SST
SOCIALISM IN EUROPE AND THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
By Ronit Samuel
Updated On 
Overview
- Socialism seeks a just and equitable society.
- Industrialization led to socialism in Europe.
- Three Types of People : Liberals, Radicals and Conservatives
- The Russian Revolution was complex, but socialism was a big factor.
- The Revolution of 1905.
- The February Revolution of 1917.
- The October Revolution of 1917.
- Stalin’s Policies.
The European Society
- The European Society in the 18th and 19th Century has been divided into three groups of people:
- The Liberals were those who wanted a representative government.
- Radicals were those who wanted a government based on majority population.
- Conservatives were those who wanted no change.
The Liberals
- Liberals wanted a nation which tolerated all religions.
- They opposed the uncontrolled power of dynastic rulers.
- They wanted to safeguard the rights of individuals against governments.
- They argued for a representative, elected parliamentary government.
- They believed in limited democracy, where only men of property had the vote.
- They did not want women to have the vote.
The Radicals
- Radicals wanted a government based on majority of the population.
- They supported women’s suffrage movements.
- They opposed the privileges of great landowners and wealthy factory owners.
- They were not against private property, but they disliked the concentration of property in the hands of a few.
The Conservatives
- Conservatives opposed radicals and liberals.
- They believed in respecting the past and bringing about change slowly.
- They accepted that some change was inevitable in the 19th century.
Industrial Revolution
- The Industrial Revolution led to social and economic changes.
- People moved to cities to work in factories.
- Working conditions in factories were poor.
- Unemployment was common.
- Housing and sanitation were problems.
- Liberals and radicals searched for solutions to these issues.
Liberals and Radicals
- Liberals and radicals believed in individual effort, labor, and enterprise.
- They believed that societies would develop if freedom of individuals was ensured, and the poor could labor.
- They opposed the privileges of the old aristocracy.
- Many working men and women rallied around liberal and radical groups and parties in the early nineteenth century.
Industrial Society & Social Change
- Nationalists, liberals, and radicals wanted revolutions to put an end to the kind of governments established in Europe in 1815.
- They wanted to create nations where all citizens would have equal rights.
- Giuseppe Mazzini, an Italian nationalist, conspired with others to achieve this in Italy.
- His writings inspired nationalists elsewhere, including in India.
Socialism
- Socialism is a vision of how society should be structured.
- Socialists are against private property.
- They believe that private property is the root of all social ills.
- They believe that society should control property.
- They believe that this would lead to more attention being paid to collective social interests.
Socialism and Ideas
- Socialists had different visions of the future.
- Some believed in the idea of cooperatives.
- Robert Owen wanted to build a cooperative community called New Harmony in Indiana.
- Other socialists felt that cooperatives could not be built on a wide scale only through individual initiative.
- They demanded that governments encourage cooperatives.
- Louis Blanc wanted the government to encourage cooperatives and replace capitalist enterprises.
- These cooperatives were to be associations of people who produced goods together and divided the profits according to the work done by members.
Marx and Engels Contributions:
- Capitalist Society: Marx’s view on industrial society as capitalist.
- Worker Exploitation: Capitalists profiting from worker labor.
- Overthrow Capitalism: Marx’s call to dismantle capitalist system.
- Socialist Society: Constructing society with socially controlled property.
- Communist Vision: Marx’s belief in future communist society.
- Worker Triumph: Marx’s conviction in workers overcoming capitalists.
Support for Socialism
- 1870s: Spread of socialist ideas in Europe.
- Coordination: Formation of Second International.
- Associations Formed: Workers’ groups for better conditions.
- Goals: Improved living, working conditions.
- Activities: Funds, reduced working hours, voting rights.
- Germany: Associations worked with Social Democratic Party.
- 1905: Labour Party (UK), Socialist Party (France) formed.
- Government Success: Socialists didn’t govern till 1914.
- Influence: Shaped legislation, not in power.
- Governments: Conservatives, liberals, radicals in control
Russian Context: Russia was one of Least Industrialized European States
- October Revolution (1917): Socialists, led by Bolshevik Party, took control of the government in Russia.
- Background Events:
- Fall of Monarchy (February 1917): Overthrow of the Russian monarchy led to a provisional government taking power.
- October Events: Bolsheviks, under Vladimir Lenin, seized power from the provisional government in October 1917.
