<>1917mr02:Russian tsarist dynasty collapsed under the weight of the catastrophic first mechanized total war, WW1 [ID], in what is called "the Second Russian Revolution" [ID]

<>1917mr02:1917oc25 (eight months of "the Second Russian Revolution"); Petrograd | The Duma Provisional Committee announced formation of a Provisional Government [TXT | McC2:20-3 | VSB,3:881 | BNE:224-6]
*--Leading figures at the outset included activists prominent in post-1905 Russian political life. EG=
Pavel Miliukov (Foreign Minister, KDs)
Aleksandr Guchkov (War and Navy, Octobrist)
Aleksandr Konovalov (Trade and Industry, Progressive Party)
Nikolai V. Nekrasov (Transportation, KDs)
Sergei Shidlovskii
Georgii L'vov (Prime Minister)
*--At this time the Petrograd Soviet of Workers and Soldiers Deputies was organized [Chamberlin,1:431-3]
*--These two amorphous bodies vied with one another for almost nine months in a situation described as "Dual power"
*--Because of "Dual Power" and other factors, the Provisional Government has been characterized as all too provisional and all too little government. A sequence of coalitions followed one after the other in an effort to stabilize a domestic revolutionary situation in the midst of a world war
*--Five serious crises arose in the eight months of the Second Russian Revolution =

*1917fe:1918; Narodno-sotsialisticheskaia (Trudovaia) partiia [NSs] came alive as Peshekhonov, Miakotin and other veterans of the 1905 Revolution were joined by Sergei Mel'gunov, ME Berezin and others who became supporters of the Provisional Government
*--Mel'gunov's memoirs of eventual Provisional Government defeat = The Bolshevik Seizure of Power
*1917fe27:oc25; Russian Gen. Boldyrev kept diary which covered full eight month period of Provisional Government [VRX:189-226]
*1917fe27+:Pollock, An Outsider's View [P20:102]
*--Years later, a key activist, Alexander Kerensky [Aleksander Kerenskii], worked with Professor Robert Browder to gather and publish three volumes of translated primary documents [coded "B&K" in SAC] relating to the "Provisional Government" in the midst of war and revolution
*1927:Great pioneer Soviet-era director, Sergei Eisenstein made 10-year anniversary epic film account of these months, OCTOBER [Oktiabr] [Youtube]
*--SUMMARY  =
Modern mechanized total war challenged European "liberal" traditions everywhere, and perhaps neutralized them permanently. The Russian Provisional Government was just about the last gasp of Russian "liberalism", and feeble it was. Russian liberalism died in combat, so to speak, as it fumbled the most important issue inherited from the old regime, perhaps the most important issue facing European liberalism everywhere = modern total war, in this case WW1 on the eastern front
*--A PEAK AHEAD =
After the Soviet Revolution [ID] overthrew the last of the Provisional Governments, some activists out of the old 1905 liberal tradition joined various military efforts in a failed effort to defeat the emerging Soviet Republic
*--This was a distinct era of politics as war, "internal war" or Revolutionary Civil War [ID]
*--It could be argued that the liberal legacy of the 1905 Revolution was revived to some degree in the Soviet period called "NEP" [ID]. But events probably should not be labeled "liberal" unless they take place on a solid liberal political/institutional foundation. NEP "liberalization" of certain economic market relationships could be called "liberal" only in the most superficial sense of the term
*--How about later in the Gorbachev era of "perestroika" [ID]?
*--Or the post-Soviet governments of Boris Yeltsin [ID] and Vladimir Putin [ID]?
\\
*--William Rosenberg, Liberals in the Russian Revolution

<>1917mr02:1918jy28; USA joined WW1 in its final 18 months. In the USA and around the world, the Russian Revolution seemed proof that WW1 was a prelude to global revolution or reform [see references to Arno Mayer's study below]. Many deplored this possibility, many welcomed it, but nearly everyone expected it. USA President Woodrow Wilson welcomed the possibility for global reform; Lenin welcomed global revolution
*--Only after the collapse of the Russian old regime did USA feel free to enter WW1. Now USA would be (or at least could tell itself that is was) in alliance with "democracies" against "imperialists" =

"The Allies"
England (now wasn't it a "British Empire"?), France (still possessing imperial domains), Italy, and newly tsarless Russia
vs.
"Central Powers"
German Empire, Austro-Hungarian Empire, Ottoman Turkish Empire

*--USA pundit Randolph Bourne expressed his feeling of betrayal as USA entered the war. His article, "The War and the Intellectuals" [W TXT], claimed that the American intelligentsia was swept up in war fever
*--The American press followed the early campaigns [pix] with enthusiasm
*1917my26:USA President Woodrow Wilson gave one version of WW1, The Idealistic View [P20:77 | More of Wilson's ideas about the Great War = DPH:346-51]
*--The hypertext LOOP on the name of President Woodrow Wilson below provides a more detailed look at the following developments =
*--USA optimism about the possibility of global reform was shaken by the "Ten Days that Shook the World", namely, the 1917oc25:Soviet Revolution in Russia
*--USA optimism about great changes was seriously dampened when Vladimir Lenin and his Bolshevik Party came to power
*--USA was especially shaken by the 1918mr03:Brest-Litovsk Treaty which confirmed formal Bolshevik withdrawal from WW1 and the cessation of hostilities on the eastern front
*--USA felt doubly betrayed by Russia. First, its revolution turned very radical. Second, Russia left the war
*--USA remained a belligerent and the main material support for Allied efforts on the western front until 1918no11:WW1's bitter end, eight months after the Brest-Litovsk Treaty and Russia's withdrawal from the war
*--USA was determined to win a central place for itself on the bargaining table at the end of the war. Wilson hoped to prevent a rebirth of old-fashioned European diplomatic practices that he felt caused the war
*--But Wilson also hoped to restrain the momentum of the new Soviet regime in Russia, led by Lenin and the Russian Social Democratic Workers Party (Bolsheviks) with international ambitions perhaps even grander than those of USA President Woodrow Wilson
*--Wilson found himself between a rock and a hard place
\\
*--Arno Mayer, Wilson vs. Lenin: Political Origins of the New Diplomacy, 1917-1918, might best be read in the following page order: 1-4, 35, 329, 344-52(mid), 206-210, 296-304, 339-44 , 352(mid)-393. Here is Mayer's conclusion [TXT]
*--The best account of the decline in Russian-American relations in these months is George Frost Kennan, Soviet-American Relations, 1917-1920 (1956-58)
*--Also see Kennan's briefer but more comprehensive Russia and the West under Lenin and Stalin (1961). Kennan became a major figure in US foreign policy in the early years of the Cold War

<>1917mr02:The Petrograd Soviet issued Order No. 1 [McC1:102-3 | McC2:23-4 | DRR:20-1 | DPH:363-4 | GRH:297-8 | DIR2:477-8]

<>1917mr03:+; Edward Heald letter described Russian revolutionary events observed during his travels there [ASEER#4,16-17 (??):116-57,118-33 | WRH:581-95]
*--Graham R. Taylor described events in Orenburg Province [WRH:604-15]

