Hundreds" and })oasant oommittoos wore formed in the villages, Tho peasants rose in revolt against the landlords and drove them from their estates. The landlords, assisted by the authorities, organized their armed squads known as "Black Hundreds." In many parts of Georgia the inhabitants refused to recognize the tsarist courts and j)olice.

The attempts of the Georgian nationalists, including the Georgian ]\Iensheviks, to capture the leadership of the movement failed. In 1905 the workers and peasants of Georgia followed the lead of the Bolsheviks.

In Azerbaijan the movement for national liberation was led by the Baku Bolshevilcs, who formed for this purpose a special organi zation known as Gummet (energy). This organization conducted extensive activities among the more backward and downtrodden section of the Azerbaijanian workers in Baku, As a result of the educa tional work conducted by the Bolsheviks, the more class-conscious of the Azerbaijanian workers, jointly with the Russian workers, succeeded, in February 1905, in putting a stop to the Armenian-Azerbaijanian massacres. During the oil workers' strike in August, the majority of the Azerbaijanian workers, for the first time, joined the strike, for they were beginning to understand that a united class movement was needed. The landlords and the rising local bourgeoisie tried to keep the Azerbaijanian workers and peasants away from the revolu tionary struggle. Intense religious and nationalist agitation was conducted in the towns and villages by the Pan-Islamists, who advocated the amalgamation of all Moslems in an independent Moslem state which was to be governed by the bourgeois-feudal upper classes 4md the clergy. This Pan-Islamist agitation received support from Turkey. The Gummet constantly exposed the reactionary plans of the exploiters of the Azerbaijanian people that were covered up by the flag of religion.

In Armenia the bourgeois party known as the Dashnacktsutyun tried to capture the leadership of the movement for national liber ation. In the endeavour to obtain the support of the Armenian bour geoisie and the clergy in the struggle against the revolution in Trans caucasia, the tsar's government repealed the church property law, which limited the revenues of the Armenian Church.

The National Movement among the Peoples of the Volga Region and Siberia

The revolution of 1905 roused all the nationali ties of Russia to political life. In the Volga Region and in Bashkiria the bourgeois nationalists formed a Moslem League, the object of which was to unite all Moslems. This league also extended its activities to some extent to the Moslem bourgeoisie in Central Asia and in Trans* caucasia. A prominent part in this league was played by the mullahs, who fomented religious strife between the Moslem and Russian popu lations. At the end of 1905 the Tatar bourgeoisie convened in Kazan the first Mosloii congress, which in a loyal ]>otition to the tsar ploatlod for the abolition of all Moslem disabilities and for political, religions and civil rights equal to those enjoyed by tlic Ivusslan population.

Tlio Chuv«ash national movement in 1005 assumed the pui*cly peasant character of a struggle for land and freedom. Activities among the Clnivash and Mari ])opulations of the Cheboksari district on tlu Volga wore conducted by members of the All-Russian Peasant Union. The peasants at their meetings passed decisions to seize the land of the landlords, and they also demanded the opening of schools to be conducted in their native language. TJie Buryats <umtinued tlieij* struggle against the })lunder of their lands by the tsarist govermnonl officials. A league of Siberian nationalities was formed. The awakening of the Yakuts was brought about by tlic Yakut League which was formed in 1905, but which was soon suppressed by the tsarist au thorities. Such were the first steps in the awakening to political life of the Siberian peoples who were oppressed and downtrodden by tsarism.

Ill the 1905 revolution the Bolsheviks fought for Lenin's ijrogi'anv on the national question. Comrade Stalin formulated this program in the following terms: "Complete (Uunocracy in the ('oiiutry is tlie ba^sis and condition for the solution of the national problem. . . . Thr right of sdf-iUUrminaUon is an esmUml clcmiml in tlu^ solution of the national problem . . . . autonomy, antonomy for such erystiilized

units as Poland, Lithuania, the Ukraine, l.heOau(uisns,cte. . , . Nationa! e.gmiliiy in all forms {^ianguagv.^ schoo ,s', vJ(\) is an cssvntml element in the solution of the national question*"' (rf. vStaliii, Marxism amf the National ami Colonial QwsHon^ Moscow, 3940, p]). 49-51).

The December Armed Insurrection

The Strike Develops into Insurrection

Experience taught the workers that they could not achieve victory over tsarism by strikes alone; they realized that armed insurrection was n(K'.essary for this.

The first to take to arms after the October wtrila^ were the sailors and artillerymen of Kronstadt. Por two days and nights — October 25 and 27 — ^Kronstadt was in the hands of the insurgents. But the sailors' movement was unorganized, it was accoin])anied by the wrecking of shops j nd the living quarters of the officers, and it lacked a j^lan and clearly formulated aim. On October 28, the insurrection was crushed and 200 of the participants and leaders of the insurrection were court martiallecl.

On November 1, 1905, the St, Potcu'sbnrg Sovic^t of Workers' Deputies proclaimed a general political strike in support of the demand for rescinding martial law in Poland and for the roloaso of the Kronstadt insurgents. Tho tsar's government was obligcnl to yield to the demands of the workers of Kt. P('t(*rsburg. Martial law in Poland was rescinded, and instead of trying the ICronstadt sailors by court martial, which had iDower to pass sentence of deaths they were tried by a military court and received comparatively light sentences: nine were sentenced to penal servitude, 123 to imprisonment, and 83 were even acquitted.

The November general strike of the St. Petersburg workers saved the lives of the insurgent Kronstadt sailors and was of enormous iDolitical importance, for it vividly demonstrated to the soldiers and sailors that the working class alone was their true champion and leader of their struggle. The Mensheviks had opposed this second general strike. Instead of fraternization with the soldiers and revolutionary propaganda in the tsar's army for the purpose of winning it to the side of the insurgent ]}eople they put forward the cotinter-revolutionary demand for the withdrawal of the garrison from St. Petersbiiig. Had this been done the soldiers would have been isolated from the St. Petersburg proletariat and left under tlie un divided influence of the army officers.

The Naval Revolt in Sevastopol

The Bolsheviks continued Avitli their work of j)roparing for an armed insurrection in the Black iSoa Fleet after the suppression of the revolt on the battleship PotemMn. The insurrection was started on Novennber 14 by the crew of the cruiser Ochakov, On November 15, 6,000 sailors on other ships and the workers omplo;y'ed in the fortress of Sevastopol joined tho insnrrection. The battleship Poiemhin, renamed the Panlehimon, again hoisted ilio rod Hag. The Sevastopol revolt was led by Lieutenant Schmidt. Being a bourgeois democrat in liis convictions he, instead of launching a vigorous attack against tlie tsar's forces, undertook no active operations whatever, but waited for the entire Hoot to join tho Ochakov, Naively believing that tlio tsar would make concessions, he oven sent tho latter a tolegi-am demanding political liberties. In spite of his confused political views, however, Lieutenant Schmidt was devoted to the revolution. On November 15, ho boarded the gunboat S^virepy and going fiom ship to sli p he urged the men to join the in surrection. Many of them hoisted the red flag, but Lieutenant Schmidt was unable to organize them for joint and speedy operations.

Tho authorities recovered from their consternation and drew troops to Sevastopol. Late in the afternoon of November 16, the bat teries and ships which had remained loyal to the govermnent opened fire on the Ochakov and the other revolutionary sliijis and continued all night. The OchuJeov caught fire. The crow tried to save themselves from the flames by swimming or rowing ashore, but they were shot down by machine guns that wore posted on tho beach. Schmidt and the other leaders of tho insurrection were captured and later court martiallod and shot.

The insuiToction in Sevastopol roused now forces for tho struggle in tho array and in tho navy.

Gommenting on the weaknesses of the revolts among the armed forces Lenin said that tho soldiers and sailors "'lacked a clear under standing of the fact that only the most vigorous continuation of the armed struggle, only a victory over all the military and civil authorities, only tho overthrow of tho government and tho seizure of power over tho whole state could guarantee the success of the revolution" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. Ill, Moscow, 1934, p. 10).

The Peasant Revolts

In November and December 1905, the struggle which the peasants waged against tho landlords became increasingly intense. Peasant revolts broke out in 170 counties, more than a third of the total number of counties in European Russia. In November there wert^ about 800 cases of peasants seizing landlords' estates. Of exceptional dimensions were the peasant revolts in the Saratov, Kursk and Tambov Gubernias and in tho Ukraine — in the Kharkov and Chernigov Gubernias, where tho peasants wrecked 272 landlords' country-seats. In Latvia tho peasants organized several hun dred revolutionary committees. In Guria the peasant "Red Hundn^ls" drove out all tho tsar's oflioials and established revolutionary rule. The peasants' struggle and preparation for armed insurrection in Trans caucasia proceeded under the direct leadership of Comrade Stalin.

Preparations for Armed Insurrection

In November 1905 Lenin, compelled till then to live the life of an exile abroad, returned to Russia, took charge of the Party leadership of the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat and set to work to prepare for an armed insurrection. While engaged in the colossal task of reorganizing the Party to meet the altered conditions, he at the same time edited Novaya Zliizn^ the first legal Bolshevik newspaper, and wrote articles for it on the fundamental problems of the revolution and the tactics and or ganization of the Party.

On Lenin's instructions the Party organizations procured arms, formed workers' fighting squads and organized their military training. The Bolsheviks also conducted extensive revolutionary propaganda among the armed forces.

In December 1905, a Bolshevik Party Conference was held in Tam merfors, in Finland. Here Lenin and Stalin met for the first time. The conference discussed the question of armed insurrection.While the con ference was in progress news was received of the outbreak of the insur rection in Moscow. On Lenin's proposal the conference broke up to allow the delegates to return to their respective localities in order to take the lead of the insurrection.

By tlie beginning of December the position of the tsarist autoc racy had improved. By this time the more reliable regular army units had been transferred from Manchmua to European Russia. The foreign banlteis hastened to the aid of tsarism, for they feared they would lose the capital they had invested in Russia and that a victory of the Russian revolution would kindle the flames of socialist revo lution in Europe, They helped the tsar's government to meet the more urgent payments of interest on loans and promised another large loan for the suppression of the revolution.

The immense sweep of the revolution frightened the liberals who, therefore, began to support the autocracy in its struggle against the workers and peasants. The Mensheviks continued their treacherous tactics and frustrated the insurrection where preparations were being made for it, or where it had already commenced.

On December 2, the St. Petersburg Soviet of Workers' Deputies adopted the so-called financial manifesto in which it called upon the inhabitants to demand their savings bank deposits and wages in gold. Next day the government arrested the Soviet. The St. Petersburg proletariat was unable to answer this challenge of the autocracy by an insurrection, for the treacherous policy which had been pursued by the Menshevilc and Trotskyite leadership of the Soviet had left them unprepared for such action.

The Armed Insurrection in Moscow

The Moscow/ Soviet, which was led by Bolsheviks, began actively to prepare for an armed insurrection from the very first day of its existence. As a result of the agilatiou c'oucliictod by t-lio 'JjolHlioviks, uiiroHi. broke out among tlu* troops of t.lio Moseovr garrison. Tlio iirsi to revolt was tho Jlostov llcgiinont. On Ooueinbei' !2, the men arreste<l their ohieors aiul clceted a HokUems' CJoinmittco to eoiulnct tiie regiiuoiit s aifains. 'J'lio otha?* niiits of ilio Moscow garrison, ho\vev<n*, failed to sn])port the rovolt and it vras crushed by the evening of ])ec<unber -t.

On .December 5 a eonlereiic.e of Mos(U)vv 1 bolsheviks resolved to urge the Moscow Soviet to procla-ini a general strike with the view of doveloj)ing it into an armed insurreetion.

Tile general strike eommeneed in the morning of December 7. Owing to tho shortage of firearms tho workers in tiio faetorios forged cold-steel weapons. Abpnt !2,000 Avorkers (almost half of them Bolshe viks) joined the lighting squads, ytreot demonstrations, meetings and collisions witii the police occurred in tiio working-class districts. The Astrakhan Bogiment came out in full fighting kit to assist tho insurgents, but it was intereex)t(^(l by the Cossaefe, completely sur rounded and eain])clled to return to barraeks, TJie other regiments were also tionliiKul to barraeks because tliey were 'hmreliable." Thc' Moscow garrison Avavenul. Of tho 15,000 men avIio constituted tlii' garrison only 1,300 Dragoons were on the side of tlie autocracy; the Governor tlonoral of Mcjscoav s('iit urgent messages to St. Petersburg pleading for the dispatch of otluu* troojis. The revolutionaries allowed tlio op])(>rtunity to sli]) by and the gOA'crnmeut sucecodod in coping with iho unrest in tht^ Moscow garrison.

The men of the Nikolayevskaya Bail way (uoav the October Rail way) did not join the strike. As a cousoqueneo, the tsarist goA^ci*umoiif was able to send ilie Semyouovsky Guards Regiment from St. Peters burg and artillery from IVcr (now Kalinin) to sup]iro8s the insurrec tion in Moscow. The police arrested the loader's of tho insurrection, wlio had been appointed by the Moscow Committee of the Party, and ilispersod a mass meeting that was being held in the Aquarium Park, by armed force.

In the ovening of December 9, troops surrounded Fiedler's School, where the fighting squads were assembled, and bombarded it with artillery. The demolition of the school infuriated the masses. In re sponse to the appeal of the fighting squads, and in many cases on their own accord, the peoj^le of Moscow erected barricades, using telegraph poles, sleighs, packing oases, barrels, wooden planks and so forth. That night Moscow was covered with barricades. On December 15, after the arrival of the troops from St. Petersburg, the barricades were bombarded by artillery; machine guns were posted on the belfries of the Moscow churches and monasteries. Unable to hold out against artillery and machine guns, the fighting squads retreated, but fought back, heroically defending every inch of ground, and concentrated in the Presnya District of Moscow (now called Krasnaya [E.ed* Presnya). The staff of the insurrection had its headquarters in a large textile mill knoAvn as the Trekhgornaya Mills, hut the leading body of the insuxTection — ^the Moscow Committee of the Party — had been arrested on the eve of the outbreak. Deprived of central leadership, the in surrection deteriorated into isolated district fighting. The workers waged a guerilla fight against the troops; they hesitated to fight their way to the centre of the city, and confined themselves to the rlcfcnsivo. This was the main i*easoii for the weakness of the Moscow insurreotLon.

Nevcrthcdcss, Presnya held out against the tsar s troops anuod with artillery, machine guns and rifJos, for ten wliolo days. Q-lio district was subjected to continuous bombardinont. Houses burned and col lapsed, but the workers remained siauncli. Fighting squads from other industrial centres in the Moscoav Itegion Jiastcncjd to i.ho aid of the Moscow revolutionaries. A workers' squad led by M. V. Frunze arrived from Ivanovo-Voznesensk. Feasants su])])lied broad to the lighters, who were aided by the entire ]) 0 ])u]ation of the Presnya District. But the workers of the other towns, and of St. Petersburg in particular, proved unable to ensure the victory of tlie armed insurrection in Moscow.

Weighing up the situation, the Moscow Committee of the Party and the Moscow Soviet of Workers' Deputies resolved to stop the armed insurrection on the night of December 18. In obedience to this order the squads operating in the Presnya District stopped fighting. Although all the railways were now occupied by tsarist troops, an engine driver named Ulvhtomsky offered to run a train carrying the fighters out of Moscow along the Kazanskaya Railway. The heroic railwayman, driving the train out of Moscow at terrific speed, through a hail of machine-gun and rifle I'ne, succeeded in saving the revolutionary fighters.

The tsar's troops dealt frightfully with the ])oaceful popula tion, the workers and their families, ilundroda of thorn wore shot without trial or investigation. Over a thousand workers perished in the ooui'so of the suppression of the insuiToction. A punitive expe dition on the Mosoow-Kazanskaya Railway shot hundreds of workers acooiding to a list which had been previously drawn upbyth'^ gendarmes. Engine driver Ukhtoinsky was also shot. Years later, when Soviet rule was established, onj of the stations on the Mosoow-Kazanskaya Railway and thj adjacent district of the Moscow Region Wv-re named after him.

Insurrections in Other Towns

The workers also rose to over throw tsarist rule in a number of other towns; and so too did the oppressed nationalities in Russia. In the Ukraine, the insurgent railwaymen, miners and metal workers in the Donotz Basin captured the extremely important Ekaterininskaya (now Stalin) Railway. In Gorlovka, the centre of the insurrection, the tsarist authorities were overthrown and replaced by representatives of the workers. The insurgents were armed with home-made swords and daggers and a small number of revolvers. Although so poorly armed, 4,000 revo lutionaries heroically fought a 5-hour battle with Cossacks, losing 300 men during the encounter. Battles with police and troops took place all over the Donotz Basin. In Lugansk, fighting squads were formed and the strike was led by K. E. Voroshilov. Tim gendannos had arrested Voroshilov in the summer of 1905, but in December thousands of workers marched to the prison where he was confined and released their "Eed General," as the workers, already at that time, called him.

In Novorossiisk power was captured by the local Soviet of Workers* Deputies, which was led by Bolsheviks. The City Governor and authorities fled. People's courts were elected and were recognized by the whole population. The burden of taxation was placed entirely upon the propertied classes.

In Sochi, in the North Caucasus, the insurgent people capturedi the garrison and the tsarist administration; and in the rural districts of the Sochi Region power passed into the hands of the people. Soviets were set up in all centres. The people of Sochi were helped by '"'Red Hundreds" sent from Guria.

In Vladikavkaz, the Ossetinian cavalry unit rose in revolt in December 1905, and it was only with the aid of Cossacks that the revolt of this national-minority unit was suppressed.

In Guria, the insurgent people in many districts seized power and the landlords' land. Here the insurrection was led by the Caucasian Bolsheviks, headed by Comrade Stalin.

In Tiflis, the Mensheviks, by arrangement with the tsar's Viceroy, undertook to maintain *'order" against the armed insurrection, and to enable them to carry out this police function the Viceroy provided them with 500 rifles and quantities of ammunition.

In Siberia — in Krasnoyarsk and Chita — troops joined the in surgent workers and, as a consequence, seats in the Soviets of these two cities were also occupied by Soldiers' Deputies. In Krasno yarsk, the soldiers, jointly with the workers, barricaded themselves in one of the railway workshops, and fighting a regular battle, bravely repulsed the attacks of the troops which were sent to suppress the insurrection.

The insurrection on the Siberian Railway was brutally suppressed by two punitive expeditions. One expedition, under the command of General Moller-Zakomelsky, moved up from European Russia, while the other, under the command of General Rennenkampf, moved to meet the former from Harbin. Shootings without trial or investi gation marked the trail of these punitive expeditions. One of those who were shot, by direct order of Moller-Zakomelsky, was the old Bolshevik and Lenin's pupil I. V. Babushkin, who was caught while transporting arms.

Ruthless operations by punitive expeditions were also conducted in Central Russia, in the Ukraine, in Poland, Latvia, Estonia, Trans caucasia and Siberia. '"Make fewer arrests, shoot more," "Don't argue, shoot," such were the orders issued by those butchers, the tsar's ministers, and by the tsar himself . Thousands were executed and tens of thousands were arrested and sentenced to penal servitude or exile. The peasants were subjected to wholesale flogging.

Tlio l>oiirgeoi,sio wolt'-oiiicd the su]>|)mswion of the iosurreobioii. The MonsheviliH ccoHiiml the inniurgont worhiM'H. Plokhanov wrote: "'They should not h«avc taken to orins/' To this Loniu rctortt^cl: "'On tlio eontrary, we Hhould have taken to arniMmoro rowolutely, onergot ically and aggi'OHsivtdy; w'c should have oxplaim^d to the masses that it was impossible to coniine oursclvc^s to a pc'atu'ful strila^ and that, a f<'a-rless iuul relentless arim'd light was indispensable'" (V. L Loiiin, Mected Works, Voi. HI, IMosoow, lOol-, p. lUS),

Tile l^cceinbor insurrection elided in defeat. 'Pho reasons i'or the defeat were tlio following: the peasants faih^d to siqiport the insurrec tion ill time. The major part of tJie army was on the side of tsarism. The insurrection was not sufficiently organized, and it broke out in different iilaccs at different ^times. The insnrgmits lacked suffioioni. arms. The insurgents pursuoci defonsiv'^e and not offensive tactics. Tho Mensheviks and Trotsky, together with tho Socialist-Revolutionaries, sabotaged tho insurrection and diil oveiything they could to hinder it. Tn the Caucasus — in Tillis — the Mensheviks openly helped tho tsarist authorities to suppress the insuri'cctiou.

Tlio December insurreetiou marked tho 'jieak of tho revolution. .After its (hdeat the revolutionary tide gradually subsided.

Retreat of the Revolution

The Revolutionary Struggle in 1906

After tho defeat of the December insurrootion the second period of tho first Russian revolution commenced. Tho workers and the revolutionary peasants ret/roated slowly, fighting all the time. In JOOG, fresh strata of workers entorod tho struggle. Theso wore tho workers omployod in tho unskilled trades in tho industrial centres, and those in the less in<lustrially-devoloped districts who had taken little part in tlie struggle in 1905. The number of workers involved in strikes in 1906 cxcu^cded 1,000,000 and in 1907 it amouiitcd to 740,000. In 1006 and 1907 tho strike movement was weaker than in 1906, but it was on a much .higher level than in tho jieriod before 1905,

The strike struggle waged by the agricultural labourers bore a revolu tionary character; the labourers organized a boycott of the landlords. Tho peasant movement spread very widely and affected about three hundred counties, including many that had not been affected by tho move ment in 1005. In many cases the peasants drove the landlords from their estates.

In tho spring of 1906 umost became more frequent in tho army .as well, and oven affected tJio tsar's guards.

Simultaneously with tlie X)easaut moviuncnt in nK)6, the movement for national liberation assumed wider proportions in the Ihiltic Provinces and iu Transcaucasia. Here regular battles took place between the peasants and the tsar's forces.

The Elections to the First State Duma

While crushing the revolution by armed force, the autocracy also began, as Lenin put it. "'to crush popular liberties bv means of a monarchist 'constitu tion.'"

On December 11, 1905, during the armed insurrection, a law was promulgated governing the elections to the State Duma. Th*s law was needed by the autocracy to deceive the people. It granted electoral rights mainly to the propertied classes — ^tlie landlords and the capitalists. As for the electoral rights received by the workers and peasants, they contained considerable restrictions. The suffrage was far fjom un*versal. Agricultural labourers, day labourers and many other categories of workers "were not granted the vote at all, nor were women, the men in the armed forces, students or persons under the age of twenty-five. The suffrage was not equal. For urban electors a high property qualification was fixed, which meant that they had to be in receipt of large incomes from the renting of liouses or from commercial or industrial enterprises. The voters were divided up into four curiae or voters' groups: landowning (landlords), urban (the bourgeoisie), peasants and workers. The rate of rexire sontation for the different curiae was not the same. The landowning groiij) could elect one elector for every 2,000 voters, the urban groui> could elect one for every 7,000 voters, the peasants' group one for every 30,000 voters and the workers' group one for every 90,000 voters. The elections were not direct, but went through a series of inter mediary stages. For the peasants there were actually four stages. First, the peasants in each village elected electors to a volost meeting which elected two delegates to a county meeting. The county meeting elected electors to a gubernia election meeting, w^hich at last elected the deputies to the Duma. Voting was^ in fact not secret.

Witte calculated that with the aid of the peasants, who still re tained some faith in the tsar, he would succeed in securmg the election of a monarchist State Duma, and therefore, in the electoral law he draft ed he allowed the peasant electors 40 per cent of the total number of seats. In February 1906, the government issued a supplementary regu lation governing the elections to the State Duma, which still further restricted the electoral rights of the workers and urban demoerati4* voters compared with the law of December 11 .

The elections to the State Duma took x>lace in March and April 1906, in an atmosphere of the most brutal police terrorism. The Bolshe viks adhered to the decision which was adoiited by the xinited Central Committee of the Party to boycott the elections. Nevertheless, they ^poko at election meetings and exx>osed the decox)tioii perxietrated by the tsar and tlio troacliorons role played by the liberals, and agitated for armed insurrection. The organized class-conscious workers took no part in the voting. The Mensheviks in the Caucasus violated the Party's boycott decision and secured the return of their leaders to the First State Duma. In BaJeu, however, the only largo industrial ceutro in tlu'. Caucasus, the Bolsheviks cllecfccd the boycott of the election.

The Fourth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P.

Working under the direct leadc^rship of Lenin, the St. Petersburg Committee of the Party steadily gained influence among the workers. Even tlic Mensheviks were obliged to admit that the proletariat had followed not their lead but that of the Bolsheviks during the December insurrectioiu The split in the Party, however, was preventing the establishment of working-class unity. And so, when the demand arose among the workers for Party unity it received the support of the Bolshe viks. The Mensheviks, unable to resist the pressure of the masses of the workers, were also obliged to agree to unity. To this end, the Fourth Congress (known as the Unity Congress) of the R.S.D.L.P. was hold in Stockholm in April 1900, At this congress the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks formally united, but luaintainod their independ ent organizational existence as two factions within the Party* The Bolshevik organizations had sufFcu'cd sovoroly from police raids and arrests after the December insurrection. The Menshe viks, on tho other hand, had gained strerngth by accepting int<> their ranks numerous roprosentativos of tho petty-bourgeois intelli gentsia who had nothing in common with tho proletariat. Tliat was why tho Mensheviks had a majority at this congress. When the congress discussed the agrarian question the Bolsheviks uphold Lenin's program for the confiscation of the landlords* estates and the nationalization of all tho land. Tho Mensheviks, however, sup ported a program for tho "municipalization of the land." This was aimed at a compromise with the remnants of serfdom and with tsarism, for it proposed that the land should be transferred to thc^ existing Zemstvos, which were to rent it to tho peasants.

Taking advantage of their chance majority, tho Mensheviks secured the adoption of their agrarian program.

The First State Duma

Although the December insurrection was suppressed, the tsar's government was compelled to convene the State Duma. The autocracy, 1 owevor, did all it could to restrict its powers. Thus, at the end of April 1906, three days before tho Duma was to open, so-called "Fundamental State Laws," were published, in which it was affirmed that "'supremo auto cratic state power is vested in tho Emperor of all tho Russias." The tsar retained the right to amend tho fundamental laws and to issue a number of exceptionally important laws without submitting them to tho Duma. Furthermore, the State Council was given equal powers with the Duma. The Council was reformed and made to consist half of high government officials appointed by the tsar and half of elected lepiesentatives of the nobility, the Zemstvos, the universities and the clergy. Bills passed by the Duma had to be passed by the State Council before they could be sent to the tsar. He, in his ,turn, had the final say as to whether to accept or reject them. Thus, the legislative rights of the Duma promised in the Manifesto of October 17, were almost nullified. Witte, with whose name the Manifesto of October 17 was associated, could not be used to carry out this avowedly reactionary policy and he was there fore dismissed. Goremykin, a representative of the reactionary bu reaucracy, became President of the Council of Ministers.

Nevertheless, although the rights of the electors and the scope of activity of the State Duma were severely restricted, the Duma did to some extent limit the powers of the tsarist autocracy.

The composition of the Duma after the elections also proved to hf' unfavourable for the tsar's government. Of the 624 Deputies 204 were peasants, hut these were not the sort of peasants Count Witte had counted on. The majority of the peasant Deputies formed what was called the Trudovik group, or Group of Toil, which, at first, the workers' Deputies also joined. The Social-Democratic group in the Duma numbered 18 Deputies. The largest single group in the First State Duma was that of the Constitutional Democrats (Cadets) who numbered 179 D puties. In their hunt for peasant votes during the elections, the Cadets had described themselves as the "Party of Popular Freedom." The Rights (from the Black Hundreds to the Octobrists) had 44 Deputies.

As a result of the constitutional illusions spread among them by the Cadets, Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, the peasants be lieved that they would be able to get land by peaceful means through the Duma and had therefore elected their Deputies with keen expectations. The Cadets proposed that only a part of the landlords* land be trans ferred to the peasants, and then only at a "fair assessment. "The peasants kn^w from their own experience that the "fair assessment" of the land lords was two or three times higher than the market price of the land, and as the attitude of the government and of the Cadets, as the leading party in the Duma, towards their urgent demands for land became clear, their constitutional illusions were dispelled. The awakening of the class consciousness of the peasant Deputies was quickened by the unceasing propaganda of the Bolsheviks who, by their policy, enabled the work ers' Deputies in the Duma to take a correct proletarian class stand on a number of questions. '

Lenin and Stalin denounced the Cadets as enemies of the working peasantry and called upon the peasants to act in unison with the work ers, to form and strengthen a proletarian and peasant alliance, for, they urged, only hucIi iin iilliioice conJd bring the p(JAsantM victory iii tlicir struggle for land . As a result of the ju'opagauda conducted by tlie Social Democrats, the Trudovik group introduced a land bill in the Duma '[)ro-. viding for the coni]>uls()ry alienation of all landlord laud; it proposed tlie uatioiialization of all the land, including peasant allotments. Tlio im])as sumeds])ecehes delivered by the peasant Deputies during the discussion of the agrarian question in tlio Duma I'cvcTberatod tliroughout the country and had a rousing elTcct upon the ]u>asantry. In the ])eriod from May to August 1000, ])oasant unrest siiroad to 50 })cr cent of all the coun ties in the country. The growth of revolutionary activity among the jicasants greatly alarmed the tsarist govennnont. It issued an official statement to the peasants in which it declared that while it would nev er agi'oe to tlie comxuilsory alienation of tlie landlords* land, it was willing to buy at state expense plots 'of land voluntarily sold bv' landownersandrcselltlieseplotsto the peasants at a jirice within their means. In answer to this declaration of war -upon the peasantry the Tru dovik grou]> tried to get carried through the Duma an a])peal to the peo ple, but this was defeated .by the Cadets. The government was scared by the turn which the discussion of the land question liatl talnm and deeidod to disj)orso the Duma. On duly 8, 14)0(), it ])roclaiine(l the dissolution of the Dinna on tlio grounds that tiie peasants "in a number of gubernias, had taken the ])uth of o])eii plunder, the seizure of other jicoxile^sprop <^rty and disobediencse to th('> hw and the lawful authorities." After the disioersion of the First State Duma, the Minister of the Interior Stolypiu was ap])ointcd Frosideut. of tlie Couneii of Ministers in ])lace of Goremykin, who was (umshlered incapable of waging a deter mined struggle against the revolution, Lenin summed up Btolyjiin's political biography iu the following brief terms: '"A landlord and a mar shal of thonobilty, he was appointed governor in 1002, under Plelive. gained 'fame* iu the eyes of the tsar and the reactionary court clique by his brutal rojirisals against tlie peasants ami the cruel punishment he meted out to them (in the Saratov Province), organized Black Hun <ired gangs and pogroms in 1005 (the iiogrom in Balashov), became Min ister of the Interior in JOOG and Presulent of tlio Council of Ministers after the dispersal of tlio First State Duma" ( V. 1 . Lenin, Selected W orks^ Two-Vol. ed., VoL I, Moscow, 1940, p. 486).

The situation in the country remained revolutionary. In the sum• mor of 1006 large-scale revolts of soldiers and sailors broke out in »Sveaborg and Kronstadt. The Bolshevik military organization made extensive preiDaratious for an insuiTCction among the naval and military forces stationed in Finland, but the iusurrootioiH in Svoaborg and Kron stadt broke out ^irematurely, before these ])reparations wore eomplotod. Warships and artillery were sent against the insurgent saihws and the insurrections wen^ crushed. The insurgents were eourt-juartialled and executed.

To punislitlie revolutionaries, Stolypin, in August 1906, instituted field courts-martial, which up to April 1907, sentenced over a thousand men to death. Execution on the gallows became a common practice.

In an, endeavour to split the ranks of the peasantry who had been united in their struggle for land during the revolution, Stolypin, on November 9, 1906, in the period between the First and the Second Du mas, issued a decree granting the peasants the right to leave the peas ant communities and to acquire definite ownership of their allot ments.

Owing to the intensification of the peasants' struggle for land, the tsar's government again entered into negotiations with the govern ments of Germany and Austria for their intervention in Russian affairs.