- Russian Revolution: Term used to encompass both the fall of the monarchy in February and the October Revolution.
- Unique Situation: Unlike other European countries, Russia experienced socialist takeover in 1917, leading to the establishment of the Soviet Union.
Russia in 1914
- 1914: Tsar Nicholas II ruled Russia and its empire.
- Territory: Included Moscow, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, parts of Poland, Ukraine, Belarus.
- Vast Empire: Extended to the Pacific, encompassing Central Asian states, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan.
- Religions: Majority practiced Russian Orthodox Christianity, with roots in Greek Orthodox Church.
- Diversity: Empire also had Catholics, Protestants, Muslims, and Buddhists.
Early 20th Century Russia
- 85% of people were farmers.
- High agricultural focus, unlike Europe.
- France and Germany: 40-50% in agriculture.
- Russia exported grain.
Industrialization:
- Industry concentrated in areas like St. Petersburg and Moscow.
- Mix of craftsmen and large factories.
- Expansion in the 1890s due to railways and foreign investment.
- Coal, iron, and steel production grew significantly.
- Factory workers and craftsmen were nearly equal in number by 1900s.
Industry Ownership
- Most industry owned by private industrialists.
- Government supervised factories for wages and work hours.
- Factory inspectors struggled to enforce rules.
- Working Conditions:
- Craft workshops: Up to 15-hour workdays.
- Factories: Generally, 10–12-hour workdays.
- Accommodation varied, from rooms to dorms.
Diverse Worker Backgrounds
- Workers from villages and cities.
- Different skill levels among workers.
- Metalworkers considered themselves elite.
- Gender diversity: 31% women by 1914.
- Gender and Wages:
- Women earned less (50-75% of men’s wages).
- Worker Divisions:
- Dress and manners showcased divisions.
- Few associations to aid unemployed workers.
Worker Unity and Strike
- Workers united in strikes against employers.
- Frequent strikes in textiles (1896-1897) and metal industries (1902).
Peasants and Land Ownership
- Peasants cultivated most land.
- Nobility, crown, and Orthodox Church owned large properties.
- Peasants divided, deeply religious, lacked respect for nobility.
- Peasant Unrest:
- Peasants wanted nobles’ land, not respect.
- Refused rent payment, sometimes killed landlords.
- 1902: Large-scale unrest in south Russia.
- 1905: Widespread incidents across Russia.
Peasant Land Management
- Russian peasants pooled land periodically.
- Commune (mir) divided land based on family needs.
- All political parties were illegal in Russia before 1914.
- Russian Social Democratic Workers Party founded in 1898 by socialists respecting Marx’s ideas.
- Operated as an illegal organization due to government policing.
- Established a newspaper, organized strikes, and mobilized workers.
- Some Russian socialists believed peasants, not workers, could drive the revolution due to their land customs.
- Socialist Revolutionary Party formed in 1900, focused on peasants’ rights and land transfer from nobles to peasants.
- Lenin disagreed with Socialist Revolutionaries, saw differentiation among peasants.
- Party divided on organization strategy: Lenin (Bolsheviks) favored disciplined, controlled membership; Mensheviks preferred openness like in Germany.
- Russia was an autocracy; Tsar had sole power, unlike European rulers.
- Liberals in Russia aimed to end Tsar’s unchecked power.
- 1905 revolution: Liberals, Social Democrats, Socialist Revolutionaries united for a constitution.
- Nationalists (like in Poland) and jadidists (advocating modernized Islam) also supported change.
Economic Crisis
- 1904: Tough year for Russian workers, 20% wage drop due to high prices.
- Workers’ associations grew.
- Assembly of Russian Workers started in 1904.
- Putilov Iron Works dismissals triggered industrial action.
- 110,000 St Petersburg workers struck for 8-hour day, higher wages, better conditions.
The Bloody Sunday
- Procession led by Father Gapon to Winter Palace attacked by police and Cossacks.
- Bloody Sunday: Over 100 workers killed, around 300 wounded.
- This event triggered the 1905 Revolution.
- Nationwide strikes followed; universities closed due to student protests for civil liberties.
- Middle-class professionals formed Union of Unions, demanded a constituent assembly.
What Followed?
- 1905 Revolution: Tsar allowed Duma, elected consultative Parliament.
- Unions, committees formed during revolution, went unofficial after 1905 due to legality.