<>1917mr03:Petrograd. The tsar's brother Grand Prince Michael Aleksandrovich refused the crown pending convocation of a constituent assembly and the creation of a new legal basis for government in Russia [W] [GRH:298-9 | McC2:14-16 | DIR2:478 | DIR3:525-6 | Russian GDR:511]. That never happened

<>1917mr03:Izvestiia report by Executive Committee of Petrograd Soviet about Provisional Government [McC2:26-7]

<>1917mr03 [mr15?]:Ukraine Central Rada assumed leadership of national movement

<>1917mr06:Russian Provisional Government declared its program (author = A.A. Manuilov) [GRH:308-9 | DPH:364-6 | ORW:177-8 | “Obrashchenie vremennogo pravitel’stva k naseleniiu Rossii”| GRV:278-9]

<>1917mr07:Russian Provisional Government declared full reinstatement of the constitution of the Grand Duchy of Finland [W]

<>1917mr08:Russian Emperor Nicholas II made final address as tsar [PFM:472-3]

<>1917mr09:12; Russian Provisional Government Naval Minister Aleksandr Guchkov wrote general Alekseev [Chamberlin,1:435-8]

<>1917mr11:Petrograd Soviet announced agreement w/Petrograd Association of Manufacturers re. working conditions [McC2:60-1]

<>1917mr14:Petrograd Soviet appealed to people of world [McC2:24-6]

<>1917mr26:Peasant Union, resolution [GRH:373-4]

<>1917mr27:Russian Provisional Government war aims [McC1:100-101 | Chamberlin,1:440-1]
*--There were those who still dreamed that revolutionary Russia on the eastern front might hold up its end of the bargain with allies still fighting the grim stalemate on the western front

<>1917ap03:Vladimir Lenin published "April Theses" [W] [DRR:23-6 | McC2:51-4 | DPH:366-8 | WRH:597-9]
*--For years efforts have been made to picture Lenin, returning now through Germany on a diplomatically "sealed train", as a hireling of German Imperial power [McC2:138-40]

<>1917ap05:Petrograd Soviet resolution in support of Provisional Government [McC2:26-7]

<>1917ap08:Leo Kamenev criticized Lenin’s “April Theses” from a moderate and less militant perspective on Russian events [McC2:54-5]

<>1917ap13:Miliukov memo on exclusion of Russia from international conference [McC2:45-6]

<>1917ap20:Russian Provisional Government Foreign Minister Pavel Miliukov's note to allies on the question of war aims caused scandal and forced his resignation  [Chamberlin,1:444 | McC2:46-7 | DPH:368-70]

<>1917ap21:Petrograd Soviet resolution on war aims [GRH:336]

<>1917ap25:Petrograd Soviet called International socialist conference on WW1 [McC2:47-8]

<>1917ap29:Lenin on the nationalities question (re. national minorities) [McC2:48-50]

<>1917ap30:Aleksandr Guchkov resigned as Naval Minister in connection with the ap20 scandal [GRH:396]
*--After more than 12 years near the center of political events, Guchkov backed away from public involvement in Russian governmental affairs, eventually fled Russia and went into emigration

<>1917my:Council of Elders of railroad workers union, appeal to Factory and Mills Committees [Fabrichnye i zavodskie komitety] [DRR:65-8]
*--Russian situation described [McC2:28-9]

<>1917my02 (my15 NS):Petrograd Soviet issued appeal to "Socialists of All Countries", calling for

peace without annexations or indemnities on the basis of the self-determination of peoples is the formula adopted unreservedly by the proletarian mind and heart [...]. The Russian Revolutionary Democracy appeals first to you, Socialists of the Allied countries. You must not permit the voice of the Provisional Government of Russia to remain the only voice in the Entente. You must force your governments to state definitely and clearly that the platform of peace without annexations or indemnities, on the basis of the self-determination of peoples is also their platform [...]. The Russian Revolutionary Democracy appeals to you, Socialists of the Austro-German alliance: You cannot allow the Armies of your Governments to become the executioners of Russian liberty [...]. In order to unite these efforts, the Petrograd Soviet ... has decided to take the initiative in calling for an international conference of all the Socialist parties and factions in every country

\\
*--Mayer:194-5

<>1917my05:Russia | First Coalition organized and issued declaration [Chamberlin,1:447-9 | McC2:27]
*--Russian woman Sofia Panina became Deputy Minister of State Welfare in the Provisional Government: Memoirs [DRW:366-71]

<>1917my09:no15; Moscow | Letters of female revolutionary Lusik Lisinova [StH:129-36]

<>1917my25:All-Russian Congress of Soviets of Peasant Deputies [GRH:375-8]

<>1917je:Russia. "From a Memorandum of Kirsanov Landowners..." [RRC1,3:507-10]

<>1917je01:French parliamentary debate on peace (follows year of mutinous unrest among allied troops)
\\
*--Mayer:206-210 top

<>1917je03:Factory and Mills Committees [Fabrichnye i zavodskie komitety] conference, resolution re. industrial disorganization [Chamberlin,1:449-51]

<>1917je03:je24; Petrograd | First All-Russian Congress of Soviets. The dominant parties were SRs and Mensheviks. Some resolutions [GRH:360-71 | McC2:29-31 | Chamberlin,1:451-3,456-7]

<>1917je07:Russian First Coalition Food Minister A.V. Peshekhonov reported to Soviet [B&K | DRR:60-5]

<>1917je07:France | William Pressey described being injured by German gas attack [Eye:473-4]

<>1917je08:Russian Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Central Committee voted for je10:armed demonstration; je09:cancelled

<>1917je09:Petrograd | First All-Russian Congress of Soviets
*--
Bolsheviks were unable to pass their resolutions for immediate dissolution of the State Duma and the State Council [DPH:370-1]
*--Website devoted to this Congress

<>1917je10:Ukrainian Rada,1st Universal declaration [Hunczak | GRH:435-44 | DRR:76-79] | Provisional Government reply [Chamberlin,1:454-5]

<>1917je10:Izvestiia reported Soviet appeals to workers not to demonstrate [McC2:29-31]

<>1917je16:Russian First Coalition Minister Aleksandr Kerenskii supported plan for military offensive [McC2:31-2]

<>1917je18:Russia launched its last ill-fated "June Offensive", the Galician offensive, on the WW1 eastern front [GRH:425-35 | McC2:31-2]
*--Germany and the Revolution

<>1917je18:Executive Committee of All-Russian Soviets of Peasant Deputies joined w/All-Russian Soviet of Workers and Soldiers Deputies [GRH:383]

<>1917je28:Ukraine, Kiev | Provisional Government sent delegation to Ukraine Rada

<>1917jy02:Constitutional Democratic Party [KDs; Kadets] ministers resigned

<>1917jy02:Memo from provincial bank [RRC1,3:510-11]

<>1917jy03:jy05; Petrograd| July Days [GRH:444-65]
*--SR activists penned justification for the armed uprising of machine-gun regiments against the Provisional Government
*--Soviet of peasant deputies response [Chamberlin,1:455-6 | McC2:32-3 | DPH:371-3]

<>1917jy04:Soviet appeal in connection with July Days demonstration [McC2:32-3]