On July 7 (20), 1906, on the very eve of the dispersion of the First State Duma, the Bolshevik newspaper Echo published an article by Lenin entitled "The Plots of the Reaction and the Threats of the Po-' grom-mongers" in which he exposed the machinations of the tsar and of his German and Austrian friends. After quoting the rapture the govern ment newspaper Eossiya had expressed over the forthcoming interven tion, Lenin went on to say: "These measures consist in preparing the armed forces of Germany and Austria for the invasion of Russia if the cause of freedom is victorious or on the point of victory. The Berlin government is already in communication with the Austrian govern ment on this question. Both governments have admitted that 'under certain circumstances active intervention in the internal affairs of' Russia with the object of suppressing or restricting this [Lp., revolu tionary] movement may become desirable and useful. . . .'

"Thus, there can be no doubt about the plot that is being hatched by international counter-revolution. The Russian government is call ing in the aid offoreign troops against the Russian people. Negotiations for this have been and are being conducted, and have aheady resulted in a fairly definite agreement" ('V. I. Lenin, Collected Worhs, Vol. IX, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 411).

This article helped still further to expose the counter-revolutionary designs of tsarism.

The Second State Duma

The experience of the First Duma showed that the Duma could be used as a platform from which to expose the crimes of tsarism and the treachery of the liberals, and also to fight for the leadership of the peasants. Consequently, on Lenin's proposal, the Bolsheviks decided to take part in the elections to the Second State Du ma.Theresult of the part^'cipation of the Left-wing parties in the elections was that the Second Duma was more radical than the First. The Cadets won only about half the seats they had held in the First Duma (98 as against 170). TheTrudovik group, together with the Socialist-Revolutionaries, bad 157 scats, compared with 94 in the First Duma. The

Sooial-Domocrats won 65 seats compared with 18 in the First Duma. But although the Second Duma was ihoro radical than the First, it was weaker than tlio latter .The revolutionary tide was subsiding. The Bolsheviks, however, sot tliomselves the task of utilizing the Duma to expose tsarism and the treacherous liberals. The activities of the Boh shovik Deputies in the Duma wore directed by Louin, and he formulated the main points of their speeches on the most important questions. The Mensheviks, however, wanted to engage in peaceful legislative work in alliance with the liberals, under the government of Stolypin, the hangman.

At the Fifth Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. which was hold in London in April and May 1907, the Bolsheviks strongly denounced the treach erous tactics which the Mcnshevilcs pursued in the Second State Duma. At this congress the Bolsheviks were in the majority, and the congress adopted the Bolshevik resolution calling for the systematic exposure *of the counter-revolutionary tactics of the liberals.

Tho election to the Second State Duma had shown that the ex isting electoral law, oven though it did greatly restrict the franchise for tho working })eoplo, could not ensure tho election of a Duma that would satisfy the tsarist autocracy. Consequently, the government made preparations to dissolve tho Second Duma and to amend tho electoral law with tho object of still further restricting the franchise for the workers and peasants. To provide an excuse for dispersing the Duma, the tsar's govornmont resorted to outright provocation, accusing the Social-Democratic group in the Second State Duma of hatching a "plot against tho state." The char.^o was a deliberately false one, and had been fabricated by the secret police. On June 1, 1907, Stolypin demanded the impeachment of tho Social Democratic Deputies. Tlie Cadets were already willing to yield to the government's demand, but on Juno 3, 1907, the government dissolved the Duma and promulgated a now electoral law that was calculated to ensure a majority in the next Duma for a bloc of tho landlords and the big bourgeoisio. Since then that day has been known as tho coup d'itat of June 3, for tho tsar's government had violated its own Manifesto of October 17, 1905, according to which no laws could be passed without the consent of the Duma. The Social-Dem ocratic Deputies in the Second Duma were arrested and tried by a tsarist court and sentenced to penal servitude and exile.

Reasons for the Defeat of the Revolution of 1905

Tho coup d*4tat of Juno 3, 1907, signified the temporary defeat of tho revo lution.

Already at that time the Bolsheviks attributed the defeat of the first Russian revolution to the fact that a linn alliance between the workers and peasants had not yet been formed. As Lonin wrote: "This alliance was si3ontaneous, not formulated, and often unconscious" (V. I. Lenin, Gollected Works, Vol. XIV, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., ]). 15). The peasants did not yet sufficiently understand that the tsar and the landlords constituted a smgle gang of the bitterest enemies of the people, and that in order to overthrow the landlords it was necessary to overthrow the tsar too. Nor did they yet realize that the only faithful ally and leader they had was the working class. As a consequence, a large section of the jieasantry failed to support the armed straggle of the workers against tsarism. Even those peasants who fought against the landlords and tsarism lacked sufficient political consciousness and organization.

The army, which consisted mainly of peasants and reflected the inadequate class consciousness of the peasantry, had not yet gone over to the side of the insurgents, and the bulk of it helped tsarism to crush the revolution.

Nor were the workers sufficiently united in their activities. The strike wave reached its peak in 1905, but the intensity of the strike * movement varied according to districts. While in industrial regions like St. Petersburg, Baku, Riga and other places, every worker went on strike no less than four or five times in 1905, in the districts of the Moscow Gubernia every worker went on strike only once in the year, and in a number of industrially less-developed gubernias, some work ers had not struck at all. In 1906, the number of strikers dropped in the more-mdustrialized gubernias, whereas in the least-industrialized gubernias, the backwoods, as Lenin called them, the number of strikers rose. But by that time the vanguard of the working class had already been weakened.

In the period of 1905 to 1907, the working class still lacked the unity necessary for the victory of the revolution. At first the Party was split into two factions; later it united, bub only formally. The Bolsheviks pursued a consistent revolutionary policy, but the Men sheviks still exercised influence among a certain section of the workers and retarded the development of the. revolution.

Thus, m the first Russian revolution its three main forces: workers, peasants and soldiers, had not yet merged in one common torrent.

The tsar's government received the assistance of the foreign impe rialists, who were apprehensive about the fate of their investments in Russia and feared that the revolution would spread to Western Europe.

In the spring of 1906, the French bankers granted the tsar loans amounting to a billion francs. Wilhelm II mustered a whole army to invade Russia in support of the tsarist autocracy. An important factor that helped tsarism was the conclusion of peace with Japan, which strengthened the position of the tsar's government. Moreover, to suppress the revolution the tsar could use the military forces that were released from Manchuria.

The Significance of the Revolution of 1905–1907

The heroic struggle which the workers and peasants waged in the revolution of 1905-1907 dealt a heavy blow at tsarism, it sa])ped its foniKlations and compelled it to make concessions. All its iittcjiupts to restore the oonditious that had existed in llnssia hetoro tlu^ nwohd-ion ]>rovod futile, it could not recover from the blows which tlu^ revolution inflict ed n])on it.

For the workers and iu\isauts of Itiissia, the revolution of 1005 1907 served as a great schooling in ])olltical struggle, it roused millions of working people to political life and riw<ialed to them the relations of all classes to each other. The masses acquired enormous exjierionco in employing the general strike and armed in surrection, and this they utilized in their subsequent struggles. The working class created the Soviets of Workers' Deputies, the embryonic form of the dictatorship of the proletariat. This experience helped the workers and peasants to achieve victory twelve years later, in October .November 1917. Hence, the revolution of 1905 was the dross rehearsal of the Great October Socialist Rovolubiou.

The international signiiicaiieo of the revolution of 1905 was also very groat. The first Russian revolution took place thirty-five years after the sup])rossion of tlio Paris Oommnne. It took jilacc in the e])och of imiiorialisin. As Comrade Stalin wrote: "Tims, the revolution against tsarism verged on and had to pass into a revolution against imperialism, into a proletarian revolution" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninisyn^ Moscow, 1945, p. 37). A direct result of the Russian revolu tion was the development of the political struggle in Austria in October 1905, in Germany in January 1900, in France in May 1900, and in Asia (the i evolutions in Peasia, Turkey and China).

Millions of woikeis and peasants all over the world have boon and ai e being taught by the experience of the fii st Russian revolution of 1905.

The Stolypin Reaction (1908–1912)

The Third of June Monarchy

The Industrial Depression of 1904–1908

By the time of the defeat of the first Russian revolution the capitalist world was entering into another economic crisis (1907-1909), which followed on the heels of the temporary industrial revival of 1903-1907.

In tsarist Russia the crisis of the early 1000 's lasted much longer than the ordinary periodical crises in Europe, and in 1904 it was . followed by a depression.

Tte unsuccessful war against Japan, the falling o/f in government contracts and railway construction, and a series of crop failures which eaused the already restricted home market to shrink still further, had all served to prolong the industrial crisis of the early 1900's. The new world economic crisis aggravated the industrial depression in Russia.

The course of the crisis may bo illustrated by the output of pig iron in that period. Taking the output of pig iron in 1900 at 100, the index number of the output in 1903 was 84. As a consequence of the increased demand created by the war against Japan the index number rose in 1904 to 102, but in 1905-1906 it dropped again, to 93, and in the period of depression from 1907 to 1909 it did not rise above 97. Only in 1910, after a ten years' state of crisis, did the output exceed that of the beginning of the century.

All the basic industries, including the oil industry, were in a state of stagnation. The coal industry of the Donetz Basin alone was some what less aifected by the crisis and the depression. The textile industry, the output of which had risen somewhat by 1907, remained stagnant during the period of the depression.

After the revolution of 1905, important changes took place in industry. The concentration of industry increased. Capitalist com bines — trusts and syndicates — ^grew rapidly. During the period of the industrial depression the big banlcs became more powerful and took a direct part in the reorganization of industry, strengthening and enlarg ing some plants, closing down others, and combining and reorganizing still others. For the pimpose of financing Russian industry the French banlters promoted the formation of a banking S 3 mdicate known as the Russo-French Finance Company. Capitalism in Russia became in creasingly monopolistic, imperialist capitalism.

In many cases the factory owners closed down their plants for a time in order to install new machinery, to reorganize the management and to combine with other plants. The unemployment that was created by the crisis assumed a spasmodic character, and this gave rise to a feeling of insecurity among the workers. Male workers were dismissed wholesale and!" replaced by cheap female and child labour. The material conditions of the workers sharply deteriorated. The employers tried to force the workers back to the conditions of labour that had existed before the revolution of 1905. The working day was lengthened to ten and even to twelve hours. Piece rates for all categories of work were re duced, and fines again became the rule. The cost of living steadily rose.

The large federations of employers that sprang up in 1906 and 1907 in St, Petersburg and Moscow formed a united front with tsarism against the workers. The employers' organizations discharged the more class-conscious and militant workers. These workers were blacklisted and could not fi.nd employment anywhere. The factory owners often practised wholesale dismissals of workers.

Counter-Revolution Rampant

After tlireo years of revolution, Russia passed thro\ijfj;li years of blootlshod and rani])aiit cpimtcr-rcv olution. Lon ill described this period as years "of tiio black Duma, rampant violence and opju'essiou, the onslauglit of the ea])italists upon the workers, tJie Joss of tJio gains wliich ilu* workers had won'"' {V. 1. Lenin, Collected Ifo-rfe, Vol. XiV, Moscow, HKl?, Russ, cd., p. 391). TJio tsarist government, the landlonls an<l tlie capitalists wreaked vcngiaiice upon the vvorJeers and ])(^asants for the revolution.

In Siberia, in the Caucasus and in the Raltic rrovinccs, punitive expeditions continued their atrocities, sotting lire to and destroying scores of villages, killing thousands of Avorkers and ])oasants without trial, and flogging women and children . For a long time the tsarist government feared to return to tlieir regular stations the troops which had been sent to suppress the revolution. Tlio troops in the central gubernias wore reinforced with ti'oops drawn from the frontier regions, as the tsarist axitocraoy believed that the '"^internal enemy" was more dangerous than the foj'oigii foe.

Tlie field courts-martial that o])oratod in 1 000 and 1 907 Avere replaced by military courts. The entire country Avas dotted with gallows, which the people dubbed "^Stolypin ne<}kties," iiftor the head of the tsar's govo 3 'nment, Stolypin. Lenin wrote regarding this period; "There has never before been in Russia such rampant ])orsoeution by tsarism, and during these Jive years tlu^ gallows boat tlu^ record of three centuries of Russian history." Rundmls of thousands of people Avero flung into prison, and there the revolutionaries wore siibjecsted to torture and limtal ill-treatment, I^or having j)articipatod in strikes or revolution ary demonstrations woi'kors Avero sonteiieod to long years of penal servitude.

After the coup (Velai of June 3, the Black Hundreds, who were organized by the League of the Russian People, intonsiliod their pogrom activities. Black Hundred outrages Avore iiarticularly rife in Odessa, Avhere organized gangs of hooligans marched through the town carrying rubber truncheons and revolvers and boating up ])assers-by. Not a year passed but what the Black Hundred hooligans organized a bloody pogi'om against the Jews. Throughout the country x^i^^datory raids by the police and gendarmes upon the workers' organizations became more frequent. In 1907, 169 trade unions wore sujjprcssed, in 1908, over 100 wore sux)X)resscd, in 1909, 96 Avere siq^xwcssed. Workers' newspapers and magazines were banned. The workers' cultural and educational organizations that managed to survive dragged out a miserable existence.

Tsarism acted as the bitterest enemy of the jiooplo. In a general description he gave of tho 3rd of Juno monarchy, Lenin wrote; . The tsarist monarchy is tho rallying centre of that gang of Black Hundred landlords (first among whom is Romanov) which has turned Russia into the terror not only of Europe, but now also of Asia, the gang which has developed tyranny, robbery and embezzlement of state funds by government officials, systematic violence against the ^common people/ torment and torture of political opponents, etc., to absolutely excep tional dimensions" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Worhs, Vol. XV, Moscow, 1937, Euss. ed,, p. 247).

The Third State Duma

The cou'p d'etat of the 3rd of June marked the opening of the offensive which tsarism launched against the gains won by the revolutionary masses; but it could not return entirely to the conditions that prevailed before the revolution. Although the revolution of 1905 sustained defeat, the revolutionary struggle which the working people had waged made it impossible for tsarism to rule by means of the old methods. After dispersing two Dumas, Nicholas II was obliged to convene the Third Duma. Another reason which dictated the necessity of maintaining the semblance of a representative institution in Russia was the growth of capitalism, the growing strength of the Russian bourgeoisie, and the unstable inter national position of tsarism, wffiich was compelled to manoeuvre and give Europe the impression that Russia was a constitutional country. Above all, however, tsarism aimed at making the Third Duma a new class bulwark for itself by forming a bloc with the counter-revolu tionary Russian bourgeoisie.

In the endeavour to "retain power and revenues" for the rul ing class of feudal landlords, tsarism — following the 1905 revolu tion — took the second step (the first was taken in 1861) towards establishing a bourgeois monarchy, by consolidating the bloc with the counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie. The political expression and embodiment of the 3rd of June bloc between the landlords and the bourgeoisie was the Third State Duma, convened on the basis of the new electoral law of June 3, 1907,

In conformity with this law, the landlords were allowed to elect one elector from every 230 voters, the bourgeoisie one from every thou sand, the peasants one from every 60,000, and the workers only one from every 125,000. This law increased the number of landlord elec tors almost fivefold, that of bourgeois electors sevenfold, compared with that provided for by the law of December 11, 1905, while the number of the worker and peasant electors was more than halved. The franchise for the non-Russian nationalities in Russia was still further restricted. The peoples of Central Asia were totally deprived of representation in the Duma. Poland was entitled to send only 12 Deputies instead of 35, and of these, two — ^the represent atives of Waisaw and the Kholm Region — ^had to be Russians. European Russia was granted 403 seats in the Duma, but the "border regions" were given only 39,

Thus, the new electoral law ensured that the Third State Duma would consist of landlords and the bourgeoisie. In other words, it was not so much an olocted body as a body carefully chosen to suit the interests of tsarism. Of the members of the Tuird Duma, 202, or 46 per cent of the total, wore landlords.

The state of the parties rejircsontod in the. Duma also clearly proved that it was a bourgeois and landlord body. Tho Right-wing parties had 40 per cent of the seats, tho Octobrists 25 ])cr cent, the Cousti tutional-Domoorata (Cadets) 23 per cent and tho Left-wing parties a little over 7 per cent. Tho rest of tho Deputies declared themselves to be non-party. No single party had an absolute majority in the Duma.

This latter fact enabled tlie tsarist government to manoeuvre and to base itself on the Black Hundred and Octobrist majority at one moment and on the Octobrist and Cadet majority at another, without having to fear serious op])osition from either of them. The obedient Octobrists voted for all the govoniinent projiosals either in alliance with tho Right-wing Black Hundreds or in alliance with the Cadets,

Tlio head of tho govormnnnt during tho 3rd of June bloc was Stoly pin, one of tho most jmunincut rojirosontativos of the landed nobility, who were organized in the countor-rovoliitiouary organization known as tho Council of the United Nobility. With tho support of tho Octo brists and Constitutioual-Domoorats, Stolypin launched an offensive against the workers and peasants and tJio working people in tho non Russian national regions. The keynote of Stolyj)iii's domestic policy was: "First pacification and then reforms." Stotyxiin achieved "paci fication" by moans of tho criiolost terrorism. Fearing another outburst of revolution, however, ho was obliged to introduce an agrarian refonn.

Stolypin's Agrarian Reform

The State of Agriculture

The agrarian, or laud question, was, as Lenin expressed it, the j^ivot of tho Russian boui*gcois-domocratic revolution. Tho problem was to break up tho vast landlord latifundia which were tho basis of the mediaeval bondage in which the peasants still found themselves and the major obstacle to tho development of caj)italism. After the revolution of 1905, 30,000 big landlords still owned 70,000,000 desyatins of land, while an almost equal amount belonged to 10,600,000 poor peasant households. The distribution of the land in this fashion kept agriculture in a state of extreme back wardness.

Tlio landlords found it more profitable to rent land to tbo ])casants than to farm their land themselves on modern linos. Tho ])e.asants cultivated their own allotments and tho land which they rented from fjhe landlords with thoir primitive implements. As a rosuit, the general level of agriculture in Russia in the beginning of the twentieth century was as low as ever it was before. As far as yield is concerned, Russia stood almost at the bottom of the list of all the countries of the world. In the x^criod from 1909 to 1913 the average yield of grain in Russia was 45 xioods X)er dosyatin compared with 90 in France, 152 in Germany ajid 192 in Denmark. In respect to the mechanization of agriculture, Russia was equally far behind the advanced countries. The greater part of the peasants' lands were ploughed with wooden ploughs, and grain was sown and threshed by hand. In 1910, there were employed in agriculture throughout the empire 3,000,000 primitive wooden ploughs, 7,000,000 wooden-handled ploughs, 6,000,000 wooden harrows and only 27,000 steam threshers. Tractors and electric ploughs were not even thought of.

After the revolution of 1905, the utter destruction of the old mediae val system of landownei ship in Russia became particularly urgent. Still more acute than in 1861 became the struggle for one or the other of the two possible paths of development of capitalism in agriculture — the Prussian or the American. In 1907, Lenin wrote that there were two possibilities: "Either the Prussian type of evolution: the feudal landlord will become a Juiil?:er. The power of the landlords in the state will be consolulated for decades. Monarchy. ^A military despotism clothed in })arliamentary forms' instead of democracy. The utmost inequality among the rural and among the rest of the population. Or the American tyx^e of evolution. Abolition of the landlord system. The peasant becomes a free farmer. Sovereignty of the people. A bourgeois-democrat ic system. The utmost equality among the rural population as the stai'ting point and condition for free capitalism" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 188).

The peasant revolts in the period of the revolution showed that the peasantry refused to tolerate their present conditions any longer, wanted to sweep away the old system of landownership by revolu tionary means, and were in fact taking the American path of develop ment of capitalism in agriculture.

The tsarist government, the landlords and the counter-revolu tionary bourgeoisie wanted to bring about this change in a way that would serve the interests of the landlords, they wanted the Prussian way. The govermnent therefore decided to split the peasantry, even at the cost of ruining the countryside, and to encourage the rise of a pros perous class of small landowners — "new landlords" who would fight for the protection of private property in land and for the preservation of the tsarist autocracy.

The government, therefore, abandoned its former policy of preserv ing the village C' minunities and the mediaeval forms of land tenure connected with it, such as tying the peasants to the village community, collective rosiionsibility of the community for the payment of taxes, etc. The aim of the autocracy in destroying the village communities was to strengthen the position of the kulaks and to transform the buUc of the peasants into a vast reserve army of labour, thereby ensuring cheap labour power for large-scale industry and for the landlords estates.

While the "reform" ("emancipation of the serfs") of 1861 enabled the landlords to rob the peasants of their land, the new reform provided the kulaks with the opportunity to do so.

Destruction of the Village Community

Stolypin devised three groups of measures with which he hoped to avert an agrarian revolu tion and strengthen the rule of tsarism. These groups were: 1) destruc tion of the village community, 2) introduction of "kiiufcor" and ^'otrub" farms in the countryside, and 3) resettlement of the peasants in other regions.

Stolypin 's ukase of November 9, 1906, which initiated the destruc tion of the village community, became, after it was amended by the Third State Duma, the law of June 14, 1910, which was to complete this destruction. The ukase of November 9, 1906, granted the peasants permission to leave the village community if they so desired; the law of June 14, 1910, made it obligatory for them to do jo. In those village communities where there had been no redivision of the land since the time when the peasants were allotted land, the plots became the private property of householders. Where the land had been redisr tributed,. householders were allowed to run their allotments as separate farms.

The Stolypin land law destroyed the community system of land tenure. It allowed the peasant to leave the village community and to sell his allotment, which he had no right to do before. This enabled the rich peasants, or kulaks, to buy up the allotments of the ruined poor peasants at low prices. A peasant who broke with the village community could remain in the village and become permanent owner of his plots, which could be exchanged for one continuous plot, the "otrub." Or he could transfer his home and his property to a plot of land outside the village, and set up a farm there, a "khutor." In either case the setting up of a farm entailed expend iture. The government granted loans io kulaks to purchase land and organize "khutor" farms. It demanded that thebest of the vil lage community's land be allotted to the kulak "khutor" -farmers. The establishment of "khutor" and ""otrub" farms was frequently ef fected by force, with the help of the rural prefects. The tsarist govern ment sent a whole army of mounted police to the rural districts and gave Provincial Governors power to send troops to suppress the peasants who resisted land assignment from community land. However, among "khutor" -farmers the kulaks were in a minority^ There was a majority of another category of "khutor "-farmers, the ruined and impoverished peasants who, having no means to escape from want, said: "There's nowhere to go, so let's take up a "khutor' farm." But having no means with which to make such farms work, they would sell their allotments to the kulaks. In this way the kulak farms within and without the villages grew into real estates where wage labour was employed on a large scale. The process of dijfferentiation of the peasantry into classes was acceler ated. A section of the peasants who had been deprived of their land went to seek a livelihood in the towns and became proletarians.

During the ten years the Stolypin law was in operation over 2,000,000 householders, with an area of land amounting to 18,000,000 hectares, left the village communities and took over the land ls their private property. Of this number, 54.7 per cent set up "khutor" and "otrub" farms, but threejfifths of these subsequently sold their allotments.

The buying and selling of land was transacted through the Peasant Bank. Prom 1906 to 1910 the peasants acquired through this bank a total of 6,000,000 hectares of land. The bank concerned itself exclu sively with the setting up of "khutor" and "otrub" farms, and during the ten years it was in operation, from 1906 to 1916, it helped to form 200,000 of these. The Peasant Bank operated in the interests of the nobility and the kulaks. It purchased allotment land at a ridiculously low price compared with that of landlord land. Where landlord land was assessed at 121 rubles j)er hectare, allotment land was assessed at 79 rubles, but the bank sold the latter at 140 to 150 rubles i^er hectare. When it sold land to be paid for in instalments it demanded high interest on the mortgage. Frequently pleasant s who had become "khu tor" -farmers fell into arrears in the payment of interest and principal on loans received from the bank. In such cases their property was sold under the hammer and they were compelled to seek a livelihood in the towns.

Stolypin also extensively applied the policy of resettlement. His aim was to form a class of "sturdy" and "prosperous" peasant owners in the Central regions of Russia and to shift the discontented poor and middle peasants further out — to Siberia and other border regions* From 1906 to 1910, 2,500,000 peasants were resettled in Siberia, the Far East, Central Asia and other outlying regions.

In the pursuit of political aims the Stolypin government rodi* roughshod over the interests of the settlers and the rights of the native inhabitants.

The task of carrying out the resettlement policy was entrusted to resettlement commissions, Prefects and Provincial Governors. The commissions packed off whole contingents of poor and middle peasants in cattle trucks which bore the inscription: "Forty persons, eight horses." The settlers with their wives and children, healthy and sick, travelled for months to their new places of settlement, living in thesis cattle trucks, in which they cooked their food and did their washing; and when they reached their destination they were bundled out and left ill the open field, in the rain or snow. To create some shelter for themselves they hastily dug dugouts, and then began a veritable martyrdom in their quest for land and loans with which to start their farms. Most of the land that was allotted them was situated in remote and inconvenient places, where there was no water, meadows and no pastures. The loans that were granted were inadequate. What the settlers suffered, left to their fate in these remote districts, can be seen from the following excerpt from the report of Prince Lvov, whom the Z3m3tvos sent on a mission of inspection to the Far East. 'Tsolabion from the world, living as if on an uninhabited island among the marshes in the dense taiga, in the marshy valleys and muddy hills, absolutely wild conditions of life, labour and sustenance, naturally crush the weak-spirited and poor settler. He becomes apathetic after exhausting his small stock of energy at the very beginning of his struggle against stern nature in building his wretched habitation. Scurvy and typhus attack his exhausted frame and carry him to the graveyard. In many settlomfiiits, in 1907, the death rate was posi tively incredible, amounting to 25 and 30 per cent. In the settlements there are as many gravestones as there are households, and many of the settlements will have to bo shifted to new sections otherwise they will be transformed into graveyards."

Miny of the settlers abandoned their newly acquired allotments in despair and returned to their former places of habitation utterly ruiued. Settlers who but recently had been middle peasants wore reduced either to working as agricultural labourers or going into the towns to seek work.

This settlement policy spread ruin among the native inhabitants of the border regions. The land intended for colonization was forcibly taken from the natives. The Kirghiz, for example, were driven wholesale from their winter pastures. The Caucasian highland ers were pushed from their fertile lands into the rocky gorges. In Central Asia, magnificent orchards, that were situated in an area intended for cultivation by settlers, were simply destroyed.

The ruined and impoverished native inhabitants of the border regions became revolutionary and augmented the ranks of the fight ers against tsarism.

The Result of Stolypin's Agrarian Reform

When he introduced his agrarian reform Sbolypin stated that his object was to wi*est tlie peasantry out of the hands of revolution and to convert the kulaks into a class of "small landlords" which was to serve as a firm bulwark for the autocracy in its struggle against the revolution.

"Give me twenty quiet years and I will reform Russia," he said.

In an article entitled "The Last Safety Valve," Lenin showed that Sbolypin's agrarian policy brought neither "reform" nor quiet." In 1910, an outbreak o£ cholera in the south of Russia carried away 100.000 persons. Plague broke out in the steppes of Astrakhan. Ruination, poverty and starvation roused the anger of the peasants and imbued them with the spirit of revolution.

Another crop failure in 1911, and the famine which affected

30.000. 000 peasants showed that the Stolypin reform had not abol ished the fundamental causes of the backwardness of agriculture. Tj^hus and other epidemic diseases ravaged the famine-affected areas.

Stolypin 's reform did not abolish mediaeval landownership. The royal family, the landlords and the monasteries still retained over

150.000. 000 hectares of the best and most fertile land in the country. The landlords continued to keep the peasants in bondage, compelling them to cultivate their, the landlords', land with their wretched horses and primitive implements. "This is not capitalism," wrote Lenin, describing the state of landlord and peasant farming that resulted from Stolypin 's reform. "This is not the European method of farming. . . . This is the old Chinese way. This is the Turkish way. This is the feudal waif^ (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works^ Voi. IV, Moscow, 1934, p. 239).

The reform did not even abolish the open-field system and other survivals of serfdom which reduced the productivity of the peasants' labour. The peasants, with bitter irony, described Stolypin 's policy of land settlement as "land unsettlement."

Stolypin 's reform merely postponed the doom of serfdom; it did not eliminate the profound contradictions that constituted the basis of the Russian bourgeois-democratic revolution. It still further accel erated the process of differentiation among the peasantry and intensified the class struggle in the rural districts. The agrarian ques tion, the fundamental question of, the Russian revolution, could be set tled only by abolishing the landlord latifundia and by transferring the

70.000. 000 hectares of landlord land to the peasants without compen sation. But only another revolution could do this.

The Working-Class Movement in the Period of Reaction

In the winter of 1907, the Stolypin government issued an order for the arrest of Lenin. The tsarist sleuths hmited high and low for the leader of the revolution. On the proposal of the Party, Lenin, who was living in Finland at the time, went abroad. To board the ship unobserved by the police he, one night, crossed the ice in the Gulf of Finland on foot to a near-by island, accompanied by two Finnish peasants. The Decem ber ice was frail and Lenin was almost drowned in an icehole, out of which he managed to extricate himself with diifioulty. He got safe on board at last and left Finland for Switzerland. His second period abroad as an exile lasted nearly ten years.

While abroad, in February 1908, Lenin resumed the publication of the Bolsheviiv newRpax)er Proletary, in the colmnns of which he began to prepare the Party and the working class for another revolution.

In 1907, Comrade Stalin left Titiis for Baku, where he led the rev olutionary struggle of the Baku 'proletariat.

Under the blows of reaction the strike movement in Russia con tinued to subside. In 1908, 176,000 workers were involved in strikes, in 1909, the number was 64,000, and in 1910, it was only 46,000. The strilces were of a defensive character. Only in Baku did the working class movement, led by Comrade Stalin, bear a clearly expressed polit ical character. To divert the workers from the revolutionary struggle, the oil employers invited the workers in the oil plants and oil fields to elect delegates to a conference with employers to discuss the terms of a collective agreement. The Bolsheviks called upon the workers to boycott this conference.

At the end of 1907, when reaction was raging throughout tlie coun try, a sort of worl^ers ' parliament was in session fur nearly two weeks in Baku, at which the workers drew up their demands to be presented to the oil employers. When these demands were rejected the Bolsheviks called for a general strike. During the preparations for this strike the twenty-two-year-old Azerbaijan worker Hanlar, a splendid orator and leader of the masses, was foully assassinated. Hanlar 's funeral developed into a powerful political demonstration. Speaking at the graveside of the fallen fighter, Comrade Stalin called upon the Azer baijan workers to continue the struggle. Hanlar, he said, was the first sacrifice the Azerbaijan people had made for the Russian revolution.

Commenting on the militant character of the Baku strikes, Lenin wrote: "In 1908, at the head of the list of gubernias showing a large number of strikes stands Baku with 47,000 strilters. The last of the Mohicans of the mass political strike!" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XV, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed,, p. 33.)

In March 1908, Comrade Stalin was arrested by the gendannes, but even in prison he continued to lead the movement and sent out articles for publication in the newspaper Qudok, One day a group of Bolsheviks was sent off from the prison to penal servitude. From his prison window Comrade Stalin called out to them as they went: "Keep your manacles, we shall want them for the tsar's government!"

In the autumn of 1908, Comrade Stalin was sentenced to two years ' exile in Solvychegodsk, but in tho summer of 1909, he escaped from there.

Ideological Confusion among the Intellectuals

Describing the po litical life of Russia dining the period of the Stolypin reaction, Com rade Stalin called it "an abomination of desolation." "Fettered public opinion," he went on to say, ^"general weariness and apathy, want and despair among the workers, a downtrodden and intimidated peasantry and with the policelandlord-cax)italist hounds running riot — such are the characteristic features of Stolypin's Opacification.'" ("On the Occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of Pravda,"^ Stalin's article pub lished in Pravda No. 98 of May 5, 1922.)

The defeat of the revolution caused disintegration and degeneration among the intellectuals. Some of the bourgeois fellow-travellers of the revolution deserted to the camp of its open enemies. Others found jobs for themselves in the legal working-class organizations, condemned all revolutionary activity, and called upon the workers to adjust them selves to reaction and reconcile themselves to tsarism. This section of the intellectuals believed that Stolypin's reforms had already con verted Russia into a bourgeois state and had made revolution super fluous. More hostile to the revolution than any other section of the intellectuals was the bourgeois (Cadet) intelligentsia who united around the symposium entitled VeJcM (Lmidmarhs) which was published in 1909. The contributors to this symposium were prominent repre sentatives of the bourgeois intelligentsia, former legal Marxists and Constitutional-Democrats. They proclaimed war on Marxism, re nounced the struggle for democracy and called for conciliation with tsarism. VekJii advocated the doctrines of the Orthodox Russian Church, mysticism and obedience to God and the powders that be, and chamx3ioned the Great-Power and imperialist foreign policy which the Cadet bourgeoisie began to advocate after 1905.

Ideological confusion and collapse were particularly rife among the petty-bourgeois parties (Mensheviks, Socialist-Revolutionaries and others) in which numerous factions, groups and coteries were formed.

The Mensheviks were of the opinion that the revolution was over and that Stolypin had put Russia onto the path of bourgeois develop ment. They tried to adjust themselves to the Stolj^in regime and urged that the old militant Social-Democratic Party, which tsarism had driven underground, should be liquidated. For this reason the Menshevilcs were called Liquidators. Lenin called the Liquidators the "Stolypin Labour Party" because they had become the servants and coadjutors of the 3rd of June monarchy.

The Socialist-Revolutionary Party split in two. The Right Social ist-Revolutionaries had as early as 1906 formed a semi-Cadet Work ing People's Socialist Party and were referred to briefly as Popular Socialists. The Popular Socialists advocated the payment of compen sation for landlords' land alienated for the benefit of the peasantry and entered into a bloc with the Cadets. The "Left" wing of the Socialist Revolutionary Party formed a semi-anarchist group known as the Maxi malist Socialist-Revolutionaries. They proposed economic and political terrorism as the j)rincipal wea]ion in the struggle and soon deteriorated into an unprincipled group of exproiiriatora.

During tlie period of reaction and police terrorism treachery and provocation became widespread. Agents provocateurs wormed their way into the Party organizations and some of them, on the instructions of the secret police, engaged in political murder wliich brought scores of innocent people to the gallows. A sensational event of that period was the exposure of the agent provocateur Azof who, since 1903, had been at the head of the 'hnilitant organization" of the Socialist-Revolu tionary Party. The Azef a. 'fair vividly demonstrated that the terroristic tactics of the Socialist-Revolutionaries were useful to the secret police and harmful to the masses.

The Decline in the Working-Class Movement and Ideological Confusion in the Period of Reaction

The Bolsheviks during the Period of Reaction

The Bolsheviks Fight to Preserve the Party

The Bolsheviks alone were able to retreat in perfect order. They were aware that the vic tory achieved by tsarism was a temporary and unstable one and contin ued to rally the forces for another revolution. They were fiercely persecuted by the tsarist government and were liable to be sentenced to penal servitude if caught by the police; but they wont underground and tirelessly continued their revolutionary activities. They formed Bolshevik cells in factories and, combining legal with illegal forms of activity, they made use of every legal possibility, such as trade un ions, workers' clubs, adult Sunday schools and co-operativo societies, for the purpose of maintaining contact with the masses. The Bolshevik Deputies in the State Duma utilized the tribune of the Duma to further the interests of the revolution. The aim of the Bolsheviks was still, as in 1905, to overthrow tsarism and to complete the bourgeois democratic revolution in order to pass on to the socialist revolution. They continued to advocate the old and tried slogans: A democratic republic, conJBsoation of the landlords' estates, and an 8-hour day.

Amidst the stern conditions of the Stolypin reaction the Bolshe viks waged a struggle on two fronts — against the Menshevik Liquida tors and against the Otzovists. The latter term was applied to a section of former Bolsheviks who demanded the recall (i-n Russian — otozvat) of the workers* Deputies from the State Duma and the cessation of all work in legal organizations, Lenin called the Otzovists "Liquidators inside-out," because their tactics would have resulted in the Party becoming isolated from the masses and, consequently, in the liquidation of the revolutionary Party. Por this reason the Otzo vists were expelled from the Bolshevik organization,

Trotsky and the Trotskyites took a Liquidatorist stand on all ques tions . Lenin said that Trotsky was more despicable and harmful than the avowed Liquidators because he deceived the workers by asserting that he was "'above factions/' whereas actually he supported the Menshe vik Liquidators. It was in that period that Lenin called Trotsky "Judas Trotsky," In 1912 Trotsky organized the so-called "August bloc," which consisted of all the anti-Party elements which were united in their struggle against Bolshevism.

Trotsky was supported in his opposition to Lenin by Kamenev, Zinoviev and Pv.ykov. Concealing their alliance with Trotsky, they succeeded in getting the Bolshevik newspaper Proletary closed down and in securing support for Trotsky's newspaper. Kamenev joined the editorial board of Trotsky's newspaper and tried to turn it into the organ of the Central Committee of the Party.

Despondency and lack of faith infected a section of the intellectuals who regarded themselves as Marxists but who had never taken a firm Marxian stand. They launched a "criticism" of the theoretical prin ciples of Marxism. Some of the intellectuals who had deserted Marx ism even began to urge the necessity of creating a new religion (the so-called "God-seekers" and "God-builders").

In his famous book Materialism and Empirio^Criticism, which ap peared in 1909, Lenin trounced these degenerates in the sphere of Marxist theory and fully substantiated the basic theoretical principles of the Marxist party.

The Bolsheviks Form an Independent Marxist Party

The fight against the Liquidators, Otzovists and Trotskyites confionted the Bol sheviks with the task of uniting all the Bolsheviks and forming them into an index^endent Marxistparty.This was necessary in order to be able to prepare the working class for a new upward swing of the revolution.

Por the purpose of forming the independent Bolshevik Party the Sixth All-Bussian Party Conference was held in Prague, in January 1912. This conference was equal in importance to a Party congress. The Prague Conference elected a Bolshevik Central Committee of the Parly, headed by Lenin. J. V. Stalin and Y. M. Sverdlov, who were in exile in Siberia at the time, were elected to the Central Committee in their absence.

The Bolshevik Party did not adopt a new name after defeating the Mensheviks both ideologically and organizationally, and after expelling them and the Otzovists from the Party; it retained the old name of Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party but added the word "Bolshe viks" in brackets. This name it retained up to 1918.

In its decisions the Prague Conference pointed to the inevitability of another revolutionary upsurge and urged the necessity of intensifying activities among the masses. For th.r puipoae of diiecting the Par ty's revolutionary activities in Russia, a centre for practical work was set up known as the Russian Bureau of the Central Committee. This Bureau was headed by Comrade Stalin. On Lenin's instructions. Sorgo Orjonikiclzc travelled to the })]ace where Comrade Stalin was in exile in order to infonn him of the conference's decisions and to arrange for his escape. In February 3912, Comrade Stalin escaped from exile for the fourth time. Ho visited a number of cities in Russia and headed tiie growing revolutionary movement in iSt. Petersburg.

The Bolshevik Iron Guard

Under the guidance of Lenin and Stalin many of the Bolsheviks who were active underground during the stern period of reaction dcvclo])od into outstanding professional revolution aries and Party leaders.

One of these was the indomitable revolutionary Yakov Mikhail ovich Sverdlov, whom Lenin described as "the most finished type of lorofessional revolutionary." Sverdlov commenced his underground revolutionary activities at the early age of fifteen among the workers of Nizhni Novgorod and Sermovo. In 1902, after organizing a polit ical demonstration in Sormovo, he was arrested and imprisoned for the first time; after that the whole of his life consisted of strenu ous revolutionary activity, ever dogged by danger, and frequently interrupted by arrests, exile and escape from exile. In 1905 ho engaged in Bolshevik activities in Kazan and in the Urals wliere he became the beloved leader of the masses of the workers. For two years after the defeat of the revolution ho was incarcerated in a fortress. His sentence expired during the period of reaction and soon after his release he was arrested again and exiled to the district of Maximkin Yar, in the Narjnn Region. Five times lie tried to escape from this remote place where even the mails wore received only twice a j^-oar. In the autumn of 1912, he tried to cross the river Yenisei in a canoe and was nearly drowned. At the end of 1912, he reached St. Petersburg.

Another staunch Bolshevik fighter was Mildiail Vassilyevich Frun ze. In 1905, he led the strike of the Ivanovo-Voznesensk workers. In March 1907, he was arrested and put in prison to await trial on a charge that made him liable to sentence of death. At the trial his counsel said to him: "Renounce your proletarians and you will be pardoned forthwith." Frunze indignantly told the court that he refused to have a lawyer like that to defend linn. The tsarist court sentenced him to ten years' penal servitude.

In this period extensive Party work was also conducted by Sergei Mironovich Kirov. Kirov joined the Bolshevik Party in Tomsk when still a youth of eighteen and took a most active part in the revolution of 1905. He was arrested three times. On the third occasion he was arrested on the charge of conducting revolutionary activities and of organizing a secret printing i^lant. He was tried and sentenced to confinement in a fortress. Immediately he was released from prison he flung himself with his customary energy into Party work in Vladikavkas, WiiCre he organized and trained new cadres of revolutionary Bolsheviks.

A no less ardent and outstanding young revolutionary of that time was the pupil of Lenin and Stalin — Grigori Konstantinovich Orjonikidze, whose Party pseudon;VTn was Sergo. The son of a Georgian peasant' he commenced revolutionary activity at the age of seventeen. In 1903 he joined the Bolslicvik Party. During the first Russian revolution he took part in preparing the armed insurrection but was arrested in December 1905 wliilo unloading a eousignment of arms which had been received . He succeeded in esca]nng abroad but subsequently re turned to Baku. In 1900, ho made his way into Persia and took part in tlic Persian revolution. After lepeated a. rests Sergo Orjonikidze went to Lon'n in Paris, where he attended a Party schooi organized by Lenin, At the Prague Conference he was elected a member of the Cen ri*al Committee of the Bolshevik Party and he returned to Russia to conduct underground Bolshevik activity. He was arrested shortlv after this, however, and sentenced to three years ^ confinement in the Schliisselhurg Portress. In this }}eriod too, Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov became a ]>rofessional revolutionary. He joined the Bolslicvik Party in 1006 while still a high-school student, and at the age of sixteen already conducted Marxist ])ropaganda among the student youth. This activity he continued during tlie ])eriod of reaction. At the age of ninotoeii, not having yet gimluatol from high sebooh he Wtis depoi'ictl to Vologda (hibeniia, but lie continued his revolu tionary activities evi-n while in t^xile and cojiiliated the views of the iMcnslieviks and So(*ialist-Revolubionaries. Like the other Bolsheviks, V. M. Molotov sjient liis tinu^ in ('xile inqiroving his knowledge of rev olutionary theory and in studying the classical vwks of Marxism. In Vologda he established contact with and conducted revolutionary •jiropaganda among the railway w'orkers. When his iieriod of exile ex })ircd he returneil to St. Pctcu'sburg to conduct underground Bolshevilv activity and took an ae,tivc part in all the im^iortant measures under taken by the St. IV'tersburg Bol lievik organization. During tlu'])criod of i'ea,(l.ion the w'orkingmen Bolsheviks Mikhail Ivanovich Kalinin and Kliment Efromovich Voroshilov worked as professional underground rovolutionarms. M. 1. Kalinin, a metal turner by ti*aclo, had led tlie arduous life of a professional rcvoliitiouary since the 1890 's and had known the in side of many jirisous in tsarist Russia. Ho had been a member of the »St. Petersburg Li'agiio of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Work ing Class and one of the active agents of Iskm. In 1910, after com ])loting a prison stmtonco, bo went to work at an ordnance works in St. Petersburg, and in 1911, lie became the leader of the Bolshevik organi zation in the Vyborg District of that city. At the Prague Conference he was eloctod as an alternate member of the Bolshevik Central 0onvmittt'(^ of tlu* Pai'ty.

Equally arduous was the life of K. E. Voroshilov, who was a fitter in Lugansk. He started work in the factory at the age of fifteen and by the end of the 1890 's he was already an active participant in illegal meetings and workers' demonstrations. In 1903, he joined the Bolshevik Party. During the 1905 revolution he prepared the workers of Lugansk for insurrection, formed fighting squads, procured arms, and taught the workers to handle firearms. At a meeting he addressed in 1906, he urged the workers to learn the art of armed fighting and to train their own commanders. One of the workers at the meeting called out: "We appoint you our Red General." "You are going too far," answered Voroshilov laughing. "I don't know anything about military matters." None of the workers, nor Voroshilov himself, then suspected that the "Red General" whom the workers appointed in 1906 would become a Marshal of the most powerful army in the world and a foremost expert in military matters.

Voroshilov was arrested after the revolution of 1905, and in 1907 he was exiled for three years. Three months later he escaped to Baku and together with Comrade Stalin took part in the strug gle that was waged by the Baku workers. He was again arrested and deported to the Archangel Gubernia, but he escaped again and with great difficulty succeeded in reaching his native Donetz Basin in 1912,

Self-sacrificing and heroic work under the severest conditions of tsarist reaction was also conducted by other leaders of the Bolshevik underground in preparing the working class for another revolutionary upsurge.

The Foreign Policy of the Stolypin Government

The Anglo-Russian Agreement

The defeat of tsarism in the Russo Japanese War led to a further decline of its international prestige and importance. After it had concluded the Portsmouth Peace Treaty with Japan, the autocracy wanted to muster its forces for the purpose of crushing the revolution, but it could do that only on two conditions: that it received a huge foreign loan, and that it secured itself against foreign attack. At first, Nicholas 11 placed his hopes upon an alliance with Germany which Wilhelm II was urging him to conclude. This plan, however, was frustrated by a group of Cabinet Ministers headed by Witte. Witte was aware that if Russia concluded an alliance with Germany, financial assistance from Prance would cease, the Pranco-Russian alliance would be broken, and Russia would become completely dependent upon Germany in Europe and upon Japan in the Par East. As a consequence of his opposition, the secret treaty which Nicholas 11 and Wilhelm n had signed in Bjdrke was annulled.

In 1906, Great Britain and JVance granted the tsarist autocracy loans amounting to 2,500,000,000 francs and thereby saved it from financial bankruptcy. These countries also helped the autocracy finally to settle its relations with Japan, which, on the pret xt of impl menting certain clauses of the Portsmouth Treaty, continued to present Russia with unacceptable demands and threatened to resume the war. After the recent losses, however, and after the demobilization of the Russian army in the Far East, tsarist Russia was totally inca pable of waging another war with Japan. The British and French gov ernments took advantage of Japan's need of a foreign loan to compel her to make concessionsto Russia and to conclude, in the summer of 1907, an agreement guaranteeing the security of Russia's Far Eastern fron tiers. The tsarist government, in its turn, pledged itself to support France in her struggle against Germany over Morocco, and agreed to a demarcation of spheres of influence between Great Britain and Russia in the Middle East (Persia, Afghanistan and Tibet). Thus, simultaneously with the signing of the Russo-Japanese agreement, a political agreement between Russia and Great Britain was signed. By the treaty of 1907, Northern Persia, the most densely populated part of the country, was recognized as Russia's sphere of influence, and Southern Persia, the strategical cover of the approaches to India, with its naval ports and rich oil deposits, was proclaimed Great Britain's sphere of influence. Central Persia was proclaimed a neutral zone.

The Anglo-Russian agreement suppl mented the Franco-Russian Treaty of 1893 and the Anglo-French agreement of 1904 and thus con summated the formation of the Triple Entente between Great Britain, France and Russia. Herein lay its immense political importance. This Triple Entente was directed against the Triple Alliance that was headed by Germany.

The Bosnia Crisis

The definite formation of these two coalitions brought the prospect of a European war very much nearer.

From the very outset Russian tsarism occupied a subordinate posi tion in the Entente. Russia's national interests called for the strengthen ing of her influence in the Balkans and in the Near East to counter balance the growing Austro-German menace. But Russia was hindered by the international treaties which prohibited Russian warships from passing through the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. Russia failed to receive the diplomatic support of her allies, who preferred to leave the question unsettled in order to keep Russia dependent upon . them.

In May and June 1908, a meeting between the King of England and the Tsar of Russia took place in Revel at which the two monarchs agreed to make joint preparations for war against Geimany. They also agreed on the joint introduction of reforms in Macedonia, which, in fact, nieatit prej)iiriii!^ to wrest that rcg'ou from Turkey. As regards the question of the Htraits, however, the meeting in Jlcvel failed to produce t]\o results the Russiau government desired.

First and foremost in accoieratiiig the outbreak of the European war wore Gornuiny, who w'as bc^tter ariued tlian any other country,, and her satellite Austria-Hungary. Tiio latter, a iiiultinational state, was su'fering from internal disintegration and iioped i.o strengthen h('r position by pushing into the Balkan Peninsula,

Jn tlie autumn of 1908, a meeting took placid between tlie Russian and Austro-Hungarian Foreign Ministers at whicli it was agreed that the tsarist govorranonb would raise no objecitioii to tlu^ annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austria-Hungary, who had occupied those regions since the Berlin Congress of 1878. In return for this, Austria-Hungary promised to support the Russian government's dt' mand for the free ]>assage of Russian warshi] is through the Turki"jli Straits.

Tsarism's claims in the Balkans, however, were strongly 0[)posed by Great Britain. Omijileicly ignoring her promise to llussia, Austria Hungary hastened to pnic.laim the annexation of Bosnia aiul Herze govina, which wore iiihahitod by Herbs. ^Jhis caused an outburst erf jiatriotio indignation in Serbia. Tsarist lliissia, whieb regardetl lierself as Serliia's prote('tress, demanded that the annexation of Bosnia an<l Herzegovina anrl the question of the Htiuits bo discussed at a con ference of the Kiin)])eau Powers, but in March 1909 Germany intervened ill the conflict and in terms that sounded like an ultimatum demand ed that Ivussia and Serbia should o'jficially recognize the u-iuiexation »if Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Bosnian crisis of 1908-1909 almost led to an armed confl ct biitween the Powers; but tsarism was imt ])re[>ared for another war and therefore gave way itself and compel let I Heiliia to do the same. The Eights in the Third Buma deseriheil this defeat sustained by tsarist diplomacy as a "diplomatic Tsushima/*'

Tsarism's Policy in the Orient

The tsartst government also lost its independence iii pursuing its policy in ivlation to the eountries of tlu' Orient. In Persia, Turkey and Cliina, Russian tsarism played the i'ea.e tionary role of suppressor of movements f^ir national liberation anil oi' revolutions.

The Russian revolution of 1906-1907, the. first bourgois-democrat ic revolution in the epoch of imperial ism , had wide rcpercuss ions among the colonial and somi-colonial peoples which wore o])i)ressed by impe rialism, primarily among the Oriental peoples who lived in ]U'opiu(iuity to Russia. Ill 1900, the bourgeois revolution in Persia began. Yield ing to the demand of the people, the Shah of Persia instituted a parlia ment (the Mejlis); but Russian tsarism, whom the western imperialists allowed "freedom of action" in Persia, decided to (*rush the Persian revolution. In the summer of 1908, Colonel Lyakhov, who was in command of a Cossack brigade in Persia, bombarded the Mejlis with artillery and established a reign of White terror in Teheran. The tsarist government compelled the Shah to dissolve the Mejlis; many members of the Mej lis were executed and others were flung into prison. But the Persian revolution continued in spite of this, and in 1909, the Shah was obliged to flee to Russia, leaving a boy successor. Great Britain and Rus sia instituted a financial blockade of revolutionary Persia. In December 1911, the Persian reactionaries, supported by Great Britain and Rus sia, carried out a counter-revolutionary coup. The Persian revolution was crushed. By agreement with Great Britain, Russia retained her troops of occupation in Northern Persia.

In 1908, a military coup, led by the party known as the Young Turks, was brought about in Turkey with the object of saving the integrity of the Turkish empire. This coup resulted in the introduction of a constitutional form of government. The flrst blow at the Young Turk revolution was struck by Austria-Hungary, which annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina. The tsarist government too helped to strangle the Young Turk revolution by the Balkan policy it pursued. In 1909 it consented to Italy's annexation of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, Turkey's provinces in Africa. It also supported the claims of Prance and Great Britain to Arab territory. Under the leadership of Russia, a league of Balkan countries was formed to attack Turkey. All this served to weaken the Young Turk revolution and to turn the Young Turks towards rapprochement with German imperialism.

The biggest revolution in the Orient was the Chinese revolution of 1911, which was directed against the feudal rulers of China and against the foreign imperialists.

Russian tsarism also acted as the supp'^essor of the Chinese rev olution by entering the bloc of six Powers (Great Britain, France, Russia, Germany, Japan and the United States), which subjected rev olutionary China to a financial boycott and helped the counter-revolu tionary President Yuan Shih-kai to suppress the revolution.

Tsarism, the Reserve ot Western Imperialism

Although Russian tsarism pursued its own imperialist aims in the world war that was in preparation, the subordinate and dependent place it occupied in the Triple Entente converted it into the military reserve of Western imperialism.

The operations of the tsar 's army in the impending war were deter mined by the military interests of Great Britain and Prance. At a con ference of Chiefs of General Sta.Ts held in 1911, the representative of Prance saidt "The object which the Russian forces must pursue is to compel Germany to maintain the largest possible forces on the Eastern Front." The Russian Army was to launch an o.Tensive against Germany simnltaueonsly with the Anglb-Prench offensive. At a conference of Chiefs of General Staffs held in 1912, France demanded that; in conformity with the Franoo-Russian military con vention of 1892, Russia should concentrate no less than 800,000 men on the Austro-German frontier, and that she should launch an attack on the sixteenth day of mobilization irrespective of what the situation on the Anglo-French front might be. To transport troops to the Ger man frontier. tsarist Russia was to build new strategical railways, and it was stipulated that the next loan to bo granted the tsarist government was to be used exclusively for this purpose.

All this indicated that tsarism was gradually losing its independence even in purely military matters.

Emphasizing Russia's dependence upon the WestEuropean im perialists, Comrade Stalin wrote: "Tsarist Russia was an immense reserve of Western imperialism, not only in that it gave free entry to foreign capital, which controlled such basic branches of Russia's national economy as the fuel and metal industries, but also in that it could supply the Western imperialists with millions of soldiers" (J. Stalin, Problems of Lenmism>^ Moscow, 1945, p. 17)

The Growth of National and Colonial Oppression during the Period of the Stolypin Reaction

Tsarism's National Policy in the Period of Reaction

The law of June 3, 1907, drastically reduced the franchise of a number of non Russian nationalities and the Third State Duma passed a series of laws which still further restricted their elementary rights. The Stolypin government decided first of all to restrict the rights of those "border regions" where the movement for national liberation was strongest at that time — ^Finland, Poland and the Caucasus. ♦

In 1910, the Third Ktate Duma, on the proposal of Stolypm, passed a law which i rovided that all fundamental questions affect ing Finland should be discussed in the Duma, and that the meas ures passed in conn otionwith them should receive the sanction of the tsar's government. Thus, the Finnish Sejm was converted into a mere advisory b dy on matt* rs of legislation.

The Polish bourgeois nationalist parties in the Third State Duma had fo msd a separate Pol'sh bl-^o, but this bloc oiffeied only passive resistance to a bill introduced in the Duma frr the institution in the western gubernias of Zemstvos, in which the Russian landlords were to be predominant.

Tsarism was able to rob Finland and Poland of the liberties they had won thanks to the her ic struggle waged by the Russian proletariat in 1906 because of the treache ry of the Finnish and Polish bourgeoisie, whose hatred of the revolution united them with tsarism. As Lenin wrote; *'The experience of the 1905 revolution showed that even in these two nations the ruling classes, the landlords and the bourgeoisie, are re nouncing the revolutionary struggle for freedom and are seeking rap prochement with the ruling classes in Russia and with the tsarist mon archy out of fear of the revolutionary proletariat of Finland and Po land" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works^ VoL XVI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 508).

The Third State Duma also discussed a bill providing for the ex tension to the Caucasus of the regulation of 1881, by which all peasants working under temporary obligation were released from serf labour with payment of compensation to the landlords.

Thus, serfdom in the Caucasus was abolished only in 1912; sur vivals of it continued right up to the revolution of 1917.

In the period of reaction the tsarist autocracy dropped its former policy of protecting the Moslem clergy who cultivated ignorance and fanaticism in their schools. The Rights in the Third State Duma demand ed that all Moslem schools be closed in order to "Russify all the non Russians, and to bring all the unorthodox into the Orthodox fold." The tsarist ofiS.cials and the Orthodox Church intensified their perse cution of Moslems, and Moslem schools and charitable institutions were banned.

The Black Hundreds in the Duma also succeeded in depriving the Ukrainians, Byelorussians and Jews of the right to have schools con ducted in their own languages. In the Ukraine all the "Prosvity" were closed, and concerts and theatrical performances in the Ukrainian lan guage were prohibited. High-school teachers and college professors suspected of having a 'TJkrainian trend of thought" were dismissed. Minstrels were even prohibited from singing Ukrainian folk songs at fairs. Exceptionally fierce, however, was the Stolypin government's persecution of the Jews. It deliberately fomented anti-Semitism among the backward sections of the population. Six million Jews were herded in the "Pale," or ghettos, and yet the Black Hundreds in the Third Duma let loose a campaign about "the impermissibility of giving equal rights to the Jews" and demanded still further restric tions for the Jewish population in Russia. The pogrom-mongers among the higher tsarist officials staged the antiJewish trial known as the Beilis case. This case was framed up in the following way. In 1911, a gang of thieves in Kiev killed a Russian boy. The tsarist officials pounced upon this murder as a pretext for increasing the persecution of the Jews. The Public Prosecutor, supported by official experts who had been bribed for the purpose, charged a Jew named Beilis witn the murder, alleging that he had committed the crime for "religious ends." This trial, which took place in 1913, roused a storm of protest among the entire progressive population of Russia and in all other countries. The jury acquitted Beilis.

Explaining why tsarism resorted to pogroms against the Jews and to the savage persecution of Jews, Lenin wrote: "The monarchy had to defend itself against the revolution; and the semi-Asiatic, feu dal Russian monarchy of the Romanovs could not defend itself by any other but the most infamous, most disgusting, vile and cruel means. The only honourable way of combating the pogroms, the only rational way from the standpoint of a socialist and a democrat, is not to express high moral condemnation, but to assist the revolution selflessly and iti every way, organize the revolution for ihQ overthromal of this monarchy" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. I, Moscow, 1946, p, 488).

Years of Revolutionary Advance (1912–1914)

The New Upswing of the Revolutionary Movement

Growth of Monopolistic Capitalism in Russia

In 1910 the pro longed depression in Russia began to give way to an industrial boom. This was brought about by the considerable accumulation of home capi tal in the country and the growth of the home market due, partly, to th(^ operation of Stolypin's agrarian reform. The kulak upper stratum of the peasantry which had established itself after the reform was intro duced created an increased demand for iron goods, building materials, leather, textiles, sugar, etc. In 1909, a series of relatively good harvests began. Peasants' savings-banlc deposits increased and from 1900 to 1914 rose by over a billion rubles.

The growth of the war industries, and of shipbuilding in particular, ensured the heavy industry of big government contracts. Prom 1905 to 1913, the government placed army contracts to the amount of 2,600,000,000 rubles; in two years of the boom period over 3,600 kilo metres of railway were laid and a corresponding amount of rolling stock was built. Such were the main reasons for the industrial boom in Russia. The boom was also facilitated by the general economic re vival in the western capitalist countries, due largely to the race for armaments and increase in war contracts.

During the period of the boom the monopolist organizations — trusts and syndicates — continued to grow and gain strength. The predominant form of monopolist organization in Russia was the syn dicate. During the decade from 1900 to 1910, these syndicates gained control of the major part of the mining and metallurgical industiy in Russia. The Prodamet, which combined from twelve to fifteen of the largest metallui'gieal plants in the country, controlled two-thirds of the sales, of the entire metallurgical industry. The Produgol, the abbreviated name of the Russian Company for Trading in the Mineral Fuel of the Donetz Bn-sin, which was formed in 1906, gained control of about 60 per cent of the coal output of the Donetz Basin. The Prodarud Syndicate, which was formed in 1908, controlled fourfifths of the ore output of the south of Russia. The growth of syn dicates in light industry was slower and feebler. In 1908 the syn dicate known as the Cotton Manufacturers' Company (in Moscow) con trolled 4;7 cotton mills. The organization of syndicates was accompa nied by a rise in the prices of the goods manufactured by the indus tries they controlled.

The banks increasingly became the owners of the manufacturing enterprises. The small and medium banks merged and formed powerful banking combines. In 1908, for example, the St. PetersburgAzov, the Orel, and the South Russian Banks combined to form the United Bank. In 1910, the Northern Bank merged with the Russo-Chinese and RussoAsiatic Banks. More than half the total bank capital in Russia was controlled by seven big banks.

The concentration of industry and the banks was accompanied by the rapid fusion of bank capital with industrial capital. The banks financed joint-stock companies and helped them to reorganize. This had been exceptionally marked during the crisis. The biggest industrial and financial magnates were simultaneously chairmen of bank di rectorates and directors of syndicates. Thus, Putilov, the owner of numerous metallurgical plants, was chairman of the Board of the big Russo-Azov Bank and also director of the Prodamet, to which his plants were affiliated. In the textile industry enormous influence was exercised by the finance capital magnates Ryabushinsky, Prokhorov, Morozov and others.

In this period too finance capital rapidly merged with the state ap paratus. The financial magnates felt quite at home in the Ministries of Finance, Industry and Trade, while prominent government officials, and even members of the royal family, held shares in banks and in in dustrial undertakings. Many retired ministers left then ministerial armchairs to take up positions* as directors of the banks and joint-stock companies of which they were shareholders.

The influence of foreign capital in the Russian banks and industry increased after the revolution of 1905-1907. By 1914, out of a total cap ital amounting to 435,500,000 rubles belonging to eighteen of the chief joint-stock banks, 185,500,000 rubles, or 42.6 per cent, was foreign capital, divided as follows: German capital 17 per cent, SVench capital 21.9 per cent, and British capital 3 per cent. Thus, British and French capital tog 3 ther constituted the largest share. Foreign capital gained control of Russian industry by forming joint-stock companies through Biissian and sometimes directly through foreign banks. Foreign capital gained control of nearly the whole of tha Russian fuel industry and of the whole of the metallurgical industry.

The Economic Backwardness of Russian Industry

Although large scale capitalist industry made considerable progress in Russia during the period of the boom, it nevertheless lagged behind the industry of Western Europe. As regards output of pig iron, Russia occupied fifth place in the world; as regards the technique of production and, in partic ular, consumption per head of the population, she was almost at the bottom of the list. Describing the backwardness of Russia, Lenin wrote: '"During the half century that has passed since the peasants were liber ated, iron consumption in Russia has increased fivefold, but still Rus sia remains an incredibly, unprecedentedly backward country, poverty stricken and half savage, equipped with modern implements of produc tion to the extent of only one-fourth of that of England, onefifth of Germany and one-tenth of America" (V. I. Lenin, Oollected Wo7*IcSt Vol. X^, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 543).

One of the indices of the technical and economic backwardness of tsarist Russia was the state of railway transport. The total length of railways in Russia in 1913 was about 65,000 kilometres. Of this, 43,500 kilometres belonged to the state and over 19,000 kilometres belonged to private companies. As regards density of railways, Russia was almost at the bottom, of the list.

In 1910, the total industrial output in Russia was one-ninth of that of the United States, and the average wage of the Russian worker was one-fourth of that of the American worker.

Stolypin and the Minister of Finance Kokovtsev made it a practice to borrow from the Paris bankers and hospitably opened the door wide for foreign capital, for they hoped, with the aid of French and British gold, to save landlordism and the tsarist system in the country in which capitalism was rapidly developing. To pay the interest on these loans the tsarist government annually squeezed hundreds of millions of ru bles out of the population. Before the First World War Russia *s national debt amounted to 8,800,000,000 rubles. Tsarist Russia's chief creditor before the war was France.

