Socialism in Europe and The Russian Revolution
The Age of Social Change
Liberals:
- Liberals argued for a representative, elected parliamentary government, subject to laws interpreted by a well-trained judiciary that was independent of rulers and officials.
Radicals:
- The radicals wanted a nation in which government was based on the majority of a country’s population.
Conservatives:
- They believed that the past had to be respected and change had to be brought about through a slow process.
Industrial Society and Social Change:
- Some nationalists, liberals and radicals wanted revolutions to put an end to the kind of governments established in Europe in 1815.
- In France, Italy, Germany and Russia, became revolutionaries and worked to overthrow existing monarchs.
The Coming of Socialism to Europe:
- Robert Owen sought to build a cooperative community called New Harmony in Indiana.
- In France, Louis Blanc wanted the government to encourage cooperatives and replace capitalist enterprises.
- Karl Marx argued that industrial society was ‘capitalist’.
Support for Socialism:
- Workers in England and Germany began forming associations to fight for better living and working conditions.
- In Germany, these associations worked closely with the Social Democratic Party and helped it win parliamentary seats.
- By 1905, socialists and trade unionists formed a Labour Party in Britain and a Socialist Party in France.
The Russian Revolution
- The fall of monarchy in February 1917 and the events of October are normally called the Russian Revolution.
The Russian Empire in 1914:
- The Russian empire included Moscow, current-day Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, parts of Poland, Ukraine and Belarus.
- It stretched to the Pacific and comprised today’s Central Asian states, as well as Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Economy and Society:
- There was a shift from farming to industries.
- Worker’s society was divided.
- Cultivators were unhappy.
Socialism in Russia:
- The Socialist Revolutionary Party was formed in 1900 demanding peasants’ rights.
A Turbulent Time: The 1905 Revolution
- Liberals worked with peasants and workers during the revolution of 1905 to demand a constitution.
- They were supported by nationalists and jadidists who wanted modernised Islam to lead their societies.
The First World War and the Russian Empire
- In 1914, the First World War broke out between Germany, Austria and Turkey and France, Britain and Russia.
- Russian armies lost badly in Germany and Austria between 1914 and 1916.
The February Revolution in Petrograd
- In February 1917, food shortages were deeply felt in the workers’ quarters as the winter was very cold.
- Petrograd had led the February Revolution that brought down the monarchy in February 1917.
After February
- Army officials, landowners and industrialists as well as the liberals and the socialists worked towards an elected government.
- Lenin declared the war to be brought to a close, land be transferred to the peasants, and banks be nationalised.
The Revolution of October 1917
- On 16 October 1917, Lenin persuaded the Petrograd Soviet and the Bolshevik Party to agree to a socialist seizure of power.
- The uprising began on 24th October.
What Changed after October?
- In cities, Bolsheviks enforced the partition of large houses according to family requirements.
- The Bolshevik Party was renamed the Russian Communist Party.
- In the November 1917 elections to the Constituent Assembly, the Bolsheviks failed to gain majority support.
- In January 1918, the Assembly rejected Bolshevik measures and Lenin dismissed the Assembly.
- In March 1918, the Bolsheviks made peace with Germany at Brest Litovsk despite opposition by their political allies.
The Civil War
- By January 1920, the Bolsheviks controlled most of the former Russian empire.
- Bolsheviks gave most of the non-Russian nationalities political autonomy in the USSR.
Making a Socialist Society
- During the civil war, the Bolsheviks kept industries and banks nationalised.
- Officials assessed how the economy could work and set targets for a five-year period and made the Five Year Plans.
- Industrial production increased between 1929 and 1933 by 100 per cent.
Stalinism and Collectivisation
- Stalin, who headed the party after the death of Lenin, introduced firm emergency measures.
- Although Stalin’s government allowed some independent cultivation, the cultivator’s were treated unsympathetically.
- Owing to the bad harvests of 1930 – 1933, Soviet faced its most devastating famines in history where over 4 million died.
The Global Influence of the Russian Revolution and the USSR
- By the time the Second World War broke out, the USSR had given socialism a global face and world stature.
- By the 1950s it was realised that the style of government in the USSR was not in keeping with the ideals of the Russian Revolution.
- By the end of the twentieth century, the international reputation of the USSR as a socialist country had declined.