Tsarist Russia Timeline 1855-1922

Tsarist Russia Timeline

Tsarist Russia timeline detailing the main events that occurred during and immediately after the Tsarist Russia period 1855 – 1922

See also Stalin’s Russia
Nicholas II, Tsar of Russia
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
Tsars/Emperors of Russia

 

1855 (2nd March)
Alexander II became Tsar. He took the traditional title of Emperor and Autocrat of all Russia.
1856 (30th March)
The Crimean War ended in defeat for Russia. The war had highlighted how far behind the rest of Europe Russia was.
1860
A state bank was established.
1861 (3rd March)
Serfdom was abolished when Alexander signed the Emancipation of the Serfs Act bringing serfdom in Tsarist Russia to an end.
1862
A group of students published ‘Young Russia’ which argued that reform was essential and that revolution was the medium necessary to effect change.
1863 (22nd January)
January Uprising
This conflict began when a number of Poles refused to be conscripted into the Soviet army. Many Poles were also dissatisfied because they had not been granted Emancipation.
1863 (during)
Universities were allowed to become self-governing bodies.
1863 (during)
The novel ‘What Is to Be Done?’ written by Nikolai Chernyshevsky, a revolutionary who was imprisoned, was smuggled out. The novel was to be a big influence on Vladimir Lenin.
1864 (during)
Zemstvo
The Zemstvo, a form of local government, was established. It had responsibility for providing local services including health and education.
1864 (during)
The judicial system was reformed with local courts dealing with minor offences and district courts dealing with more serious crimes.
1865 (during)
Censorship reforms were introduced with new more relaxed guidelines being introduced.
1865 (24th April)
Alexander II’s son and heir, Nicholas, died from meningitis. His second son, Alexander became heir to Tsarist Russia.
1866 (4th April)
An assassination attempt on the life of Alexander II in St Petersburg failed.
1866 (July)
Alexander II took a mistress, Catherine Dolgorukova.
1866 (after July)
Many nobles, ministers and Alexander’s son and heir, the future Alexander III, felt that the reforms had gone too far, destroying the old Tsarist Russia and allowing an influx of Western ideas. They persuaded Alexander II to replace liberal ministers with more conservative ones.
1866 (9th November)
Alexander’s son and heir, Alexander, married Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She had converted to Russian Orthodoxy and taken the name Maria Feodorovna. She was an imposing, charismatic woman who was highly influential on her husband and children.
1867 (14th September)
Karl Marx’s ‘Das Kapital’ was published.
1869 (during)
Trial by jury was removed for political crimes.
1869 (during)
‘The Communist Manifesto’ by Karl Marx was translated into Russian.
1869 (August)
The book ‘Catechism of a Revolutionary’ by Mikhail Bakunin and Sergei Nechaev was published. It argued for opponents of autocracy to keep up the struggle and press for revolution.
1870
Dumas
Elected town councils called dumas were introduced to urban areas.
1870 – 1873
This period, nicknamed the ‘railway mania years’ saw substantial government investment in Railway construction.
1871 (during)
Dimitri Tolstoy, minister for education, insisted on a return to a classical curriculum. Universities were forbidden from including any subjects that encouraged critical thinking.
1871 (during)
Oil was pumped from the sea port of Baku.
1872 (during)
The Donetsk iron works was established.
1874 (during)
As part of a major reform of the armed services, military service was extended to all classes, inhumane punishments were abolished, military colleges were set up and modern weapons were introduced.
1874 (during)
The populist ‘Go to the People’ campaign was spread by Nihilists and Narodniks. Their aim was to persuade peasants to rise up against the Tsarist Russia regime by stirring up resentment at their lack of land ownership and the taxes they had to pay.
1874 (Autumn)
More than 1,500 exponents of the Populist Movement had been arrested.
1876 (during)
Another Populist ‘Go to the People’ campaign failed.
1877 (during)
Trial of the 193
Populists were tried as revolutionaries who spread propaganda against the Russian government.
1877 (during)
A number of Populists that had evaded capture set up ‘Land and Liberty’ but it soon became clear that the peasants were not interested in joining a full scale revolution.
1877 (12th April)
Russo-Turkish War began
Russia declared war on Turkey in support of the Balkan States who were fighting against Turkish rule.
1878 (4th August)
General Mezemtsov, head of the Third Section of Government, was assassinated by members of the ‘Land and Liberty’ group. The assassins escaped amid a wave of popular support.
1878 (3rd March)
The war with Turkey ended with the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano. The Russians had secured autonomy for the Balkan States and created Bulgaria under Russian protection. However, Britain and Austro-Hungary protested against this and Bulgaria was split under the Treaty of Berlin.
1879 (during)
The People’s Will declared that the Tsar had to be removed.
