The Russian Revolution: Causes, Events, and Consequences
The Russian Revolution of 1917 ended three centuries of Romanov rule and established the world's first communist state. Learn about the February and October Revolutions, their causes, and global impact.
Background: Russia Before 1917
In the early twentieth century, the Russian Empire under Tsar Nicholas II was one of the largest political entities in the world, spanning eleven time zones and governing nearly 170 million people. Yet beneath this vast surface lay deep structural tensions. Russia remained an overwhelmingly agrarian society — approximately 80% of the population were peasants — while industrialization in cities like St. Petersburg and Moscow had created a rapidly growing, politically radicalized urban working class (proletariat).
The autocratic tsarist system allowed virtually no political representation. Nicholas II, a weak and inflexible ruler, resisted meaningful reform and dismissed the elected parliament (Duma) when it challenged his authority. A failed revolution in 1905 following the catastrophic defeat in the Russo-Japanese War had produced cosmetic reforms — a constitutional manifesto and a Duma — without transferring real power from the tsar.
Causes of the Revolution
Multiple long-term and immediate causes combined to destabilize the Romanov regime by 1917:
| Cause | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| World War I military failures | Immediate | Russia suffered catastrophic losses — 1.7 million dead, 5 million wounded by 1917; army morale collapsed |
| Food shortages and inflation | Immediate | War disrupted food supply chains; bread prices rose 700% between 1914 and 1917 |
| Tsarist autocracy | Structural | No constitutional limits on royal power; repression of political dissent |
| Land inequality | Structural | Landed nobility controlled vast estates while peasants lived in poverty and land hunger |
| Rasputin's influence | Political | Mystical healer's influence over Empress Alexandra undermined confidence in the royal family |
| Growth of revolutionary movements | Ideological | Socialist Revolutionary, Menshevik, and Bolshevik parties organized workers and peasants |
The February Revolution (March 1917)
In late February 1917 (early March by the Gregorian calendar — Russia used the Julian calendar until 1918), spontaneous protests erupted in Petrograd (renamed from St. Petersburg in 1914 for its German sound). Bread riots triggered by food shortages merged with International Women's Day demonstrations on February 23 (March 8). Within days, hundreds of thousands of workers had joined the strikes, and crucially, the Petrograd garrison mutinied and refused to fire on the crowds.
Nicholas II, at the military front, ordered the suppression of the revolt, but the order could not be carried out. On March 2, 1917, he abdicated the throne — ending 304 years of Romanov rule. Power passed to a Provisional Government formed by Duma leaders, which agreed to continue the war and scheduled elections for a Constituent Assembly.
Lenin and the Bolsheviks
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, leader of the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, was in exile in Switzerland when the February Revolution occurred. The German government, seeking to destabilize Russia and end the eastern front, facilitated his transit in the famous sealed train across Germany to Petrograd in April 1917. Upon arrival, Lenin issued his April Theses, demanding immediate withdrawal from the war, transfer of land to peasants, and all power to the Soviets (workers' councils) — rejecting any cooperation with the Provisional Government.
The October Revolution (November 1917)
Through the summer of 1917, support for the Provisional Government collapsed as it continued the disastrous war. The Bolsheviks gained control of the Petrograd Soviet. On the night of October 24–25 (November 6–7 Gregorian), Bolshevik Red Guards seized key points in Petrograd — bridges, telephone exchanges, train stations, and the State Bank — with minimal resistance. The next day, they stormed the Winter Palace and arrested the remaining members of the Provisional Government.
Lenin declared the transfer of power to the Soviets and issued immediate decrees: the Decree on Peace (calling for an end to the war) and the Decree on Land (abolishing private land ownership and redistributing land to peasants). The world's first socialist state had been established.
Civil War and Consolidation of Soviet Power (1917–1922)
The Bolshevik seizure of power did not end conflict. A brutal civil war raged from 1917 to 1922 between the Red Army (Bolsheviks) and the heterogeneous White Army (monarchists, liberals, and foreign interventionist forces from Britain, France, the United States, and Japan). The Reds prevailed through disciplined military organization, control of the population centers, and the inability of the Whites to unite around a common political program.
Key events of this period included:
- The signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany (March 1918), ceding enormous territories to end Russian participation in World War I
- The execution of Tsar Nicholas II and his family at Yekaterinburg in July 1918
- The Red Terror — mass executions of perceived political opponents by the Bolshevik secret police (Cheka)
- The famine of 1921–1922, which killed an estimated 5 million people
Consequences and Global Impact
| Area | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Political | Formation of the Soviet Union (USSR) in 1922; one-party Communist state under Lenin then Stalin |
| Economic | Nationalization of industry; abolition of private property; War Communism followed by New Economic Policy |
| International | Formation of Comintern (Communist International) to spread revolution globally; Cold War origins |
| Social | Legal equality for women; mass literacy campaigns; secularization; destruction of the nobility class |
| Cultural | Socialist realism; avant-garde art movements initially flourished then suppressed under Stalin |
The Russian Revolution's global impact proved immense. It inspired communist movements worldwide, shaped the ideological conflict of the twentieth century, and directly contributed to the conditions that produced World War II. The Soviet state it established persisted until 1991, profoundly shaping the political landscape of Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America throughout the Cold War era.
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