In tsarist Russia a number of leading branches of industry, such as electr cal engineering, turb'ne building, machine-tool building, heavy -engineering, and the automobile and chemical industries, did not exist.

The oil industry was controlled by foreign capital, who stopped at nothing in exploiting the rich deposits of Russian oil, wastefully utilizing only "gushers" and eschewing deep boring, extensive explo ration of new fields, etc.

The Lena Shootings

The industrial boom was accompanied by the growth of the Russian proletariat and of the working-class movement. The general upswing of the revolutionary proletarian struggle was stimulated by the events that occurred in the remote gold fields in Siberia that belonged to the Lena Gold Fields Company. This company was formed in 1908. Three-fourths of the shares belonged to British capitalists and the rest belonged to big Russian capitalists and high tsarist officials. Among the shareholders were capitalists like Putilov, bank directors like Vyshnegradsky, and a number of high St. Peters burg dignitaries. The British and Russian shareholders in the Lena Gold Fields Company drew profits amounting to over 7,000,000 rubles per annum. The gold-field workers were cruelly exploited and, in addi tion, were totally bereft of rights.

The gold fields were situated in the remote taiga, 1,700 kilometres from the railway. It was possible to get away from the place only during the navigation season on the river Lena. Ihe conditions of labour were fixed by harsh contracts, and although the workers had no right to leave their jobs before the expiration of the contract they could be discharged at any time. Wages were paid only on the expiration of the contract; the provisions issued to the men at the company stor3s on account of wages were of the worst quality. The working day was fixed by contract at 10 to 11^/2 hours, but it was often extended at the arbitrary will of the management. The workers were completely in the power of the management who, to keep the workers in hand, had at their command a police force paid by the company. The Lena Gold Fields Company behaved like a feudal ruler. Byelozerov, the manager of the Lena Gold Fields, was called the uncrowned king of the taiga. In 1912, the gold fields were, as Lenin described them, one of "those corners where it seems as though serfdom existed -but yesterday."

The atrocious conditions of labour, the holding up of wages, the sale of bad-quality provisions at exorbitant prices and the violence and tyranny of the management and the police often gave rise to unrest in the gold fields.

At the end of February 1912, a strike broke out on one of the sec tions where the conditions of the workers were exceptionally hard. It would have paid the management to close the section, but that would have meant breaking the contract, which was due to expire only in September. The management therefore set out to provoke the workers to break the contract themselves. The immediate cause of the strike was the issue of bad horse meat. The workers downed tools in protest and sent dele gates to the other fields to bring the men out there. On March 1, the strike spread to a number of other sections. A strike committee was set up with the object of making the strike general. Strike committees were also set up in all the fields, and stewards were appointed in the living quarters. The Central Strike Committee opened negotiations with the management. Tulehinsky, the Regional Engineer, received the deputa tion with great courtesy and persuaded the Menshevik delegates to agree to call off the strike. Tlic BoLshevik-niimlccl members of the Strike Committee condneted propaganda among the masses against calling off the strike. .

It was decided to settle the question by a secret ballot of the work ers. In the morning of March 25, two sugar barrels were ])laeed opposite each other in one of the fields, one bearing the inscription "Will go back to work" and the other the inscription "Will not go back to work." The workers filed between the barrels holding a pebble in one hand. As they passed they dipped their hands into both barrels and dropped the pebble into one barrel or the other. Soon the barrel bearing the inscription "Will not go back to work" was full to the brim. In the other barrel only seventeen pebbles were found.

On March 27, the strike became general and over 6,000 workers were involved. Under the leadership of the Bolslievik-minded workers the strike proceeded in a unanimous and organized manner; but notwith standing the peaceful cliarfeicter of the strike the management called for troops, and a largo force was sent to the gold fields. For the delib erate purpose of creating disorders Captain of Gendannes Tresliehenkov ordered the i^rrest of the members of the Strike Committee and told the troops not to hesitate to "use force" against the workers if they attempt ed to release their comrades. On April 4 (17), 3,000 workers sigiaed a statement to the effect that they had gone on strike on their own ac cord and had not been instigated to do so by anybody, and they marched in procession to the Nadczhdinsk Section of the gold fields to hand this statement to the local prosec'.uting attorney.

On this frosty morning of April 4, long lines of workers streamed from various parts of the gold fields » to Nadezhdinsk, and on nearing that centre they linked up in one long, dark ribbon stretching for three or four kilometres. The road along which the procession wended its way was flanked on the one side by the steep bank of the river Bodaibo and on the other by stacks of timber. Near Nadezhdinsk the road was blocked by a cordon of treoj^s in full fighting kit. Engineer Tulchinsky stepped out to the workers and told them to disperse. The workers at the head of the procession halted, but the rest, stretched out along the narrow road, continued to press forward. Suddenly shots rang out, volley after volley; 260 workers were killed and 270 were wounded.

This new atrocity committed by the tsarist autocracy roused a unanimous outburst of anger among the workers. A wave of protest strikes swept the country. Revolutionary demonstrations took place in the cities. On the demand of the Social-Democratic Deputies the State Duma was compelled to (liscuss the Lena events, but Makarov, the Minister of the Interior, explained the matter to the Duma in his own way. He said: "So it was, and so it will bo."

This insolent statement of the tsar's minister, was answered by the rise of an immense mass political movement of the working class in protest against the I/ena shootings. As Lenin wrote: "The Lena shootings . . . were an exact re fleet ion of the regime of the Third ofJune monarchy." He went on to say that it was not the demand for certain particular rights but the general lack of rights that prompted the workers to enter into decisive struggle against tsarism. "It is precisely this general tyranny in Russian life," he wrote, "it is pi ecisely the hopelessness and impossibility of waging a struggle for particular rights, precisely this incorrigibility of the tsar's monarchy and of its entire regime, that stood out so clearly against the background of the Lena events that they fired the masses with revolutionary ardour" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. I, Moscow, 1946, p. 550).

Emphasizing the historical significance of the Lena events, Comrade Stalin wrote in the Bolshevik newspaper Zvezda in 1912:

"The Lena shooting has broken the ice of silence and the river of the people's movement has begun to flow.

"The ice is broken! , . .

"All that was evil and pernicious in the present regime, all the ills of much-suffering Russia, were focussed in the one fact, the events on the Lena.

"That is why it was the Lena shootings that served as a signal for strik<='S and demonstrations."

The Mass Revolutionary Movement During the Revival

The wave of political strikes called in protest against the shooting down of the workers in the I^ena gold fields swept over the whole country with ex traordinary rapidity. Hundreds of thousands of workers downed tools. In St. Petersburg the strikes were accompanied by street demonstra tions. The struggle of the St. Petersburg workers was led by Comrade Stalin, but soon he was again arrested. Protest strilces against the Lena diootings merged with a powerful First of May movement. The Lena events revealed that the working class had accumulated enormous rev olutionary energy. In April 1912, over 300,000 workers were involved in strikes, but the First of May strike affected about 400,000 workers. The movement spread and affected even the most backward strata of the workers. Strikes took place in every district in the countiy. At the head of the stiike movement marched the revolutionary proletariat of St. Petersburg; then came the workers of the Baltic Provinces, Moscow, the Ukraine and the Caucasus. According to official figures, the total number of workers involved in strikes in 1912 was 726,000 and in 1913, 861,000, Actually, the number was considerably higher. Economic strikes were interwoven with the political strikes. Lenin described these mass strikes as revolutionary strikes, for they were directed against the autocracy and were of nation-wide importance. The strikes enjoyed the sympathy of the majority of the working population. They stimulated the peasants to fight against the landlords and tsarism. The factory owners retaliated to the strikes by lockouts. The police and the secret police intensified their persecution of the strikers.

The strikes proceeded under the Bolshevik slogans of: "An 8-hour day, confiscation of the landlords' estates, and a democratic republic." These slogans were calculated to rouse for the struggle against tsarism not only the workers, but also the peasants and the men in the army.

The peasant movement, which had subsided after 1907, began to flare up again. The introduction of the Stolypin reform accelerated the process of class diTerentiation among the rural population. The conditions of the rural poor still further deteriorated, partic ularly after the famine of 1911 which a,Teoted about 30,000,000 peasants. The peasant movement directed against the landlords and the kulaks assumed the militant forms of incendiarism, trespass, tree felling, refusal to pay taxes, etc. Collisions between poor peas ants and kulak "khutor^-farmers became more and more fre quent.

Revolutionary outbreaks occurred also in the army. In 1912, a revolt broke out among the troops who were stationed in Turkestan, and fierce reprisals were taken against the mutineers. In June 1913, 62 sailors of the Baltic Fleet were tried by naval court-martial in Kronstadt on the charge of conspiring to cause a revolt. Strikes in protest against this trial of the revolutionary sailors broke out, and this indicated that the class-conscious working-class movement in tsar ist Russia constituted a powerful political force.

As Comrade Stalin said, the mass revolutionary strikes showed that ". . . in Russia a tremendous popular revolution was rising, headed by the most revolutionary proletariat in the world, which possessed such an important ally as the revolutionary peasantry of Russia" (J. Stalm, Problems of Leninism^ Moscow, 1945, pp. 17*18).

The Bolshevik "Pravda"

The struggle that was waged by the pro letariat was led by the Bolsheviks and proceeded imder Bolshevik slogans. The revolutionary upswing created the urgent need for a mili tant daily political newspaper that could be read by the broad masses of the workers. Under the direction of Comrade Stalin, who had escaped from exile in Vologda, preparations were made for the publication of a popular daily newspaper, the Pmvda.

In January 1912, the workers began to contribute funds for the purpose of starting such a workers^ newspaper. Contributions came in from all parts of Russia. As Lenin wrote . the creation of Pravda remains outstanding proof of the class consciousness, energy and solidarity of the Russian workers" (V. I, Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XVI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 46).

Tlio tilvt ir^aiio uf Pravda, vyhiclj Cojiirade Staliu edited, appeared on April 22 (May 5 new ntyle). That is why wo now o'.dcbrate May 5 as Workers' Press Day. The work of tht^ Pravda was gnided from abroad by Lenin. Its first editor was Comrade Staliu and its first editorial secr^taiy was V. M. Molotov, who devoted much time and energy to the paper. Among the mem hers of the staff wore K. E. Voroshilov, M. 1. Kalinin and Y. M. Sverdlov. Maxim Gorky also eontribiiied to tlie paper.

Fmvda was the organizer of the revoiutionary masses and directed all the mass campaigns that were organized by the Bolsheviks. Of considerable ijnportance among these eampaigtis was the insurance campaign. In Juno 1912, an act was ])assed to insure the workers in (5ase of sickness and accidents. The insurance Lmd was to be managed by insurance boards on which the workers wore to be represented. Notwithstanding the grave defects of this law, Pravda called ni)on the workers to take j)art in the election of the insurance boards and the elections ])assod n.T successfully. This insurance campaign was of gi*eat importance l>ecauso it helped to organize very wide masses for the revolutimmry siruggle.

Pm?Y/a. trained a whoh^ generation of worker-Bolshcvike who liel)>ed Ijenin and Wtaliu to rei^reate the mass Bolsluwik .Party in the pcwiod of the revohition.ary ujmwing. As Oomnide Staliu wrote: "The old Pravda was undoubttully the hai'bingor of tlie coming of glorious victories of the Russian ] proletariat"" ("On the Occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of Pravda Stalin's article publislied in PrnrdaNo. 08 of May T), 1922).

Pravda w^as eonstantly subjected to the ]Pcrsecution of the poli(ie. In the lirst year of its oxistonco the police raided the ] printing })lant and destroyed the current issue of the pa[)er no less than forty times. To prevent this, the workers would come to the jprinting plant at niglit and take the fi'eshty printed iicwsjpapcrs away b('fore the police arrived. The newspaper often had to change its name. In July 1914, just before the First World Wai*, Pmrda's jpremises wore wrecked and its staff was arrostfnL.

The Fourth State Duma

The Elections to the Fourth State Duma

In 1912, the fcerm of the Third State Duma expired. The tsar's government dissolved it and appointed elections to tlie Fourth Duma. These elections took place in an atmosphere of repression and persecution, which had become exceptionally intense after the assassination of Stolyiiin in 1911.

The Bolsheviks decided to utilize the elections for the purpose ■of conducting a new mass campaign against tsarism. To be nearer to Russia, and to direct the election campaign, Lenin, in the summer of 1912, removed from Paris to Cracow. In Russia the Bolshevik election campaign was led by Comrade Stalin who, in Sep tember 1912, had again escaped from exile and had returned. to St. Petersburg. The editorial ojSces of Pravda were used as stafr head quarters for organizing the working class for the campaign. The Bolsheviks issued a document, drafted by Comrade Stalin, entitled "The Mandate of the Workingmen of St. Petersburg to Their Worker Deputy."

At election meetings the Bolsheviks denounced and exposed the compromising tactics of the Liquidators, and emerged victorious at the elections. Often the police came to the assistance of the Liquida tors and baimed meetings of workers' representatives. The workers voted in their separate curiae, apart from the rest of the popula tion. Pive Bolsheviks were elected by the workers to the State Duma — ^in the St. Petersburg, Moscow, Vladimir, Kharkov, Ekate rinoslav and Kostroma gubernias. A sixth Deputy elected on the Bolshevik panel turned out to be an agent provocateur. The Menshe viks secured the election of seven of their candidates, but these were in gubtrnias where there were no workers' curiae.

Tiie Fourth State Duma, which assembled at the end of 1912, was as much a Black Hundred and Octobrist Duma as the Third Duma had been. Of a total of 410 Deputies, 170 were Eights. The Octobrists, who constituted the government party and had nearly 100 Deputies, were adherents of the Eights. The Cadets had 50 Deputies. They differed from the Octobrists only in that they indulged in "Lfffc^ phrases and in the Duma they acted jointly with the Octobrists. The petty bourgeoisie was represented by ten Trudoviki and seven Men shevik.

The Bolsheviks in the Fourth State Duma

At first the Bol sheviks in the Fourth State Duma formed a single group with the Mensheviks, but the latter, taking advantage of their majority of one vote, systematically prevented the Bolsheviks from speaking in the Duma. In conformity with the decision of the Central Committee of the Party, the Bolshevik Deputies left the joint group and formed an independent Bolshevik group. The group maintained close contact with the masses of the workers and conducted extensive activities among them; it received numerous letters, declarations, reso lutions, instructions and greetings from workers in all parts of Russia. One of the most effective means it employed for using the floor of the Duma was to interpellate the government in cases of acts of lawless ness and tyranny. The Bolshevik Deputies conducted their activities in the Duma under the direction of the Party Central Committee and of Lenin. The Deputies used to receive directives from Lenin and on several occasions went abroad to consult with bim, Comrade Stalin, who was in St. Petersburg, directly guided the activities of the Bolshevik gi'oup in the Duma.

The Works of Lenin and Stalin on the National Question

The growth of jingoism among the bourgeois and petty-bourgeois nationalist parties duo to the intensification of national oppression during the period of reaction made it particularly necessary for the Bjlshevik Party to explain to the masses the essence of the national question and its role in the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat.

In 1913, two classical works on the national question appeared: Lenin's Critical Notes on the National Question, and Stalin's Marxism and the National Question. These two books provided the proletariat with the theoretical basis of the Bolshevik program on the national and colcnial problem.

In the autumn of 1913, Lenin convened a conference of the Central Committee in the village of Poronino, in Galicia, whe-re ho then lived, to discuss the national question. This conference adopted a resolution, which Lenin had drafted, and endorsed the slogan which had been substantiated in the works of Lenin and Stalin, namely, the right of nations to self-determination, including secession. The conference also emphasized that the preservation of the militant and solid Party of the proletariat, undivided by national barriers, was an essential condition for victory in the struggle for the liberation of the oppressed nations.

The Preparation of the World War

In the epoch of imperialism great changes took place in the relations between the capitalist coun tries. As a result of the process of uneven economic development, Ge.Tnany, at the beginning of the twentieth century, outpaced France and Great Britain in the sphere of industry. The magnates of German finance capital, in conjunction with the Prusso-German mili tarists, made energetic preparations for a European war. They dinned it into the minds of the German people that Germany's powerful war industry, the superior armament of her vast army and her navy would make victory certain, and held out the prospect of Germany becoming the ruler of the world. Tlie Pan-Gkrman League, the imperialist organization which they formed, was convinced that Ger many could achieve victory over France and Bussia as long as Russia was fettered by the autocratic system. The chief obstacle to German domination, particularly on the sea, in the opinion of the German imperialists, was Great Britain, and against that country they pre pared for a ruthless naval war. On the other hand, the chief obje ct of Groat Britain's foreign policy was to crush Germany's might with the aid jDf . France, with whom she had concluded an agreement on this soQre'in 1904;.

in the forefront stood the conflict of interests of British and Ge^an imperialism, of which the latter was particularly aggressive.

Second^ to that came the conflict of interests of imperialist Ger many and tsarist Russia.

^rman imperialism was driving towards the Near East, into Turkey. The German banks gained control of the building of the rail-^ way that was to link Germany with Turkey, and German military instructors directed the organization of Turkish military forces in preparation for war against Russia and Great Britain.

The growth of Germany's economic and political influence in the Turkish empire would have placed her in control of the Black Sea Straits.

Ruling circles in Russia became increasingly imbued with the thought that "the road to Constantinople lies through Berlin, " that is to say, through the destruction of the German empire.

Lenin described Great Britain, Germany and tsarist Russia as "three big highway robbers" and the chief factors in the world Wt'-.ir, while the other countries were merely "non-independent allies." He emphasized that while the war for the redivision of the world affected the interests of all the imperialist powers, the chief instigator was Germany.

In the struggle for the redivision of the world all the participants in the world slaughter drew up predatory plans.

The plans of the German imperialists included the creation of a great German empire that was to embrace so-called "Middle Europe," to seize the Baltic Provinces and Poland, dismember Russia, deprive her of the Ukraine, subjugate the Balkan Peninsula and Turkej^, deprive Great Britain of Egypt and India, and push France away from the English Channel, etc.

The plans of Austria, Germany's ally, were, with the aid of Ger many, to dismember Serbia, annex Russian Poland and to subjugate the Ukraine and the Balkan Peninsula.

Great Britain's plans were to crush her principal rival, Germany, to destroy her navy and mercantile fleet, to seize the German colonies, and also to deprive Turkey of Mesopotamia and Palestine and finally annex Egypt.

The plans of France were to regain Alsace-Lorraine and seize the left bank of the Rhine, to crush Germany's military power, share the German colonies with Great Britain, and take part in the partition of the Turkish empire.

The plans of tsarist. Russia were to gain possession of the Bospho rus and the Dardanelles, to seize Turkish Armenia, to dis member Austria-Hungary, and establish her influence in the Balkan Peninsula. . \

Japan's plans were to take advantage of the war in Europe, to seize China with the assistance of Russian tsarism, and in the.^s^ent. of Russia's defeat to seize the Russian Par East.

Notwithstanding fierce repression by the police and the gendarmes, the Baku workers, supported by the workers of St. Petersburg and other industrial centres, staunchly continued the struggle for two months.

In response to the appeal of the Bolsheviks, 90,000 workers in St. Petersburg struck work in solidarity with the Baku workers. On July 11, 200,000 workers were out on strike in that city. Meetings Avere continuously held under the slogans; ""Comrades of Baku, we arc with you!'*, "'Victory for the workers of Baku is victory for us," etc. One such revolutionary demonstration ended in the shooting down of workers at the Putilov Works.

In retaliation to this outrage, the whole of the working class of St. Petersburg rose in protest; the workers of all the big plants downed tools and poured into the streets for a revolutionary demonstration. Collisions occurred between workers and troops which developed into barricade fighting. The caj^ital was transformed into a military camj). Pravda was suppressed.

When these events were at their height Poincare, President of France, arrived in St. Petersburg to conduct negotiations with the tsar. During these negotiations the tsarist government agreed that France and Russia should jointly counteract Austria-Hungary's attack on Serbia, -which was likely to lead to a world war.

The Second Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution

Tsarist Russia during the First World War (1914–March 1917)

Russia's Part in the War

The Beginning of the World War

In July 1914, the world imperialist war, of which Germany was the instigator, broke out. This war was fought between two . groups of imperialist countries; one, headed by Germany, constituted the Quadruple Alliance (Ger many, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey); the other, headed by the British and French imperialists, constituted the Triple Entente (Great Britain, France and Russia, and also Serbia and Belgium). In 1914, Japan joined the Triple Entente; Italy did the same in 1915, and the United States joined it in 1917. In alL 33 countries were involved in the war, and 74,000,000 men were mobilized for the various armies. The war cost 30,000,000 human lives and about 300,000,000,000 rubles in money.

As regards the number of cormtries that were involved all over the globe it was a world war, but in its aims it was an imperial ist war, a war for the forcible redivision of the world.

As Lenin wrote: 'Tn its real nature this war is not a national but an imperialist war.

, The war is being waged between two groups of oppressors, between two robbers, to decide how to divide the booty, who is to plunder Turkey and the colonies" (V. I. Lenin, Collectf^d WorJcs^ Vol. XIX, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed., p. 200).

This predatory war for the redivision of the world was prepared for in the course of decades and affected the interests of all the impe rialist countries. Its immediate cause was Austria-Hungary's plan to crush Serbia, a plan that was supported by Germany, who counted on securing a redivision of the world in her own favour as the result of the development of the Austro-Serbian war into a world war. The spark that ignited the conflagration of the world war was the assassination of the Austrian Crown Prince Francis Ferdinand in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia. Mae assassination was committed on Juno 28, 1914, by a nineteen-year-old student named Gavrila Princip on tho instructions of a Serbian army officers' nationalist organization. Austria-Hungary, instigated by Germany, presented Serbia wiiJi an ultimatum that was couched in terms that made its rejection by the Serbian government inevitable. On the advice of tlie Russian government, however, the Serbian government agreed to nearly all of the terms of the ultimatum, but in spite of this the Austrian Minister, who aheady had his trunlis packed, left Belgrade, and Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. After receiving the assur ances of President Poincare that France was ready to sujiport Russia and Serbia, the tsarist goveriunent intervened in tho conflict

Proclaiming her solidarity with Serbia, Russia began to mobilize. Germany called upon the tsarist government to stop mobilizing. Tlie tsarist government refused to do so, whereupon, Germany, on August 1, declared war on Russia. France began to mobilize. On August 3, Ger many declared war on France, and on that same day German trooiis crossed the Belgian frontier. Next morning the British government presented an ultimatimi to Germany demanding lier withdrawal from Belgian territory, but without waiting for a reply fche British govern ment, in tho aftenioon of August 4, issued an order to mobilize the British army. At midnight it declared war on Germany. Thus com menced tho first world imperialist war of 3914-1918.

The War on the Eastern Front

At the very beginning of August three fronts were formed in belligerent Europe: a Western Front, which stretched from the North Sea to Switzerland; an Eastern or Russian Front, which* stretched from the Baltic Sea to Rumania, and the Balkan Front, which ran along the Danube. The Russian Front was split up into two almost independent operative sectors — the Northwestern and Southwestern sectors. The Northwestern Front ran from the Baltic Sea to the lower reaches of the river Bug, and tho Southwestern Front ran along the Russo-Austrian frontier to Rumania. On the Balkan Front the Serbian army fought the Austro-Hungarian army.

After violating the neutrality of Belgium the German army made a drive towards Paris. The French government called upon Russia forthwith to launch an offensive on the Eastern Front with the object of diverting the largest possible number of German troops from the Western Front. Accordingly, two Russian armies, under tho com mand of Generals Samsonov and Rennenkampf, were sent to invade East Prussia. Rennenltampf's army launched a successful offensive and won a big victory in the battle of Gumbinnen, but this victory was not followed up. Rennenkampf 's army failed to develop its offensive and this enabled the German Command to throw the whole weight of its forces against General Samsonov's army. The oj)er ations of the two Russian armies were not co-ordinated. From inter cepted and decoded telegrams sent by General Samsonov and Rennen kampf, and also through its own spies, the German Command learned of all the movements of the Russian troops. A large part of General Samsonov's army was surroimded by the Germans in the marshy and wooded region of the Masurian Lakes and was wiped out. Tens of thousands of Russian soldiers perished. General Samsonov com mitted suicide.

After defeating Samsonov's army, the Germans hurled their troops against Rennenkampf's army, which had remained inactive. Rennenkampf retreated to Russian territory, losing 110,000 men. But Paris was saved. By taking the blow upon herself, Russia saved her ally France from defeat.

In August 1914, simultaneously with the unsuccessful offensive in East Prussia, four Russian armies launched an offensive against Austria-Hungary on the Southwestern Front. The armies commanded by General Brusilov and Ruzsky defeated the Austro-Hungarian armies, occupied Lvov and Gorlice and surrounded the fortress of Przemysl. Nearly the whole of Galicia was occupied by the tsarist forces.

In the middle of September the German armies came to the assist ance of Austria-Hungary by launching a wide offensive from the foothills of the Carpathians. In the middle of December 1914, the offensive was halted on both sides.

In the autumn of 1914, a new front was formed — ^the Caucasian Front. Two German warships, the Ooehen and the Breslau, stole their way from the Mediterranean into the Black Sea and bombarded Foo dosia and Odessa. After this, Turkey, who was bound by a military alliance with Germany, went to war against Russia. In December 1914, the Turkish army was defeated in the battle of Sari Quamish, after which the Russian troops on the Turkish Front slowly pushed forward. On the Austro-German Front, however, the belligerent sides were extremely exhausted and consequently passed over to trench warfare, meanwhile mustering forces for new decisive blows. At the end of April and the beginning of May 1916, a German army, under the command of General Mackenzen, supported on both flanks by Austrians, pierced the Russian Front between Gorlice and Tarnov thus compelling the Russian armies to beat a hasty retreat. The Austro Hungarian troops occupied Przemysl and Lvov. In July, another German army occupied the fortress of Ivangorod. At the end of July German troops occupied Warsaw and Brest-Litovsk. The Germans developed their offensive and occupied Grodno and Vilna. Thus, by the autumn of 1916, Poland, Lithuania, part of tlie Baltic Provinces a.nd VoUiynia had fallen into the hands of Germaiiy and Austria-Hungary. From May to October 1915, the Russian army lost over 150,000 men in killed and more than 1,000,000 in wounded and pris oners. Towa^rds the end of September 1915, operations on the Eastern Front were reduced to trench warfare. This front now stretched in an ahnost straight Ime from the river Dniester to the Gulf of Riga. Thus, in the first period of the world war tsarism sustained grave military defeats.

Military operations on the Eastern Front in 1914-1915 ended in the defeat of the Russian armies. This made the loss of the war by Russia a foregone conclusion. Thus, tsarist Russia's unprepar edness for war made itself felt at tlie very outset. The Russian ^army was inadequately supplied with ammunition, heavy artillery, air craft, materials for chemical warfare and equipment. There were cases when men went to the front without weapons and had to pick up ibose left by the men who were killed in battle. Sometimes a unit had' only one rifle for every three men. The army was supplied with boots with rotten-lcathor soles, with greatcoats which bebame useless after the first downpour of rain, with provisions thaWiad gone bad, and so forth. All sorts of sliarpers and swindlers speculated in war contracts and made fabulous i)rofits. Military headquarters, army supply departments and munition plants swarmed with spies, adventurers, scoundrels and j)rofiteers, incompetent generals and downright traitors.

A German and Austrian espionage organization, headed by Colonel of Gendarmes Myasoyedov, was already operating in Russia before the war. Even the War Minister Suldiomlinov was accused of espio nage. The effect of sabotage and espionage was severely felt at the very outset of the war. The stocks of military su]pplies were exhausted during the first month, and no new supplies were forthcoming. The Ministry of War had not supplied the army with shells and small arms ammunition. Output in the government small-arms factories had been reduced by three-fourths and of the ordnance works by one half. Treachery and espionage caused the death of thousands of men at the front. Sometimes vital orders were communicated by radio uncoded and were intercepted by the Germans, who were thus able to follow the movements of the Russian armies. Headquarters staffs were incompetent and the orders they issued only caused anarchy and confusion. But even under these conditions the Russian army, as always, displayed magnificent fighting qualities. The courage, endurance, heroism and initiative of individual soldiers and units often saved the situation and helped to extricate a force from encircle ment in which it was threatened by complete extermination.

The Treachery of the Second International

From the very first days of the war the imperialist bourgeoisie in all the belligerent countries tried to deceive the masses and make them believe that the war had been caused by the aggression of the enemy and was there fore a defensive war. The parties that were affiliated to the Second International betrayed the principles of internationalism and Sociah ism and helped the bourgeoisie to perpetrate this deception upon the masses. Playing upon the natural love of the common people for their country, they did all in their power to rally the masses for the impe rialist war by concealing its true character and lU'ging the necessity of defending the bourgeois fatherland.

On August 4, 1914 j the German Social-Democrats, in defiance of the resolutions passed at international congresses of the Second International, voted with the German bourgeoisie in the Reichstag in favour gi war credits. That same day, the French Socialists also voted for the war credits. "We are being attacked, we are defending ourselves," they assured the workers and peasants. In a number of countries ^(France, Belgium, Great Britain) the leaders of the socialist parties entered the upper ialist governments. Thus, as Lenin wrote:

Overwhelmed by opportunism, the Second International has died" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Worlds, Vol. XVIII, New York, 1930, p. 89). It broke up into separate social-chauvinist parties, engaged in war with one another. By the time the war broke out the opportunists degenerated into socialchauvinists.

The Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries as the Vehicles of Chauvinism in Russia

At the beginning of the war chauvinist fever ran as high among the petty bourgeoisie in Russia as it did in other countries. In Petrograd, as St. Petersburg was renamed after the outbreak of war, university students who were called up for mili tary service marched in procession to the Winter Palace to pay homage to the tsar. The Cadet-minded bourgeoisie called for the cessation of "internal controversy" for the duration of the war. At the very first session of the State Duma that was held after the outbreak of the war, the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Trudoviki associated themselves with the solemn declaration made by the Octobrist Rodz yanko, the President of the Duma, who called for "unity between the tsar and his faithful people." Behind the guise of socialist phrases, the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks helped the bourgeoisie to deceive the people by calling upon them to "defend the fatherland," hence the term "Defencist" that was applied to the Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries. In the autumn of 1914, the Belgian Socialist Cabinet Minister Vandervelde sent a telegram to the Russian Socialists calling upon them to help in the prosecution of the war. In answer to this the Mensheviks wrote; "By our activities in Russia we are not hindering the prosecution of the war." Thus, the Russian Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, like all the social-chauvinists of the Second International, openly spread chauvinistic propaganda among the masses. The most dangerous to the* cause of the proletariat were the concealed social-chauvinists, the so called Centrists, like Kautsky, Martov, Trotsky and others, who, like the avowed social-chauvinists, stood for the defence of the hour geois "fatherland," called for the cessation of the class struggle against the bourgeoisie for the duration of the war and, deceiving the masses^ as regards the actual war criminals, covered up their own treachery with "Loft" phrases about fighting for peace.

The Bolsheviks' Fight against the War and the Social-Chauvinists

The only party in the International which saved the honour of the international proletariat was the Bolshevik Party, headed by Lenin and Stalin. Prom the very outset of the war the Bolsheviks ex posed its imperialist character and the treacherous conduct of the Second International.

Lenin was in Austria when the war broke out. The Austrian im perialists hastened to arrest the leader of the world proletariat and then deported him from the country. Lenin went to Switzerland and there launched a campaign to expose the predatory, imperialist char acter of the war, and also the treachery of international social-chau vinism.

"The Bolsheviks hold that there are two kinds of wars:

"a) Just wars, wars tliat are not wars of conquest but wars of liber ation, waged to defend the people from foreign attack and from at tempts to enslave them, or to liberate the people from capitalist slav ery, or, lastly, to liberate colonies and dependent countries from the yoke of imperialism; and

"b) unjust wars, wars of conquest, waged to conquer and enslave foreign countries and foreign nations" {History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union [Bolsheviks]^ Short Course, Moscow, 1945, pp. 167-168).