1879 (15th August)
‘Land and Liberty’ split into two groups – Black Partition and The People’s Will
1879 -1880
A poor harvest in 1879 led to famine in 1880.
1880 (during)
A spate of arrests severely weakened the Black Partition group.
1880 (6th July)
Alexander II married his mistress Catherine Dolgorukova just 40 days after the death of his wife.
1881 (13th March)
Alexander II was assassinated by the ‘People’s Will’ group who wanted an end to Tsarist Russia. He was succeeded by his son, Alexander III who was much more conservative than his father. Almost immediately the new Tsar ordered the rounding up and arrest of the assassins and put a ban on secret meetings.
1881 (late March)
Von Plehve was appointed to investigate the assassination of Alexander II. He was made Director of the Police which gave him full control of the entire police force and Okhrana.
1881 (after March)
Alexander III pursued a policy of Russification enforcing the use of the Russian language throughout the provinces and persecuting non-Russians especially the Jews. A number of anti-Jewish pogroms took place.
1882 (during)
The Okhrana (security police) were given new powers to search, question, detain and even exile anyone who was likely to commit a crime.
1883 (during)
First Russian Marxist group formed in Geneva by former members of the Black Partition group.
1883 (during)
The novelist Leo Tolstoy, famous for his ‘War and Peace’ and ‘Anna Karenina’ novels was fiercely critical of Tsarist Russia but wanted a bloodless revolution brought about by a moralistic reformed society. He wrote a tract entitled ‘What I believe’ which was banned a year later but was hugely influential nevertheless.
1885 (during)
Peasant Land Banks were established.
1885 (during)
The government increased spending on the military.
1885 (during)
A law was passed banning women and children from working at night.
1885 (during)
‘Closed’ court sessions without juries were re-introduced for a number of crimes.
1886 (during)
Ivan Vyshnegradsky became Minister of Finance. He wanted to improve Russian finances and build up the gold reserve.
1888 (during)
Ivan Vyshnegradsky negotiated a loan from France which was used to grow the economy.
1889 (during)
Alexander III set up the new office of Land Captains. Recruited from the nobility these Land Captains had the power to over-ride decisions made by local Zemstva, overturn local court decisions and impose their own punishments.
1890 (during)
An act was passed that reduced the peasant’s vote in elections.
1891 (during)
Ivan Vyshnegradsky introduced a Tariff Act which reduced imports of foreign raw materials. Over the last years he had increased exports of grain by 18%.
1891 (during)
Work began on the Trans Siberian Railway.
1891 – 92
Russian famine
Around 2 million peasants died of starvation. Despite the famine, Russia continued to export grain, a move which was seen as controversial and led to the dismissal of Vyshnegradsky.
1891 – 1892
Russian Famine
Famine victims received no relief from the Tsar or government and it was left to middle class philanthropists to provide aid for those feeling the worst effects of the famine. These middle classes became more opposed to the Tsar and wanted a voice in government.
1892 (during)
Children under the age of 12 and women were no longer allowed to work in the mines.
1892 (during)
Sergei Witte became Minister of Finance – he believed in economic modernisation and felt that Russian growth was hampered by – insufficient capital, Lack of technical expertise and insufficient manpower in industry.
1892 (during)
An act was passed that made it difficult for poor people living in towns to qualify for a vote.
1894 (1st November)
Alexander III died of kidney failure. He was succeeded by his eldest son Nicholas II who, like his father was a committed autocrat. However, unlike his father, Nicholas had no interest in politics and would have preferred not to be Tsar.
1894 (26th November)
Nicholas married Alix of Hesse, granddaughter of Queen Victoria of Britain. She had converted to Russian Orthodoxy and taken the name Alexandra Feodorovna.
1895 (December)
Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (Lenin) was arrested for distributing revolutionary material to workers. He was imprisoned to await trial.
1896 (December)
Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (Lenin) was exiled to Siberia for three years. He had not been given a trial.
1897 (during)
Russia had increased industrial output significantly and had become the World’s fourth largest industrial economy. However, the rise in industrialisation had led to a move away from the countryside to the cities where people depended on their income to pay for rent, food etc. Those that rose through the ranks of industry to become managers together with those professionals that served the cities – doctors, teachers, bankers etc created a new middle class that wanted political representation.
1897 (during)
The General Union of Jewish Workers, known as The Bund, was formed. It was strongly opposed to the autocracy and sought to advance Marxism.
1897 (January)
Sergei Witte introduced a new rouble backed by the gold standard. This meant that the value of the new rouble would remain fairly constant and led to an influx of foreign investment.
1898 (during)
The Russian Social Democratic Worker’s Party was formed based on the theories of Karl Marx and Frederich Engels.
1898 (January)
Lev Davodovich Bronstein (Trotsky) was arrested and imprisoned for forming a commune of workers and students.