<>1917jy05:SBv?? proclamation [McC2:33]

<>1917jy05:Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) printing press seized.  Lenin & Grigorii Zinoviev fled as the July Days uprising collapsed
*--They were soon émigrés in Finland

<>1917jy05:jy12; Finnish law of the Sejm on Supreme Power [DRR:79-82]

<>1917jy07:Leon Trotsky (leader of Mezhraiontsy [Inter-district Activists]), Leo Kamenev (Bolshevik), and others arrested in the aftermath of the "July Days"

<>1917jy07:Lvov resigned [GRH:470-1]

<>1917jy08:Aleksandr Kerenskii became Prime Minister [GRH:471]

<>1917jy16:Ukraine. Rada 2nd declaration [Hunczak]

<>1917jy18:Kerenskii appointed general Lavr Kornilov commander in chief

<>1917jy23:Aleksandr Kerenskii organized Russian Provisional Government's Second Coalition cabinet [GRH:479 | McC2:34]

<>1917jy25c:David Soskice memoirs re. Second Coalition [McC2:34-7]

<>1917jy26:au03; Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) "6th" party conference; Mezhraiontsy & Leon Trotsky joined Bolsheviks

<>1917au:Lenin wrote preface to his unfinished essay "State and Revolution" [W], an analysis of the meaning of the Paris Commune and Marxist teachings on the revolutionary state [CCC2,2:919-33 | BMC1:622-4 | BMC4:726-9]

<>1917au:Podvoiskii report on Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) military organization [DRR:37-41]

<>1917au09:Russian Fourth Duma ceased to function [GRH:412-13]

<>1917au13:au15; Moscow State Conference [GRH:482]

<>1917au14:Chkheidze declaration of United Democracy [GRH:496-504]

<>1917au15:Russian Orthodox Church Council Opened and continued in session into 1918
\\
*1991fa:SlR:497-511| Catherine Evtuhov, "The Church and the Russian Revolution: Arguments For and Against Restoring the Patriarchate at the Church Council of 1917-1918"

<>1917au21:Riga [Latvia], a vital Russian Imperial seaport, was occupied by German forces [GRH:584-6]

<>1917au25:au30; Russian Revolution threatened by military coup d'état in what came to be known as the "Kornilov Affair" [GRH:513-33 | DPH:373-4 | McC2:37-43]
*--Military commanders blamed civilians and their feeble civilian revolutionary government for the tragic failures on the eastern front. Some of them were contemplating creation of a war-time military dictatorship


1917au21:Petrograd | library of the Winter Palace
Aleksandr Fedorovich Kerenskii,
Photograph by K. Bulla

<>1917au27:Aleksandr Kerenskii sent telegram condemning Kornilov [McC2:37-8]. Kornilov replied [38-9 (w/observations of N. Ukraintsev, member of special Committee of Inquiry,39-43)]
*--The scramble to resist an apparent imminent military coup d'état mobilized many who were willing to fight against Kornilov but not for Kerenskii

<>1917au28:Simbirsk provincial Commissar [F/] reported [RRC1,3:511-12]

<>1917au31:Petrograd Soviet heard SDs(b) resolution on need to mobilize against Kornilov [Chamberlin,1:462-4]

<>1917se:Petrograd Factory and Mills Committees [Fabrichnye i zavodskie komitety], conference3, resolution  [DRR:69-71]

<>1917se01:Aleksandr Kerenskii organized "Directory" as Second Coalition unraveled and declared Russia a republic [McC2:44] "Council of Five" [McC2:43-4]
*--Kornilov was arrested [GRH:533-9]

<>1917se02:Woodrow Wilson letter to Colonel Edward House called for creation of "American Inquiry" or "Peace Inquiry Bureau", a group of intellectuals, including the young scholar-journalist Walter Lippmann
*--Lippmann played the central role over the next four months in the composition of Wilson's "Fourteen Points" [Mayer:334-9]

<>1917se03:Soviet Central Executive Committee called for Democratic Conference; Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Central Committee supported

<>1917se03:Kronstadt. On eve of SOVIET REVOLUTION. Red Guard organized [McC2:132-4 | GRH:580]

<>1917se04:Leon Trotsky out of prison

<>1917se09:Social Democratic Party (mensheviks) & Social Revolutionary Party resigned from Central Committee of Soviet. SDs(m) and SRs were wilting in the intense political heat of revolution
*--Regional Soviet met in Finland with a Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) [SDs(b)] majority

<>1917se11:se14; Lenin called for an uprising [McC2:113-15]

<>1917se14:se22; Petrograd Democratic Conference [GRH:542-57]

<>1917se17:Volia narod [The Will of the People, a Social Revolutionary Party newspaper] editorial [Jones:62-3]

<>1917se19:Petrograd Democratic Conference decided to convoke All-Russian Democratic Conference (Provisional Council of the Republic, All-Russian Democratic Council, or "Pre-Parliament") [GRH:563-67]

<>1917se19:Moscow.  Soviet election, Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Executive Committee w/Nogin=president

<>1917se21:Petrograd Soviet resolution on question of political power in which All-Russian Democratic Conference was rejected in favor of Congress of Soviets [GRH:582-4]

<>1917se23:All-Russian Democratic Conference, meeting1 [GRH:564-7]
*--On same day, the planned All-Russian Soviet meeting cancelled because of opposition within military [GRH:603-4]

<>1917se24:?? Pre-Parliament (All-Russian Democratic Conference) opened; Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) walked out
*--Lenin returned in secret from Finland to Petrograd

<>1917se25:Aleksandr Kerenskii formed Third Coalition cabinet [GRH:558-63 | McC2:45]
*--Petrograd Soviet Executive Committee elected Leon Trotsky president [GRH:584]

<>1917se26:Petrograd Soviet resolution re. All-Russian Democratic Conference [GRH:567 | Chamberlin,1:464]

<>1917se28:Novaia zhizn' [The New Life] reported the reasons why the SDs Menshevik faction [SDs(m)] was falling apart [W]

<>1917oc06:Delo naroda [The People's Cause], an SR newspaper, raised complicated issue of relationship between revolutionary and irregular political institutions -- the Soviets -- and the planned national Constituent Assembly [TXT]
*1917oc06:Petrograd | Provisional Government announced the formal dissolution of the Fourth State Duma [Russian GDR:512]
*1917oc06:Petrograd Soviet resolution against evacuation of Petrograd. The Soviet feared that opponents might be willing to surrender Petrograd, the home of radical opposition, to the Germans [GRH:580-2]

<>1917oc09:Petrograd HQ ordered part of Petrograd garrison to front. Soldiers refused [GRH:587]
*--Petrograd Soviet organized Defense Committee; Lazimir = president [GRH:587-8; 594-7]

<>1917oc10:Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Central Committee resolution, composed by Lenin, urged a revolutionary military attack on the Russian Provisional Government [Sukhanov | DRR:99 | McC2:50-9 | WRH:600] *--War and revolution were fusing. International war was becoming also internal war

<>1917oc11:Leo Kamenev & Grigorii Zinoviev letter of opposition to SD(b) insurrection [McC2:115-17 | DRR:100-2]