Lenin regarded the World War of 1914 as an unjust war of conquest and called for a determined struggle against it to the extent of over throwing the imperialist governments by means of revolution. Ho ad vanced the slogan of transforming the imperialist war into civil war and called upon the proletarians of each country to wage a revolutionary struggle for the defeat of "their own" government. The slogan "Por the defeat of the tsarist government" issued by the Bolsheviks meant not only the 'fulfilment of their international duty as Socialists. The Bolsheviks* fight for their slogans was one to save their country, to preserve its independence, which could be guaranteed only if the workers and peasants won victory over tsarism and imperialism. The Russian social-chauvinists and the Centrists headed by Trotsky ' opposed Lenin's slogan calling for the defeat of tsarism. Rebutting their arguments, Lenin said that . to justify participation in the imperialist war, to advance in this war the slogan 'against defeat^ means to act not only as an anti-socialist, but also as an anti-national politician" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Worlcs, VoL XVIII, New York, 1930, p. 190).

From the very outbreak of the war Lenin set out to form a new. Third International in place of the Second International, which had suffered a shameful collapse.

Lenin's poiicj'of a complete rupture with the imperialists and of waging a determined struggle against the social-chauvinists and Centrists was vigorously carried out in Russia by the Bolshevik mem bers of the Duma. They constituted the only legal group of Bolsheviks that had the opportunity of appealing to the masses, for with the out break of the war all the Bolshevik newspapers were suppressed, the prominent Partyworkers were arrested and exiled, the workers' orga nizations were wrecked and the more classconscious and advanced workers were called up for military seivice and bent to the fiont. The five Bolshevik members of the Duma toured the country, visiting factories, holding tail^is with the workers and explaining to them the aggressive and predatory nature of the war. In the Duma itself the il^lslievik nicinhers openly proclaimed their opposition to the war and refused to vote for the war credits.

In November 1914, all the Bolshevik members of the Duma were arrested by the jiolice just when they were holding a secret conference with Party workers, and in February 1915, they were put on trial. At the trial they conducted themselves like staunch fighters for the cause of the proletariat. Only Kamenev, who had been arrested with the Duma Deputies, behaved at the trial like a renegade. He declared that he differed fundamentally with the Bolsheviks on the question of the war and that he agreed with the Defencists. On receiving a report of this trial Lenin expressed his approval of the conduct of the workers' Duma Deputies and denounced the disgraceful, craven and despicable conduct of Kamenev.

The tsarist court sentenced the five Bolshevik members of the Duma to lifelong exile in Siberia.

But even while in exile the Bolsheviks continued to oppose the war and to combat social-chauvinism. Comrade Stalin who, in 1913, had been exiled (for the sixth time) to the remote Turukhansk Region, although cut off from Lenin and the central Party bodies, took Lenin's stand on the question of war, peace and revolution.

Tho hamlet of Kureika, whore Comrade Stalin lived, was two hundred kilometres from tho nearest village of Monastyrskoye and newspapers arrived there very rarely; the mail came once in two or three months and letters from comrades were delivered with great difficulty. Nevertheless, at the end of 3914, Comrade Stalin received Lenin's theses in which he formulated the Bolshevik attitude towards the war. In the summer of 1915, Comrade Stalin called a conference in Monastyrskoye of the Bolsheviks in exile. This conference denounced Kamenev's craven and treacherous conduct at the trial. In 1916 Com rade Stalin received copies of the Bolshevilc magazine Insurance Questions^ whereupon he sent greetings to the editorial staff of that magazine in which he emiDhasized that in his opinion the chief task of the Bolshevik press was ideologically to insure the working class of Russia against the corrupting, anti-proletarian, chauvinistic propa ganda of the Menshevik Defencists.

A similar attitude of imcompromising opposition to opportunism in every form was displayed by Y. M. Sverdlov, who was in exile with Comrade Stalin, by G. K. Orjonikidze, who was serving a sentence of penal servitude, and by the other Bolsheviks.

Brusilov's Breakthrough

The Military-Strategical Situation in the Beginning of 1916

Germany's plans for a blitzkrieg collapsed; the war became a prolonged one. Germany had less chance of winning a prolonged war than the Entente, as the latter possessed large resources of manpower and ma teriel. In 1915, the 6e man High Command concentrated its main forces on the Eastern Front and strove to defeat the Russian army and compel Russia to conclude a separate peace. Its aim was to rid it self, in this way, of the second front in the East and to concentrate all its forces for the struggle in the West. The Germans did succeed in capturing a large area of Russian territory, but they failed to rout the Russian armies and the second front was not liquidated.

By the autumn of 1915, the German High Command came to the conclusion that it was useless to continue active operations against Russia and therefore began to make preparations for decisive opera tions on the Western Front. Leading Entente circles also realized that the respite the. Entente had received in 1915 at Russia's expense had ended, and they too began to prepare for the anticipated German offensive on the Western Front. The military situation comj)elled the Allies to decide to smash their opponents in the Western and Eastern theatres of war by a series of successive decisive blows.

In the beginning of 1916, tsarist Russia intensified military oper ations on the Caucasian Front. In spite of the incredibly dijficult fighting conditions in mountain terrain the Caucasian army stormed and captured Erzerum in February and Trebizond in April. Another Russian army launched a drive in the direction of Persia. But the offensive against Turkey was not pressed home as the Allies did not wish Turkey to be utterly defeated by Russia.

The strategical position of the Entente countries had now consid erably improved. Their military technical forces had grown. The French and British armies were equipped with splendid artillery, and having succeeded in organizing the mass production of shells they now had a plentiful supply of these. Particularly well equipped was the for tress of Verdun, which covered the road to Paris. Lacking adequate forces for an offensive on other parts of the front the Germans, in Feb ruary 1916, launched a drive precisely against this fortress in the hope of breaking through and gaining a decisive success. Within a short space of time the Germans fired against the Verdun fortifica tions over 2,000,000 shells. At the crucial moment they even resorted to asphyxiating gases, for it was the Germans who first used poison gas in the First World War.

To divert some of the German forces from Verdun the Allies de manded that the Russian armies should launch an offensive on the Eastern Eront. This offensive had the added object of preventing the defeat of Italy, against whom the Anstro-German command was preparing to strike a blow at Trent ino.

The Russian Army's Offensive on the Southwestern Front

In conformity with the plans of the Russian High Command the offen sive operations wore to comniL'nce on the Russian Western Front from the region of Molodeczno and drive towards Oszmiana-Vilna. A supple mentary blow was to be struck on the Northern Front in the region of Dvinsk. The Southwestern Front was to kcc]) on the defensive. But General Brusilov, who shortly before had been appointed Commander in-Chief of the Southwestern Front, was stiongly opposed to this plan. At the conference held at General Headquarters in Mogilev on April 14, 1916, ho argued that all the fronts should launch an offen sive, and do so simultaneously. The war, he said, could not be won by defensive tactics, and the Russian army and its allies now possessed all the facilities for launching a general and decisive offensive.

Brusilov, an outstanding loader in the Russian army in the period of the First World War, held the view that military objectives could be achieved only by active methods. In this iCvspcct he was ono of the last representatives of the Suvorov school in the old Russian army. What distinguished him as a military leader was his constant striving to employ new methods on the basis of a study of the oxperien.co of war. He demanded thorough preparation for an operation and a clear understanding of the general strategical tasks. Hd was of the opin ion that preparations for an offensive should be made along the whole front and that blows should be struck on several sectors simultane ously so that the enemy should not know where the main blow was to be struck.

Brusilov drew up the following plan of operation. He decided to strike the main blow in the Luck direction, on the right flank of his front, which was capable of rendering most assistance to the Russian Western Front where offensive operations wore about to begin. Making clever use of camouflage, he did all possible to ensure that his preparations were concealed from the enemy. All troop movements were performed at night. No conversations about the preparations were conducted over the telephone. Not a single person unconnected with the forthcoming operations knew anything about them. All this ensured not only thorough preparation but also that the enemy would be taken completely by surprise.

Brusilov's army launched its offensive at dawn on June 4, 1916. After artillery preparation lasting twenty-nine hours, the infantry charged the AustroGerman positions. After ten days' fighting the enemy's defensive system was breached on a front of ninety kilomelTcs and Luck was captured. Within a few days the army captured the whole of Bukovina and part of South Galicia and reached the passes of the Carpathian mountains. Brusilov's successful offensive compelled the enemy to transfer his reserves from the Italian and French Fronts to the Eastern Front. The German High Command effected such a transfer.

Brusilov's blow saved the Italians from defeat and eased the position of the French at Verdun. The whole Austro-German Front from Pole sie to the Bumanian frontier was disorganized, and this created the possibility of inflicting decisive defeat upon the German coalition. But neither the Allies nor the Russian High Command followed up Brusilov's success in time. The Anglo-French troops failed to pass to the offensive at this crucial moment for the German army, thus enabling the German High Command to transfer considerable forces from the Western to the Eastern Front. Failing to receive the support of the other armies, Brusilov's offensive was checked, after fierce fighting involving heavy casualties, in the marshy terrain near the river Stokhod. This lack of co-ordination of active Allied operations v/as one of the factors which helped to prolong the war and to ease Germany's position in 1916.

Growth of the Revolutionary Crisis

Economic Chaos in the Country

Despite the successes the Russian armies achieved on the Turkish and Southwestern Fronts it was already evident that tsarist Russia had lost the war. The main reason for the defeat of tsarism was Russia's economic and technical backward ness. The technically backward war industry was incapable of sup plying the army with the munitions of war. In the rear, economic chaos reigned. Although the number of workers employed in industry almost doubled, the productivity of labour steadily declined.

Shortage of fuel led to the cutting down of production in the fac tories and mills. In 1916, thirty-six blast furnaces were blown out. The steel mills produced only half the metal that was needed for the war industry and metal deliveries to plants were rationed.

The railways could not cope with the traffic. The transport system was dislocated, as a result both of repeated militar^'^ withdrawals and of the flood of refugees who poured from the regions occupied by the Germans into the hinterland of Russia. During hasty retreats large quantities of rolling stock were left in the hands of the enemy. Wrecked cars and locomotives blocked the roads. To allow trains to pass, trains ahead of them were sometimes thrown over the railway embank ment. Owing to the lack of transport facilities even urgent supplies of war materiel obtained from the United States, Great Britain and France were not delivered on time. The military port of Archangel was so congested with war materiel that the lower oases literally sank into the ground under the weight of those on top of them.

The utter dislocation of the transport system intensified the food crisis. Over a billion poods of grain from preceding harvests lay rotting at remote railway stations while the population of the towns were living; on meagre bread rations. The army received only half the regu lation rations. The price of bread rose over 50 per cent. In the autumn of 1916, fixed grain prices were introduced, but the landlords and kulaks ignored them. Profiteering in grain increased, while long queues of starving people lined up outside the bakeries.

■ Agricultural output dropped considerably during the period of the war. About 14,000,000, or 47 per cent, of the adult male popula tion had been conscripted for the army, and it was the most able-bodied section of the rural population that was taken. Agriculture also suf fered from the continuous requisition of horses and cattle; during the period of the war the number of horses in the coimtry was reduced by 5,000,000.

Tn 1916 the sown area in the country was 85 per cent of that of 1909. Landlord farming, deprived of the cheap labour of day labour ers and peasants, deteriorated. The landlord farms were largely cul tivated by prisoners of war, but their labour was very unproductive.

Particularly disastrous were the effects of the war upon the cur rency of the country. The colossal expenditure entailed by the war was covered by the issue of paper currency. The value of the ruble dropped and the cost of living steadily rose. To meet the war expend iture the tsarist government floated internal loans and also appealed again and again for loans to the Allies. To pay for war contracts placed abroad it received from Great Britain, France and the United States sums amounting to 7,769,000,000 rubles.

The defeats at the front and economic chaos at home roused the alarm of the bourgeoisie. The bourgeoisie had been making unprece dented profits out of war contracts. Since tsarism proved to be inca pable of organizing a victorious war, the Russian bourgeoisie tried to take charge of the organization of the war effort and achieved great influence in affairs of state.

In the summer of 1915, the bourgeois representatives in rural and urban local government bodies formed an organization, known as the "Zemgor, " which demanded a voice in the distribution of sup plies for the army. At about the same time so-called War Industry Committees were set up which undertook to fulfil part of the war contracts. Proclaiming the slogan of "everything for the war, all for the war," the bourgeoisie launched a campaign to increase output in the factories.

The bourgeois opposition during the war years was led by a body set up in the State Duma in August 1915, and known as the Progressive bloc. It included nearly all the bourgeois parties, the Octobrists, Progressives, Cadets and part of the Nationalists.

Backed by the Mensheviks and the Trudovik ^^roup, tliis bloc demanded the" formation of a "Cabinet of confidence," that is to say, the ap pointment of Cabinet Ministers who would enjoy the confidence of the bourgeois majority in the Duma. The tsarist government, however, refused to make any concessions and in September 1915, it issued a decree to prorogue the Duma "for recess."

During the war Russia's economic dependence upon British and French capital greatly increased. In return for credits amounting to 3,000,000,000 rubles, Great Britain demanded that the tsarist gov ernment should transfer to London a part of Russia's gold reserve as security for payment on war contracts. At the same time the Allies continuously kept demanding fresh reinforcements fiom^Russia. In April 1916, the French "Socialists" Albert Thomas and Viviani were sent to Russia to demand the despatch of 400,000 Russian soldiers to France. Only a proletarian revolution could save Riissia from being utterly converted into a colony of foreign imperialism.

The Revolutionary Situation in the Country

At the end of 1915, a revolutionary situation began to develop in iche country. The war and the economic chaos caused extreme discontent among the masses of the working people who were obliged to bear the whole brunt of the war. The conditions of the working class had greatly dete riorated during the period of the war. The insignificant "war bonus"' was insufficient to cover the rising cost of living. High prices, shortage* of food and the eternal queues, particularly wore out the women workers who were obliged to maintain their children without the assistance of their husbands who were away at the front. About 40 per cent of the industrial workers had been conscripted for the war and it was the more class-conscious and j)rogrcssive workers, and also 3 ^oung workers, who were sent off first. Their j)laces in the factories were taken by work ers from the rural districts and by women and juveniles. To compel the workers to work harder and to rouse their supportfor the war, the War Industry Committees formed "workers' groups." In September 1915, at a meeting of representatives of the workers of the factories of Petrogr«^.d, the Bolshevilis secured the adoj^tion of a resolution against the election of such a gi'oup to the Central War Industries Commit tee. The result was that only an insignificant number of workers took part in the election of the "workers' group" which took place in No vember. The Menslievilvs, who advocated "class peace" between the workers and the bourgeoisie, supported the "workers' group," and the Menshevik Kuzma Gvozdev, an arrant Defencist, became the head of it.

Ill the spring of 1916, the strike movement began to assume wide proportions and the strikes in the central industrial region were exceptionally tiTrbulent, At the Novo Kostroma Linen Mills the work ers demanded an increase in wages and marched in procession to the offices of the mill to present this demand. They were met by troops who fii'ed at them, killing and wounding scores of them. The Commander of the Cor])S of Gendarmes sent a telegi'amto the Governor of Kostroma stating; "Apiirove your action. Find ringleaders. Court-martial them."

The same brulal treatment was meted out by troops and police to the workers of Ivanovo-Voznesensk who marched to the Town Hall to XDresent their demands. The shooting down of the workers in Kostroma and Ivanovo-Voznesensk called forth a wave of protest strikes. The strike of the workers of the Putilov Works, which was engaged on war orders, assumed a militant character, and was joined by the new work ers, among whom the Bolsheviks employed at the ]3lant had been very active. The Putilov strike was supported by the entire proletariat of Petrograd. In the autumn, mass strikes began to spread all over the country.

January 9, 1916, the anniversary of Bloody Sunday, was com memorated by the workers by a political strike. The political strike wave reached its peak in October 1916, when these strikes were accom panied by demonstrations in which the workers carried the revolution ary slogans: "Down with the war!", "Down with the autocracy!"

The movement among the workers stimulated the struggle of the peasants. The imperialist war had finally divorced the peasants from the bourgeoisie, for it revealed to them how utterly groundless were their hopes of receiving land and peace from the tsar and his bourgeois allies. The impoverishment and ruin created in the countryside by the war strengthened anti-war temper in the most backward and remote villages. The Department of Police noted the growth of propaganda conducted by peasants against the further recruitment of soldiers for the war. One such rural propagandii^t is reported to have said: "Our tsar is throwing the people into the war like an extrava gant cook throwing logs in the stove."

Information rhout the disastrous condition of peasant farming reached the army. Worn out by the protracted war and enraged by the ruination of their farms at home the soldiers refused to go into action against the enemy, voluntarily surrendered, inflicted wounds upon themselves and deserted in masses. In 1916 the number of de serters was estimated to have exceeded 1,500,000.

The Activities of the Bolsheviks During the War

The Bolshe viks developed extensive activities in the aimy and in the navy. They formed underground military organizations m the army units and printed and distributed revolutionarj'leaflets in which they called for fraternization between the soldiers of the belligerent armies and stressed that their common enemy was the imperialist bourgeoisie, and that the only way they could end the war was by turning their weapons against the bourgeoisie and their governments.

In the autumn of 1915, fraternization commenced at the front. The Bussian soldiers left their trenches to mingle with the enemy soldiers. Tlio soldiers of both sides treated each other to cigarettes and understood each other perfectly even though they did not know each other's language. This fraternization strengthened the international unity of the working people in both lines of trenches.

By the end of 1916, the letters vrhich the soldiers sent home from the front reflected their growing hatred of the vrar and of tsar ism. One soldier wrote: "The soldiers today are not what they were during the Japanese War; under the mask of slavish obedience there bums frightful anger. It is enough to light a tiny match for this mass to flare up." The conscripted workers, many of whom had taken part in the revolution of 1905, conducted propaganda in favour of another revolution.

A number of leading Bolsheviks were active in the army. M, V. Frunze, who escaped from prison in 1915, secured a situation in the Union of the Zemstvos under the assumed name of Mikhailov. He formed an underground Bolshevik organization in Minsk and established close contacts with the soldiers on the Russian Western Front. A. A, Zhdanov, mobilized into the armyj» conducted energetic Bolshevik propaganda among the troops. V. V. Kuibyshev was active in the pipe works in Samara, and S.M. Kirov was active inthe Caucasus, rousing the most backward and downtrodden highlanders for the struggle against tsarism. In Kiev, and later in Ekaterinoslav, L. M. Kaganovich conducted propaganda among the workers and soldiers. In the spring of 1915, V. M. Molotov arrived in Moscow to organize a Bolshevik conference. He was arrested and ex iled to Siberia, but he escaped shortly afterwards, went to Petrograd, and there directed the preparations for a new revolution.

Never had the lives of the Bolsheviks working underground been so full of danger as during the imperialist war, when those conduct ing revolutionary propaganda were liable to be coiirt-martialled and shot. But the Bolsheviks were not daunted by dijOSiculties or dangers; they knew how to be with, and at the head of, the masses, no ' matter what conditions prevailed.

In the endeavour to rally all the revolutionary forces for the struggle against the imperialist war the Bolsheviks conducted intense activity among the youths and workingwomen who had taken the places in industry of the men who had gone to the front.

The theoretical basis for the activities of the Bolsheviks during the period of the war was provided by Lenin's works on imperialism. In 1916, he wrote that work of genius, Im'periaUsm^ the Highest Stage of Capitalism in which he showed that imperialism is the last stage in the development of capitalism and is the eve of the proletarian revo lution. In this book, and in the articles he wrote in 1916-1916, he showed that imperialist wars weaken the forces of imperialism and ren der possible the breaking of the chain of imperialism at its weakest link. In his articles "The United States of Europe Slogan" and "The War Program of the Proletarian Eevolution" he showed that it was quite possible for the proletariat to break the chain of imperialism at some one point, that Socialism could not be victorious in all coun tries simultaneously, that it would iii'st achieve victory in a few coun tries, or even in only one country, while the other countries would for a time remain bourgeois countries. This was a new and complete theory of the socialist revolution, a theory the fundamentals of which were outlined by Lenin as early as 1906. This theory opened up a revolutionary perspective for the proletarians of the various countries, taught them to utilize the war situation for a revolutionary onslaught upon the bourgeoisie in the given country, and strengthened their confidence in the victory of the world proletarian revolution.

The Revolt of the Peoples in Central Asia in 1916

The National Question During the Period of the War

The bourgeoisie in all eountries proclaimed the imperialist war a war for the protection of weak nations, but actually, during the war the oppressed nationalities were forced into, greater dependence than ever upon the imperialist bourgeoisie. The colonial peoples served, as the source from which the belligerent armies received replenishments of "cannon fodder." During the period of the war the movement for national liberation was rapidly heading towards a revolutionary uprising against imperialism. Lenin and Stalin pointed out that the revolutionary movement for national liberation of the oppressed nationalities was a reserve of the proletarian revolution. The Bolsheviks waged a determined struggle against national oppression in Russia and in other oountries, and upheld the right of nations to self-determination and the international unity of the working class in its struggle for Socialism.

The Bolsheviks denounced the policy of national oppression pur sued by tsarism and the imperialist bourgeoisie. As far as Russia

is concerned," wrote Lenin at this time, "the war is doubly reaction ary and hostile to national liberation" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XVIII, New York, 1930, p. 226).

The Revolt in Central Asia and Kazakhstan

The war imposed great suffering upon the oppressed peoples of tsarist Russia, la its quest for fresh sources of revenue for the purpose of financing the war, the tsarist government imposed additional taxes on the inhab itants of the outlying regions. The peoples of Central Asia were sub jected to exceptionally cruel exploitation. In the settled cotton-grow ing regions, the exploiters enmeshed the entire population in a net of enslaving contracts. During the period of the war the area under cotton increased 50 per cent, but the peasant growers could not enjoy the produce of their labour. They delivered the greater part of their crop to the landlords in payment for rent, and sold the remainder at ridiculously low prices fixed by the government to the disadvantage of the poor peasants . Meanwhile, the price of manufactured goods rose to an enormous extent. The Uzbek peasant cotton growers were threat ened by famine, as they grew scarcely any grain themselves and little grain was shipped into the region owing to the dislocation of the railways.

Conditions in the nomadic and semi-nomadic regions of Central Asia and Kazakhstan were even worse. The government continued to drive the Kirghiz and Kazakh herdsmen from their pastures in order to provide land for Russian settlers. In 1915, 1,800,000 hectares of the best land of the Kazakh and Kirghiz were granted to Russian land lords, government offtcials and kulaks. The continuous requisition of horses, cattle and wool for war purposes utterly ruined the herdsmen. The tyranny of the local authorities and the levies they imposed still further worsened the hard lot of the people.

The immediate cause of the extensive revolt of the working people in Central Asia was the order issued by the tsarist government in June 1916, conscripting the inhabitants from the age of nineteen to forty-three for the purpose of digging trenches and performing other work at the front, in spite of the fact that according to the laws of tsarist Russia the noii-Riissiau population was not liable to military service.

The Uzbeks, Ivazaldis, Kirghiz and Turkmen refused to obey thi.s harsh order, the more so that it was issued just when t]ie harvest was being taken in. The fii^st to rise in revolt were the peoples of Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. Crowds of excited Uzbeks in the towns and villages of the Tashlient and Samarkand counties attacked the rural admin istration ofliccs and demanded that the conscription lists should be destroyed. By the middle of July 1916, the revolt had spread over the whole of Ferghana. Near Jizak, in the Samarkand Region, regular battles with the tsarist troops took place, in which the latter employed artillery. The rebels cut eommunications between Verny (now Alma-Ata) and Tashkent, caj^tured a trainload of arms that w^as being sent to be used against them , armed the peasants and entered into battle with the Russian troops. The revolt was suppressed only in October, after a punitive army had been sent against the rebels of the Somirechensk Region.

The revolt of the Kazakhs in the Turgai (now Aktyubinsk) Re gion which broke out in September 1916 was exceptionally iirolonged and stubborn. The revolt was headed by Aniangeldy linanov. When the Kazakhs of the Turgai Region refused to obey the tsar's conscription order, the Governor of the region went to them in person to jjorsiiade them to obey. Amangeldy turned to him and said: "Permit me, worthy chief, to put one question to you. In our ignorance we do not understand; whom shall we defend in this war?" The Governor ordered the arrest of Amangeldy, but he went into hiding among the poorest sections of the Kazakhs. Sliortly afterwards Amangeldy Imanov organized a large force of rebels which entered into battle with one of the punitive units at Lake Kizil-KuL The battle lasted a whole day and the troops were forced to retreat.

At the end of October 1916, the rebels headed by Amangeldy Imanov besieged the town of Turgai, but failed to capture it. Aman geldy retreated from Turgai and fortified himself in the village of Batbakara. Here workshops were set up where armourers worked day and night making swords and other side arms. The Ka zakhs were trained in the use of firearms and in military exercises. The local inhabitants supplied the rebels with food, and with fodder for their horses. A large punitive army was sent against Amangeldy, and in the middle of February 1917 this army captured Batbakara. The rebels retreated into the steppe. Later their brave leader Aman geldy took part in the revolution, joined the Bolshevik Party and died like a hero in the Civil War.

The revolt in Turkmenistan also lasted a considerable time. Tlie Turkmen herdsmen, moving from place to place, easily evad ed the tsar's troops sent against them. A special punitive expedition of Cossack troops sent against them succeeded in forcing the rebels to cross the frontier into Persia. The revolt was suppressed with ruthless cruelty. The punitive army burned down the herdsmen's encampments, and seized their property and cattle. In a number of counties more than half the population was wiped out. The Governor General, Kuropatkin, put 347 of the rebels on trial, and of these 51 were executed. In the case of the others sentence of death was commuted to penal servitude. Several hundred rebels were exiled without trial . After the revolt was sup pressed many thousands of Khghiz and Kazakli refugees, with their families and herds, wandered into China and Mongolia, while the Turkmens crossed over into Persia. On leaving their habitations the refugees sold the remnants of their jjroperty to the rich and to the bai (kulaks) for a mere song; but in the countries in which they had taken refuge they were also subjected to persecution. After Soviet rule was established in Kussia many of the refugees returned home.

Education and Culture in Russia before the Revolution (1907–1917)

Education and Science

The revolution of 1905-1907 had roused among the masses of the people a tremendous thirst for knowledge. During the period of the revolution a large number of educational societies were formed, and adult schools and study coxirses, libraries, people's universities, etc., were oj^ened. During the period of reaction, however, the tsarist government suppressed most of these educational societies and institutions. The first to suffer were the educational so cieties which had been formed by the workers and the iion-Russian nationalities. Among these were the Ehiowledge Is Strength Society, The Educational Society, The Self-Educational Society, The Voluntary High School, which had been organized by P. E. Lesgaft, a number of educational study courses, nearly all the People's xmiversities, and many of the elementary educational societies. But the tsarist govern ment was unable to crush the people's desire for knowledge.

The needs of developing capitalism, the growing economic and political intercourse with the more cultured European countries, and lastly, the steps which the tsarist government itself was taking towards a bourgeois monarchy, compelled the government to increase the extremely insignificant funds hitherto allocated for education in Russia.

The industrial boom of 1912-1914 confronted the bourgeoisie with the need for training technical personnel which were practically non-existent in tsarist Russia. The number of students in technical colleges in 1914 was twice that in 1903.

With funds provided by the Zemstvo and private capitalists teclinioal and commercial schools, and trade and agricultural schools were opened

Duriiig tho six years from 1907 to 1913 the 'estimates of the Min istry of Education were trebled, from 46,000,000 rubles to 137,000,000 rubles; but the latter was an insignificant sum considering the real needs of a civilized country. The tsarist government spent on educa tion 65 kopeks per head i)er annum, whereas Great Britain, Prance and Germany spent three to four rubles, and the United States nine rubles per head per annum. On the eve of the war the number of pupils attending educational establishments of all types was about 7,000,000, which was less than 60 per 1,000 ofthe population. Only about one-fourth of the children of school age attended school. Accord ing to official figures, before the revolution of 1917, only 21 per cent of the population of Russia was literate. In the non-Russian national regions the percentage of literacy was even lower: in Transcaucasia 12 per cent, in Central Asia about 5 per cent. Of Uzbek, Turkmen and Tadjik children only 42 per 1,000 attended school. This explains why entire nationalities, such as the Bashkirs, Kirghiz, Turkmens, Yakuts and many others were totally illiterate. As Lenin wrote: "No such barbarous country in which tho masses of the people have been so completely robbed of education, light and knowledge has remained in Europe except Russia" (V. I. Lonin, Oollected Works, Vol. XVI, Moscow, 1937, Russ, ed,, p, 410).

Lonin pointed to the conditions of schoolteachers as an index ofthe backwardness and barbarism of tsarist Russia. Teachers* salaries were miserably low, they wore continuously subjected to the carping crit iciam and persecution of the higher officials, and were constantly harassed by the police and secret service agents.

The tsarist school, "the school of drilling and learning by rote" as Lenin called it, dinned into the minds of the children knowledge of which nine-tenths was useless, while the other tenth was distorted. High-school students were prohibited from forming self-educational circles.

After defeating the revolution of 1906, the tsarist government came down heavily on the universities. In 1910 and 1911, in connection with the death of Leo Tolstoy, the students resumed their political meetings and protest demonstrations. In retaliation to this the tsarist government issued an order iabolishing university autonomy which had been won by the 1906 revolution, and suppressing student organizations which hitherto had been permitted to exist. Largo numbers of students were expelled from the universities and deported for taking part in tho students' movement. In 1910 the newly appointed Minister of Edu cation, the reactionary Kasso, dismissed all the liberal and radical professors and he also discharged the Principal of the Moscow University and his assistants for failing to take adequate measures against the "mutinous" students. In protest against this act of bureaucratic tyraimy 125 professors and lecturers of the Moscow University, among whom were K. A. Timiryazev, Professor of Physics P. N. Lebedev, and others, resigned.

To combat the revolutionary student movement the government encouraged the formation in the higher educational establishments of Black Hundred student organizations, such as the Academic Union, and others, which were connected with the Union of Russian People.

The state of the universities to some extent detennined the state of science in Russia. The university chairs trained an inadequate num ber of scientific research workers and there were few scientific research institutes in tsarist Russia. The Imperial Academy of Sciences pro duced no works of any great scientific value, and the President of the Academy was the tsar's uncle Konstantin Romanov, who knew nothing about science.

The genuine scientists who sprang from the ranks of the people received neither recognition nor assistance. The great genetics se lectionist, I. V. Michurin, was not recognized as a scientific researcher, in spite of the fact that scientists from other countries came to him to study his methods. The same applied to another great scientist, K. E. Tsiolkovsky, who constructed a dirigible airship ten years before the Zeppelin appeared, and who formulated the principles of the jet propelled engine; he was obliged to remain a teacher of mathematics in Kaluga and conduct his scientific researches with his own very modest resources. The outstanding mechanic, the father of Russian aviation, N. E. Zhukovsky, devoted himself to the study of aerial dynamics and the theory of the flight of aircraft, but the results of his work found application only under the Soviet regime. The first Russian airmen, Rossinsky, Utochkin and others, performed their flights at the risk of their lives in badly constructed aeroplanes provided by professional showmen for the purpose of public entertainment.

The plan proposed by the Arctic explorer, G. Y. Sedov in 1912, for an expedition to the Korth Pole was met with hostility and ridicule. It was only with great dijfiSlculty that Sedov, with the aid of private contributions, fitted out the St. Phoca and started out on his expedition, which was inadequately organized. Eventually, the ship was caught in the ice and Sedov, accompanied by two sailors, abandoned the ship and attempted to reach the Pole on foot, but they only succeeded in reacliing Rudolf Island, where, in the winter of 1914, the brave explorer died of hunger and cold. The remains of Sedov's grave on Rudolf Island were only recently discovered.

Thus, scientific discoveries, research and expeditions were treated by the tsiirist govoriiiiient and the bourgeoisie with cold indifference, and sometimes oven with ignorant contempt.

