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  • In 1894, Nicholas II became ruler of a Russian empire that stretched from the Baltic to the

  • Pacific, inhabited by 126 million people, from 194 ethnic groups.

  • It was a country in which workers and peasants lived in poverty and hardship - while Russia's

  • elite - its imperial family and aristocracy - lived lives of gilded luxury.

  • There was a long history of struggle in Russia against the injustices of the system.

  • And in 1905, a revolution forced the Tsar to allow the creation of a state duma, or

  • national assembly.

  • But its power was limited, and the compromise pleased neither the Tsar nor the reformers.

  • In 1914, this divided empire was plunged into fresh crisis... by world war.

  • World War One was a disaster for Tsarist Russia.

  • At the front, the country suffered a series of devastating defeats, while at home there

  • were food shortages and economic chaos.

  • The Tsar was held responsible for the crisisafter all, he was now the army's commander-in-chief,

  • and he was standing in the way of government reform.

  • His German-born wife, Empress Alexandra, was even thought to be supporting Germany; while

  • the entire family was said to have fallen under the spell of a Siberian mystic and faith

  • healer, Grigory Rasputin.

  • In December 1916, Rasputin was murdered by Russian aristocrats, possibly with the help

  • of British secret agents - both groups determined to end his influence over the Tsar.

  • But in the eyes of many, the damage had already been done.

  • On 23rd February 1917, thousands of women took to the streets of the Russian capital,

  • Petrograd, to mark International Women's Day and protest over bread shortages.

  • The next day they were joined on the streets by workers and students, carrying placards

  • that read 'Down with the Tsar!'

  • Troops, ordered to put down the disorder, mutinied, and joined the protesters instead.

  • Tsarist officials were arrested, prisons and police stations were attacked, emblems of

  • Tsarist rule smashed and burned.

  • The government had lost control of the capital.

  • The Tsar was told by his ministers that order could only be restored - and Russia saved

  • from military defeat - if he gave up power.

  • So on 2nd March, Nicholas agreed to abdicate.

  • In just 10 days, 300 years of Romanov rule had come to an end.

  • The February Revolution had been remarkably swift and bloodless, and hopes were now high

  • for the creation of a more democratic, more just Russian state.

  • Members of the State Duma, the national assembly, had formed a Provisional Government, which

  • was to hold power until a Constituent Assembly was elected, to give Russia a new constitution.

  • But in reality, the Provisional Government shared power with the Petrograd Soviet, a

  • council elected by workers and soldiers, that controlled the capital's troops, transport

  • and communications.

  • The Petrograd Soviet, dominated by the Socialist Revolutionary Party and the Marxist Menshevik

  • Party, was much more radical than the Provisional Government... yet it supported the Government's

  • decision to continue the war, and honour the commitments that Russia had made to the Allies.

  • It was a fateful decision, that ultimately played into the hands of one of the smaller

  • parties.... the Bolsheviks.

  • Their leader, Vladimir Lenin, recently returned from 16 years in exile, bitterly opposed the

  • 'imperialist war'.

  • He also demanded the immediate redistribution of land from rich landowners to peasants;

  • and the transfer of power from the 'bourgeois' Provisional Government to the people's Soviets,

  • or councils, that were springing up across Russia.

  • The Bolshevik programme was summed up in a simple slogan, 'Bread, Peace and Land'.

  • And as Russia's economic and military crisis deepened, its appeal to the masses grew and

  • grew.

  • In June, a new Russian military offensive ended in disaster, with 400,000 Russian casualties,

  • massive desertions, and the collapse of army morale and discipline.

  • In July, soldiers and sailors in Petrograd mutinied.

  • They were joined in the streets by workers, with Bolshevik support.

  • But troops loyal to the Provisional Government opened fire on the protestors, and dispersed

  • the crowds.

  • A police crackdown followed, leading to the arrest of several Bolshevik leaders, including

  • Leon Trotsky, while Lenin, with the help of Josef Stalin, fled to Finland, travelling

  • with forged papers under the name of Konstantin Ivanov...

  • A socialist, and stirring orator, named Alexander Kerensky, became Russia's new Prime Minister,

  • and was hailed as the man who would save Russia from anarchy.

  • The army's commander-in-chief, General Kornilov, believed Russia's war effort was being undermined

  • by chaos at home, and deliberately sabotaged by men like Lenin, whom he declared a German

  • spy.

  • So in August, he ordered his men to march on Petrograd, to 'restore order'.

  • Bolsheviks played a leading role in the city's defence against this attempted military coup.

  • Their most brilliant organiser, Leon Trotsky, was released from prison, and sent armed Bolshevik

  • militias, the 'Red Guards', to defend key points in the city.

  • Strikes by railway workers, many of them Bolshevik supporters, prevented Kornilov from moving

  • his men by rail, and his soldiers began to switch sides, or simply go home.

  • The Kornilov Affair cast the Bolsheviks as saviours of the revolution.