1900 (around)
The average Russian working day was 11 hours for weekdays and 10 hours on a Saturday. Living conditions in the cities were poor with many living in overcrowded conditions in hastily erected buildings. More than 40% of city houses had no running water.
1900 (during)
The government ordered that hundreds of liberals be dismissed from the local Zemstvo.
1900 (early)
Lenin was released from exile and settled in Pskov. He began raising funds for a pro Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) newspaper ‘Spark’.
1900 (July)
Lenin travelled to Switzerland to meet other Marxists. It was agreed that ‘Spark’ would be produced in Munich. Lenin moved to Munich to produce the newspaper.
1901 (during)
Worldwide depression
A worldwide depression caused an economic slump which led to social and industrial unrest.
1901 (Autumn)
Another poor harvest led to an increase in rural violence.
1902 (January)
The Socialist Revolutionary Party was formed by Viktor Chernov. They believed that Tsarist Russia should be reformed through armed revolution, that there should be no private land ownership, democratic elections should be held and an 8-hour working day introduced.
1902 (during)
The Commission on Agriculture was established by Pyotr Stolypin. As a landowner Stolypin took a hard line on unrest.
1902 (during)
Lenin wrote and published a pamphlet entitled ‘What is to be done.’ In the pamphlet he argued that trade unionism would not bring about reform alone that only an overthrow of  Tsarist Russia would bring reforms.
1902 (during)
Lev Davodovich Bronstein (Leon Trotsky) escaped from prison using a false passport and went to London
1902 (during)
Most of the Trans-Siberian Railway had been completed.
1903 (during)
Anti-Semetic pogroms were introduced.
1903 (during)
Father Georgy Gapon formed the Assembly of Russian Workers Union.
1903 (30th July)
Second RSDLP Congress
This meeting of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party was held in London over a period of two weeks. The Social Democrats split into Bolsheviks led by Lenin and Mensheviks led by Martov. Lenin and the Bolsheviks wanted a full revolution while the Mensheviks were prepared to work with liberal groups to bring about reform. Bolsheviks wanted to restrict membership to the party and lead from a central core while the Mensheviks wanted an open membership and a democratic run party.
1903 (during)
Sergei Witte became president of the Council of Ministers. Although this was a promotion, in real terms the position offered much less power than he had had as Finance Minister.
1903 (during)
The ‘holy man’, Rasputin arrived in St Petersburg.
1904 (January)
Pyotr Struve formed the Union of Liberation in exile in Germany. Struve was opposed to the Marxist idea of violent revolution and rejected both the Bolshevik and Menshevik models hoping that Tsarist Russia would evolve naturally into a constitutional monarchy through which reform would follow.
1904 (January)
Russo-Japanese War
War broke out when Japanese forces attacked and lay siege to Port Arthur on the Liadong Peninsular which had been leased to Russia by the Chinese. The Japanese wanted to conquer the regions of Manchuria and Korea as areas to expand their own territory.
1904 (during)
Prices of essential goods had risen so much that workers were effectively 20% worse off than they had been a year ago.
1904 (during)
Father Gapon’s Assembly of Russian Workers had 9,000 members
1904 (28th July)
Von Plehve, the Interior Minister, was assassinated by the Combat wing of the Socialist Revoutionary Party.
1904 (October)
Russo-Japanese War
Nicholas II ordered the Baltic Fleet to sail to the East. Sailing out from the Baltic the fleet opened fire on two of its own ships believing them to be Japanese. In the firing a British fishing vessel was sunk killing two fishermen. This provoked an outcry in Britain and war was only avoided by the payment of a huge compensation.
1905 (January)
Russo-Japanese War
Port Arthur fell to the Japanese. This was a huge loss as it was Russia’s only eastern port and marked an end to further expansion in the east.
1905 (during)
Rasputin was introduced to the Royal family. He seemed to have the power to reduce the pain of the royal couples son, Alexis who suffered from haemophilia.
1905 (9th January)
Father Gapon called for his Union members to strike in protest at the dismissal of four iron workers for being members of the union.
1905 (16th January)
The entire workforce of the Putilov Ironworks in St. Petersburg went on strike when the management refused to reinstate four workers who had been dismissed for being members of the workers’ Assembly led by Father Gapon.
1905 (21st January)
150,000 workers in 382 factories were now on strike in support of the four dismissed ironworks workers and St Petersburg was without power.
1905 (22nd January)
Bloody Sunday
Father Georgy Gapon had organised a peaceful march to present a petition to the Tsar to ask for measures to be put in place to treat the Russian people more fairly. The marchers were men, women and children carrying banners of the Tsar singing religious hymns. However, when the marchers reached the Winter Palace they were met by a line of armed Cossacks who opened fire. More than 200 demonstrators were killed and more than 500 injured. Father Gapon escaped and left Russia. The event, known as Bloody Sunday sparked a series of revolts known as the 1905 Revolution.
