December 15, 2023 | Sammy Tran

Rebellious Facts About The Russian Revolution


2017 marks the centennial anniversary of the Russian Revolution. 100 years ago, the unrest in Russia set in motion a series of events that would influence the world in ways we are still figuring out today.


41. Two Revolutions In One

The Russian Revolution was comprised of two separate Revolutionary uprisings in the same year—1917. While actually two separate events, they are both used to describe the downfall of the tsarist Russian empire under the Romanov dynasty.

russian revolution

40. Revolutionary Roots

The Russian revolution of 1917 had its roots in the 1905 Revolution. On Sunday, January 22, 1905, thousands of workers went on strike and marched towards the Tsar’s palace to present him with a petition. To quell the workers, the Tsar had his imperial guard open fire on them, ending as many as 1,000 people. This is known as the Bloody Sunday Bloodshed and led to a countrywide strike movement that would set the foundation for the future of the country.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

39. Stolypin’s Necktie

In the aftermath of 1905, Pyotr Stolypin, a conservative statesman, was appointed as Prime Minister to bring agrarian reform to Russia. During his time in charge, he went after and executed over 3,000 dissidents of the Tsar. This led to the term “Stolypin’s necktie” being used for a noose.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

38. Revolution in February

The first revolutionary event is known as the February Revolution. This marked the collapse of the autocratic tsarist government when Tsar Nicholas II abdicated his throne and ended the Russian Empire.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

37. Too German

In 1914, the name of the capital city of St. Petersburg was officially changed to the more Slavic sounding Petrograd because St. Petersburg sounded “too German.”

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

 

Advertisement

36. World Battle Collapse

While the autocracy was already on the ropes, the collapse of the empire can be seen as a consequence of Russia’s involvement in WW1. The battle cost Russia millions of lives, destroyed their economy, and created a famine.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

35. Battle Funding

To fund their battle efforts, Russia created incredible inflation by printing millions of rubles, which quadrupled prices across the country.

Russian Revolution FactsShutterstock

 

34. Rasputin in Charge

The population was struggling, and their support for the Tsar was already fragile when he decided to take over command of the army on the advisement by Grigori Rasputin. In doing so, he left power to Tsarina Alexandra, who was extremely unpopular and left Rasputin with a lot of influence. This would fracture the support of not only the population but also of the nobility.

Alexei Romanov FactsWikipedia

 

Advertisement

33. February in March

The February Revolution actually took place in March according to the modern Gregorian calendar; at the time Russia was still using the Julian calendar, which was still in February. The Julian calendar is used by the Eastern Orthodox clergy, and in 1917 it was 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar.

Russian Revolution FactsShutterstock

 

32.Officers Join In

The spark of the revolution was a massive worker strike that ended up in riots on the streets. When the local army garrison was called in to establish order, many of the people mutinied, with some even joining in on the riots.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

31. Women Set The Stage

Women were the first to hit the streets. Starving, exhausted, and angry, a series of meetings and rallies were held for International Women's Day as a part of the unrest.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

Advertisement

30. Stalin’s History

Joseph Stalin would revise history books under his reign, writing his own version of events and omitting many key figures such as Leon Trotsky. Stalin would also end many of the Bolshevik leaders in the 1930s and 1940s in what is now known as The Terror.

The Most Hated Rulers In World History FactsGetty Images

 

29. Romanov Out

When Nicholas II was forced to step down and abdicate his throne, his brother, the Grand Duke, refused to take it either. This put an end to over 300 years of rule by the Romanov dynasty over Russia.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

28. Duma In

After the February Revolution, a provisional government was established by the former members of the Duma, which was the imperial parliament under the Tsar. Comprised of upper and middle-class liberals fixated on centralized control, they were concerned with a sort of equality and granted civil liberties to the population. However, they did not address the widespread problems of the nation at hand, namely the continuation of the battle and the redistribution of land.