Literature and Art

The ideological disintegration that set in among the bourgeois intelligentsia found most vivid rejection in the decadence that cliaraoterized the literary world in the last decade be fore the revolution. Tlie Cadet proff^ssors and philosopliers, such as Bulgakov, Berdj^aev and others, intensified, in their philoso];>hical works, their attacks on Marxism and revolution and preached idealism and mysticism. Reactionary idealistic philoso])hy exercised considerable inlluenc(.'^ upon the Russian petty-bourgeois intelligentsia who frequently sought escape from reality in the world of abstract ideas and emotions. The individualist intellectual, disillusioned with life, became the lu'incipal hero in fiction. Social reaction opened the way for numerous literary trends such as the symbolists, futurists, acme-ists, etc., and while these various groups, schools and coteries were at loggerheads with each other, they all agreed in reimdiating realism in art. The predominating jirinciplc in literature was formalistic searching. The literature and poetry of that time was distinguished for its intellectual shallowness and }}essi inistio moods. Thus, tho works of Leonid Aiidrcyov breathed profound }>essimism and fatalism. Life for him was "madness and horror" and man was "a plaything in tho hands of fate." Artsybashev argued that a man "could do anything ho pleased since Death stood at everyone's back." Merezhkovsky and Zinaida Hippius advocated "seeking for a God" and denounced the Russian revolution. Undoubtedly talent ed poets like Balmont, Theodore Sologub and others, withdrew from; public life and sanli into extreme individualism, or into the world of abstract fantasy, "from constricting borders into a wonderful world, to unlmown beauty" as Balmont wrote. Pessimism even affect ed tho work of progressive poets like Alexander Blok and Valeri Bryusov. Tho Bolsheviks combated this state of decay in the literary world. Amidst the gloom of that period the wonderful stories that were written by the great proletarian author Maxim Gorky breathed cheer ful confidence and strength. "Man — ^there is a proud ring about that word," said Gorky. He had confidence in the new man and in his lofty mission as fighter for and builder of the new way of life. At that time Gorky came out as the bard of socialist democracy. In his novel Mother ^ he put into the month of his hero the following words about the new generation of Russian workers: ^VPhen you look at them you can see that Russia will be tho brightest democracy on earth." Maxim Gorky became tho favourite author of tho proletariat, and from his works the proletarians imbibed new strength for the struggle. Lenin wrote that "Gorky is undoubtedly the greatest representative of proleia^'ian art, who has done a great deal for this art and is capable of doing still more in the future" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Worhs, Vol. IV, Moscow, 1934, p. 36). Another challenge to the old decaying world was the poetry of the young poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. His poem "Cloud in Pants," written in 1914, was a hymn to life, love and the struggle, Mayakovsky proclaimed himself the "drummer boy of the revolution" and welcomed its coming. The call for the struggle for the new way of life was also sounded ill the works of the Ukrainian autlioress Lesj^a Ukrainlva, whose art reached its peak in the darkest years of reaction. The writer's fate was a tragic one: she was bedridden with tuberculosis in a severe form, but her work, which was strongly influenced by Puslikin's poetry, breathed ardent sjunpathy for the people who were rising against the autocracy, and sounded a call for the struggle against the oppres sors. In 1913, untimely death carried away another great artist in the field of literature in the person of M. M. Kotsyubinsky. Kotsyubinsky commenced his literary career in the 1880 's and 1890 's by ruthlessly denouncing the liberal Narodnik intelligentsia and the monstros ities of peasant life. In the period of the 1905 revolution he definitely became the mouthpiece of revolutionary peasant democracy. In his most important work, Fata Morgana, he describes with pro found sympathy the revolt of the peasants and reveals his hatred for the landlords and the kulaks. In 1916, the most popular of Jewish authors, Sholem Alechem, the nom de plmne of Sholem Rabinovich, died. Maxim Gorky described him as an "artist in melanchol 3 " and grave humour." In his series of humorous tales: Tobias the MUhtnan, The Memoirs of a Commer cial Traveller, and others, he described with great artistic realism and sincere sympathy the joyless life of the Jewish poor. Art in this period reflected the same ideas and moods as were reflected in literature. In painting, decorative themes came to the forefront (the "World of Art" group represented by Roerich, Benois and others). The same tendency to escape from realism into the world of inner emotions and external formalistic searchings was reflected in sculpture (P. P. Trubetskoy, Konenkov, and others). The work of the outstanding composer A. N. Scriabin (1871-1915)^ an innovator of musical form, contained elements of mysticism and' symbolism ("A Divine Poem," and others).

The February Bourgeois-Democratic Revolution

Overthrow of Tsarism

Two Conspiracies

Hie last years of tsarism in Russia were the years of its utter decay and decomposition. During the period of the war, the rascal Gregory Rasputin, formerly a peasant from Siberia, gained exceptional influence at the tsar's court. In his youth Rasputin had been a horse thief and later he roamed from monastery to monastery with pilgrims and alms-beggars. Skilfully posing as a "seer,^" he became extremely poxmlar among ignorant religious people and partic ularly among women. Rumours about him and the ^'"miracles" he performed reached the tsar's comt. The tsar and the tsarina who were extremely superstitious believed these rumours. The tsarina, who was fanatically religious, invited Rasputin to the court in the hope that he would bo able to cure the Crown Prince Alexei of the illness which the physicians had iDronounoed incurable. Rasputin was shrewd and brazen and gained enormous influence over the tsarina, and through her, over the tsar. The tsarina constantly induced Nicho las II to follow the advice of Rasputin, to whom, she believed, "God reveals everything." In obedience to Rasputin's illiterate messages the tsar appointed and dismissed ministers. With his assistance shady businessmen, profiteers, swindlers and foreign spies obtained important posts, profitable concessions, enormous subsidies and lucrative war contracts. The ascendancy of Rasputin most vividly reflected the obscurantism, the superstition, the intellectual poverty and mor al decay of the tsarist regime.

The defeats sustained at the front and the revolutionary situation in the country created panic in governmental circles. To have their hands free to crush the growing revolution, the tsar and the court clique wanted to conclude a separate peace with Germany, and arrange ments for negotiations for such a peace were made by the tsarina through her Geiman relatives. The scheme to conclude a separate peace with Germany was also supported by Rasputin,

Rumours that the court was secretly preparing to conclude a sepa rate peace with Germany leaked out and this, together with the fact that tsarism was obviously incapable of coping with the revolutionary movement in the country, stimulated the opposition of the bourgeoisie. At the Olid of 1915, the government began to meet with increasingly vigorous and sharp criticism in the State Duma. True, as Shulgin, one of the Deputies of the Right explained, this criticism was merely an attempt to transform "the seething revolutionary energy into words" and to "substitute resolutions for revolution." Nevertheless, bourgeois circles had lost their former "confidence" in the government. The government became panic-stricken and began to indulge in what was called "Ministerial leapfrog," i, e., constantly dismissing ministers and replacing them by others. During the period of the war there were no less than four Presidents of the Council of Ministers, six Minis ters of the Interior, four Ministers of War, three Ministers of Foreign Affairs, four Ministers of Agriculture and four Ministers of Justice. As was said in the Duma, the changes were so fast that it was impossible to "get a good look at the faces of the Ministers who fell."

In November 1916, the Fourth State Duma reassembled after the summer recess in an atmosphere of extreme political tension. The revolutionary crisis in the country was growing with catastrophic speed. The time had come when the ruling classes could no longer govern in the old way and the working people would no longer live in the old way. In its report on the political situation in the country, the Department of Police was obliged to admit that "opiDosition tem per has now reached such exceptional dimensions that it far exceeds that which prevailed among the broad masses in the turbulent period of 1905-1906."

Even the Grand Dukes and the higher aristocracy sensed the im pending collapse of tsarism and demanded the removal of Rasputin, whom they regarded as the chief cause of all the trouble in the country. On the night of December 17, 1916, Rasputin was killed by conspirators, among whom were relatives of the tsar, and his body was thrown into an ice hole on the river Neva. The assassination of Rasputin, however, could not, of course, alter the situation in the country. The tsarist government resolved to take drastic measures to crush the revolu tionary masses. Its plan was to conclude a separate peace with Ger many, dissolve the Duma, and then concentrate its main blow against the working class. It intended to draw troops, including artillery, to the capital and to do so in good time. The war factories were to be militarized in order to place the workers under military law. The Petrograd Military Area, which came within the area of the Northern Front, was formed into a separate military area under the command of General Khabalov, a most reactionary general. The police force in the capital was put on a war footing and supplied with machine guns. Maklakov, formerly Minister of the Interior, wrote to the tsar demanding that the sternest measures be taken to combat the revolutionary movement in order "to restore order in the state at all costs and ensure victory over the internal enemy who has long been becoming more dangerous, more fierce and more insolent than the external enemy." Concurrently witli this plot, another plot was being hatched by the imperialist bourgeoisie and the militarists. Giving up all hope of reaching an agreement with tsarism, the bourgeois plotters decided that the best means of averting a revolution would be a palace revolution. They plofcted to capture the tsar's train while it was on the way from Army Gonoral Headquarters in Mogilev to Tsarskoye Solo, compel the tsar to abdicate in favour of his son Alexei and appoint the tsar's brother, J\Tiehacl Romanov, who sjuapathized with "English ways," regent until Alexei came of age. A part in tliis plot to bring about a palace revolution was idaj^'ed by the British and French im perialists who were afraid that the autocracy would conclude a separate ]3oace with Germany.

But neither the plot of the tsarist autocracy nor that of the bourgeoisie fructified. They could not avert revolution. The working class and the peasants in soldiers' uniforms thwarted these plans by their mass revolutionary actions.

The Insurrection in Petrograd

At the beginning of 1917, the general crisis in the country became extremely acute. The railways almost ceased to function. The factories and mills failed to receive raw materials and fuel and came to a standstill. The food problem grew into an acute political problem. Ou January 9, 1917, the anniver sary of Bloody Sunday, a huge anti-war demonstration took place in Petrograd. Similar demonstrations took place in Moscow, Baku, Nizhni Novgorod and other towns. In Moscow two thousand workers came into the streets carrying red flags and banners bearing the slogan "Down witli the war! " Mounted police dispersed the demonstrators. In a number of towns strikes broke out, and in some, the people spontaneously began, to raid the baker shops. The government lost its head and began to intensify its measures of repression. The Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries tried to prevent the revolution from developing by calling upon the workers to organize a demonstra tion in defence of the State Duma; but on February 14, the day on which the Duma was to open, a large section of the workers, in response to the call of the Bolsheviks, came into the streets, carrying the slogans "Down with the autocracy! ", "Down with the war!"

In the latter half of February the revolutionary movement in Petrograd grew with exceptional rapidity. On February 18, 30,000 workers employed at the Putilov Works came out on strike.

In the morning of February 23 the Putilov workers came out in a demonstration and were joined by the workers of other plants and by women waiting in the queues outside the baker shops. The Petrograd Committoo of the Bolshevik Party had issued an appeal for February 23 (March 8 new style) — International Workingwomen's Day — ^to be marked by a political strike. In all, 90,000 men and women workers struck work that day. The political strike began to develop into a general political demonstration against tsarism.

Next day, February 24, 200,000 workers were on strike. Revo lutionary meetings were held in all parts of the city. The police occupied the bridges across the Neva, but the workers streamed towards the centre of the city over the ice. On February 25, the political strikes in the different districts of Petrograd developed into a general political strike of the workers of the whole city. From General Headquarters the tsar sent the officer commanding the Petro grad Military Area the following order: 'T command you to put a stop to the disorders in the capital not later than tomorrow." The police began to fire upon the demonstrators with machine guns that were posted on the roofs of houses. The streets and squares in the centre of the city were occupied by troops. Large numbers of workers and Bol sheviks were arrested and flung into prison, among them members of the Petrograd Committee of the Bolshevik Party. The revolt at that time was directed by the Bureau of the Central Committee headed by Comrade Molotov.

V. M. Molotov had returned to Petrograd in 1916, after escaping from the Irkutsk Gubernia, where he had been exiled in 1915. On Lenin's instructions he was appointed to the Russian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, which was directing the preparations for the February revolution. It was he who edited the leaflet issued by the Petrograd Committee of the Bolshevik Party on February 25, the last before the revolution — openly calling for insurrec tion. This leaflet ended with the words: "Ahead of us lies struggle, but victory awaits us. Let everybody rally under the Red flags of the revolution! Down with the tsarist monarchy!"

On February" 26, the Vyborg Side of Petrograd was entirely in the hands of the insurgent workers. The Vyborg District Committee of the Bolshevik Party called upon the workers to arm themselves by seizing the arsenals and disarming the police. Meanwhile the workers intensified their propaganda activities among the troops; they forced their way into the barracks and called upon the soldiers to join them. In the morning of February 26, some military units were still firing at the people, but by noon the soldieis w'ere firing not at the people, but at the mounted police who were attacking the workers. An important part in winning the soldiers over to the side of the people was played by the workingw'omen who ardently pleaded with the soldiers to help the workers to overthrow the hated autocracy.

On February 27, the troops in Petrograd began to go over to the side of the insurgents. Thg men of the Volhynsky and Lithuanian Regi ments joined the workers in the Vyborg District. The workers captured an arsenal containiug 40,000 rifles and armed themselves. Political prisoners were liberated from the prisons.

General Khabalov proclaimed martial law in Petrograd, but the tsarist authorities were no longer capable of checking the revolution. The insurgent workers marched to the Taurida Palace, where the State Duma met. During these daysRodzyanko, the President of the State Duma, had been sending the tsar at General Headquarters in Mogilev telegram after telegram begging him to make concessions to the people and thus "save the country and the dynasty"; but the tsar regarded the Duma as the principal hotbed of the resolution and therefore, on February 26, had issued a decree dissolving the Duma. The members of the Duma submitted to the tsar's decree, but they remained in the Taurida Palace.

The tsar at General Headquarters continued to receive reassuring telegrams from the tsaripa who was in the capital, "It is a hooligan movement," the tsarina wrote, "young boys and girls are running about and screaming that they have no bread — only to excite. ..." The tsar ordered troops to be withdrawn from the front and sent to Petrograd, but a troop train under the command of General Ivanov scarcely managed to reach Tsarskoye Selo, near Petrograd, where the soldiers fraternized with the revolutionary soldiers and want ed to arrest the General. The tsar left General Headquarters for Petrograd, but the royal train barely reached Dno, where it was obliged to turn and make ior Pskov, the Headquarters of the Northern Front.

Everywhere the troops went over to the side of the revolution.

The Dual Power

The Formation of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies

On February 27 (March 12 new style), the revolu tion triumphed.

Armed workers and soldiers liberated political prisoners from the prisons. The victorious workers and soldiers marched to the Taurida Palace where the members of the dissolved Duma were gathered. Hardly had the fighting ended than Comrade Molotov, member of the Russian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, andved a-t the palace.

The idea of Soviets lived on in the minds of the people ever since the days of the 1905 revolution, and they put this idea into effect immediately on the overthrow of tsarism. Even while fighting was still in progress in the streets the workers in the factories and mills were already electing their first Deputies to the Soviets. Comrade Molotov sent Bolshevik soldiers to the various regiments of the Petrograd garrison with instructions to organize the election of Depu ties to the Soviet from each military unit.

Thus, unlike what occurred in 1905, when only Soviets of Workers' Deputies were formed, in February 1917, a joint Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies was formed. The &st meeting of the Petrograd Soviet took place in the evening of February 27.

The Petrograd Soviet and its Executive Committee proved to be under the control of representatives of the compromising parties — ^the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries — ^who managed to secure election while the Bolsheviks were in the streets leading the workers' insurrection. Another factor that infiuencedthe elections was that most of the leaders of the Bolshevik Party were still in prison or in exile. Tsarism had tom the leaders of the Bolshevik Party out of the ranks of the working class: Lenin was a political emigrant abroad, Stalin was in exile in distant Siberia. The Mensheviks, however, had remained at large, and posing as the champions of freedom they deceived the workers and soldiers and got themselves elected to the Soviets as their representatives. The rate of representation also helped the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries to obtain a majority in the Soviets; the rate of representation for large plants was one Deputy per 1,000 workers, but plants employing less than 1,000 workers could also elect one Deputy. The result was that the big plants, where Bol shevik influence was strongest, received only as many seats in the Soviet as the small plants in which Menshevik influence predominated. The army units, wliicli consisted largely of peasants, elected mainly Socialist-Revolutionaries or their sympathizers to the Soviet.

The Provisional Committee of the State Duma

On February 27, after backstairs negotiations between the bourgeois members of the Duma and the leaders of the Menshevik and Sooialist-Eevolutionary parties, a Provisional Committee of the State Duma was set up, headed by the President of the Fourth Duma, Eodzyanko. The latter en tered into communication with General Headquarters with the view to obtaining the consent of Nicholas II to the formation of a Cabinet that would be responsible to the Duma. The bourgeoisie were still trying to save the monarchy. As Comrade Stalin wrote in appraising the stand that was taken by the bourgeoisie at the time of the Feb ruary revolution, they "wanted a little revolution for a big war," The first thing the Provisional Committee of the State Duma did was to issue an order to the troops to retmn to barracks immediately and obey their officers. At a meeting of the Soviet of Workers' Deputies the soldiers' representatives raised a protest against this order. Yield ing to the pressure from the masses of soldiers the Soviet issued Or der No. 1, which defined the rights of the revolutionary soldiers. It provided for the elect'on of Soldiers' Committees in all units of the Petrograd garrison, abolished the rule of addressing officers and gener als as "Your Honour," "Your Excellency," etc., prohibited officers from using the degrading form, "thou," in addressing soldiers, and granted the latter the same political and civil rights as those enjoyed by officers.

Order No. 1 was an important factor in organizing the revolu tionary forces of the army and in finally swinging the soldiers at the front to the side of the revolution.

The Revolution Victorious Throughout the Country

Follow ing on the successful revolution in Petrograd, the revolution swept in triumph over the whole country. On February 27, the Moscow or ganization of t e Bolshevik Party called upon the workers and soldiers in that city to support the revolution in Petrograd. In the morning of February 28, the workers of the biggest plants came out on strike and were joined by the soldiers of the Moscow garrison. In the evening of March 1, the workers liberated imprisoned Bolsheviks. Among these was F. E. Dzerzhinsky.

The victory of the revolution m Petrograd was the signal for a revolt against tsarism also in the city of Nizhni Novgorod. The workers of the Soxmovo and other plants started a general strike, liberated political prisoners, disarmed the police and marched to the barracks and fraternized with the soldiers.

On March 2, the workers employed at the small-arms and ammuni tion factories in Tula rose in revolt, set up Soviets and arrested the local tsarist authorities. Similar scenes occurred in February and Marcli all over Russia. As Lenin figuratively expressed it, the blood-and mud-stainerl cart of the Eomanov monarchy was overturned at one stroke.

The Provisional Government

The revolution was brought about by the workers and the peasants in soldier's uniform, but they were robbed of the fruits of their victory. The Socialist-Eevolution aries and the Mensheviks were of the opinion that the revolution was already over and that the main thing now was to set up a '"normal" bourgeois government. On the night of March 1, behind the backs of the Bolsheviks, they reached an agreement with the members of the Duma to form such a government. In the morning of March 2, the appointment of a Provisional Government headed by Prince Lvov, a big landlord, was announced. Among the members of this government was Milyukov, leader of the Cadet Party, prof3ssor of history, who was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs; Guchkov, leader of the Octobrist Party, a manufacturer and banker, head of the War Indus try Committees, who was appointed Minister of War and Marine; Konovalov, member of the Progressive Party and textile mill ower, was appointed Minister of Commerce and Industry; and the millionaire sugar manufacturer Tereshchenko was appointed Minister of Finance, Of the eleven Ministers only one was a "Socialist," the Peo ple's Socialist (later Socialist-Revolutionary) Kerensky, a lawyer, who received the minor post of Minister of Justice.

In his first "Letter from Afar," Lenin described this government in the following words: "This government is not a fortuitous assem blage of persons. They are representatives of the new class that has risen to political power in Russia, the class of capitalist landlords and bourgeoisie, the class that for a long time has been ruling our country economically. ..." (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. I, Moscow, 1947, p. 739.)

The first steps the new bourgeois government took were directed towards saving the monarchy. Behind the back of the Petrograd So viet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, Guchkov and Shulgin went to the deposed tsar in Pskov, and in the name of the Provisional Govern ment urged him to abdicate in favour of his son Alexei. The tsar con sented to abdicate in favour of his brother Michael. The bourgeoisie were willing to accept even this new tsar. On his return to Petrograd Guchkov addressed a meeting of the workers in the railway workshops and after reading the manifesto announcing the abdication of Tsar Nicholas 11 he concluded with the cry: "Long live Emperor Mi chael!" The indignant workers demanded Guchkov's immediate arrest. "Horse-radish is no sweeter than radish," they said.

Realizing that it was impossible to save the monarchy, the Provi sional Government sent a deputation to Michael Romanov to request him to abdicate and transfer power to itself. On March 3, Michael Romanov signed iiis abdication, and in a manifesto to the people he called upon them to obey the Provisional Government.

The Class Nature of the Dual Power

At the very outset of the revolution a dual power arose in the country; the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, rej)resented by the Provisional Govemment; and the revolutionary-democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry, represented by the Soviets of Deputies. Both these powers existed side by side.

After victory was achieved over tsarism Soviets of Workers' Depu ties were set up in all the towns of Russia, even in the most remote parts of the country. Somewhat later, in the latter half of March, Soviets of Peasants' Deputies began to spring up. At first, the Petro grad Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies served as the all Russian centre of the Soviets. The Soviets were virtually a second government. They controlled the armed forces of the revolution. Armed workers formed units of Red Guards. The Soviets enjoyed the undivided confidence and support of the army and of the masses of the working people. Nevertheless, the Soviets voluntarily surren dered all state power to the bourgeoisie and its Provisional Government .

Lenin wrote the following: "The class origin and the class signifi cance of this dual power consist inthe fact thab the Russian revolu tion of March 1917 not only swept away the whole tsarist monarchy, not. only transferred the entire power to the bourgeoisie, but also approached very closely to the point of a revolutionary-democratic dictatorship , of the proletariat ' and peasantry. The Petrograd and the otW, the local, Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies represent precisely such a dictatorship (that is, a government power resting not on law but on the direct force of armed masses of the population), a dictatorship precisely of the above-mentioned classes" {V. I. Lenin, Selected Worlcs, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, pp. 27-28).

The existence of a dual power in 1917 was due to the fact that Russia was a petty-bourgeois country. During the revolution, millions of people who had had no previous experience in politics were awak ened to political life, and this petty-bourgeois tide swept to the political forefront the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary parties which entered into a compromise with the bourgeoisie.

As a class, the bourgeoisie was better organized than the workers and peasants, who had not had the same legal opportunities to organize as the bourgeoisie had enjoyed. After 1906, and particularly during the war, the capitalist class was able to build up for itself the machinery of its future power, and it easily set this machinery in motion at the time of the revolution.

During the war the petty-bourgeois stratum of the proletariat also gained in strength as a consequence of the fact that numerous small property owners, handicraftsmen, shopkeepers and kulaks had poured into the factorit-s in order to escape military service. It was this petty-bourgeois stratum of the workers, together with the small "labour aristocracy," that served as the main prop of the Mensheviks and the Sooialist-E.evolutionaries.

The politically mature and most class-conscious section of the proletariat belonged to the Bolshevik Party; but during the war most of these were either in prison, in exile, or at the front.

The vast masses of the workers, soldiers and peasants, formerly downtrodden by tsarism, betrayed naive confidence in the Provisional Government, which, they believed, had been created by the revolu tion, and in the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks, who were the worst enemies of peace and Socialism.

The Great October Socialist Revolution

Preparations for the Great October Socialist Revolution

The Beginning of the Crisis of the Provisional Government

The Imperialist Policy of the Provisional Government

The masses of the working people expected that the government which came into power as a result of the revolution would put a stop to the war, transfer the land to the peasants, introduce an 8-hour day for the workers and take measures to combat hunger and economic chaos. But, as Lenin wrote, the Provisional Government could "give to the peoples of Russia (or to those nations to which we are bound by the war) neither peace, nor bread, nor complete freedom. . .

(V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XX, Bk. I, New York, 1929, p. 24.)

The Provisional Government, which consisted of representatives of the landlords and capitalists whose interests were bound up with the war, had no intention of terminating the war. On the contrary, it tried to utilize the revolution for the purpose of stimulat ing military operations and of giving effect to the plans of the imperialists.

Russia's British and French allies also demanded that the Provi sional Government prosecute the war "to a victorious j&nish." The Brit ish government recognized the Provisional Government on the condition that it "remained faithful to the obligations undertaken by its prede cessors." The French government sent the Provisional Government a note wishing it success in its determination to prosecute the war "honestly and tirelessly to a victorious finish," but made no mention of official recognition.

With the assistance of the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolu tionaries, the Provisional Government deceived the masses by assur ing them that after the overthrow of tsarism the war had ceased to be an imperialist war and was now a war for a free and democratic Russia. The bourgeois, landlord, Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary newspapers proclaimed in different keys that "without victory at the front there can be no freedom."

The workers, soldiers and peasants, however, persistently demand ed the termination of the hated war, and as a result of their pressure the Petrograd Soviet on l\Iarch 14 issued an appeal to the peoples of Europe calling for a "just democratic peace without annexations or indemnities." This appeal did not, however, indicate any concrete measures for the struggle for peace; it merely fostered the illusion that an imperialist war can terminate with a "just peace" without the overthrow of the imperialist governments. But even this compromise appeal of the Soviet roused the protests of the Entente governments.

The Provisional Government hastened to assure the Allies of its readiness to prosecute the war to a victorious finish. Eor the purpose of continuing the war it floated a "Liberty Loan" to the amount of 6,000,000,000 rubles, and the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolution aries supported this measure.

The bourgeois Provisional Government tried to preserve the old order after the revolution; the land remained in the possession of the landlords, and the factories in the possession of the capitalists. Protect ing the interests of the employers, it refused to pass a law introducing an 8-hour day; the workers instituted the 8-hour day on their own accord. Protecting the interests of the landlords, the government, in March, sent troops to the Kursk, Mogilev and Perm Gubernias to suppress the incipient peasant movement there. In April it circulat ed an order to Gubernia Commissar calling upon them to crush revolu tionary actions of the peasants "by all means, including the calling out of military forces." At the same time it passed a law on the protection of grain fields, which provided for the payment of compensa tion to landlords for damage caused by "popular unrest." The Ministry of Agriculture, of which the Cadet Shingaryov was the head, set up Conciliation Boards consisting of peasants and landlords for the purpose of settling disputes between them "by voluntary agree ment." The Provisional Government introduced no reforms what ever; it postponed all reforms until the "convocation of the Con stituent Assembly," which, however, it was in no hurry to con vene.

The Provisional Government left intact the entire administrative machinery of the old regime. The Provincial Governors were replaced by Provincial Commissars, these posts being filled by chairmen of gubernia and county Zemstvo Administrations, most of whom were landlords and arrant monarchists. The Minister of Justice, the Social ist-Revolutionary Kerensky, left all the tsarist procurators in their posts. The former tsarist ministers and high government offieials contin ued to receive huge pensions. Neither titles (prince, count, baron, etc.) nor tsarist decorations were abolished. The nobility continued to enjoy all their caste and property rights and privileges. The Provi sional Government even tried to save the royal family by sending it to England, and it was only the determined intervention of the workers and soldiers that compelled the government to abandon this plan and arrest the tsar.

The imperialist Provisional Government neither could nor would give the people peace, land, bread and freedom; but a section of the workers and a considerable section of the soldiers and peasants still had confidence in the compromising parties — the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Eevolutionaries — ^whioh called upon them to support the Provisional Government. Lenin called these misguided people "honest Defencists" as distinct from the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary" leaders who deliberately advocated the continuation of the imperialist war.

Lenin's April Theses

As a result of the victorious revolution Russia, which only recently had been the most oppressed country in the world, became a free country compared with other countries. The masses of the people made full use of the democratic rights and the freedom of speech, press, combination, demonstration and assembly which they had won.

All over the country the workers set up factory committees and formed trade unions; the peasants began to organize land committees; in conformity with Order No. 1 the soldiers democratized the army. To develop the revolution further, it was necessary to guide the activi ties of these broad masses who had just been awakened to political life and to help them to understand the situation that had arisen in the country. This was the task that the Bolshevik Party set itself after the victory of the Eebruary revolution.

On March 5, 1917, the first issue of the revived Bolshevik newspaper Pravda appeared. On March 12, Comrade Stalin returned to Petrograd from exile in Turukhansk, and on March 14, his first article on the Soviets appeared in Pravda, In this article Comrade Stalin urged that the Soviets should be strengthened in every way as the organs of the revolutionary power of the people. The change from •underground to legal conditions caused semi-Menshevik wavering among some of the members of the Bolshevik Party. Thus, Kamenev, on his return to Petro grad, took the Menshevik stand of supporting the Provisional Govern ment and the policy it pursued. But the Petrograd Bolsheviks, headed by Comrade Stalin, strongly combated the attempts of Kamenev and his group to divert the Party to the path of opportunism.

The entire Party eagerly awaited the return to Russia of the leader of the revolution, V. I. Lenin.

Lenin was an exile in Switzerland when he received the newsoftho second revolution in Russia. He wanted to return home at once, but the imperialist governments of Prance and Great Britain put every obstacle in his way. From this "accursed afar" as he called it, he closely watched the development of events in Russia, and in letters to com rades and articles in Pravda (his "Letters from Afar") indicated to the Party the fundamental tasks of the proletariat in the revolu tion.

It was not until April 3 (16), 1917, that Lenin succeeded, after overcoming great difficulties, in returning to Pi,ussia. At Byelo-Ostrov, near Petrograd, he was met by Comrade Stalin . Thousands and thousands of workers, soldiers and sailors assembled at the Finland Railway Sta tion in Petrograd to welcome the beloved leader of the revolution. The station square and the adjoining streets were crammed with people and scores of Red flags bearing the inscription "Welcome to Lenin" fluttered in the light of flaming torches. On his appearance outside the station Lenin was greeted with thunderous cheers. Mounting an ar moured car he delivered a brief speech of greeting which he concluded with the cry: "Lo7ig live the Socialist EevolutionV^

In the morning of April 4, Lenin attended a meeting of Bolsheviks at which he expounded his theses entitled "The Tasks of the Proletariat in the Present Revolution." These were Lenin's celebrated April Theses.

In these theses Lenin emphasized that "the specific feature of the present situation in Russia is that it represents a transition from the first stage of the revolution — ^which . . . placed the power in the hands of the bourgeoisie — to the second stage, which must place the power in the hands of the proletariat and the poorest strata of the peasantry" (V. I. Lenin, Selected WorJcs, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. 11, Moscow, 1947,

p. 18).

The Bolshevik Party came to the new stage with the plan for developing the bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolution which Lenin had worked out as far back as 1906. It launched its struggle for the new stage of the revolution on the basis of Lenin's theory that Socialism could be victorious in a single country. Formerly, Social-Democrats had regarded the parliamen tary democratic republic as the best political form for the transition to Socialism; now, however, Lenin proposed that the demand for a democratic republic should be superseded by the demand for a Soviet republic. In his theses he proclaimed the slogan: "A republic of Soviets of Workers', Agricultural Labourers' and Peasants' Deputies through out the coimtry, from top to bottom." As regards the Provisional Government he proclaimed the slogan: "No support for the Provisional Government."

In his theses Lenin also put forward the demand for the confisca tion of the landlords' estates and the nationalization of all the land, the immediate merging of all the •banks in one national bank to be controlled by the Soviets of Workers' Deputies, and the immediate institution of Soviet control over the social production and distri bution of products.

Another of Lenin 's pro posals was that the Bolshe vik Party should drop the name of Social-Democratic Party, which had been dis credited and disgraced by tfe opportunists, traitors to Socialism, and adopt the name of Communist Party, as Marx and Engels had called the proletarian party.

By adopting this name the Party emphasized that its ultimate goal was Communism.

Lenin also set the task of forming a neWj Third, Communist International.