1905 (17th February)
Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich, Nicholas II’s uncle, was assassinated by the Combat wing of the Socialist Revolutionary Party.
1905 (during)
For the rest of the year there were demonstrations by students complaining about lack of civil liberties, by professional people (lawyers, doctors etc) complaining about the power of the nobility and demanding a constituent assembly and by workers complaining about their conditions. All were broken up by extreme force which increased hostility to Tsarist Russia.
1905 (March)
Russo-Japanese War
The Japanese won the battle of Mukden. More than 90,000 Russian soldiers lost their lives in the fighting.
1905 (April)
The All Russian Union of Railway Workers was established.
1905 (28th May)
Russo-Japanese War
The Russian Baltic fleet reached the east but were defeated by Japanese at The Battle of Tsushima.
1905 (June)
The Potemkin battleship sailors mutinied after refusing to obey the Captain’s order to execute sailors protesting against being served rotten meat. The Captain and officers were thrown overboard. The sailors then sailed to Odessa where they proceeded to stir up revolution against Tsarist Russia through their drunken speeches. The police and Cossacks used violence to break the revolution killing 2,000 people and injuring 3,000. The sailors escaped by sailing to Romania.
1905 (5th September)
Russia was defeated in the Russo-Japanese War. Sergei Witte was sent to negotiate the Treaty of Portsmouth which agreed that both Russia and Japan would leave Manchuria and return it to Chinese rule. Russia lost Port Arthur to the Japanese.
1905 (6th October)
There were strikes by workers across Russia and a strike by the railway workers paralysed the rail network.
1905 (10th October)
General strikes in Moscow brought the city to a standstill.
1905 (13th October)
Trotsky, who was a member of the Mensheviks, returned to Russia and became a member of the St Petersburg Soviet. Other Soviets were formed by Mensheviks and Bolsheviks.
1905 (17th October)
October Manifesto
This was issued and agreed by Nicholas II to try to appease the people. It promised: Freedom of speech, Freedom to hold meetings, No laws to be introduced without the agreement of the Duma, political parties were no longer banned and elections to the Duma were agreed.
1905 (18th October)
Many strikes had been broken up by extreme force and strikers, fearful of the violence, returned to work.
1905 (12th October)
Pyotr Struve returned to Russia and together with Pavel Milyukov founded The Constitutional Democratic Party (Kadets). They believed that the October Manifesto was the first step towards a true democracy. They wanted The Royal family to become a constitutional monarchy rather than an autocratic system controlled by the Tsar.
1905 (October)
The term Nationalists was coined to describe those nobles and politicians who wanted things to remain as they had for centuries, but understood that Nicholas had no choice but to issue the October Manifesto. They were against an elected Duma but saw it as a necessary concession. Within the Duma, Nationalists voted in favour of laws that were favourable to the Tsar and nobility but against reforms that improved the lives of the people.
1905 (October 17th)
The Union of October 17 (Octobrists) was formed. It was a centre party that believed the October Manifesto was the solution to political demands and backed the Tsar.
1905 (4th – 7th November)
There was a second General Strike in St Petersburg calling for an 8-hour working day.
1905 (8th November)
Lenin returned to St Petersburg.
1905 (14th November)
Peasant Union leaders were arrested.
1905 (26th November)
Leon Trotsky became head of the St Petersburg Soviet after its leader was arrested.
1905 (December)
Soldiers returning from the Russo-Japanese war were used to put down all traces of unrest and revolution. Trotsky and all members of the St Petersburg Soviet were arrested. Nicholas once more assumed autocratic rule with little regard for the October Manifesto.
1905 (December)
Father Gapon returned to Russia.
1906 (early)
Sergei Witte persuaded Nicholas II to allow the introduction of an elected Duma.
1906 (10th April)
Father Gapon was found hanged. He was likely murdered by the Okhrana.
1906 (23rd April)
Fundamental Law
This law declared Nicholas a supreme autocrat. The Duma could not make laws without his approval and Nicholas was to have the final say in the appointment of ministers and other officials.
1906 (10th May)
Nicholas forced Prime Minister Sergei Witte to resign and replaced him with Ivan Goremykin.
1906 (May)
First Duma
The first elected Duma began. The Bolsheviks and Social Revolutionaries had refused to field candidates and the largest political group in the first Duma were the Kadets. Nicholas firmly rejected all proposals put forward by this Duma as too radical.
1906 (July)
First Duma
The Duma was dismissed and Ivan Goremykin was replaced by Stolypin.
1906 (August)
Stolypin introduced military courts to deal with political unrest. Those accused were denied representation and those found guilty were executed within 24 hours.
1906 (September)
The amount of land available for peasants to purchase was increased.
1906 (November)
Peasants were given the right to leave the commune (Mir).