- Tsar dismissed first and second Duma quickly to maintain authority.
- Third Duma packed with conservatives, excluded liberals and revolutionaries.
First World War
- 1914: War between two alliances – Central Powers (Germany, Austria, Turkey) vs. Allies (France, Britain, Russia, later Italy and Romania).
- Global conflict due to each country’s empire.
- Known as the First World War.
World War 1 and Russia
- Initially, WWI garnered support for Tsar Nicholas II in Russia.
- Over time, Tsar’s refusal to involve Duma parties led to dwindling support.
- High anti-German sentiment: St Petersburg renamed Petrograd.
- Tsarina’s German origin and Rasputin’s influence made autocracy unpopular.
Impacts of World War 1
- WWI’s impact differed on the eastern and western fronts.
- Russia faced defeats, massive casualties (7 million by 1917), and army retreats.
- Russian army destroyed crops and buildings, causing over 3 million refugees.
- War hurt industry, railways broke down, labor shortages emerged.
- Essential workshops shut down, food scarcity in cities, bread riots in 1916.
February Revolution of 1917
- Winter 1917, Petrograd faced grim conditions; divisions evident between workers’ quarters and fashionable areas.
- Food shortages in workers’ areas, harsh winter; tensions grew.
- On 22 February, factory lockout triggered sympathy strikes, led by women, marked International Women’s Day.
- Demonstrators moved from factories to Nevsky Prospekt.
- No organized party initially, but workers surrounded fashionable areas, government-imposed curfew.
- Demonstrations continued, cavalry and police called in, but they refused to fire on demonstrators.
- Regiments mutinied, formed Petrograd Soviet, demanding change.
- Tsar abdicated on 2 March following military advice.
- Provisional Government formed by Soviet and Duma leaders.
- Petrograd February Revolution led to monarchy downfall.
After February
- Provisional Gov: Army, landowners, industrialists; liberals, socialists aimed for elected rule.
- Public meeting restrictions lifted; ‘Soviets’ formed nationwide.
- Lenin’s ‘April Theses’: end war, land to peasants, bank nationalization.
- Initially surprising for Bolsheviks, but attitudes changed.
- Summer: Worker movement spread, factory committees, trade unions grew.
- Soldiers’ committees formed; All Russian Congress of Soviets.
- Gov’s power waned, Bolshevik influence rose.
- July: Repressed Bolshevik demonstrations, leaders hid.
- Peasants, Socialist Revolutionaries sought land redistribution, land committees formed.
- Peasants seized land, July-September 1917.
The October Revolution of 1917
- Conflict grew between Provisional Gov and Bolsheviks.
- Lenin feared dictatorship; planned uprising in September.
- Oct 16: Petrograd Soviet and Bolsheviks supported power takeover.
- Trotsky’s committee organized seizure secretly.
- Oct 24: Uprising began, key locations seized.
- Winter Palace shelled, city under committee’s control.
- Other cities saw uprisings; Moscow heavy fighting.
- By December, Bolsheviks ruled Moscow-Petrograd
After October
- Bolsheviks strongly against private property.
- Industry, banks nationalized in Nov 1917.
- Land declared social property; peasants seized nobility’s land.
- Cities: Large houses partitioned; old aristocratic titles banned.
- New army and officials’ uniforms introduced, including Soviet hat (budenovka), chosen in 1918 competition.
- Bolsheviks renamed Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik).
- Nov 1917: Constituent Assembly elections, no majority for Bolsheviks.
- Jan 1918: Assembly rejected, dismissed by Lenin.
- Bolsheviks favored All Russian Congress of Soviets, more democratic.
- Mar 1918: Peace with Germany at Brest Litovsk.
- Years after: One-party state, Bolsheviks only in Congress of Soviets.
- Trade unions under party control; secret police punished critics.
- Party attracted young artists, experiments in arts and architecture.
- Disillusionment due to Party’s censorship.
The Civil War
- Bolshevik Land Redistribution:
- Bolsheviks ordered land redistribution.
- Russian army began breaking up as soldiers, mainly peasants, left for home for land redistribution.
- Opposition to Bolsheviks:
- Non-Bolshevik groups (socialists, liberals, autocracy supporters) condemned Bolshevik uprising.
- Leaders of these groups moved to south Russia and organized troops against the Bolsheviks.