  • And by the end of September, they'd gained a majority in the Petrograd Soviet.

  • In October, Lenin decided the time had come.

  • He secretly returned from Finland to Petrograd, and began preparing to seize power.

  • On 25th October, the Bolsheviks made their move: Red Guards and loyal troops seized key

  • points around the capital, and that night they stormed the Provisional Government's

  • headquarters at the Winter Palacean event later immortalised by Bolshevik propaganda,

  • and the great Soviet filmmaker, Sergei Eisenstein.

  • Kerensky fled the city at the last moment, narrowly avoiding capture, and the next day,

  • at the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, Lenin announced the overthrow of the Provisional

  • Government.

  • The following months saw the Bolsheviks consolidate their hold on power, while fighting a brutal

  • civil war against counter-revolutionary, or 'White Russian', forces, who had foreign support.

  • Some Whites hoped to put Tsar Nicholas back on the throne.

  • After his abdication, Nicholas and his family had been held under guard at Tsarskoye Selo,

  • outside Petrograd, where they occupied themselves with gardening and other diversions.

  • In summer 1917 the family was sent to Tobolsk, in Siberia, where they lived under house arrest

  • in the Governor's Mansion.

  • The following spring, the Bolsheviks had the family moved to Yekaterinburg.

  • In July 1918, as White forces approached the city, Bolshevik soldiers gathered the whole

  • family in a cellarthe Tsar, his wife, their son Alexei, their 4 daughters, Olga,

  • Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia, as well as 4 servants - and executed them all.

  • Russia's civil war was one of the 20th century's most devastating events.

  • An estimated 2 million soldiers lost their lives, while a typhus epidemic and famine

  • claimed the lives of a further 9 million civilians.

  • By the end of 1921, the Bolsheviks had emerged victorious, and under Lenin's determined and

  • uncompromising leadership, set about building a new socialist order.

  • The Soviet Union, created in 1922, emerged as a world superpower following the defeat

  • of Nazi Germany in World War Two.

  • But it would always remain a single party state, where all opposition or dissent was

  • ruthlessly suppressed.

  • Those brief hopes for Russian democracy, that flowered amid the euphoria of the February

  • Revolution, were extinguished by the Bolshevik October Revolution, and put beyond reach for

  • decades to come.

  • In 1894, Nicholas II became ruler of a Russian empire that stretched from the Baltic to the

  • Pacific, inhabited by 126 million people, from 194 ethnic groups.

  • It was a country in which workers and peasants lived in poverty and hardship - while Russia's

  • elite - its imperial family and aristocracy - lived lives of gilded luxury.

  • There was a long history of struggle in Russia against the injustices of the system.

  • And in 1905, a revolution forced the Tsar to allow the creation of a state duma, or

  • national assembly.

  • But its power was limited, and the compromise pleased neither the Tsar nor the reformers.

  • In 1914, this divided empire was plunged into fresh crisis... by world war.

  • World War One was a disaster for Tsarist Russia.

  • At the front, the country suffered a series of devastating defeats, while at home there

  • were food shortages and economic chaos.

  • The Tsar was held responsible for the crisisafter all, he was now the army's commander-in-chief,

  • and he was standing in the way of government reform. His German-born wife, Empress Alexandra,

  • was even thought to be supporting Germany; while the entire family was said to have fallen

  • under the spell of a Siberian mystic and faith healer, Grigory Rasputin.

  • In December 1916, Rasputin was murdered by Russian aristocrats, possibly with the help

  • of British secret agents - both groups determined to end his influence over the Tsar. But in

  • the eyes of many, the damage had already been done.

  • On 23rd February 1917, thousands of women took to the streets of the Russian capital,

  • Petrograd, to mark International Women's Day and protest over bread shortages.

  • The next day they were joined on the streets by workers and students, carrying placards

  • that read 'Down with the Tsar!'

  • Troops, ordered to put down the disorder, mutinied, and joined the protesters instead.

  • Tsarist officials were arrested, prisons and police stations were attacked, emblems of

  • Tsarist rule smashed and burned.

  • The government had lost control of the capital.

  • The Tsar was told by his ministers that order could only be restored - and Russia saved

  • from military defeat - if he gave up power.

  • So on 2nd March, Nicholas agreed to abdicate.

  • In just 10 days, 300 years of Romanov rule had come to an end.

  • The February Revolution had been remarkably swift and bloodless, and hopes were now high

  • for the creation of a more democratic, more just Russian state.

  • Members of the State Duma, the national assembly, had formed a Provisional Government, which

  • was to hold power until a Constituent Assembly was elected, to give Russia a new constitution.

  • But in reality, the Provisional Government shared power with the Petrograd Soviet, a

  • council elected by workers and soldiers, that controlled the capital's troops, transport

  • and communications.