Kamenev, Rykov and the other opportunists who were opposed to the transition to the socialist revolution joined the Mensheviks in opposing Lenin's theses. The entire Party, however, unanimously adopt ed Lenin's theses which outlined a masterly plan of the party s' struggle for the transition from the bourgeois-democratic revolution to the socialist revolution.

Lenin's April Theses served as the basis for all the decisions that were adopted by the Seventh All-Russian Conference of the Bolshevik Party that was held in April 1917 (hence known as the April Con ference). At this conference Kamenev, Rykov and Zinoviev opposed Lenin's plan for the development of the bourgeois-democratic into a socialist revolution. They repeated the Menshevik argument that Russia had not yet matured for a socialist revolution, and that only bourgeois rule could be established. The conference, however, supported Lenin's theses and denounced the enemies of Socialism.

The conference adopted a resolution demanding that the landlords' estates be confiscated and placed at the disposal of the Peasant Com mittees,

Comrade Staliir delivered a report on the national question in which he substantiated the Bolshevik program demands for the right of nations to self-determination, including the right to secede and form independent states. Pyatakov, who, with Bukharin, had taken a national-chauvinist stand during the imperialist war, opposed grant ing nations the right to self-determination. Pollowing the lead of Lenin and Stalin, the conference rebuffed this attempt at the oppor tunist revision of the Party's program on the national question. In the speech he delivered at the conference, Lenin advanced the slogan of "All power to the Soviets." The fact that the Party put forward this slogan meant that it was setting out to abolish the dual power and to secure the transfer of all power to the Soviets. The fulfilment of this slogan would mean expelling the representatives of the landlords and capitalists from the organs of power.

The Apxil Confeience was of tremendous significance in the his tory of the Bolshevik Party. It headed the Party for the fight to develop the bourgeois-democratic revolution into a socialist revolu tion, for the fight for the dictatorship of the proletariat.

The April Crisis

The Bolsheviks did not at this time call upon the masses immediately to overtlirow the Px'ovisional Government, in so far as it was still supported by the Soviets. They set out to win a majority in the Soviets, which were controlled by the Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries and through the Soviets to bring about chan ges in the composition and the policy of the Provisional Government. The propaganda of the Bolshevik Party and experience itself soon helped the workers and soldiers to realize tliat the bourgeois Provision al Government was deceiving them on the most vital question, namely, the question of the war.

On April 18 (May I new style), when huge May Day demonstra tions were taking place all over the country in support of universal peace, Milyukov, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, sent a note to the Allies in which he pledged the Provisional Government "to continue the war until a decisive victory is achieved" and promised that the Provisional Government would honour to the full the obligations undertaken towards the Allies.

When, on April 19, Milyukov's note became known to the workers and soldiers it caused profound indignation among them.

On April 20, the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party called upon the working people to protest against the Provisional Govern ment's imperialist policy. In the morning of that day the "Finland" Regiment marched to the Mariinsky Palace, where the Provisional Government was sitting, carrying the slogan: "Down with the policy of conquest!" Late in the afternoon columns of workers marched to the palace carrying banners on which were inscribed; "All power to the Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies!", "Down with the war!"

On April 20 and 21 (May 3 and 4) over 100,000 people took part in the protest demonstration against the 'Provisional Government's imperialist policy. The bourgeoisie in their turn organized a demonstration of armed officers, cadets^ university students and shopkeepers who carried the slogan: '"Confidence in the Provisional Government!" General Kornilov, Commander of the Petrograd Military Area, issued an order to the troops to fire on the demonstrating working people, but the soldiers refused to obey the order of this counter-revolutionary general.

The April demonstration showed that the masses were beginning to waver in their confidence towards the Provisional Government and the compromising parties, but that it was still premature to set the task of immediately overthrowing the Provisional Government.

The April demonstration of the masses signified a crisis of the Prov'-sional Government. When the bourgeoisie saw that they would be unable to secure complete power through the medium of the Cadet and Octobrist Ministers, they resorted to a manoeuvre: they removed from the government the ministers that were most hateful to the people and agreed to the appointment of several representatives of the compromising parties to posts in the government.

On May 2, Milyukov and Guchkov were removed from the Provi sional Government. The reorganized government consisted of represent atives of the bourgeoisie and a number of Mensheviks and Social ist Pevolutionaries . Thus, V. M. Chernov, the head of the Socirlist Revolutionary Party, became Minister of Agriculture, the Menshevik Tsereteli became Minister of Post and Telegraph, the Menshevik Skobelev became Minister of Labour. That was Low the first coalition Provisional Government was made up. The entry of Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries into the coalition government signified the open desertion of the compromising parties to the camp of the coxmter-revolutionary bourgeoisie.

As Lenin wrote: "The bourgeoisie has begun to use them [the compromisers] as its oat's paw; it has started doing such things through them as it could never have done without them" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, Vol. XX, Bk. 2, New York, 1929, p. 230).

The policy of the coalition government differed in no way from that of the Milyukov and Guchkov government. The '^Socialist" Minis ters acted in conformity with the instructions of the imperialist bour geoisie. The Socialist-Revolutionary Kerensky, who took Guchkov's place as Minister of War, on the demand of the Entente began to prepare for an offensive. The Socialist-Revolutionarj" Chernov, the Minister of Agriculture, ordered stronger measures to be taken to combat the seizure of the landlords' land by the peasants. The Men shevik Minister of Labour, Skobelev, while helping the capital ists, called upon the workers to display "self-denial" and complained that their "wages were too high." The People's Socialist Peshekhonov, Minister of Food, in every way protected the landlords and kulaks, who were proiiteering in grain, and dared not put into effect the law introducing a state grain monopoly which had been passed in March. Casting off all restraint, the landlords and the kulaks even sabotaged the census of grain stocks in the country which had been ordered. Profiteering in grain assumed vast proportions.

The June Crisis

The June Demonstration

Tlie policy directed against the in terests of the people that was pursued by the coalition government showed that the petty-bourgeois Menshevik and Socialist-Revolu tionary parties had become the most important social prop of impe rialism in Russia. Hence, the exposure and isolation of these compro misers became the fundamental aim in the activities of the Bolsheviks.

As Comrade Stalin wrote: "Naturally, the Bolsheviks at that time directed their main blows at these parties, for unless these parties were isolated, there could be no hope of a rupture between the labouring masses and imperialism, and unless this rupture was ensured, there could he no hope of the Soviet revolution achieving victory" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism^ Moscow, 1945, pp. 112-113).

In pursuance of the decisions of the April Conference, the Bolshevik Party launched an extensive campaign to explain the Bolshevik slogans and to expose the policy of the Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries. The effect of this was that the workers began to carry through new elections of the Soviets, out of which they swept the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionary Deputies, replacing them by Bolsheviks.

The Bolsheviks also ousted the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Rev olutionaries from posts in the trade union organizations, particularly in the factory committees. On May 30 (June 12), the first conference of factory committees was held in Petrograd at which three-fourths of the delegates voted for the Bolsheviks.

Indicative of the growth of Bolshevik influence among the masses were the letters to Lenin and to Pravdu that were sent from villages, factories and the trenches. "Comrade, friend Lenin," wrote the sol diers to Lenin, "remember that we soldiers are prepared to a man to follow you anywhere, and that your ideas truly express the will of the peasants and workers." The growth of political consciousness among the workers and soldiers was exceptionally rapid in Petrograd.

In the provinces the liberation of the masses from the influence of the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries was slower. This is shown by the fact that of the 1,000 delegates who assembled at the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets that was held in June 1917, only 105 were Bolsheviks. But even though in the minority, the Bolsheviks were successful in exposing the compromising policy of the Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries .

The main item on the agen da of this congress was the ques tion of the attitude to be taken towards the coalition Provision al Government. The Menshevik Tsereteli tried to scare the con gress by stating that the rev olution would be doomed if the coalition with the bourgeoi sie were abandoned. "There is no political party in Russia at the present time," he said,

"that would express its readi ness to take entire power upon itself." Lenin at once shouted from his seat: "There is such a party!" And then, mounting the platform, he said: "I say there is! . . . Our party does not refuse it; it is prepared at any moment to take over entire power" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, pp. 59-60).

Lenin strongly denounced the compromising policy that w^aa pursued by the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries, who were helping to prolong the war and assisting the bourgeoisie in every way, and he concluded his speech with the demand that all power be transferred to the Soviets.

While the congress was in session the Bolsheviks were making preparations for a demonstration of Petrograd workers and soldiers under the slogans of "All power to the Soviets!", "Down with the ten capitalist Ministers!", "Bread, peace and freedom!" Dreading the growing influence of the Bolsheviks, the Menshevik and Socialist Revolutionary leaders of the congress secured the passage of a resolu tion prohibiting all demonstrations for three days. At the same time the Executive Committee of the Petrograd Soviet called for a general demonstration on June 18, with the intention of making its watchword "Confidence in the Provisional Government!" The compromisers anticipated that th*s would l^e a patriotic demonstration to mark the launching of the offensive at the front. The Bolsheviks called upon the workers and soldiers to join in this demonstration, but to inscribe Bolshevik slogans on their banners. Over four hundred thousand workers took part in the demonstration.

Comrade Stalin described this demonstration in Pravda in the following words: "A bright sumiy day. An endless string of demon strators. From morning to night the procession moves towards the Field of Mars. An endless forest of banners . ... A feature that struck the eye: not a single mill, not a single factory, not a single regiment displayed the slogan 'Confidence in the Provisional Government!' Even the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Eevolutionaries forgot (or rather did not dare) to display this slogan. . . . Only three groups had the courage to display the slogan of confidence, but even they found causo to regret it. These were a group of Cossacks, the * Bund' group, and Plekha nov's Yediifistm group. *The Holy Trinity! ' the workers on the Field of Mars ironically called them. Two of them (the Bund and the Yedinstvo) were compelled by the workers and soldiers to furl their banners amidst cries of 'Down with them! ' The Cossacks refused to furl their banner, so it was torn to shreds. And one anonymous banner of 'confidence' stretched 'in mid-air' across the entrance to the Field of Mars was tom down by a group of soldiers and workers amid the approving comments of the public: 'Confidence in the Provisional Government is hanging in mid-aiP^ (Lenin and Stalin^ 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Russ, ed., pp. 156-157).

Thus, the demonstration of June 18, turned into a demon stration of no confidence in the Provisional Government. It served as an index of the growing revolutionary spirit of the workers and soldiers of Petrograd, of their readiness to fight for the Bolshevik slogans. It was a de feat for the Menshevik and So cialist-Revolutionary parties which supported the Pj ovisional Government.

The June Offensive

On the demand of the Brit ish and French imperialists, the Provisional Government prepared to launch an offensive at

the front. In April 1917, the United States entered the World War, but considerable time was required to transport the Amer ican troops to the theatre of war. The governments of the Entente countries wanted at all costs to keep the Russian Front active in order to prevent the Germans from transferring troops to the Western Front, and they threatened to deprive the Provisional Government of loans and subsidies if it did not immediately launch an offensive and so draw German troops away from the Western Front. In addition, the Russian bourgeoisie saw in an offensive the only way of putting a stop to the revolution. They calculated that if it failed they could throw the blame on the Soviets and the Bolsheviks and crush them,

Kerensky, the Minister of War, speeded up the preparations for the offensive. Troop trains carrying reinforcements and trains loaded with ammunition and supplies were sent to the front lines, and Keren sky himself toured the different fronts haranguing the soldiers and urging them to fight. That was why the soldiers dubbed him "Persuaderin-Ohief. "

The offensive was launched on June 18, and at first proceeded successfully, particularly in the case of the Eighth Army, which pierced the Austrian Front and moved its divisions into the breach, A few days later, however, the offensive petered out. Reinforcements arrived slowly, and the army command w'as unable to develop the first suc cesses. The offensive came to a halt.

Shortly afterwards the Austro-German troops launched a counter offensive, inflicted defeat on the Russian army at Tarnopol and forced it to beat a rapid retreat. During the ten days of the ' offensive the Russian Southwestern Front lost about 60,000 men. War weariness and discontent among the troops, their desire for peace, and their distrust of and downright enmity towards the counter-revo lutionary officers were factors which contributed to the failure of the offensive.

The National-Liberation Movement of the Oppressed Nationalities in Russia after the Overthrow of Tsarism

The Provisional Government's National Policy

After it came into power the imperialist bourgeoisie pursued the same great-power policy of national oppression in the non-Russian regions as that pursued by tsarism, for it regarded the maintenance of its rule over the non-Bussian regions as one of the bases of its economic and political power. Backed by the petty-bourgeois parties, the Provisional Gov ernment advanced the old tsarist slogan of "Russia, united and in divisible,^' but covered it with the flag of "revolutionary democracy."

The Provisional Government met with hostility every attempt at self-determination on the part of the nations, and called upon all the oppressed peoples in Russia to wait until the Constituent Assembly decided their fate. It made an exception only in the case of Poland by adopting an official decision recognizing her independ ence; but Poland had been occupied by German troops since 1915,

The movement for national liberation in the former tsarist colo nies grew with increasing intensity in 1917,

Comrade Stalin wrote: "'Abolish national oppression' was the slogan of the movement. In a trice, 'all-national' institutions sprang up all over the border regions of Russia, The movement was headed by the national, bourgeois-democratic intelligentsia, 'National Coun cils' in Latvia, the Estonian Region, Lithuania, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, the Caucasus, Kirghizstan and the Middle Volga Region; the 'Rada' in the Ukraine and in Byelorussia; the 'Sfatul Tsarii' in Bessarabia; the 'Kurultai' in the Crimea and in Bashkiria; the 'Auton omous Government' in Turkestan — such were the 'all-national' in stitutions around which the national bourgeoisie rallied its forces" (J . Stalin, Marxism and the National and Colonial Question^ Moscow, 1940, p. 60).

The bourgeois nationalist intelligentsia tried to capture the leader ship of the growing national movement and to take advantage of the February revolution to form "their own" national states.

The national bourgeoisie in the border regions, however, demanded not secession from Russia, but national autonomy within the Russian state, with the bourgeois government of which they hoped they could reach agreement.

The Provisional Government's Conflict with Finland

In the beginning of March 1917, the Provisional Govermnent issued a decree restoring the tsarist Constitution in Finland. Shortly after that a coalition Senate was set up in that country, consisting of six Social-Democrats and six representatives of the bourgeoisie. This Senate was to act as the government. The Finnish Sejm, which had been elected in 1916, was convened. But actually, neither the Sejm nor the Senate were given any power. The Provisional Government sent a Commissioner to Finland and refused to recognize her independ ence.

Finnish army officers opened negotiations with Wilhelm II with the object of obtaining his assistance in severing Finland from Russia. The Finnish bourgeoisie hoped with the assistance of the German imperialists not only to separate Finland from Russia, but also to launch a civil war against the Finnish workers. In the guise of athletic clubs they began to form reactionary "maintenance of order squads."

The Finnish proletariat were emphatically opposed to an alliance with German imperialism against Russia, where tsarism had .been overthrown, and ardently supported the Russian revolution.

In the endeavour to achieve Finland's independence, the Finnish Sejm, in July, passed a law defining the supreme powers of the Sejm. In retaliation to this, the Provisional Government, following the example of the tsarist government, dissolved the Sejm.

The Bolsheviks headed by Lenin and Stalin denounced the im perialist policy of the Provisional Government and demanded recognition of Finland's right to self-determination, including secession.

Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia after the February Revolution

By the beginning of 1917, the greater part of Lithuania was oc cupied by German troops. At a conference of representatives of Lith uanian kulaks, landlords and the bourgeoisie that was held in Vilna, a Taryba, or National Council, was formed. The German authorities tried to convert the Taryba into an obedient tool of their own, and wishing to entrench themselves in Lithuania they played up to the Lithuanian bourgeoisie and promised to recognize the independence of Lithuania if she officially seceded from Russia.

A considerable part of Latvia was also occupied by German troops during the world wa^r. Latvia was the most capitalistically-developed of the Baltic countries. The war had caused it great devastation. The Northern Front ran through Latvia; more than half the country was furrowed with trenches and affected by military operations. The crops were destroyed, and cattle breeding had declined. The commercial and economic life of the country was almost at a standstill and industry was severely damaged. On the outbreak of the war a number of the plants, and the workers employed in them, were evacuated to the interior of Russia, and after Latvia was occupied by the Germans the rest of the industrial plants were either wrecked or transported to Germany. The conditions of the masses of the working people were extremely hard during the occupation. Relying on the support of the Latvian barons, the German imperialists aimed at converting Latvia into a German duchy. But even in the imocciipied part of Latvia the workers and peasants suffered a great deal from the effects of the war and from exploitation by the tsarist authorities and the local landlords and capitalists.

Consequently, the February bourgeois-democratic revolution in Russia was welcomed with great rejoicing in Latvia. A movement for national liberation sprang uij in the country, but the Latvian bour geoisie, who were dependent upon the Russian market, counted on the Provisional Government granting Latvia autonomy, and there fore did not strive for the independance of that country. At the begin ning of the revolution a kulak party which called itself the Peasant Union was fonned, and in the middle of March 1917, this Peasant Union convened a National Assembly, which passed a resolution de manding Latvian autonomy within the Russian state. The Provision al Govermnent, however, gave a hostile reception even to this mod est demand.

The policy which the Provisional Government pursued agamst the interests of the people roused discontent among the masses of the Latvian working people. A conference of representatives of the Lettish Eifle Regiment passed a Bolshevik resolution condemning the Provi sional Government's policy and the imperialist war. A congress of landless peasants that was held at about the same time passed a reso lution demanding the confiscation of landlord and church land. The masses demanded the transfer of all power to the Soviets.

Estonia, situated near Petrograd, was the first of the Baltic coun tries to secure autonomy; the Provisional Government passed a law granting that country self-government in April 1917. Not withstanding this, however, the government continued to pursue the old policy of Russification, In the summer of 1917, a National As sembly consisting of representatives of the Estonian bourgeoisie, landlords and kulaks, was convened in Eevel. After securing a few political rights for the Estonian bourgeoisie this National Assembly entered into a compromise with the Provisional Government. The masses of the working people of Estonia were discontented with the compromising policy pursued by the propertied classes and began to go over to the Bolsheviks and demand the transfer of all power to the Soviets.

The Ukrainian Central Rada and the Provisional Government

The Provisional Government also very strongly opposed the movement for national liberation in the Ukraine. In the beginning of April 1917, the Ukrainian bourgeois and petty-bourgeois nationalist parties set up in' Kiev a Ukrainian Central Rada, or Council. The largest and most influential party in the Rada was the Ukrainian Socialist-Rev olutionary Party. The Rada had the support of the village kulaks. The leading members of the Rada were Grushevsky, Vinnichenko andPetliura. In the beginning of June, the Central E,ada issued an address to the Ukrainian people, proclaiming the autonomy of the Ukraine. The petty-bourgeois Central Eada did not dare to go to the length of a rupture with the Provisional Government, as it feared to remain alon3, face to face with the revolutionary masses of workers and peasants; it therefore sought a compromise with the Russian bour geoisie. On the other hand, the Provisional Government needed the support of the Ukrainian bourgeoisie during the offensive, and it therefore sent four Ministers, headed by Kerensky, to negotiate with the Eada.

The upshot of these negotiations was that in the summer of 1917, a new administrative body consisting of representatives of the Central Eada was set up in Kiev. This body was known as the General Secre tariat, and its ftinction was to co-operate with the Provisional Govern ment's Commissioner in the Ukraine as the representative of the supreme authority. The final settlement of the political structure of the Ukraine was put off until the Constituent Assembly.

Lenin was of the opinion that the demand for Ukrainian autonomy was 'Very modest and very legitimate." The Bolsheviks denounced both the great-power policy pursued by the imperialist Provisional Government and the compromising policy of the Central Eada, and called upon the Ukrainian workers and peasants to fight jointly with the Russian workers and peasants against the imperialist bourgeoisie for the dictatorship of the proletariat.

The Byelorussian Central Rada

In the middle of March 1917, the First Congress of Byelorussian nationalist parties and organiza tions was held in Minsk. These bodies were united in the Byelo russian National Committee headed by the landlord Skirmunt. In June 1917, this committee convened a congress of representatives of Byelorussian bourgeois and petty-bourgeois parties at which the Byelo russian Central Eada was formed. Under cover of national slogans, the nationalists tried to keep the Byelorussian workers and peasants out of the revolutionary struggle, but at the same time they expressed readiness to organize the administration of Byelorussia "in co-opera tion with the Provisional Government." Like the bourgeois national ists everywhere, those in Byelorussia concluded an alliance with the bourgeoisie of the dominant, Russian nation for the purpose of combat ing the revolutionary movement.

The Byelorussian Bolsheviks strongly combated the Byelorussian Central Eada. An exceptionally important part in this struggle against the bourgeois nationalists was played by M. V. Frunze, who was then at the head of the Executive Committee of the Soviet of Peasants' Deputies; at the First Congress of Peasants' Deputies of the Minsk and Vilna Gubernias he exposed the counter-revolutionary nature of the Byelorussian nationalists. The Bolsheviks established closer contacts with the front and the rural districts of Byelorussia, gained influence there and roused the B 3 "elorussian workers, peasants and soldiers to the fight, with the slogans of the self-determination of nations and the conversion of the land into the property of the people.

The Transcaucasian Committee and the "National Councils"

After the February revolution the leading position in Transcaucasia was held hy the Georgian Mensheviks. Like the bourgeoisie and the landlords, it was their aim to preserve the bourgeois system. When they received the telegram announcing the overthrow of tsarism they kept it from the masses, but hastened to express their loyalty to the Vice roy of the Caucasus, the Grand Duke Nicholas. The old tsarist ad ministration was allowed to remain intact. To govern Transcaucasia the Provisional Government set up a Special Transcaucasian Commit tee (pzahom) consisting of local bourgeois nationalists and Mensheviks. The leading position in this committee was held by the Georgian Mensheviks.

The Georgian Mensheviks, the Armenian Dashnaoks and the Azer baijanian Mussavatists called upon the peasants to refrain from "unauthorized action" and wait until the land question was settled by the All-Russian Constituent Assembly. To organize their forces and to conduct a struggle for power, the Transcaucasian bourgeoisie set up National Councils, which fought against the movement for national liberation of the Caucasian people being transformed into a mass revolutionary struggle against imperialism.

The Bolsheviks were the only party to fight for the complete abo lition of national oppression in Transcaucasia and to demand a com plete rupture with the imperialist policy that was being pursued by the Provisional Government.

The Provisional Government's Policy in Central Asia

On March 2, 1917, the railwaymen in Tashkent received the news of the overthrow of the tsar and thereupon elected a Soviet of Workers' Deputies; but the tsarist Governor General Kuropatkin, who had crashed the popular movement in 1916, remained in power. At the end of March, Kuropatkin was removed on the demand of the workers and soldiers. But it was not until the middle of April that the tsarist authorities were replaced by the Turkestan Committee, a body representing the bourgeois Provisional Government.

The national movement in Central Asia was led by the reactionary Moslem clergy. The dekhans (peasants) were downtrodden and igno rant and still believed the hai and mullahs. In the towns, however » the Moslem workers and other poor strata set up their Soviets of Moslem Working People. In most cases these Soviets were organized by Russian workers and soldiers, and also by active participants in the insurrection of 1916 who returned home from exile.

In Khiva and Bukhara the old feudal rulers, the Khan and the Emir, remained in power after the February revolution. The Provisional Government sent a Commissar to Khiva who acted hand in hand with the lOian. In Bukhara, the working people demanded the limi tation of the power of the Emir. Fearing a popular insurrection, the representative of the Provisional Government in Bukhara advised the Emir to issue a manifesto promising reforms, but shortly afterwards the Emir, with the knowledge of the Provisional Government, arrested and executed the advocates of reform.

Thus, the peoples of Central Asia failed to achieve either social or national liberation as a result of the February revolution.

Not only that. In Turkmenia the Provisional Government con tinued, until it was overthrown, the punitive policy which the tsarist government had pursued against the Yomuds, who rose in revolt in 1916.

The July Crisis

The Demonstration of July 3–5

The war was costing the country 40,000,000 rubles per day. To cover this expenditure the gov ernment issued a huge quantity of paper currency, the value of which steadily dropped while the cost of living rose. There was a shortage of raw materials and fuel for industry and of bread for the workers. The transport system was completely dislocated. Factories and mills closed down. In May, 108 plants employing 8,700 workers, in June, 125 plants employing 38,465 workers and in July, 206 plants employing 47,754 workers were closed. Iron and steel output dropped 40 per cent and textiles 20 per cent. Unemployment grew. The strike movement spread. The workers demanded an 8-hour day and higher wages. An agrarian revolution began to sweep the country. By July, 43 out of the 69 gubernias in the country were affected by peasant un rest; the peasants seized the landlords* land and set fire to their man sions. The movement of the workers and peasants was warmly welcomed in the army. The soldiers, war weary and enraged by the continuation of the war, threatened to leave the trenches and go home. The masses of the people became more and more convinced that the Provisional Government was deceiving them. The news of the launching of the offensive and of its subsequent failure roused a storm of indignation among the workers and soldiers in Petrograd.

At the end of June the situation in Petrograd became exceptionally strained. In this situation the bourgeois parties called upon the Pro visional Government to take determined measures to crush the revo lutionary workers and soldiers of Petrograd, The government decided to get rid of the revolutionary garrison of Petrograd and with this object sent larger contingents of the garrison to the front on the pre text that the units there needed reiuforceinents. In order to exert pressure on the compromising parties and to force them to agree at last to the formation of a "strong government" the Cadets, on July 2, resigned from the government and thereby created a governmental crisis.

The failure of the offensive, the govermnental crisis, and the pro vocative tactics of the bourgeois parties and organizations, filled the eup of bitterness of the workers and soldiers of Petrograd to overflow.

^ ing, and on July 3 (16), individual regiments and the workers of dif ferent factories demonstrated in the streets. Soon these demonstra tions grew into a general armed demonstration under the slogan of "All power to the Soviets!"

The Bolshevik Party was of the opinion that to seize power at that moment would be premature. Lenin and Stalin pointed out that the Bolsheviks could easily capture power in Petrograd but would be unable to hold it as they did not yet have a majority in the Soviets throughout the country. In spite of these warnings, however, on July 3, the Pirst Machine-Gun Begiment came out in full fighting kit and marched to the Bolshevik headquarters. On the way other regi ments, and also units of the workers' Red Guard, joined the Machine Gun Regim nt. At 11 o'clock at night the workers of the Putilov Plan came into the street. The demonstration assumed a mass charac ter. When it became evident that this spontaneous demonstration could not be stopped the Bolsheviks decided to take the lead of it in order to keep it within peaceful and organized bounds, so as to give the bourgeoisie no opportunity for provoking the workers and soldiers to premature action with the object of crushing them.

In the morning of Jul}?^ 4, no less than 500,000 workers partici pated in the demonstration. Strikes closed the . factories and mills. Ninety delegates, representing all the factories and regiments in the city, went to the Taurida Palace where the Central Executive Com mittee that was elected by the First Congress of Soviets was in session, and demanded that the All-Russian Central Executive Committee should proclaim the transfer of 'power to the Soviets,

Meanwhile, the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries fe verishly mustered troops for the purpose of suppressing the demon stration. Cossack units were called in from the front. In the evening of July 4, detachments of army cadets and Cossacks opened fire on the demonstrators. On July 5 demonstrators were still being fired on. After suppressing the demonstration of the workers and soldiers, the counter-revolutionaries attacked the Bolshevik Party. The editorial offices of Pmvda were raided and wrecked and all the Bolshevik newspapers were suppressed. A detachment of cadets ar rived at Lenin's lodgings with the object of arresting him and searched the premises. Foreseeing this, Comrade Stalin had opportunely ar ranged for Lenin's departure from Petrograd. After shaving off his beard and moustaches and disguising himself as a Finnish peasant.

Lenin safely reached Raz liv Station on the Ses troretsk E,ailway, where for several weeks he lived in a shack on the shore of a lake, hiding from the spies of the Provi sional Government.

The bourgeoisie were determined to crush the rising proletarian revolu tion, and with this object the authorities arrested a number of prominent Bolsheviks and wrecked the printing plant where the Party publications were printed. The Bol shevik Party became semi illegal. The government instituted proceedings against Lenin on the charge of "high treason" and of organizing an armed insurrection.

Rykov, Kamenev and Trotsky, the masked ene mies of the revolution, demanded that Lenin should attend the court, but Stalin emphatically opposed this treacherous proposal and warned that "the cadets will not bring Lenin to the prison, they will kill him on the way." It was proved subsequently that Stalin was right: the cadets had actu ally received instructions to kill Lenin, ostensibly "while attempting to escape." Thus, Comrade Stalin saved the life of the great leader of the working people for the benefit of mankind.

The events of July 3-5 marked the third political crisis in the country. As in the first two crises — in April and in June — the cause of the third crisis was, as Lenin put it "... the overflowing dissatisfaction of the masses, their indignation against the bourgeoisie and ifs government" {Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 203), The July events marked the turning point in the process of the development of the bourgeois revolution into a socialist revolution. During the July events the Menshevik and the Socialist-Revolutionary leaders, in conjunction with the monarchist generals, organized the shooting down of the workers' and soldiers' demonstration; and the All-Riissian Central Executive Committee, which was controlled by the Socialist-Revolutionaries and Mensheviks, even issued a special order authorizing the Socialist-Revolutionaries Gotz and Avksentyev to assist General Polovtsev to "restore order."

After the July events the political situation in the country changed. The Soviets lost the confidence of the masses and became impotent. The dual power was superseded by the sole power of the bourgeoisie. Appraising the situation in the country at the time, Lenin vTote: "A peaceful development of the Russian revolution has now become im possible, History puts the question thus: either complete victory for the counter-revolution, or a new revolution" (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works y Vol. XXI, Bk. 1, New York, 1932, p. 58).

In view of these circumstances, it became necessary to withdraw the slogan of "All power to the Soviets! " for a time, because the Soviets, which were controlled by the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolution aries, were then acting as the accomplices of counter-revolution. The party was faced with the new task of winning a majority in the So viets and of converting the latter into organs of insurrection.

The offensive that was launched by the counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie with the assistance of the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revo lutionaries shook the confidence of the workers and peasants in those parties. Discontent grew among the masses of the soldiers at the fipont. Reports to headquarters read: "The masses are sullen. Hostility to wards the officers continues. The bulk of the soldiers do not want to fight. There are frequent cases of refusal to obey orders."

In the rural districts the peasants rose against the landlords. The "Red Chanticleer" (incendiarism) was on the rampage among the land lords' estates. Whereas in March, 34 counties had been affected by the peasant movement, in July, 325 were affected. The workers in the mills and factories went on strike and in many cases the}" drove out the hated directors and managers and introduced workers' control of production.

The Sixth Congress of the Bolshevik Party

On July 26, the Sixth Congress of the Bolshevik Party was opened in Petrograd. The congress was held in secret.

Lenin, who was in h'dlng, was unable to attend the congress, but Comrade Stalin kept him informed of its proceedings and received instructions from him. The congress proceedings were directed by Comrade Stalin.

Comrade Stalin delivered a report on the political situation in which he emphasized that the revolution "had begun to assume the character of a socialist vorkers' revolution," and that the only way to achieve the victory of the socialist revolution was to prepare for and carry out an armed insurrection.

The Bukharinites and Trotskyites at the congress opposed the line for a socialist revolution. In denouncing their treacherous policy, Comrade Stalin said: "The possibility is not excluded that Russia will be the country that will lay the road to Socialism, . . . We must discard the antiquated idea that only Europe can show us the way" {History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union [Bolsheviks']^ Short Course, Moscow, 1945, p. 197). *

The congress adopted a resolution that was submitted by Comrade Stalin and endorsed the Bolshevik economic program — confiscation of the landlords' estates and nationalization of all the land, nationali zation of the banks and large-scale industry, and workers' control of production and distribution. The congress also adopted a resolution on the Youth Leagues in which the latter were regarded as the re serves of the Party.

The Socialist Young Workers' League was formed in July 1917, and all its branches were directed by the Bolshevik Party. The Petro grad Committee of the Bolshevik Party set up a special committee headed by N. it. Krupskaya to organize the young workers and to concern itself with their interests.