1907 (during)
Leon Trotsky escaped from prison and travelled to Western Europe.
1907 (February)
Second Duma
Stolypin had tried to influence the elections by supporting the more moderate Octobrists but he failed and a more radical government made up of Bolsheviks, Mensheviks and Kadets was elected. Stolypin was continually frustrated by this Duma who would not support his agrarian reform policy.
1907 (June)
Second Duma
Stolypin dismissed the Second Duma. He then used an emergency law to alter the franchise giving increased priority to the landed gentry.
1907 (June)
Third Duma
This was known as the Duma of Lords and Lackeys due to the dominance of the noble classes who were more conservative. This government agreed to Stolypin’s agrarian reforms, especially the removal of the Mir allowing peasants to own their own land. Redemption payment was abolished due to so many peasants being in arrears.
1908 (during)
30,000 people in St Petersburg died of cholera caused by the insanitary living conditions.
1908 (3rd October)
Leon Trotsky published the Communist newspaper, Pravda in Vienna.
1910 (June)
All communes that had not redistributed land since the 1860s were abolished.
1911 (during)
The Octobrists who had generally supported the government, were now increasingly critical of Tsarist Russia.
1911 (14th September)
Stolypin was shot twice by Dmitrii Bogrov. He died four days later. Bogrov was arrested and hanged.
1912
Fourth Duma
Most parties had some representation but the new Prime Minister Kokovtsov generally ignored the Duma and pushed through his own measures independently.
1912 (during)
A workers’ health insurance system was introduced.
1912 (17th April)
Lena Goldfields massacre
A group of miners from the Lena Goldfields in Siberia were went on strike after the management took no action on a complaint about the quality of horsemeat the miners were given to eat. The Bolsheviks co-ordinated a wave of support strike action and many thousand workers marched to present a petition in support of the miner’s claims. However, the authorities ordered troops to fire on the protesters and 500 people died. The massacre caused an outrage and a wave of sympathy strikes.
1913 (during)
The Octobrists, the largest party in the Duma, ordered an investigation into Rasputin.
1913 (February)
Nicholas and Alexandra celebrated the three-hundredth anniversary of the Romanov dynasty.
1914 (28th June)
Heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Franz Ferdinand, was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Black Hand a Serbian Nationalist group.
1914 (28th July)
World War One
Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia.
1914 (29th July)
World War One
Ignoring all advice not to involve Russia in the war, Nicholas decided to support Serbia and declared war on Austria-Hungary.
1914 (August)
World War One
The Russian army was badly equipped for war. Most were conscripted peasants who were inadequately clothed and three soldiers had to share two guns.
1914 (1st August)
World War One
Germany declared war on Russia.
1914 (30th August)
World War One
Russia lost Battle of Tannenberg.
1914 (1st September)
Saint Petersburg was renamed Petrograd (Peter’s City). The move was made to remove the German word ‘burg’ from the city.
1914 (14th September)
World War One
Russia lost First Battle of Masurian Lakes
1915 (22nd February)
World War One
Russia lost Second Battle of Masurian Lakes
1915 (June)
The All Russian Union of Zemstvo and Cities (Zemgor) was established. Chaired by Prince Lvov its aim was to help the government in the war effort but it was largely ignored by Nicholas.
1915 (August)
Fourth Duma
Some members of this Duma organised themselves into a Progressive Bloc and called for the Tsar to change his government ministers for those that had the confidence of the public.
1915 (6th September)
World War One
Tsar Nicholas took personal charge of the army and dismissed the Duma. Although a brave move by Nicholas he did not have sufficient military experience to turn the war in Russia’s favour. Moreover, Nicholas was now wholly responsible for the continuing defeats Russia faced.
1915 (September)
Rasputin was blamed for a series of ministerial changes. People were becoming increasingly suspicious of the extent of Rasputin’s influence on the Tsarina.
1916 (August)
World War One
Although the Russian army was now much better equipped than it had been in the early days of the war most of the army’s experienced generals had been killed and without adequate leadership the newly launched Brusilov offensive failed.
1916 (Autumn)
World War One
Large numbers of Russian soldiers deserted.
1916 (30th December)
Grigory Rasputin was assassinated
1917 (22nd January)
150,000 workers took to the streets of Petrograd on the anniversary of Bloody Sunday to protest at the desperate situation many were in – lack of food, poor living conditions and Russia’s continued participation in a war that was going from bad to worse.
1917 (February)
February Revolution
Strikes and unrest continued in Petrograd amid calls for the Tsar to be overthrown and an end to Tsarist Russia.
1917 (February)
February Revolution
Rumours that bread would be rationed from March led to long queues at bakers’ shops.
1917 (22nd February)
February Revolution
20,000 workers from the Putilov Ironworks went on strike.
