17.3.6

The Seeds of Revolution

Test yourself on The Seeds of Revolution

After reading these notes, test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

Long-Term Causes of the February Revolution

It took only a few days for the tsar’s regime to collapse. The revolution happened because of long- and short-term causes, including International Women's Day.

Long-standing discontent

Long-standing discontent

  • There was long-standing economic discontent amongst workers and the peasantry.
    • The tsar was unpopular as a wartime leader. There had been a lot of casualties and living standards were low.
  • This eventually led to revolt.
International Women's Day

International Women's Day

  • International Women’s Day was on the 23rd February.
    • Bread shortages, strikes in bakeries across Petrograd and Moscow and grain hoarding by peasants led thousands of women to march on the streets.
    • This made Russia’s problems worse.

The Seeds of Revolution

After 23 February 1917, the combination of worsening living conditions, better weather and political discontent led protesting crowds to grow to 240,000 people. There were then clashes with the police.

Absence of the tsar

Absence of the tsar

  • The tsar, in his role as commander-in-chief, was 780 kilometres away at Mogilev.
  • The tsar was told that crowds were trying to seize control of the city, and on 25 February he ordered the police and the army to stop the protests.
Escalation of Violence - 26th February

Escalation of Violence - 26th February

  • On the 26 February, soldiers killed 40 protesters even though the soldiers did not fully support the tsar.
  • Soldiers from the Pavlovsky Guards in Petrograd refused to follow orders.
  • This initial revolt was put down.
Escalation of Violence - 27th February

Escalation of Violence - 27th February

  • The regiment which had executed the protesters the previous day refused to shoot demonstrators on 27 February.
  • Other regiments did the same and crowds on the streets now had weapons.
  • The young conscripts in the army had little loyalty to the regime.
Collapse of law and order - 28th February

Collapse of law and order - 28th February

  • Law and order officials stopped trying to control the garrison.
  • On 28th February, a military commander reported to the tsar that protesters had taken control of the weaponry in the garrison and the railway stations.
    • Telephone lines had also been seized by the protesters.
The role of the Duma

The role of the Duma

  • The Duma (parliament) petitioned the tsar to create a cabinet (a committee of senior members of the government) representing the different parties.
  • On the streets, the Okhrana (tsar’s secret police) reported that “the masses gained confidence that they could act with impunity” (Secret report, 26 February 1917).
    • The tsar refused to allow the Duma to continue sitting or create a representative cabinet.
Jump to other topics
1

Empires East & West: 1000 AD

1.1

The Rise & Fall of Ancient China’s Empire

1.2

The Medieval Greatness of the Byzantine Empire

1.3

The Golden Age of the Islamic Empire

1.4

The Politics & Power of the Holy Roman Empire

1.5

Medieval Religion

1.6

The Influence of the Church in Medieval Times

1.7

How Religion Tested the Power of Kings

1.8

Dynastic Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

1.9

Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

1.10

Revolts, Rebellions & Rights

1.11

Medieval England & Her Neighbours

1.12

European Renaissance

1.13

Norman Conquest & Control

1.14

Historical Skills

2

The Medieval World: 450-1450 AD

2.1

Anglo-Saxon England

2.2

The Contest for the English Throne

2.3

Conquering the Holy Land, 10-96-1396 AD

2.4

King John

2.5

The Magna Carta & Parliament

2.6

The Black Death

3

Worldviews

4

The Empire of Mali: 1076-1670 AD

5

The Renaissance & Reformations: 1500-1598 AD

6

The British Empire: 1583-1960 AD

7

The Peasants' Revolt: 1381 AD

8

Religion in the Middle Ages

9

Slavery: 1619-1833 AD

10

The English Civil War: 1642-1660 AD

11

The Industrial Revolution: 1750-1840 AD

12

US Independence: 1775-1783 AD

13

The French Revolution: 1789-1815 AD

14

The British Empire: 1857–1930 AD

15

Suffrage: 1840-1928 AD

16

World War 1: 1914-1918 AD

17

The Russian Revolution: 1917 AD

18

The Inter-War Years: 1919-1939 AD

19

World War 2: 1939-1945 AD

20

The Cold War: 1947-1962 AD

21

Civil Rights in the USA: 1954-1975 AD

Practice questions on The Seeds of Revolution

Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
Answer all questions on The Seeds of Revolution

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium