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Study guide

Road to Revolution

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An in-depth (15 page) guide to the causes of the 1917 October Revolution. The document contains essay plans, timelines, breakdowns of key players and causes and more. Written by an A* grade student, this details the consequences of the February revolution, the July Days, the Kornilov coup and the impacts on ordinary people. This document covers the first four chapters of the AQA Unit 2 textbook.

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Uploaded on
July 31, 2019
Number of pages
15
Written in
2018/2019
Type
Study guide

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LENIN’S RETURN

Lenin first arrived at Finland Station on 3rd April 1917

MAIN POINTS OF THE APRIL THESES

• Create a workers’ administration to replace the bourgeoise bureaucracy
• Confiscation of large estates and nationalisation of banks
• End to WW1
• Bolsheviks did not support the PG

WHY DID HIS ARRIVAL IN PETROGRAD HAVE SUCH A LARGE IMPACT?

• Radical demands that appealed to soldiers and workers
• Welcomed the revolution but said it was far from complete
o Mensheviks claimed he was ignoring the teachings of Marx.
• Provided a radically different alternative to PG and moderate socialists
• Offered immediate solutions to problems
• His ideas meant the Bolsheviks were easily distinguished from other parties
• Large crowds (many were offered free beer to turn up)
• Lenin can be seen to have been the spark of inspiration that people needed

JULY DAYS




Important Dates Important People


3rd June: First All-Russian Congress Lenin
of Soviets begins

3-4 July: July Days Chernov

5-6 July: Lenin flees, Bolsheviks Kerensky
arrested in Petrograd

8th July: Kerensky becomes Prime Kamenev & Zinoviev
Minister

Trotsky

CAUSES

1. Failure of the Summer Offensive
2. Petrograd Garrison feared being sent to the front line
3. Worker’s growing anger over the economic plight

, BOLSHEVIK COUP OR CIVIL UNREST?




July Days were a Planned Bolshevik Coup July Days were just civil unrest

Lenin was forced into hiding in Finland Lack of coherent leadership

Leaking of PG letter that showed Lenin was in Lenin was on holiday when rioting began
the pay of Germans and had been sent to
undermine the war effort

Izvestia denounces Bolsheviks Lenin appealed to Bolshevik Central Committee
for restraint and they called off the
demonstration planned for the next day

Sukhanov talks of armed groups led by Lenin bottled it when he was giving a speech
'Bolshevik lieutenants'

Lenin didn't dissociate himself from the Trotsky argued it had not been started by
demonstrations Bolsheviks, and instead argued that they had
come to the aid of workers and Kronstadt sailors

Trotsky, and Kamenev were all arrested Once the crowd had been broken up by the
Cossacks on the Liteiny Prospekt and people had
scattered, the crowd turned into a mob and
began looting shops, houses and attacking well-
dressed passers-by

A month before at the first All Russian Congress The Soviet Chairman, Chkheidze, calmly handed
of Soviets, Lenin had argued that the Bolshevik the mob's hysterical leader a manifesto that had
party was ready to take power been printed the evening before.

A number of non-Bolshevik revolutionaries had When Chernov was 'kidnapped', people shouted
been demanding for some time that the "Take power you son of a bitch when it is
Petrograd Soviet should seize power handed you"

Demonstrators chanted the Bolshevik slogans Neither Lenin nor Trotsky believed the
('All power to the Soviets' and 'Peace, Bread, Bolsheviks could keep power should they take it
Land') following the July Days

Bolshevik newspapers were banned following Bolsheviks tried to transform rising into peaceful
the uprising and Bolsheviks were discredited as demonstration (until the shooting started)
traitors and spies

800 Bolsheviks were imprisoned Proletariat felt betrayed by the Bolsheviks and
easily believed in PG's claim that they work for
Germans

Bolshevik Military Organisation in the
Petrograd Garrison encouraged an uprising;

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