Russian Revolution FactsWikipedia

 

Advertisement

27. Here Come The Soviets

Another faction emerged alongside the provisional government. This was the Petrograd Soviet, made up of the working class and army. Their rise led to a situation known as Dual Power. The socialists in charge did not believe the country was ready for a socialist revolution just yet, and allowed to provisional government to rule. At first.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

26. We Want Peace

With the Soviets demanding peace, the issue of continuing to fight in WWI would prove to be the downfall of the Provisional Government. The battle was unpopular with civilians, who were still struggling severely, and the Soviets began to rise in popularity.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

25. Enter Lenin

Germany saw this as an opportunity to undermine the power of their enemy. In the spring of 1917, they allowed Vladimir Lenin, then in exile, to cross their country and re-enter Russia in hopes he would halt Russian battle efforts by galvanizing the country into further revolution. Nonetheless, the Germans made Lenin travel in a sealed train so he wouldn't foment revolution in their country. With his arrival, his party, the Bolsheviks, soared in popularity.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

Advertisement

24. Nom de Guerre

Vladimir Lenin’s real name was Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov. When the Tsarist secret Officers were persecuting Russian revolutionaries, many of them adopted underground “battle names.” Leon Trotsky’s real name was Lev Davidovich Bronstein and Joseph Stalin’s was Iosif Vissarionovitch Dzhugashvili. It is said that Lenin derived his name from the Lena River, where he was exiled for some time.

Russian Revolution FactsFlickr

 

23. Revolutionary World

Upon his return, Lenin published his April Theses, which called for the immediate overthrow of the Provisional Government and for its replacement to be a working class-led communist government. He believed this to be the first step to a worldwide revolution.

Dictators FactsGetty Images

 

22. Dictatorship

Although he believed in a working class led revolution, Lenin thought that a dictatorship was necessary to accelerate Russia’s transition into socialism and then communism.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

Advertisement

21. Majority

The Bolsheviks were founded by Vladimir Lenin and Alexander Bogdanov originally as a faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party. Bolsheviks means “ones of the majority” (they won the majority of issues in the Second Party Congress vote), and they would be referred to, as is now familiar to us, as the “Reds.”

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

20. Minority

During their rise, the Bolsheviks were at odds with another faction from the same party, the Mensheviks. Mensheviks derived from the word minority, not from their proclivity to drink loads of delicious Manischewitz drink.

Russian Revolution FactsWikipedia

 

19. We Could Do Better

The Bolsheviks would change their name to the All-Russian Communist Party of Bolsheviks in March 1918, and again to the All-Union Communist Party in 1925.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

Advertisement

18. Soviet Origins

The Russian word “soviet” can be translated as “council.” In the early 20th century, Soviets were municipal governing bodies that made collective policy decisions.

Russian Revolution FactsFlickr

 

17. Coup Time

In October of 1917, Lenin and the Bolsheviks overthrew the Provisional Government in a nearly bloodless coup. The October Revolution has come to be known as the Bolshevik Revolution, as well as Red October. Unlike the revolution of February, the October Revolution was well-planned and meticulously coordinated. Instead of just hitting the streets, the Bolsheviks and their allies occupied government buildings and important strategic locations throughout Petrograd.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

16. Vlad Is the Captain Now

The Revolution was formed from Lenin’s radical theoretical writings based on the ideas of Karl Marx. This political ideology is known as Marxist-Leninism and seeks to establish socialist states. Lenin was in control of the Bolshevik party, and in turn, took control of the new government.

Famous Last Words FactsShutterstock

 

Advertisement

15. Peace Be To You

The government immediately took action. They established peace with Germany, nationalized their industries, and, not so peacefully, executed the entire imperial family.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

14. Lost Land

In withdrawing from the battle, Russia ceded a large portion of their territory to Germany in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. The conditions were harsh; when the Germans later argued that the Treaty of Versailles at the end of the battle was stringent, the Allies responded that Versailles was far more lax than Brest-Litovsk.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

13. Absolute Power

The government was to be a centralized government, led by a singular leader advised by a loyal council. This was a result of the Bolshevik realization that in a democratic system, they would be forced to share power, and they instead declared a dictatorship of the proletariat. Russian activist Peter Kropotkin called this move "the burial of the Russian Revolution."