Emergence of “Reds,” “Greens,” and “Whites”:
- During 1918-1919, “Reds” (Bolsheviks), “Greens” (Socialist Revolutionaries), and “Whites” (pro-Tsarists) controlled much of Russia.
- Backed by foreign forces (French, American, British, Japanese) concerned about socialism’s growth.
- Civil War Impact:
- Civil war led to looting, banditry, and famine.
- Private property supporters among “Whites” clashed with peasants who took land, losing popular support.
The Civil War
- Bolshevik Success and Confusion:
- By January 1920, Bolsheviks controlled most of the former Russian empire.
- Cooperation with non-Russian nationalities and Muslim jadidists contributed to their success.
- National Autonomy in the USSR:
- Bolsheviks created the Soviet Union (USSR) from the Russian empire in 1922.
- Non-Russian nationalities granted political autonomy in the USSR.
- Challenges with Autonomy:
- Autonomy combined with unpopular policies imposed by Bolsheviks.
- Attempts to win over nationalities only partly successful due to policies like discouraging nomadism.
Making A Socialist Society
- Bolshevik’s Civil War Measures:
- Industries, banks nationalized amidst civil war.
- Peasants allowed to cultivate socialized land.
- Confiscated land showcased collective effort.
- Centralized Planning and Five Year Plans:
- Centralized planning introduced; economy assessed.
- Five Year Plans crafted, setting targets.
- Fixed prices ignited industrial growth in first two Plans.
- Economic Growth and Industrial Rise:
- Centralized planning spurred economic growth.
- 1929-1933: Industrial production doubled (oil, coal, steel).
- Birth of new factory cities, prosperity’s theme.
- Challenges of Swift Construction:
- Rapid construction, poor working conditions.
- Magnitogorsk steel plant in 3 years.
- 550 work stoppages in first year, worker’s plight unveiled.
- Living Quarters and Harsh Realities:
- In extreme cold, fourth-floor dash for toilets.
- Worker’s lives, stark challenges told.
- Education and Social Support:
- Extended schooling, workers and peasants embrace.
- Factory daycares for women’s kids, a nurturing space.
- Healthcare and Model Living:
- Cheap public health care, a national care.
- Model living quarters, workers well-being flair.
- Uneven Impact and Limited Resources:
- Uneven effect, resources restrained.
- Government’s limits, progress contained.
Stalinism and Collectivization
- Early Planned Economy Challenges:
- Collectivisation of agriculture linked to early Planned Economy.
- Towns faced grain shortage in 1927-1928.
- Stalin’s Measures:
- Stalin took strong actions against hoarding.
- Introduced grain collections, targeting rich peasants.
- Collectivization Decision:
- Small peasant farms couldn’t modernize, leading to grain shortages.
- Stalin’s plan: Eliminate kulaks, establish state-controlled large farms.
- Collective Farms Imposed:
- From 1929, all peasants forced into collective farms.
- Land and tools to collective farms, profits shared.
- Resistance and Punishment:
- Peasants resisted collectivization, lost livestock.
- Resistance met with severe punishment.
- Challenges and Devastation:
- Production didn’t immediately increase.
- Bad harvests (1930-1933) caused a devastating famine, over 4 million deaths.
- Critics and Accusations:
- Party critics voiced concerns over industrial confusion and collectivisation fallout.
- Stalin labeled critics as socialists’ foes, alleging conspiracy.
- Wide Accusations and Imprisonment:
- Accusations spread countrywide, by 1939.
- Over 2 million imprisoned or in labor camps.
- Innocence and Silence:
- Many falsely accused, lacked advocates.
- Silence prevailed, injustice unfolded.
- False Confessions and Tragic End:
- Torture led to false confessions, talented professionals included.
- Executions followed, casting shadows on the era.
Global Influence of the Russian Revolution
- Global Socialist Movement:
- Existing socialist parties in Europe questioned Bolshevik power.
- Formation of communist parties worldwide, inspired by workers’ state concept.
- Communist Influence and Education:
- Bolsheviks urged colonial nations to follow their lead.
- Conference of the Peoples of the East and Comintern fostered international unity.
- Non-Russians joined, received education at Communist University.
- USSR’s Global Impact:
- USSR’s influence soared by Second World War.
- Became a symbol of socialism worldwide.
- Diverse Rethinking of Socialism:
- Across nations, socialism’s ideas reconsidered in varied ways.