<>1917oc11:oc13; Congress of Soviet of Northern Region [GRH:598-602]
*--Trotsky called for all power to the Soviet in order to save Petrograd & the Revolution
*--All-Russian conference of Factory and Mills Committees [Fabrichnye i zavodskie komitety] resolution [Reed,3:1] [Reed LOOP]

<>1917oc12:Soviet Defense Committee (GO oc09:) renamed “Military Revolutionary Committee” [F/MRC] [GRH:588-9]

<>1917oc12:Congress of Public Men organized, a conservative group, alarmed by mounting disorder

<>1917oc13:de05; Baltic Fleet navy diary [VRX:131-88]
*1917oc:Russian Army Intelligence Report on the breakdown of military discipline [B&F:24-6]
*1917fa:Agrarian unrest again on the rise [McC2:62-6, 71-72]
*--Russia was physically and psychologically exhausted by WW1 [GO above]
*--The Soviet of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Deputies was on the verge of declaring war on the war
*--Russia was in fact unable to attack or defend itself in either internal war or external war (on the eastern front) [McC2:45-8 on foreign affairs]

<>1917oc13:Petrograd Soviet soldiers section organized department of Workers' Guard, organization HQ & planned city-wide conference for late Oct

<>1917oc14:Soviet Central Executive Committee met (Gotz = president) [GRH:591-2]

<>1917oc15:Petrograd newspapers discussed anticipated Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) "move"

<>1917oc16:Petrograd Soviet (Kamenev =president) agreed to send observers to conference in Pskov called by general Cheremisov, commander in chief of northern front, and approved Lazimir report on MRC [GRH:589-90]
*--Trotsky spoke on the MRC and other issues [McC2:117-21]

<>1917oc16:Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Central Committee meeting [Jones:64-76]

<>1917oc17:Lenin discussed revolutionary military with Podvoiskii & Antonov-Ovseenko & other MRC activists [DRR:107-110 | Jones:108-128]

<>1917oc18:Petrograd Soviet newspaper Izvestiia published editorial vs. Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) [GRH:605-6] said they plan military revolutionary strike against Provisional Government, Central Executive Committee & Council of the Republic (All-Russian Democratic Conference?)

<>1917oc19:Petrograd Soviet (Leon Trotsky president) [GRH:613]

<>1917no02(NS):English statesman Arthur James Balfour sent public declaration in favor of the Zionist plan for a Jewish National Home [Israel] to head of the great European banking family, Lord Rothschild [TXT | BNE:298]
*--England continued to plan independently of other Allies for the future disposition of Ottoman Turkish Empire holdings
*1917no02:USA and Japan exchanged notes, known together as the Lansing-Ishii Agreement [TXT], which acknowledged Japan's "special interests" in China, but reaffirmed the Open Door policy in China

<>1917oc20:oc23; Red Guard conference [Articles of Service:Chamberlin,1:465-7; break w/Petrograd military district:467-8]

<>1917oc20:MRC activated [DRR:116-7]

<>1917oc21:MRC organized "Bureau" (Lazimir = president, Podvoiskii = vice president, Antonov-Ovseenko = secretary).  A commissar was assigned to each military unit.  Lazimir led delegation to Petrograd GHQ.  Polkovnikov opposed MRC command over Petrograd garrison [GRH:593-4]

<>1917oc22:Nikolai Sukhanov [ID] described how Trotsky aroused the peoples [P20:111]

<>1917oc23:Newspaper of the Petrograd Soviet, News [Izvestiia] raised question of need to make Soviets the permanent governmental institutions [Reed,2:3]

<>1917oc24:Council of the Republic, Aleksandr Kerenskii speech [StH:77-87]
*--Lenin letter to Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) called on them to take power [WRH:600-1]
*--Petrograd Soviet (Trotsky=president) [McC2:124-5 | GRH:616-17]
*--Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) printing press seized by Provisional Government military
*--Petrograd MRC circular sounded alarm [McC2:121-2 | DPH:375-6 | DRR:121-2 | Chamberlin,1:469-70]
*--Minutes of Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Central Committee meeting [DRR:122-5]
*--Stankevich described events of the day [McC2:122-4]

<>1917oc25:(NS no07) "The Soviet Revolution" (aka "The Bolshevik Revolution" or "The Communist Revolution" or "The October Revolution" or -- throughout the Soviet period of Russian history -- "Great October")

Revolutionary soldiers ride into action on fender of truck

\\
*--Sheila Fitzpatrick, Russian Revolution, 1917-1932
*--Robert Daniels,. Red October: The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917
*--Alexander Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks Come to Power
*--Leonard Schapiro, The Origin of the Communist Autocracy is the classic anti-Soviet study of political opposition to Soviet power
On the American and Soviet revolutionary traditions, see the following:
*--Hanna Arendt, On Revolution (1963), especially "The Revolutionary Tradition and Its Lost Treasure":217-285, a macro-analytic approach
*--Crane Brinton, Anatomy of Revolution (1938) (pb, NYC: 1952); read intro, then 14-27, 70-96, 250-79; follow index on American and Russian revolutions (Classic,but light & seriously dated)
*--Ethan T. Colton, Four Patterns of Revolution: Communist USSR, Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, New Deal America (1964). Surprising perspective
*1984oc:CSinSH#26:672-708 (Robert Kelley on politics and ideas in USA and USSR)


<>1917oc25:Newspaper of the Petrograd Soviet, News [Izvestiia], editorial vs. Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) [GRH:614-16]

<>1917oc26:SRs published condemnation of Bolshevik/Soviet seizure of power [W]

<>1917oc27:Anti-Bolshevik Party press was suppressed, this the original act of Soviet censorship [SGv:18-19 | PS&C:130-1]
*--Related decree [McC2:190]
*--"Committee for the Salvation of the Motherland" appealed against the Soviet Revolution [Chamberlin,1:478-9]
*--Moscow Conference of Businessmen passed resolution [Reed,1:5]

<>1917oc27:oc31; general Krasnov moved military forces toward Petrograd

<>1917oc28:Bourgeois newspaper reaction to October Revolution [Reed appendix to ch3,#2=TXT] [Reed LOOP]

<>1917oc29:All-Russian Executive Committee of Railroad labor unions sponsored conference of socialist parties (SDs, SRs, etc.)

<>1917oc30:1917no01; Aleksandr Kerenskii military move against Bolsheviks failed. Kerenskii's five months near the center of events was over, but over the next half century he tried to explain and justify his role in events [ID], and he helped gather one of the best anthologies of translated primary documents on these months [ID]

<>1917oc30:Bolsheviks announced new social insurance policy [ID]

<>1917no02:Soviet Decree on the right of the peoples of the old Russia Empire to revolutionary national self-determination (signed: Joseph Stalin & Vladimir Lenin) [McC2:191-3 | CCC2,2:1119-20 | DRR:159-61]

\\
*1990:Graham Smith, ed., The Nationalities Question in the Soviet Union [Janus provides table of contents]

<>1917no02:Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) Central Committee rejected coalition government

<>1917no04:Soviet of People's Commissars [Sovnarkom] ultimatum to Rada [Chamberlin,1:486-8]

<>1917no07:Ukraine Rada,3rd declaration: proclamation of Ukraine as autonomous republic [Hunczak | Chamberlin,1:479-82]

<>1917no08:Russian Orthodox Church Patriarchate restored with appointment of Tikhon. At the same time the nearly 200-year old bureaucratic office, the Holy Synod, was abolished
*1917:1918; Liudmila Gerasimova urged Orthodox Church Council to recognize the role of women in church administration and restore the office of Deaconess [DRW:283-6]

<>1917no08:Trotsky reported on the international situation [RFP3:96-9]

 \\
Mayer:18

<>1917no12:Constituent Assembly election

<>1917no14:Soviet Decree "On Workers' Control" (Vladimir Lenin & Shliapnikov) [Bunyan1:4-7 | Chamberlin,1:482-4 | DRR:161-3 | McC2:233-5 | DPH:379-80 | SGv:405-]

<>1917no18:The Left-SRs joined Lenin and SDs(b) on the governing Soviet of People's Commissars[Sovnarkom]
*--Thus, a semblance of coalition government was created

<>1917no19:1917no28; Ten-day conference of new party, Left-SRs

<>1917no22:provisional armistice on the eastern front of WW1, de02:Armistice confirmed

<>1917no28:Soviet decree ordered arrest of Constitutional Democrats [Partiia narodnoi svobody; Kadets or KDs]

<>1917de:German prison in Breslau described by radical Social Democrat Rosa Luxemburg who was there because of her WW1 pacifism [Eye:483-4]

<>1917de01:Novaia zhizn' [The New Life] carried an article by ex-Bolshevik V.A. Rudnev, criticizing Lenin and single-party rule [W TXT]
*--New Life was a Menshevik-Internationalist party publication. Maksim Gorky was the leading figure
*--Maksim Gorky's own harsh evaluations of early Soviet politics were published in Untimely Thoughts: Essays on Revolution, Culture and the Bolsheviks, 1917-1918

<>1917de01:Moscow decree on organization of Supreme Soviet of National Economy [McC2:230-2 | MDF:119]

<>1917de06:[de19 NS]; Soviet announcement of Brest-Litovsk armistice or cease-fire with Germany on the eastern front of WW1

<>1917de07:Soviet Decree on revolutionary state police, the "Cheka" [DRR:174-5 | McC2:181 | B&F | MDF:119 | SGv:237]

<>1917de07:Sovnarkom allocated 2M rubles for the needs of the revolutionary international movement [RFP3:104]
*--Bolsheviks felt world revolution was essential to their success

<>1917de14:Decree on Nationalization of Banks [Chamberlin,1:489 | McC2:232 | CCC2,2:1120-1 | MDF:119]

<>1917de16:Soviet decree on organization of Red Army [McC2:140-1 | Chamberlin,1:489-90 | MDF:119]

\\
*--Merkle describes managerial concepts behind new War Minister Trotsky's creation of the Red Army [TXT]

<>1917de20:Decree on civil marriage & Finnish independence

<>1917de22:Russian-Polish border town Brest-Litovsk, site of German-Russian peace talks. Revolutionary Russia's foreign minister Joffe offered six points re. peace [Mayer:296-304 (-312)]

  1. No forcible annexation of territories seized in the war
  2. Restore national independence where it was terminated during war
  3. National groups independent before the war should be allowed by referendum to decide question of independence
  4. Multi-cultural regions should be administered so as to allow all possible cultural independence and self-regulation of minorities peoples
  5. No indemnities. Personal losses should be compensated out of international fund
  6. Colonial question should be decided according to points 1-4
German Foreign Minister Richard von Kühlmann and Austrian Foreign Minister Count Ottokar Czernin, in all their old-world splendor, were met by leather-coated representatives of revolutionary Soviet power who at first brushed off the Central Power dignitaries and distributed incendiary pamphlets to German troops. The eastern front looked like it was shifting from international war to revolutionary war
\\
*--Mayer:302 compares Joffe's six points with Lenin's views on Imperialism [ID]
*--Mayer:303-4 highlights Rbt Lansing's fear of revolutionary potential as WW1 ended

<>1917de26:Decree of Sovet narodnykh deputatov [Sovnarkom; Council of People’s Deputies] re. Rights & Duties of Soviet [MDF:119]

<>1918:1919; Russian writer Vasilii Rozanov, The Apocalypse of Our Times [cf. Edie,2:286-304]

<>1918:Russian poet Aleksandr Blok, "The Intelligentsia and the Revolution" [Raeff3:364-71]
*--Blok's most brilliant twenty years were at a close

<>1918:Russian feminist revolutionary Aleksandra Kollontai, "The Family & the Communist State" [Wm. Rosenberg,Bolshevik:79-88]

<>1918:German sociologist Max Weber delivered a lecture which treated with a special flare the conflict between scholarly detachment and engagement with everyday life, "Politics as a Vocation" [CCS:361-90 | CCS,1:651-82]

<>1918ja04:USA President Woodrow Wilson's Peace Inquiry Bureau position paper "The War Aims and Peace Terms it Suggests" [Mayer:339-44]. GO ja05:British Prime Minister delivered his views on war aims

<>1918ja04:Ukraine invaded by military force loyal to Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks)

<>1918ja05:London Trades Union Congress heard address by Prime Minister David Lloyd George, in which he offered comprehensive and progressive statement of British war aims

\\
*--Mayer:323-8

<>1918ja05:ja06; Russian delegates to the Constituent Assembly, elected almost two months earlier [ID], now met for one long day and declared Russia a republic

<>1918ja07:ja14; All-Russian Congress of Workers' Unions [professional'nye soiuzy; Trade Unions] met for first time [Bunyan1:12-15]

\\
*1963mr:SlR#22,1:47-63| Paul Avrich, "The Bolshevik Revolution and Workers' Control in Russian Industry"

<>1918ja07:Lenin's 21 theses on the need for immediate peace with Central Powers [RFP3:104-111 | Senn,2:38] included the following =

The peace negotiations at Brest-Litovsk have made it completely clear ... that in the German government (which completely directs the other governments of the Quadruple Alliance) the military party has taken over, and it has essentially presented Russia with an ultimatum. [...] The ultimatum is such: either more war or an annexationist peace, i.e., a peace on the condition that we yield all land occupied by us, the Germans keep all land occupied by them and impose upon us an indemnity (externally disguised as payment for the maintenance of prisoners) in the neighborhood of three billion rubles, to be paid over several years.