1917 (23rd February)
February Revolution
The annual International Women’s Day march from the suburbs to the centre of Petrograd turned increasingly political as they were joined by students, Putilov strikers and other disgruntled factory workers. The number of protesters quickly reached around a quarter of a million people.
1917 (23rd – 25th February)
February Revolution
People continued to demonstrate on the streets. Statues of the Tsar were toppled, people waved the red flag of the revolutionaries and called for an end to Tsarist Russia. Many also sang the anthem of the French Revolution, the ‘Marseillaise’, sympathising with its call for Liberty, Equality and Fraternity.
1917 (26th February)
February Revolution
Nicholas II ordered the Duma to disband but it refused to do so.
1917 (26th February)
February Revolution
Nicholas ordered troops onto the streets to remove the protesters by force. Although some complied killing around 40 protesters. Nicholas’s move worsened the matter by inflaming the mood of the protesters even more. Moreover, around 65,000 soldiers ordered onto the streets were new recruits who sympathised with the masses. They refused to fire on the demonstrators and joined them instead.
1917 (27th February)
February Revolution
A meeting of the Duma was held to discuss the future of Tsarist Russia. They established a Provisional Committee of The Duma and demanded that the Tsar abdicate immediately. At the same time the army generals ordered the soldiers off the streets telling them to support the Provisional Committee instead.
1917 (27th February)
February Revolution
The Petrograd Soviet was formed, comprised mainly of Mensheviks it called for representatives of the workers to attend a meeting on 28th February.
1917 (28th February)
February Revolution
A meeting took place and a Provisional Executive Committee was elected.
1917 (28th February)
February Revolution
Nicholas, who was currently overseeing army manoeuvres at the front line decided to return to Petrograd. However, his train was diverted by railway workers.
1917 (28th February)
February Revolution
The Kronstadt sailors mutinied and put pressure on the Petrograd Soviet to allow army regiments to elect committees which in turn would be able to send representatives to the Petrograd Soviet.
1917 (1st March)
The Chief of Staff, Mikhail Alexeev, put pressure on Nicholas II to resign both as head of the army and also as Tsar.
1917 (2nd March)
Nicholas II reluctantly abdicated as Tsar. He named his younger brother Mikhail as the new Tsar, a position which Mikhail refused. The Royal family were placed under virtual house arrest. The abdication brought an end to Tsarist Russia.
1917 (2nd March)
First Provisional government was formed, led by Prince Lvov, a founder member of the Kadet party.
1917 (March – May)
The new Provisional Government had set about removing all traces of Tsarist Russia amid a mood of optimism. Reforms were put in place, Tsarist sympathisers were removed and soviets were established to represent the workers and peasants. However, Prince Lvov was aware that he led a Provisional Government and that many more drastic reforms should wait to be implemented by a fully elected government. Yet this very delay in implementing reforms undermined support for the Provisional Government.
1917 (April)
Land Committees were set up to collect information regarding land ownership that would be used to set out reforms. However, the peasants did not want to wait they wanted reform now. Many simply seized property that they believed they had a right to.
1917 (3rd April)
Lenin returned to Russia.
1917 (7th April)
Lenin’s April Theses was published in Pravda. It stated:
Russia’s involvement in WWI should end immediately
The Revolution needed to move to a second stage where power was given to the proletariat and peasants
Lenin did not support the Provisional Government
The people should be persuaded that the Soviet is the only possible revolutionary government
Landed estates should be confiscated
There should be a single national bank
Police, army and bureaucracy should be abolished.
Production of goods should be controlled by the soviet
International organisations should spread the revolution Worldwide
1917 (21st April)
Lenin attempted to effect a new revolution and the overthrow of the Provisional Government but only a small number of people turned out onto the streets in support.
1917 (May)
Leon Trotsky returned to Russia
1917 (May)
The Provisional Government’s failure to take Russia out of the War was an unpopular move. More importantly, it led to unrest in the army and and the number of deserters increased to more than 365,000. Army generals called for more power to restore order in the ranks but the Provisional Government, fearful of an army coup, refused.
1917 (May to June)
The Provisional Government needed to maintain economic output but although committees were established to represent the demands of the workers, the government still allowed factory owners to decided working hours and conditions. This frustrated the workers who had hoped for improvements in their conditions and in June 175,000 workers went on strike.
1917 (9th June)
The Bolsheviks tried to effect revolution by trying to use the June Offensive on the Eastern Front to turn people against the Provisional Government. However, the Bolsheviks failed to gain the support of the Petrograd Soviet and it failed.
1917 (2nd July)
Leon Trotsky joined the Bolsheviks, convinced that only they had the leadership to overthrow the Provisional Government.
1917 (3rd – 4th July)
July Days
There were demonstrations against the government in Petrograd. Workers were joined on the streets by soldiers and the Kronstadt sailors calling for power to be given to the Soviets.
