Causes of Russian Revoltuion

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Date Submitted: 04/09/2015 05:13 AM

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Underlay everything (see weaknesses 1–7)

2 World War I

The First World War was the key factor.

The army was badly led and poorly equipped. Russian defeats at Tannenberg and Masurian Lakes – the Russians lost 200,000 men – lost the government the support of the army.

The war took 15 million men from the farms and trains had to be used for the war (so they could not bring food to the cities) so there were food shortages and food prices rose, all of which created anger and unrest in Petrograd

The winter of 1916–17 was severe. Food shortages got worse – there was a famine in the cities.

3 Tsar’s Mistakes

The Tsar took personal command of the army – which did not help the war effort and meant he was blamed for the defeats.

He left the Tsarina in charge. She was incompetent (she let Rasputin run the government), and (because she was a German) rumours circulated that she was trying to help Germany to win.

By February 1917 the government was in chaos.

Finally, in the crisis, Nicholas went to pieces and failed to do anything (see Source A).

4 Army abandoned the Tsar

On 8 March 1917, there were riots in Petrograd about the food shortages and the war.

On 12 March the Army abandoned the Tsar – the soldiers mutinied and refused to put down the riots. The government lost control of the country.

5 Duma abandoned the Tsar

On 13 March members of the Duma went to Nicholas to tell him to abdicate.

The strengths of the Tsar's government were those usually found in an autocratic regime - Church, army, a repressive secret police and the unthinking love of the peasantry.

The weaknesses of the government lay in its incompetence, in the huge size and economic poverty of Russia, and in the pressures coming from a modernising world - i.e., from a middle class which had already in 1905 forced the Tsar to set up a parliament (the Duma), and from extreme political groups which wanted even more radical changes.

1. The Peasants loved the Tsar...