*--Lenin argued that the Soviets should accede and take this bitter pill. Further war would be even more disastrous. The eastern front was winding down

<>1918ja08:USA Congress| Woodrow Wilson address outlined "Fourteen Points" [TXT] [Mayer:352 mid-367 | BNE:215-19]

\\
*--Mayer describes Allied views on war aims as of this time

<>1918ja09:Ukraine Rada 4th declaration, "independence, subject to no one," a free, sovereign national state of the People of the Ukraine" [Hunczak]

<>1918ja16:Kiev taken by Bolshevik military units [McC2:141-2]

<>1918ja19:Tikhon,Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, pastoral letter condemned Bolsheviks [Chamberlin,1:495-7 | McC2:193-5 | Curtis, Russian Revolution:177-9]

<>1918ja23:Decree on relationship of Russian Orthodox Church to the new revolutionary state [Chamberlin,1:497-8]

<>1918ja24:Ukraine Rada signed WW1 treaty w/Germany

<>1918ja26:Ukraine Rada toppled by military loyal to Bolshevik Party. Revolutionary civil war loomed

<>1918ja27:Soviet decree on socialization of agricultural land [McC2:248-51] CF=1918fe19

<>1918ja28:Moscow Congress of Soviets, Resolution#3 established Soviet style federal government [B&F:396-7 | DPH:427-9]

<>1918ja28:Moscow decree annulling state debts inhereted from the old regime [Chamberlin,1:498-9 | McC2:235]
*--Disavowal of national debts much perturbed international financial interests

<>1918fe01:fe13; There was no 1918:fe01:fe13 in Russian history

<>1918fe18:German-Russian hostilities resumed after Germany denounced Soviet diplomatic stalling and abandoned negotiations at Brest-Litovsk

<>1918fe19:Lenin pleaded for acceptance of peace, but Party rejected his plea
*--Two more weeks of German/Austrian advance finally convinced everyone that peace was necessary [McC2:142-4] GO mr03

<>1918fe19:Russian Federated Soviet Republic passed "Fundamental Law of Agricultural Land Socialization" [CCC2,2:1121-2] CF=1918ja27

<>1918fe22:Social Democratic Party (bolsheviks) [SD(b)] accepted the offer by western-front allies to aid them on the eastern front. All this presumed that the Soviets were going to continue the war effort against Central Powers. However =

<>1918mr03:German-Russian Brest-Litovsk treaty ended World War One on eastern front [W]

<>1918mr05:England military landing at Murmansk on White Sea. Allied intervention intensified

<>1918mr06:mr07; Moscow| Communist Party Congress #7, re. peasant affairs and agricultural land policy [Chamberlin,2:478-81]
*--Bolshevik Party [SD(b)] changed its name to Communist Party

<>1918mr15:Left-SRs withdrew from the institutions of People's Commissars, though they held onto local positions for the time being

\\
*--Merkle describes these days [TXT]

<>1918mr16:Kiev | German occupation
*--Within a few weeks, Ukraine Rada toppled by German military; Pavlo Skoropadski

<>1918mr21:Germany launched last WW1 offensive on western front

<>1918ap05:Siberia, Vladivostok| Japan military landing complicated the question of revolutionary civil war as outside intervention entered into the equation of domestic struggle

<>1918ap10:Russian consumers' co-operatives [McC2:239-41]

<>1918ap22:Soviet Decree on compulsory military training [McC2:144-7 | Chamberlin,1:502-4]

<>1918my09:Soviet Congress of the Supreme Council of the Public Economy issued a Decree on food [Chamberlin,1:509-11 | Senn,2:] and a Decree on agricultural land which emphasized the need for war against kulaks [term employed to label rich peasants, or any village folk who opposed Soviet policies]
*--Seven months of search for a proper policy on agricultural land [LOOP]
\\
*--Merkle analyzes the Congress and presents in Lenin's own words the guiding managerial ideas and the growing conflict of the struggling Party with Soviet wage-laborers and their unions [TXT]

<>1918my:"Natsional'nyi tsentr" [National Center] organized against Soviet government
*--Old Zemstvo constitutionalist Dmitrii Shipov became first president

<>1918my16:1918my19; Saratov | Red Army mutinied, adding an urgent note of institutional instability as revolutionary civil war loomed

<>1918my16:USA "Espionage Act" amended [W]

<>1918my23:Siberia, Cheliabinsk| Soviet authorities ordered that the mutinous Czech and Slovak legions [ID] be disarmed and broken up

<>1918my30:Siberia, Tomsk | Western Siberian Commissariat established to secure Soviet power there

<>1918je09:Decree on Red Army [Chamberlin,2:465]
*--A second round of mobilization decrees now followed the first [ID]
*--Two more decrees followed quickly as Soviets geared up for military struggle against anti-revolutionary forces =

<>1918je11:Decree on Committees of Poor Peasants (Kombedy) [Chamberlin,2:465-8 | McC2:247-51 | SGv:312-2]
*--These squads combed the countryside in search of grain to be confiscated and used in the most vital governmental, military and industrial centers

<>1918je28:Soviet Decree on Nationalization of manufacturing, industry, transportation, etc [Chamberlin,2:468-70 | CCC2,2:1122-4 | MDF:119-20 | SGv:34-6]
*--Revolutionary civil war compelled thoroughgoing state centralization of national economic life in connection with military mobilization, but it was to outlive the civil war. In the long run it contributed to the rise of Stalinism

<>1918jy01:Official Communist Party labor union condemned industrial worker strikes
*--Independent trades unions and workers' control of industry were now a thing of the past  [Bunyan1:25-51]
*--The fate of wage-labor was a frosty hint of future "Stalinism"

<>1918jy02:European Allies decided on military intervention in the Russian Revolution
*--NB! earlier landings on territories of old Russian empire in Murmansk in the White Sea region [ID] and Vladivostok in the region of the Sea of Japan [ID]

<>1918jy06:USA. Woodrow Wilson decided to send troops to Russia

\\
*--Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia: The Formative Years (NYC:1960)
*--Peter G. Filene, Americans and the Soviet Experiment: 1917-1933 (1967)
*--Peter G. Filene, ed., American Views of Soviet Russia, 1917-1965 (1968)
*--Stephen P. Gibert, Soviet Image of America (1977)
*--Paul Hollander, Political Pilgrims: Travels of Western Intellectuals to the Soviet Union, China, and Cuba, 1928-1978 (1981)
*--Christopher Lasch, American Liberals and the Russian Revolution (NYC:1962)
*--Robert K. Murray, Red Scare: A Study in National Hysteria, 1919-1920 (1955)
*--Marvin M. Berman, The Treatment of the Soviet Union and Communism in Selected World History Textbooks, 1920-1970

<>1918jy06:Murmansk | Invading English forces reached agreement with local Soviet

<>1918jy06:1918jy08; Moscow | Left-SRs rebelled against Communist Party rule

<>1918jy06:1918jy23; Yaroslavl [map] gripped in public disorder

<>1918jy10:Soviet Conference#5 expelled Left-SRs and declared that the new revolutionary state was named the "Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic" (RSFSR)

<>1918jy16:Russian ex-tsar Nicholas II and his family gunned down in Ekaterinburg captivity [McC2:189]
*--Pavel Medvedev described event [Eye:485-7]

<>1918jy17:USA President Wilson's instructions to his commander in Siberia, General William Graves [RFP2,2:3-6]
*--Graves, America's Siberian Adventure: 1918-1920 (1931, reprint, 1941)

<>1918jy28:USA-Soviet diplomatic break when Ambassador David Francis sailed away from a port on the White Sea near Arkhangel'sk

\\
*--Harper Barnes, Standing on a Volcano: The Life and Times of David R. Francis (2001)