Russian Revolution FactsWikipedia

 

Advertisement

12. New Capital

The Bolsheviks moved the capital from Petrograd to Moscow in 1918, due to it being a more centralized location for the territory they directly controlled.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

11. Secret Officers

The Cheka was established as a revolutionary security in order to surveil and punish “enemies of the people.” These secret office efforts were modelled after the similar events of the French Revolution and were an early precursor to the KGB.

Russian Revolution FactsWikipedia

 

10. All Out Battle

This all led to a devastating civil battle  which would end up as the deadliest battle in history. From 1917-1922, nearly 1.5 million army man and approximately 8 million civilians were ended due to battle, famine, and disease.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

Advertisement

9. Red vs White

The civil battle was fought between the Bolsheviks, known as the Red Army, and a faction called the White Army made up of different socialists, monarchists, anarchists, conservative autocrats, and warlords.

Russian Revolution FactsShutterstock

 

8. Ivan the Great

The White Army was the arm of the White Movement. Their name calls back to the time of absolute monarchy, specifically that of Russia’s first Tsar, Ivan III, who was known as the “White King.” They had no clear ideology due to their diverse make-up.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

7. Allied Backing

The White Army was aided by many countries aligned to stop the Bolsheviks, including Japan, the UK, France, Italy, and the US.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

Advertisement

6. White on White

The Whites were a Nationalistic movement who did themselves no favors internationally, as they were largely Anti-Semitic and were responsible for over 60,000 Jewish murders during the civil battle.

Russian Revolution FactsWikimedia Commons

 

5. Trotsky To The Rescue

The Red Army was dysfunctional at first. It wasn’t until Leon Trotsky took over and applied his incredibly efficient organization skills that the army would grow into a force that could win a battle.

Russian Revolution FactsGetty Images

 

4. Red Victory

Lenin and the Red Army would declare victory in 1922, and establish the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Russian Revolution FactsFlickr

 

Advertisement

3. Home Away From Home

After their defeat, the White Movement fled into exile and established an anti-Communist home base in the United States.

Russian Revolution FactsWikipedia

 

2. The United States Against Soviets

While some European countries recognized the Soviet Union early in the 1920s, the United States refused to until 1933.

Russian Revolution FactsShutterstock

 

1. Cousinly Love

King George V of England was the cousin of Tsar Nicholas II and had the opportunity to save his and his family's life. However, King George and the British Parliament denied amnesty to the Tsar.

Russian Revolution FactsWikipedia

 

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16


READ MORE

Adare Manor

The Top Three Resorts In The World

Any resort can ensure a good time, but the truly remarkable ones want you to experience the vacation of a lifetime. Here are the best resorts in the world.
July 9, 2023 Kaddy Gibson
The Royal Plaza

The Three Most Beautiful Hotel Rooms In The World

Offering peaceful seclusion, world-class customer service, and spectacular views, these are three of the most beautiful hotel rooms in the world.
July 8, 2023 Kaddy Gibson
St. George's Church

The Creepiest Abandoned Attractions

Despite their ominous origins, these abandoned attractions have become some of the world’s most popular tourist destinations.
June 13, 2023 Kaddy Gibson
internal

Four Tips For A Successful Vacation

Vacations are great but it’s also easy for them to turn stressful. Keep these travel tips in mind to get the most out of your next adventure.
July 7, 2023 Kaddy Gibson
internal

Five Must-Have Travel Accessories

If you're going on a trip, there are some things that you should pack with you every time. You can’t go wrong with these must-have travel accessories.
July 6, 2023 Kaddy Gibson
internal

The Most Visited Tourist Attractions In The World

The world is full of great tourist attractions, but have you ever been curious about which ones are the most popular? The list might surprise you.
June 21, 2023 Kaddy Gibson