  • The Petrograd Soviet, dominated by the Socialist Revolutionary Party and the Marxist Menshevik

  • Party, was much more radical than the Provisional Government... yet it supported the Government's

  • decision to continue the war, and honour the commitments that Russia had made to the Allies.

  • It was a fateful decision, that ultimately played into the hands of one of the smaller

  • parties.... the Bolsheviks.

  • Their leader, Vladimir Lenin, recently returned from 16 years in exile, bitterly opposed the

  • 'imperialist war'.

  • He also demanded the immediate redistribution of land from rich landowners to peasants;

  • and the transfer of power from the 'bourgeois' Provisional Government to the people's Soviets,

  • or councils, that were springing up across Russia.

  • The Bolshevik programme was summed up in a simple slogan, 'Bread, Peace and Land'.

  • And as Russia's economic and military crisis deepened, its appeal to the masses grew and

  • grew.

  • In June, a new Russian military offensive ended in disaster, with 400,000 Russian casualties,

  • massive desertions, and the collapse of army morale and discipline.

  • In July, soldiers and sailors in Petrograd mutinied. They were joined in the streets

  • by workers, with Bolshevik support. But troops loyal to the Provisional Government opened

  • fire on the protestors, and dispersed the crowds.

  • A police crackdown followed, leading to the arrest of several Bolshevik leaders, including

  • Leon Trotsky, while Lenin, with the help of Josef Stalin, fled to Finland, travelling

  • with forged papers under the name of Konstantin Ivanov...

  • A socialist, and stirring orator, named Alexander Kerensky, became Russia's new Prime Minister,

  • and was hailed as the man who would save Russia from anarchy.

  • The army's commander-in-chief, General Kornilov, believed Russia's war effort was being undermined

  • by chaos at home, and deliberately sabotaged by men like Lenin, whom he declared a German

  • spy.

  • So in August, he ordered his men to march on Petrograd, to 'restore order'.

  • Bolsheviks played a leading role in the city's defence against this attempted military coup.

  • Their most brilliant organiser, Leon Trotsky, was released from prison, and sent armed Bolshevik

  • militias, the 'Red Guards', to defend key points in the city.

  • Strikes by railway workers, many of them Bolshevik supporters, prevented Kornilov from moving

  • his men by rail, and his soldiers began to switch sides, or simply go home.

  • The Kornilov Affair cast the Bolsheviks as saviours of the revolution.

  • And by the end of September, they'd gained a majority in the Petrograd Soviet.

  • In October, Lenin decided the time had come. He secretly returned from Finland to Petrograd,

  • and began preparing to seize power.

  • On 25th October, the Bolsheviks made their move: Red Guards and loyal troops seized key

  • points around the capital, and that night they stormed the Provisional Government's

  • headquarters at the Winter Palacean event later immortalised by Bolshevik propaganda,

  • and the great Soviet filmmaker, Sergei Eisenstein.

  • Kerensky fled the city at the last moment, narrowly avoiding capture, and the next day,

  • at the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, Lenin announced the overthrow of the Provisional

  • Government.

  • Lenin: “If we are not ready to shoot a saboteur and a White Guard, what sort of Revolution

  • is that? Nothing but talk and a bowl of mush.”

  • The following months saw the Bolsheviks consolidate their hold on power, while fighting a brutal

  • civil war against counter-revolutionary, or 'White Russian', forces, who had foreign support.

  • Some Whites hoped to put Tsar Nicholas back on the throne.

  • After his abdication, Nicholas and his family had been held under guard at Tsarkoye Selo,

  • outside Petrograd, where they occupied themselves with gardening and other diversions.

  • In summer 1917 the family was sent to Tobolsk, in Siberia, where they lived under house arrest

  • in the Governor's Mansion.

  • The following spring, the Bolsheviks had the family moved to Yekaterinburg.

  • In July 1918, as White forces approached the city, Bolshevik soldiers gathered the whole

  • family in a cellarthe Tsar, his wife, their son Alexei, their 4 daughters, Olga,

  • Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia, as well as 4 servants - and executed them all.

  • Russia's civil war was one of the 20th century's most devastating events. An estimated 2 million

  • soldiers lost their lives, while a typhus epidemic and famine claimed the lives of a

  • further 9 million civilians.

  • By the end of 1921, the Bolsheviks had emerged victorious, and under Lenin's determined and

  • uncompromising leadership, set about building a new socialist order.

  • The Soviet Union, created in 1922, emerged as a world superpower following the defeat

  • of Nazi Germany in World War Two.

  • But it would always remain a single party state, where all opposition or dissent was

  • ruthlessly suppressed.

  • Those brief hopes for Russian democracy, that flowered amid the euphoria of the February

  • Revolution, were extinguished by the Bolshevik October Revolution, and put beyond reach for

  • decades to come.

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In 1894, Nicholas II became ruler of a Russian empire that stretched from the Baltic to the

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1917年俄國革命 (The Russian Revolution 1917)

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    蔡文彬 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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