<>1918au02:1919je07; Arkhangel'sk [map] English proclamations to Russians aimed to enlist domestic forces in the cause of Allied intervention and defeat of Soviet power [VRX:300-18]
*1918au02:Arkhangel’sk | Anti-Soviet Chaikovskii government established
*--England definitely saw a role for itself in the revolutionary civil war

<>1918au02:Vladivostok [map] Japanese forces moved along Trans-Siberian railroad into Siberia

<>1918au03:Vladivostok | English forces landed at Vladivostok. USA also involved in Siberian intervention

<>1918au07:Kazan and its gold reserves taken by people's military

<>1918au15:USA formally severed diplomatic relations with revolutionary Russia

<>1918se04:Arkhangel'sk | USA landed military force with other interventionist ally England
*1918se05:"Red terror" on the rise [McC2:186-9]

<>1918se23:Ufa, a city at the southern tip of the Ural Mts. [map], ruled by "White" government
*--Revolutionary civil war approached its year of greatest crisis =

<>1918oc:Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Tikhon placed under house arrest
*--The previous critical sixty years of reform had not prepared the Russian Church to survive the revolutionary era without devastating loss of official stature in the emerging Soviet Union

<>1918oc03:Germany, in the waning weeks of WW1, moved toward creation of liberal republic when Prince Max of Baden was appointed German chancellor

<>1918oc18:Russian industrial worker control in factories abolished, ending wage-labor self-management [SGv:406-7]
*--More than a hint of coming Stalinism in the revolutionary civil war policies of the new Soviet state

<>1918oc26:German chief of staff Erich Ludendorff dismissed

<>1918oc30:Czechoslovak Republic declared its existence, a new bi-national (Czech and Slovak) Slavic nation-state. Within a few weeks, T.G. Masaryk was elected first president

<>1918oc31:Soviet Social Security plan enacted [Rimlinger one-paragraph ID]

<>1918no06:Polish Republic was declared under Pilsudski who set about instantly to wage war in order to restore pre-partition borders [ID]. He sent troops to the east against the fragmented old Russian Empire, locked now in revolutionary civil war

<>1918no07:English-French joint declaration about national liberation in old "Near Eastern" territories of the Ottoman Empire [BNE:298-9]
*--Ottoman Turkish collapse provided yet further opportunities for England and France

<>1918no09:Germany, Berlin | Rebellion brought down decrepit Hohenzollern imperial monarchy and incipient liberal regime

\\
*--Mayer [TXT]

<>1918no11:Germany signed Armistice with Allies

<>1918no12:Austrian Habsburg Emperor Charles I abdicated

<>1918no13:Moscow | Congress of Soviets #6 repudiated Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, now that armistice signed on western front

<>1918no18:Siberia, Omsk | Coup d'etat brought Admiral Kolchak to power far from the open seas. Kolchak's Siberia soon became an important anti-Soviet rallying point in the revolutionary civil war

<>1918no26:Odessa occupied by French interventionist force

<>1918de:Ukraine Directory (x-Rada) cooperated with military to overthrow pro-German leader Skoropadski

<>1918de02:Committees of Poor Peasants (Kombedy) liquidated, bringing an end to one of the most unpopular Soviet policies in the revolutionary civil war period

<>1918de14:English general elections brought strong-man David Lloyd George, war-time Minister of Defense and Prime Minister, and his Coalition to center

<>1918de18:Batumi on the far eastern shore of the Black Sea [map] the site of English interventionist military landing, further complicating the lines of battle forming in the revolutionary civil war

<>1918de20:Germany | Berlin conference of workers and soldiers deputies demanded nationalization of those industries within which soviets had been created by wage-laborers (especially war veterans -- soldiers mainly being workers temporarily in uniform). These soviets imitated the Russian revolutionary model [ID].

<>1919:Germany, Weimar | Walter Gropius created school of applied art and architecture called "Bauhaus" [CWC:398-413]

<>1919:German (Czech-born) Social Democrat Karl Kautsky criticized Bolshevik politics in Terrorism and Communism
*--Kautsky distinguished his social-democracy from Soviet-style socialism [CCS:921-44 | CCS,2:533-56]
*--Trotsky was quick to respond [excerpts from the full polemic = PWT2:300-4]

<>1919:German (Czech-born) political theorist Joseph Schumpeter published Soziologie des Imperialismus [CCC3,2:1089-1109]

<>1919:Moscow Communist Party renounced all unequal tsarist treaties and Russian imperialism in general

<>1919wi:Soviet political police [Cheka] arrested anti-Soviet revolutionary civil war political leader Dmitrii Shipov
*1920:Shipov's death brought an end to a remarkable 20-year political career

<>1919ja05:ja11; German Spartacists Party [Spartakusbund], a radical spin-off from the main body of German Social Democrats, revolted in Berlin
*--Klara Zetkin, Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht, and Franz Mehring, Spartacist Manifesto [Gruber,1:104-14 | BPE:521-4]
*1919ja15:Luxemburg and Liebknecht were arrested and murdered by Free Corps police on their way to jail [W]

<>1919ja10:fe04; German city Bremen declared self a Soviet Republic and survived 4 weeks

<>1919ja12:Soviet Republic Foreign Affairs Commissar Chicherin memo to USA State Department about the intervention and need for peace talks [RFP2,2:27]

<>1919ja18:1920au10; France | Paris Peace Conference [W] met for 18 months and imposed five major treaties on defeated Central Powers [ID]

  1. 1919je28:Treaty of Versailles was settled on Germany, the first of the major treaties
  2. 1919se10:Treaty of Saint-Germain was settled on Austria, setting free Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Hungary as independent nation-states
  3. 1919no27:Treaty of Neuilly [W] was settled on Bulgaria, the least of the Central Powers, which was forced to relinquish its Aegean Sea territories, to pay excessive reparations to the victorious Allies, and to accept the independence of Yugoslavia
  4. 1920je04:Treaty of Trianon [W] was settled on Hungary, stripping it of huge territories in Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Romania
  5. 1920au10:Treaty of Sévres [W] was settled on what remained of the old Ottoman Turkish Empire (where the Covenant of the League of Nations, ARTICLE 22 on "Mandatories" [ID], was applied with especial vigor =

<>1919ja25:1942; The Versailles Treaty contained the Covenant of the League of Nations [TXT] [Excerpts = BNE:257-60 | CCC2,2:1219-31 | DPH:451-61]

<>1919ja21:Ireland, Dublin | Sinn Fein Congress adopted declaration of independence from England
*1919:1921; Irish war of independence. The military wing of the Sinn Fein political party, the Irish Republican Army [IRA],  was led by Michael Collins. Conclusion of war for independence from England did not bring peace to the Irish

<>1919ja23:German elections brought socialists to power

<>1919fe:Ukraine Directory fell to Red Army as the revolutionary civil war raged on

<>1919fe:Japan suggested racial equality clause in the charter of the League of Nations, supported by China, Czechoslovakia, France, Greece, Italy, and Poland. Austria was a bitter opponent of the racial equality clause, supported by Canada and USA. England held back. Defeat left "Japan with a feeling of resentment that was never entirely assuaged" [Beasley,MHJ:208]