1917 (4th July)
Prince Lvov resigned as leader of the Provisional Government. He felt he was unable to control the liberals and socialists within the Provisional government.
1917 (5th July)
The Government blamed the July days on Bolshevik leaders and many, including Trotsky, were arrested. Lenin escaped to Finland.
1917 (16th July)
Kornilov was appointed Commander of the Russian troops.
1917 (18th July)
The Socialist Alexander Kerensky became Prime Minister.
1917 (26th – 30th August)
General Kornilov called for tough measures to restore discipline in the army and to increase economic output. However, although these measures would have helped to restore order they went against the spirit of the Provisional Government. With much of Petrograd at a standstill following the July Days, Kornilov called for martial law to be established in the city. Kerensky refused and fearing an attempted takeover by Kornilov called on the Kronstadt sailors to come to his defence. He also agreed to arm the Bolshevik ‘Red Guards’ so that they could defend the city. Kornilov’s troops travelled by train to Petrograd but railway workers stopped the trains and persuaded the soldiers to desert.
1917 (August)
The Romanov family were moved to Tobolsk in Western Siberia.
1917 (1st September)
General Kornilov was arrested.
1917 (September)
Kerensky was persuaded to release those Bolsheviks that had been imprisoned following the July Days.
1917 (September)
Leon Trotsky became leader of the Petrograd Soviet. He worked closely with Lenin to plan a Bolshevik takeover.
1917 (September)
Throughout late Summer and early September support for the Bolsheviks had grown and by the end of September had reached 200,000.
1917 (7th October)
Lenin returned to Petrograd.
1917 (9th October)
The Bolsheviks established a Military Revolutionary Committee led by Trotsky.
1917 (10th October)
Lenin attended a meeting of the Bolshevik Central Committee and called for a Bolshevik Revolution.
1917 (24th October)
October Revolution
Armed workers, Bolshevik Red Guards and the Kronstadt sailors occupied key buildings around the city of Petrograd.
1917 (25th October)
October Revolution
Alexander Kerensky left Petrograd in disguise bound for the front line. The remaining members of the Provisional Government met in the Winter Palace and were still there when armed Bolshevik supporters entered the Palace. They were arrested.
1917 (26th October)
October Revolution
A congress of Soviets was held which appointed the first Soviet government with Lenin as Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars. Joseph Stalin was made Commissar for Nationalities and Leon Trotsky was made People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs.
1917 (28th, 29th October)
October Revolution
The Provisional Government’s Cossacks and officer cadets advanced on Petrograd.
1917 (30th October)
October Revolution
The Provisional Government’s force were defeated by a large force of Red Guards at Pulkovo Heights on the outskirts of Petrograd.
1917 (12th November)
The election that had been promised by the Provisional Government after the February revolution took place. The Socialist Revolutionaries received the most votes but they were not a fully united party. They were split between the left Socialist Revolutionaries who supported Lenin and joined him in forming a coalition government and the moderate Socialist Revolutionaries led by Viktor Chernov. Lenin needed to formulate a plan to prevent the moderate Socialist Revolutionaries challenging the Bolshevik rule.
1917 (November)
Alexander Kerensky rallied those loyal to the Provisional Government and there was fighting between the two factions especially around Moscow. However, Lenin agreed to talk to other party members and Kerensky lost much support. He eventually fled firstly to France and then to the USA.
1917 (2nd December)
Lenin created the Supreme Council of National Economy (Vesenkha). His aim was to bring the economy under central government control.
1917 (6th December)
The Cheka (Communist secret police) was established. Its main purpose was to arrest, imprison and execute opponents to Lenin.
1917 (14th December)
Lenin used the Red Army to take control of all the banks.
1917 (22nd December)
A Bolshevik peace delegation led by Alfred Joffe began negotiating a peace with Germany to take Russia out of World War One.
1918 (5th January)
The newly elected constituent assembly met in the Tauride Palace, Petrograd. The Bolsheviks proposed that the assembly should be subservient to decrees passed by the Soviet. This proposal was rejected. In response to the rejection of the proposal the Bolsheviks and the left Socialist Revolutionaries walked out of the assembly. Red Guards and armed troops loyal to Lenin forcibly dispersed the remainder of the assembly.
1918 (January)
Lenin changed the name of the Bolshevik party to the Russian Communist Party.
1918 (7th, 8th January)
The harsh demands placed on Russia by Germany were not well received. Germany wanted to take the Baltic states as well as Poland and Ukraine from Russia, a move that would result in the loss of one third of Russia’s population and agricultural land as well as half of its industry. Lenin faced opposition in his government over the continuation of the peace negotiations but eventually won the opposition over.
1918 (21st January)
Lenin declared all debts owed to foreign powers by the Romanovs and the Provisional Government would not be repaid.
1918 (27th January)
Trotsky signed a peace treaty with Ukraine.