The Sixth Congress of the Bolshevik Party was the congress of preparation for the armed insurrection against the bourgeoisie. It headed the Party for the socialist revolution.

The Suppression of General Kornilov's Counter-Revolutionary Revolt

The Bourgeois Counter-Revolutionary Plot

After the July demonstration the bourgeoisie began to mobilize its forces for the purpose of crushing the revolution. The petty-bourgeois parties which controlled the Soviets obediently carried out the program of the coun ter-revoluti onary bourgeoisie .

On July 8, 1917, the "Little Bonaparte," "the little braggart Ker ensky," as Lenin called him, became the head of the government. Kerensky introduced the death penalty at the front, and informed the Allies that he had taken all measures to restore the fighting efSiciency of the army. On the demand of the Allies, General Kornilov, who was notorious for his uncompromising hostility to the revolution, was appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief. He issued an order prohibiting all meetings in the army. Field courts-martial intro duced a reign cf terror at the front. Kornilov demanded the introduc tion of the death penalty in the rear as well.

After Kornilov was appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief the second coalition Provisional Government was formed. This government was headed by Kerensky and included members of the Cadet Party.

The counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie set out to establish a mili tary dictatorship and with this object organized a military monarch ist plot. The instigator of this plot was the Cadet Party. As Lenin wrote at the time; "The Cadet Party is the chief political force of the bourgeois counter-revolution in Russia" (LeTiin arid Stalin^ 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 359). The plot was hatched at the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief Kornilov, who was mustering troops for the purpose of marching them against Petrqgrad.

On August 12, 1917, Kerensky convened in Moscow a Council of State, which served as a sort of general review of the counter-revolu tionary forces. Comrade Stalin characterized this council in the follow ing words: "The 'way out' for the counter-revolution lies in conven ing a conference of merchants and manufacturers, of landlords and bankers, of members of the tsarist Duma and already tamed Men^e viks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, in order, by declaring this con ference to be a 'National Assembly,' to obtain from it approval for the policy of imperialism and counter-revolution, and for transferring the burdens of the war to the shoulders of the workers and peasants"

• {Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, pp. 314-16).

The leaders of the counter-revolution intended to proclaim a mili tary dictatorship at this council, but events developed differently from the way they anticipated.

On the day the council was opened in Moscow the Central Committee of the Bol shevik Party called a general protest strike and 400,000 workers downed tools. The Coun cil of State sat without electric light; the tramways did not run.

Next day, August 13, Kornilov arrived in Moscow and the bourgeoisie organized an official reception for him; but the heads of the Council of State did not dare openly to proclaim a counter-revolutionary dictator ship; the situation in Moscow was too unfavourable for this. Kornilov left for General Headquarters in Mogilev and there continued his preparations for a counter-rev olutionary cowp. His plan was to capture Petrograd with counter-revolutionary troops that were to be drawn to that city and to establish a military dictatorship in the country.

A part in this plot against the revolution was also played by the British and French imperialists. After the fail ure of the June offensive, the ""allied" governments, who up to now had intervened in the internal affairs of Russia through the Provisional Government, now practically ignored that government and est ablished closer direct connections with the counter-revolutionary leaders of the Russian army. The representatives of the Entente promised Kor nilov a loan of 5,000,000,000 rubles as soon as a "strong government" was established in Russia.

On August 19, Kornilov treacherously surrendered Riga, thereby opening to the German troops the road to Petrograd. The surrender of Riga served as a new pretext for launching an offensive against the revolutionary masses.

Kornilov prepared for his counter-revolutionary cm/p with the knowledge and assistance of Kerensky, who ordered the revolutionary Petrograd garrison to be sent to the front in order to make it easier for the counter-revolutionaries to capture the capital. The Menshevik and the Socialist-Revolutionary leaders actively helped Kerensky and Korni lov to prepare for their cowp. When, however, Kornilov demanded that all military and civil power be entirely concentrated in his hands Ke rensky, fearing the anger of the masses, proclaimed Kornilov a traitor to the state and issued an order for his dismissal from the post of Su preme Commander-ia-Chief. Kornilov refused to obey this order and on August 25, 1917, sent the Third Cavalry Corps, under the command of General Krymov, against Petrograd.

The leaders of the compromising parties were terrified by this turn of affairs and turned to the Bolsheviks for assistance, for they were aware that the only force in the country that was capable of organizing the defeat of Kornilov was the Bolshevik Party.

Mobilization of the Forces of the Revolution

The Bolsheviks took the lead in the struggle against Kornilov. While calling for the suppression of the mutinous general, the Bolshevik Party denounced the Provisional Government, which consisted of masked Korni lovites, and the entire policy of which had served to strengthen the counter-revolution .

The proletariat rose to a man to defend revolutionary Petrograd. In the course of three days 25,000 workers enrolled in the Red Guard. The military organization of the Bolshevik Party enlisted the serv ices of 700 army instructors to train the Red Guards. In the munition factories the production of shells was speeded up and armoured cars were fitted out. Within two days the workers at the Putilov Plant, working 16 hours a day, turned out about 200 new pieces of ar tillery. The railwaymen diverted Kornilov's troop trains to sidings, blocked the stations with empty trains, tore up the rails on railway bridges and removed vital parts fi'om locomotives. Thousands of working people dug fortifications at the approaches to Petrograd.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Bolshevik agitators worked among Kor nilov's troops explaining to them the object of Kornilov's mutiny. Enormous influence upon Kornilov's so-called "Savage Division" which consisted of Caucasian highlanders, was exercised by a del egation of highlanders who, on S. M. Kirov's advice, were sent to the division to explain the true objects of the counter-revolution. The soldiers and Cossacks in Kornilov's force began to go over to the side of the workers.

The Kornilov adventure collapsed. General Krymov committed suicide. Kornilov, Denikin and other generals were arrested, but the manner in which these monarchist generals were "held in custody" was very strange. Kornilov and his accomplices were "imprisoned" m the premises of a school known as Bykhov's High School, and the Tekinsky Regiment which Kornilov himself had formed, and which was loyal to him, was appointed to guard them. Actually, Kerensky protected the mutinous generals from popular anger and judgment.

The civil war begun by the generals and the bourgeoisie rad ically changed the relation of forces in the country. As Comrade Stalin wrote at the time: "The Kornilov revolt merely opened the valve for the accumulated revolutionary anger, it merely unbound the hith erto fettered revolution, whipped it up and pushed it forward" (J. Stalin, On the Eoad to October, Moscow, 1925, Russ, ed., p. 206).

The suppression of the Kornilov plot revealed that the position of the bourgeoisie and of their stooges, the Mensheviks. and the Socialist-Revolutionaries, was a hopeless one. Their influence among the masses was completely undermined. The Bolsheviks unmasked the Mensheviks and the Socialist-Revolutionaries whose entire policy had facilitated Kornilov's counter-revolutionary plot.

The suppression of the Kornilov plot also revealed that the Bolshevik Party had become the decisive force of the revolution. The masses saw that the Bolsheviks were the only effective force that was capable of crushing the counter-revolution, and, as a result, the Bolsheviks gained undivided influence in the factories and mills. In the rural districts and at the front the influence of the Bolsheviks, grew as it had never done before. The soldiers demanded that stern retribution be meted out to the counter-revolutionaries. In connection with the contemplated trial of Kornilov, soldiers wrote from the front: "Dear comrades, don't make it a long trial; they betrayed us, they spilled our blood. Make it short — in twenty-four hours, just as they did to us."

Lastly, the suppression of the Kornilov revolt showed that after abandoning the policy of compromise the Soviets were beginning to revive and were becoming a great revolutionary force. A period of the Bolshevization of the Soviets began. On August 31, the Petrograd So viet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, by a majority vote, passed a resolution proposed by the Bolsheviks; on September 5, the Moscow Soviet did the same. The Bolsheviks gained control of the Soviets in the two capitals and also in the decisive industrial centres.

In view of the Bolshevization of the Soviets the Party, in Sep tember, brought forward again the slogan which had been withdrawn after the events of July 3-5, namely, "All power to the Soviets."

As Comrade Stalin has written: "The slogan 'All power to the Soviets!' was again put forward. But now this slogan had a different meaning from that in the first stage. Its content had rad ically changed. Now this slogan signified a complete rupture with im perialism and the passing of power to the Bolsheviks, for the majority of the Soviets were already Bolshevik. Now this slogan signified that the revolution must march directly towards the dictatorship of the proletariat by means of insurrection. More than that, this slogan now signified the organization and shaping of the dictatorship of the pro letariat as a state" (J. Stalin, Problems of Leninism^ Moscow, 1945, p. 115).

The slogan "All power to the Soviets!" was a call for insurrection against the Provisional Government for the purpose of transferring all power to the Soviets controlled by the Bolshevilis.

Terrified by the revolution, the Mensheviks and the Sooialist Bevolutionaries countered the slogan of "All power to the Soviets!" by convening a Democratic Conference with the object of diverting the revolutionary movement into a less dangerous channel. The Demo cratic Conference which was made up of representatives of the com promising parties, Soviets, trade unions, Zemstvos, army organiza tions and co-operative societies, met on September 12, and rejected the coalition with the Cadets. The Sooialist-Bevolutionaries and the Mensheviks thereupon proposed that the Democratic Conference should set up a Provisional Council of the Republic, known as the Pre-par liament, for the purpose, as they said, of controlling the actions of the government. Actually, however, their aim was to create another screen for their coalition with the bourgeoisie. While the Democratic Confer ence was in session, Kerensky obtained the consent of the Cadets Kishkin, Buryshkin, Konovalov and others to enter the government. The Pre-parliament remained a futile exercise in parliamenta rism. The workers derisively called it the "Pre-bathhouse."

The Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party decided to boy cott the Pre-parliament, but Kamenev and his supporters, wishing to divert the Party from its preparations for an insurrection, insisted that the Party should be represented in it. At a meeting of the Bol shevik group in the Democratic Conference, Comrade Stalin strongly opposed Kamenev's proposal and exposed the manoeuvre of the compromisers.

Organization of the Assault

The Maturing Revolutionary Crisis

Comrade Stalin has de scribed the months of September and October 1917 as the period of preparation for the assault upon the rule of the bourgeoisie. "We must regard as the characteristic feature of this period," he wrote, "the rapid maturing of the crisis, the utter consternation reigning in ruling cir cles, the isolation of the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks, and the wholesale crossing over of vacillating elements to the side of the Bolsheviks."

The revolutionary crisis matured while the imperialist war was still in progress. The war aggravated the economic chaos which in the autumn of 1917 assumed catastrophic dimensions.

The capitalists and landlords deliberately sapped the foundations of the economy of the country. In August and September the factory owners in Petrograd alone closed as many as 230 plants employing 61,000 workers. In the Donetz Basin, in the Urals, in Mos cow, all over the country, in fact, the capitalists declared lockouts and threw hundreds of thousands of workers onto the street. The food situation became exceptionally acute. The landlords and kulaks sabo taged the state grain monopoly in spite of the fact that to please them the government had twice raised the "fixed prices" of grain. The grain profiteers, so-called "bagmen," overloaded the aheady dislocated transport system. The workers' bread ration amounted to less than 200 grams per day and hunger was making itself felt more and more. The capitalist Ryabushinsky, one of the organizers of the hunger and ruin, openly stated that the revolution would be crushed only if "the gaunt hand of famine, the impoverishment of the masses, clutches by the throat the false friends of the people — the democratic Soviets and committees."

In his work "The Impending Catastrophe and How to Combat It," written in September 1917, Lenin showed that the hunger and ruin were due to the policy that was pursued by the Provisional Government in obedience to the will of the capitalists. Lenin foimu lated in this work the Bolshevik economic program, indicating the first steps toward Socialism.

"The result of the revolution has been," he wrote, "that the political system of E»ussia has in a few months caught up with that of the advanced countries. But that is not enough. The war is inexorable; it puts the alternative with ruthless severity: either perish, or overtake and outstrip the advanced countries economically as tvelV (V.I. Lenin, Selected Worhs^ Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, p. 117).

In August-September 1917, Lenin finished his book The State and Revolution in which he developed the fundamental propositions of Marx and Engels on the proletarian revolution and the dictator ship of the proletariat and expounded the doctrine of the Soviets as the state form of the dictatorship of the proletariat.

At the end of September 1917, the Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries made another attempt to check the revolution by forming a new coalition government. It included "six capitalist ministers as the nucleus of the 'Cabinet' and ten 'Socialist' ministers to be at their service as the vehicles of their will'^ (J. Stalin, On the Road to October^ Moscow, 1925, Russ, ed., p. 223). Kerensky re mained Prime Minister.

The counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie began secretly to plot another blow against the revolution.

Large counter-revolutionary forces were concentrated around the capital and shock battalions were formed of specially picked men who wore allowed to join only on the recommendation of officers. These battalions consisted of the sons of kulaks and the bourgeoisie. More than ten such battalions were posted on the Northern and Western Fronts, in proximity to Petrograd and Moscow. Cossack and cavalry regiments which were regarded as exceptionally "reliable" were withdrawn from the front to the rear. Polish soldiers serving in the Russian army in Byelorussia were formed in a separate Polish Corps under the command of General Dowbor-Musnicki for the purpose of cutting the Western Front off from Petrograd and of capturing all the railway jtmetions on the line to Petrograd. A simil ar corps was formed in the Ukraine of Czech and Slovak prisoners of war for the purpose of cutting off the Southwestern and Rumanian Fronts from the revolutionary capital if this was found necessary.

The Bolshevization of the Masses

In September and October 1917, the political influence of the Party of Lenin and Stalin grew day after day and its membership steadily in creased. Thus, in April 1917, the membership of the Bolshevik Party was 80,000, in the middle of August it had risen to 250,000, and in the beginning of October to 400,000. Under the leadership of the Bolshe viks a strike movement commenced among the proletariat. One hun dred thousand leather workers in Moscow went on strike and remained out for two and a half months. Over 300,000 workers were involved in the textile strikes in Ivanovo-Voznesensk and Kineshma. Strikes of printers spread over nearly the whole country. The Baku workers waged a long and stubborn struggle for a collective agreement. The very forms of the strike struggle changed. The workers not only downed tools butdrove the capitalists and their managers out of the factories and took over the management of production themselves. The movement for workers' control of industry spread over the whole country and faced the workers with the struggle for power.

All over the country the overwhelming majcrlty of the proletariat followed the lead of the Bolsheviks.

At the same time Bolshevik influence increased in the rural dis tricts and in the army. Delegations of soldiers arrived in Petrograd and called upon the Petrograd Soviet immediately to launch a struggle for peace. The only organization which the war-weary masses of soldiers trusted and now followed was the Bolshevik Party. Soldiers at the front wrote the following letter to a Bolshevik army newspaper: "Comrades, workers and soldiers! Keep your weapons. Let's go to Petrograd and flght the bourgeoisie and the coalition government. The soldiers have lost all patience with this miserable life in the trenches."

In regiments and divisions the men drove out the officers, elected new army committees and in a number of localities even killed the more detested of their officers. In their letters home the soldiers advised their fellow villagers to drive out the landlords and to get Peasant Committees to take over the land.

In the rural districts the relatively peaceful forms of fighting the landlords, such as refusal to pay rent and seizing meadows and pastures, we-'e superseded by the seizure of the landlords' land. Casting ofl the influence of the Socialist-Revolutionaries, the local Soviets of Peasants' Deputies adopted decisions to transfer all the land and all the landlords' farm property to the peasants. The poorest stratum of the peasants seized monastery and church lands. The peasant move ment grew into a peasant insurrection.

The Provisional Government sent punitive expeditions to the coun tryside to suppress the peasant revolts. From March to June there were 17 cases of the armed suppression of peasant revolts; in July and August there were 39, "and in September and October the number grew to 105.

All over Russia members of Land Committees were arrested en masse and put on trial for seizing landlords' land. This only served to excite the masses of the peasantry still more.

Referring to these incidents Lenin wrote: "It is obvious that if in a peasant country, after seven months of a democratic republic, matters have come to the pass of a peasant revolt, it is irrefutable proof that the revolution is suffering nation-wide collapse, that it is passing through a crisis of unprecedented severity, and that the forces of counter-revolu tion have gone the full (V. I, Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. VI,

Moscow, 1935, p. 227).

The peasantry began to cast off the influence of the Socialist-Revolutionary party which, had become, to use Lenin's words party hostile to the 'people, hostile to the peasants, and counter-revolutionary

In alliance with the poorest stratum of the peasantry, and with the bulk of the peasantry supporting the Bolshevik slogans, the proletariat inarched towards the proletarian revolution.

The maturing of the proletarian revolution caused wavering and confusion in the ranks of the petty-bourgeois parties. After the July events a "Left" wing calling itself '^Left" Socialist-Revolutionaries, sprang up in the Socialist-Revolutionary Party. A group of "Lefts" who called themselves Internationalists also sprang up among the Men sheviks. In the endeavour to retain the masses who were rapidly desert ing them, the Socialist-Revolutionaries and the Mensheviks came for ward with the proposal to establish a republic in Russia. Hitherto, the question of the form of government, like all other questions arising out of the revolution, had been put ofiE imtil the convocation of a Con stituent Assembly.

The confusion that reigned in the ranks of the Menshevik and the So eialist-Revolutionary parties indicated that these compromising parties — the main prop of the bourgeoisie — were becoming isolated from the masses, and this brought nearer the victory of the socialist revolution.

The oppressed nationalities in Russia also rose up to fight the impe rialist bourgeoisie; under the leadership of the Bolsheviks the movement for national liberation developed into a struggle for power. This was exceptionally evident in Central Asia. In September, a spontaneous mass revolt of the workers broke out in Tashkent, and for two weeks pow er was in the hands of the Soviet. The Provisional Government sent a punitive expedition to Tashkent under the command of General Korov nichenko, who dealt ruthlessly with the working population of the city.

In the Ukraine the Bolsheviks won over the masses and made vigor ous preparations for an armed insurrection. In Kharkov, Kiev and Ekaterinoslav, Red Guard units were formed.

In Latvia, the Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies were Bolshevik. In Estonia the Bolsheviks had a majority at the Congress of Soviets that was convened in October. In Finland a Regional Congress of Soviets which was held in the beginning of September adopted resolutions submitted by Bolsheviks.

Not only Russia, but all the countries ofWestem Europe that were suffering from the protracted war were passing through a revolutionary orisis.

In France workers went on strike in protest against the im perialist war. The anti-war movement spread to the army and in some regiments Councils of Soldiers* Deputies were formed. Soldiers even talked about marching on Paris to settle accoimts with the capitalists and the government.

In Germany hunger riots were occurring all over the country. In the autumn, the crews of four battleships that were stationed at the naval fortress of Wilhelmshaven rose in armed revolt. The revolutionary pro letarian organization known as the Spartacus Union conducted exten sive activity among the masses.

Analyzing the events in Russia and abroad in an article he wrote at the end of September 1917, entitled "The Crisis Has Matured," Lenin said: "The end of September undoubtedly marked a definite turning point in the history of the Russian revolution and, to all appear ances, of the world revolution also" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Vol. VI, Moscow, 1935, p. 224).

The Victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution

The October Armed Insurrection

Preparations for the Insurrection

In September Lenin lived in Helsingfors, Finland, hiding from the sleuths of the Provisional Gov ernment. From here he closely watched the development of the revo lution and sent directives to the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party.

Between September 12 and 14, Lenin sent two remarkable letters to the Central Committee, one entitled "The Bolsheviks Must Assume Power" and the other entitled "Marxism and Insurrection." In the first-mentioned letter he wrote that, having won the majority in the Soviets of the two capitals, the Bolsheviks can and must take state pow er into their hands. "The point is," he wrote, "to make the task clear to the Party. Armed insurrection in Petrograd and Moscow (with their regions), the conquest of power and the overthrow of the government must be placed on the order of the day" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works Vol. VI, Moscow, 1935, p. 216),

In the second letter Lenin urged that insurrection must be treated as an art and that the conditions necessary for a successful outcome of the iusurrection must be seriously studied. He outlined a general plan for the organization of the insurrection in which he insisted that the decisive forces must be concentrated at the decisive points, and that the revolutionary forces should without fail take the offensive, for, he said, defence means the death of armed insurrection.

On September 15, Lenin's letters were discussed at a meeting of the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party. The only one to oppose Lenin's directives to prepare for insurrection was the traitor Kamenev. On Comi\ de Stalin's proposal, the Central Committee decided to send copies of the letters to the largest Party organi zations. During the latter part of September the Bolshevik Party developed extensive activities in preparation for the armed insurrec tion, and on October 7, Lenin secretly arrived in Petrograd for the purpose of directing it. Stalin informed him of the progress that was being made in the preparations.

On October 10 (23), Lenin attended a meeting of the Central Com mittee, for the first time since the July events, and delivered a report on the preparations for the insurrection in which he proposed that anj' suitable occasion be utilized for the purpose of launching it. He empha sized that the entire external and internal situation of the country, including the war situation, had prepared the ground for a political insurrection: the Provisional Government had decided to send the revolutionary garrison out of Petrograd and to surrender the capital to the Germans, and the Pussian bourgeoisie he^d opened negotiations for the conclusion of a separate peace with German imperialism in order to crush the Pussian revolution. He said it was time to fix the date for the insurrection and to make the military-technical prepa rations for it.

Stalin, Sverdlov, Dzerzhinsky and the other members of the Cen tral Committee supported Lenin's proposals. Those blacklegs of the revolution, Zinoviev and Kamenev, were the only ones to oppose him.

The Central Committee condemned these defenders of capitalism and passed a resolution, moved by Lenin, calling for the immediate organization of armed insurrection and the subordination of all the Party's activities to this task. The resolution read: "Considering therefore that an armed uprising is inevitable, and that the time for it is fully ripe, the Central Committee instructs all Party organiza tions to be guided accordingly, and to discuss and decide all practical questions (the Congress of Soviets of the Northern Pegion, the with drawal of troops from Petrograd, the action of our people in Moscow and Minsk, etc.) from this point of view" (V. I. Lenin, Selected Works, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, p. 135).

After strongly rebuffing the capitulators, the Central Committee continued with its preparations for the armed insurrection. A Pevo~ lutionary Military Committee of the Petrograd Soviet was set up which served as a legal headquarters for the insurrection. The main force of the insurrection was to be the Petrograd Red Guard, which in October numbered 12,000 armed men. It was decided to call the sailors of the Baltic Fleet from Helsingfors to assist the revolution ary capital. Committees of Three were set up in every district of Petrograd to guide the insurrection in the given district. Meanwhile, congresses of Soviets were held in most of the regions throughout the country, and these passed resolutions calling for the transfer of all power to the Soviets, On October 16 (29), on Lenin's recommendation, a second meeting of the Central Committee of the Party was held to which representatives of the Petrograd Bolsheviks were invited in order that a larger circle of Party members could be informed of the plan for the insurrection. This meeting reaffirmed the decision to launch the armed insurrection. Kamenev and Zinoviev again demanded that the insurrection be postponed. Comrade Stalin spoke and denounced these traitors. He said: "Objectively, what Kamenev and Zinoviev propose amounts to giving the counter-revolution the opportunity to organize."

That same day a Party Centre was set up, headed by Comrade Stalin, for the purpose of exercising practical leadership of the insurrection.

After sustaining defeat at the meeting of the Central Committee, Zinoviev and Kamenev resorted to an act of unprecedented treachery. They sent a statement to the Menshevik newspaper Novaya Zhizn, which published it in its issue of October 18, declaring that they disagreed with the decision of the Central Committee of the Bol shevik Party to launch an insurrection. This was a downright betrayal. Concerning this action Lenin wrote: "Kamenev and Zinoviev have betrayed to Rodzyanko and Kerensky^ the decision of the Central Committee of their Party on armed insurrection and the fact that preparations for armed insurrection and the choice of the date for the aimed insurrection were being concealed from the enemy" (Lenin and Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 605). Following in the footsteps of Kamenev and Zinoviev, Trotsky too di vulged the date of the insurrection by stating at a meeting of the Petrograd Soviet that the Second Congress of Soviets that was to be held on October 25 must take over power, Kerensky took advantage of this betrayal to take a series of military measures for the purpose of forestalling the insurrection.

The Bolsheviks intensified their activities in preparing for the armed insurrection. In conformity with the plan drawn up by Comrade Stalin, the workers of the Urals were to come to the aid of Petrograd, those of Ivanovo-Voznesensk were to go to the aid of Moscow, and in Byelorussia the soldiers at the front, in the event of being sent against Petrograd, were to be disarmed. In preparing for the insurrection Com rade Stalin was assisted by Y. M. Sverdlov, F. E. Dzerzhinsky, V. M, Molotov, G. K. Orjonikidze, M. I. Kalinin, A. A. Andreyev and other comrades.

In the provinces preparations for the armed insurrection were made under the direction of those tried and trusted pupils of Lenin,

K. E. Voroshilov in the Donetz Basin, Artyom (Sergeyev) in Kharkov, V. V. Kuibyshev in the Volga Region, A. A. Zhdanov in the Urals,

L. M. Kaganovich in the Polesie Region, M. V. Frunze in Ivanovo-Voznesensk and S. M. Kirov in the North Caucasus. The Bolsheviks intensified their activities in the Baltic Fleet and on the Northern Front, the nearest front to the capital.

In the factories feverish activities were conducted in arming and drilling the workers. Units of the Bed Guard were quickly formed. The workers of the Sestroretsk Small -Arms Factory delivered the weapons they made to the headquarters of the Bed Guard. The workers of the Schlusselburg Gun Powder Works sent by way of the Neva a bargeload of grenades to the headquarters of the Bed Guard in Petro grad. At the Putilov Works there was a Bed Guard miit of 1,500 men, ready for action.

Lenin called a conference of the leaders of the military organization and discussed with them what ships and troops should be called in from Kronstadt and Helsingfors. The Bevolutionary Military Committee sent its Commissars to all the army units for the purpose of preparing the soldiers for the insurrection.

The Insurrection in Petrograd

Forewarned by the traitors Kamenev, Zinoviev and Trotsky, the Provisional Government believed that the proletarian insurrection would commence on October 25, 1917, the day the Second Congress of Soviets was to open, and took measures to suppress it on that date.

The headquarters of the counter-revolution hastily drew up a plan to capture the Smohiy Institute, where the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party had its headquarters. Military forces were drawn to the capital and the cadet schools were prepared for action. The Provisional Government ordered the revolutionary cruiser Aurora, which was under going repairs on the Neva, to put out to sea immediately, as it was afraid to allow the ship to remain in Petrograd. The bridges that connected the working-class districts with the centre of Petrograd were ordered to be raised.

Early in the morning of October 24 (November 6), a detachment of cadets arrived in motor trucks at the premises of Eabochi Put (the temporary title of Pravda) with the object of confiscating the latest issue of that newspaper. The workers in the printing plant managed to inform Comrade Stal^ of this raid; soon a detachment of revolutionary sol diers arrived on an armoured car and the cadets beat a hasty retreat. The BabocJhi Put came out with an appeal for the overthrow of the Pro visional Government. In a leading article in that issue entitled "What Do We Need?" Comrade Stalin wrote: "The time has come when further delay will be fatal for the whole cause of the revolution. The present government of landlords and capitalists must be replaced by a new gov ernment of workers and peasants. . . (Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 611.)

Towards the evening of October 24 (November 6), Lenin, on learning of the attack launched by the counter-revolution, sent the Central Committes of the Bolshevik Party his last letter demanding that the insurrection should be started forthwith, "We must at all costs, this very eve ning, this very night, arrest the government, first disarming the cadets (de feating them if they resist), and so forth," he wrote. "Under no circum stances must power be left in the hands of Kerensky and Co, until the 25th — ^not under any circumstances; the matter must be decided with out fail this very evening, or this very night" (V. I, Lenia, Selected ITor&s, Two-Vol. ed., Vol. II, Moscow, 1947, p. 159).

To prevent Kerensky from taking action on the 25th, the day the Congress of Soviets was to open, the Central Committee of the Bolshe vik Party instructed the Revolutionary Military Committee to start the insurrection at once.

In the morning of October 24 (November 6), the Revolutionary Military Committee ordered the military units to prepare for action; it also ordered that a close watch be kept on the army units that were approaching the capital, and that the guard at bridges and railway sta tions be reinforced. It decided to call in the assistance of the warships and sailors of the Baltic Fleet and with this object sent the Central Committee of the Soviets of the Baltic Fleet in Helsingfors a prear ranged telegram containing the words: "Send regulations"; this meant "the insurrection has commenced, dispatch ships and men."

That evening Lenin, disguised as a workingman, with his face tied up and wearing a wig, and accompanied by a comrade sent from the Central Committee, arrived in the Smolny. Men from the Lithuanian Regiment and detachments of Red Guards were called to the Smolny, where they took up their posts, supported by machine guns, at all the entrances and exits. Detachment after detach ment of Red Guards kept arriving. Earlier in the day the Red Guards were armed with weapons obtained from the arsenal in the Fortress of Peter and Paul which had gone over to the Bolsheviks.

In conformity with the prearranged plan, detachments of workers proceeded to occupy state buildings; after midnight t-he Central Telephone Exchange, the State Bank, the General Post Office, the railway stations and the principal government offices were occupied.

The Revolutionary Military Committee ordered the cruiser Aurora to move up from the Franoo-Russian Shipyards on the Neva to the Winter Palace. The commander of the Aurora refused to obey the order on the plea that the Neva was too shallow, whereupon the sailors took soundings, found that the fairway was suffi ciently deep, arrested the commander and steered the ship in the ap pointed direction. The Aurora's guns were turned on the last refuge of the bourgeois government — ^the Winter Palace.

The insurrection proceeded in an organized manner a-ocording to plan. By 9 a. m. on October 25 (November 7), seven companies of the Kexholm Regiment had occupied the approaches to the Winter Palace, where the Provisional Government was assembled. By this time it was evident that the government was completely isolated; not a single military unit supported it. On the morning of the 25th Kerensky fled from the insurgent capital in a motor car flying the United States flag.

At 10 am. on October 25 (November 7), the Revolutionary Mili tary Committee issued a manifesto proclaiming the overthrow of the Provisional Government, The manifesto, which had been drawn up by Lenin, stated;

"The Provisional Government has been overthrown. The power of state has passed into the hands of the organ of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers* and Soldiers* Deputies, the Revolutionary Military Commit tee, which stands at the head of the Petrograd proletariat and garrison.

"The cause for which the people have fought — the immediate proposal of a democratic peace, the abolition of landed proprietorship, workers* control over production and the creation of a Soviet govern . ment — is assured.

"Long live the revolution of the workers, soldiers and peasants!" {Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 613.)

On October 25, a special meeting of the Petrograd Soviet was held. The appearance of Lenin, the leader of the revolu tion, was greeted with round after round of applause and cheers. Addressing the meeting, Lenin said: "Comrades, the workers* and peasants' revolution, about the necessity of which the Bolsheviks have always spoken, has taken place. . . . From now on, a new phase in the history of Russia begins, and this revolution, the third Russian revolution, should in the end lead to the victory of Socialism" {Lenin and Stalin, 1917, Selected Writings and Speeches, Moscow, 1938, p. 614).

The Petrograd Soviet adopted a resolution welcoming the pro letarian revolution and expressing the conviction that the Soviet government which the revolution created would march firmly along the road to Socialism.

By this time the insurgents controlled the whole city except the Winter Palace. Lenin ordered the Winter Palace to be captured before the opening of the Congress of Soviets. The Provisional Government was called upon to smrender forthwith, but it refused, whereupon, at 9 p. m., the assault on the Winter Palace was launched. After the prearranged signal, the firing of a gun from the Fortress of Peter and Paul and shots from the six-inch guns of the Aurora, the Red Guards, sailors and soldiers, led by the Bolsheviks, stormed the Winter Palace.

Almost the entire Petrograd Young Socialist Workers' League (the future Young Communist League) had joined the ranks of the Red Guard, and the young proletarians constituted more than one third of its strength.

The broad masses of the workers and soldiers were imbued with tremendous enthusiasm and confidence in victory. The Provisional Government that was besieged in the Winter Palace waited in vain for the assistance that had been promised from the front.

Contents