<>1919fe:USA, Seattle General Strike, growing labor militancy led to first ever "general" strike in USA, in which workers throughout a major city simply ceased to "go to work"


The City of Seattle formed machine-gun units to combat strikers [Seattle Times]

\\
*--Excellent historical website on the Seattle strike [W] sponsored by the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies at the University of Washington
*--Judith Nies, Nine Women: Portraits from the American Radical Tradition (2002; expanded 1977 ed.), a good chapter on Strong

<>1919fe11:German republic formed even as the ashes of WW1 cooled

<>1919fe13(NS):English Foreign Office [FO] interviews with Russian political refugees painted a grim picture
*--An interventionist mood grew in FO circles [BNE:233-9]

<>1919fe21:Germany, Munich | Bavarian premier Kurt Eisner assassinated

<>1919fe23:Italian political activist, ex-socialist syndicalist Benito Mussolini founded Fasci del Combattimento
*--
He drafted a visionary program that was never carried out, whatever his later successes as founder of European Fascism [DPH:386-7]
*--GO mr04

<>1919mr04:1943my22; Moscow | Comintern [Communist International or Third International] lasted 24 years

<>1919mr13:Kolchak military campaign vs. Bolsheviks on the Siberian front of the revolutionary civil war

<>1919mr16:Austria appeared as a new post-war nation, born at the center of the defeated Empire, now with Socialist Karl Renner appointed chancellor

<>1919mr18:mr23; Communist Party Congress #8 met and created the Politbiuro [F/]

<>1919mr21:au01; Hungary. Bela Kun formed Soviet government which survived more than four months

<>1919mr26:Soviet Republic declaration addressed to China [RFP2,1:172-5]
*--China in three-way political struggle between Sun Yat-sen, the nationalist Kuomintang, and warlord factions

<>1919ap04:my01; Germany | Bavarian Soviet Republic established and lasted less than one month before it was crushed by troops

<>1919ap06:Odessa [map] occupied by Red Army after French interventionist forces withdrew

<>1919ap13:India, Amritsar | Unarmed civilian subjects of English imperialist rule were slaughtered by troops under English command. Jawaharlal Nehru joined Gandhi in organizing anti-imperialist movement

<>1919my:1919je;; Donbas [basin of the Don River] General Anton Denikin (1872-1947) led a campaign that suggested that these anti-Soviet "White-guardists" might have some chance of victory in the revolutionary civil war [McC2:173-6]

<>1919my06:Kamerun (Cameroon) and German East Africa, both German colonial holdings in east and southwest Africa, taken by England [MAP]
*--Soon Belgian complaints resulted in some of this going to Belgium

<>1919je22:Versailles Peace Treaty imposed impossible economic, territorial, and military requirements on Germany [W] [DPH:353-9]

<>1919su:Azerbaidjan, Baku | English interventionist military withdrew

<>1919jy12:England and France authorized renewed trade relations with Germany

<>1919jy27:jy31; USA | Chicago gripped by four days of race rioting

<>1919jy31:Germany adopted Weimar Constitution [CCC2,2:1125-30 | DPH:406-9]

<>1919au05:Turkey threatened with European imperialist dismemberment, carried out by "Allies" (mainly England and France working together, behind the backs of their other "allies")

<>1919au08:Afghanistan granted independence from England

<>1919se:Chicago | Communist Party of America [CPA], as well as its rival, the Communist Labor Party of America [CLP], were founded

\\
*--Have a look at the movie "Reds" based on this book [Perhaps the title is a typo for "Reeds", because it has a lot about John and his wife Louise Bryant (a UO graduate), and perhaps its subtitle should have been "Ten Spats that shook the Reeds" :-) ] [Reed LOOP]
*--William Hard published Raymond Robins' Own Story (1920) [about his personal experiences in the Russian Revolution] [W]

<>1919se12:Italian adventurer Gabriele d'Annunzio led private army in seizure of Fiume, providing an example of the sort of bravado and disregard for the Versailles settlement that inspired the Italian Fascist movement

<>1919fa:Arkhangel'sk region. Allied interventionist forces withdrew

<>1919fa:Ukraine under control of Denikin
*--Revolutionary civil war battle lines [MAP]
*1919oc:Petrograd attacked by general Yudenich
*1919oc:Orel | Denikin established military lines

<>1919no:USA President Wilson vetoed Volstead Prohibition Enforcement Act, but Congress overturned veto

<>1919no14:Siberia, Omsk | Kolchak in retreat

<>1919no27:Paris | Neuilly-sur-Seine Treaty between Allies and Bulgaria [W]

<>1919de02:Russian Communist Party Conference #8 [McC2:200-7]

<>1919de12:Kiev | Red Army took Ukraine
*--Rural opposition to Soviet power in Ukraine had found an anarchist leader, Nestor Makhno (1884-1934) [McC2:165-73]
*--But anti-Soviet forces in the revolutionary civil war were weakening

<>1919de31:USA, England and Japan signed agreement over Russian territories in Siberia

<>1920:Petrograd writer Evgenyi Zamiatin wrote novel We, the first of the great twentieth-century "anti-utopian" works

<>1920ja15:Kolchak surrendered

<>1920fe25:Germany | National Socialist German Workers' Party [NSDAP or "Nazi Party" for short] adopted first political program [BNE:264-7 | DPH:409-12]

<>1920mr:Communist Party Congress #9

<>1920ap04:Wrangel assumed command over Denikin forces

<>1920ap05:Communist Party Control of Staffing [SGv:145-6]

<>1920ap25:Polish/Soviet war broke out along their eastern border when Poland invaded Ukraine

<>1920ap27:Lenin, "Left-Wing Communism...." tried to calm, to restrain the more radical and world-revolutionary activists in the Party

<>1920my06:Ukraine, Kiev occupied by Polish forces, but over the next months the Red Army drove Polish armies back

<>1920je04:Paris | Trianon Treaty between Allies and Hungary [W]

<>1920je06:Wrangel offensive the last gasp of the White-guardist forces in the revolutionary civil war

<>1920jy:Batumi (on the SE shores of the Black Sea) | England withdrew its interventionist forces

<>1920jy17:1920au07; Moscow | Comintern [Third International] Congress #2

<>1920au:Tambov province peasant rebellion against Soviet power [Radkey]

<>1920au10:USA diplomatic note to Italian Ambassador Avezzano tried from distance to influence east European events [RFP2,2:29-34]

<>1920se27:Soviet Republic declaration addressed to China [RFP2,1:176-7]

<>1920oc12:Soviet-Polish peace treaty signed ending the indecisive six-month-long war

<>1920oc19:USA/Soviet agreement on shipment of food to Russia [W]
*--In this month H.G. Wells observed conditions in Petrograd [McC2:276-9]

<>1920no14:Red Army victorious over Wrangel who sailed away from Crimea, into exile

<>1920de27:French socialist leader Léon Blum (1872-1950) spoke against his party imitating Russian Bolshevism [CWC:251-70]
*--In this same year, 1920:English economist Arthur Cecil Pigou published The Economics of Welfare which laid out formulas that allowed unequal distribution of wealth (economic inequality) to be measured and by which the harm of extreme economic inequality could be assessed

 


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