1918 (23rd February)
Trotsky formed the Red Army. It was comprised of workers and peasants.
1918 (3rd March)
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
The signing of this treaty ended Russian involvement in World War One. It also ended the left Socialist Revolutionary’s support of Lenin.
1918 (5th March)
Fearing a possible foreign invasion in support of the Romanovs, Lenin moved the capital of Russia to Moscow.
1918 (April)
Lenin’s government was facing opposition from a number of forces collectively known as the ‘White’ forces. Based in the south, they had been led by Kornilov but following his death were led by Deniken. Another ‘White’ force led by General Yudenich were forming near Petrograd.
1918 (22nd April)
Compulsory military service was introduced for all workers and peasants that did not hire labour.
1918 (Spring)
The Romanov family were moved to Ekaterinburg in the Urals.
1918 (June)
The left Socialist Revolutionaries launched an attack on Communist Rule and an attempt to assassinate Lenin failed.
1918 (28th June)
War Communism began when a decree was issued that ended all forms of private capitalism.
1918 (6th July)
The left Socialist Revolutionaries assassinated the German ambassador to Russia. They hoped that the Germans would retaliate and help to end Communist rule.
1918 (10th July)
The left Socialist Revolutionaries attempted an uprising at Simbirsk but were defeated by the Red Army.
1918 (17th July)
The Romanov family were executed and buried in shallow graves.
1918 (20th July)
Under the economic War Communism policy it was decided that all surplus grain should be forfeited to the government. Strict grain quotas were issued depending on the type of labour done by individuals.
1918 (September)
Lenin introduced the Gulag system of labour camps to contain opponents of his regime.
1919 (March)
General Deniken, who had initially offered to join forces with Kolchak but had changed his mind and gone to the Dombass region, was defeated by the Red Army.
1919 (July)
The Red Army had virtually defeated the White force led by Kolchak.
1919 (October)
Yudenich’s attack on Petrograd was defeated when Trotsky took control and roused sufficient troops and workers to secure a Red victory.
1920 (21st April)
The Polish leader, Jozef Pilsudski, formed an alliance with the Ukrainian leader, Symon Petlyura
1920 (7th May)
The Russo-Polish War began when the Polish army occupied Kiev
1920 (June)
The Soviet Red Army launched a counter-offensive against the Poles and marched to the Polish border.
1920 (early August)
Soviet forces had reached the outskirts of Warsaw. Western European powers fearing a Communist takeover of Poland, sent a military force to help the Poles.
1920 (mid August)
The Red Army were forced to retreat from Poland.
1920 (19th August)
Peasants in the Tambov region rebelled against grain requisitioning.
1920 (October)
The Russian Red Army were defeated by the Polish army.
1920 (29th November)
Any factory that employed more than 10 people was nationalised by the government under its economic War Communism policy.
1921 (22nd January)
The bread ration was reduced by a third leaving most people with a daily calorie allocation of just 1,000 calories. People were not happy.
1921 (2nd February)
Lenin announced the end of grain requisitioning.
1921 (23rd February)
Menshevik and Socialist Revolutionary workers went on strike. They were angry at the continual decrees of Lenin’s government and their lack of freedom.
1921 (28th February)
The Kronstadt sailors went on strike. They called for a return to true revolutionary ideals, that all working people be given equal rations and the peasants be freed.
1921 (1st March)
A group of soldiers met in Kronstadt square and demanded a new revolution. They complained of the fear of the Cheka and the lack of freedom of the people.
1921 (5th March)
Trotsky led a force to put down the revolt in Kronstadt.
1921 (7th March)
The Red Army assault on Kronstadt was repelled.
1921 (16th March)
Following heavy artillery battering of Kronstadt a new offensive was launched by Trotsky. After a long and bloody battle Kronstadt was taken.
1921 (18th March)
The Treaty of Riga officially ended the Russo-Polish War. Poland gained a large part of Belorussia.
1921 (late March)
The Tenth meeting of the Communist Party was held. Lenin announced an end to War Communism and introduced a New Economic Policy whereby peasants only had to give a portion of the produce to the government, the rest they could sell and pay tax on the income. Private trading was also to be allowed in a bid to to increase availability of goods.
1922 (1st January)
In a bid to combat rising inflation a new Russian Ruble was introduced. 1 new ruble was worth 10,000 old rubles.
1922 (April)
Lenin created a new post, General Secretary and chose Joseph Stalin for the post. Stalin had been a loyal supporter of Lenin. Leading members of the Politburo supported Stalin’s appointment since they presumed that the post would be insignificant.

 

First published 2015; updated and republished Jan 17 2022 @ 11:55 am – Updated – [last-modified]

Harvard Reference for this page:

Heather Y Wheeler. (2015 – 2022). Tsarist Russia and Provisional Government 1855 to 1922.

 

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