Russian Revolution

  • Marxists Revolutionaries split

    Marxists Revolutionaries split
    Marxists revolutionaries disagree over revolutionary tactics. The more radical Bolsheviks are ready to risk everything. The charismatic Vladimir Lenin becomes the leader.
  • The Russo-Japanese War begins

    The Russo-Japanese War begins
    Following the Russian rejection of a Japanese plan to divide Manchuria and Korea into spheres of influence, Japan launches a surprise naval attack against Port Arthur, a Russian naval base in China. The Russian fleet was decimated.
  • Bloody Sunday Massacre in Russia

    Bloody Sunday Massacre in Russia
    a group of workers led by the radical priest Georgy Apollonovich Gapon marched to the czar’s Winter Palace in St. Petersburg to make their demands. Imperial forces opened fire on the demonstrators, killing and wounding hundreds. Strikes and riots broke out throughout the country in outraged response to the massacre, to which Nicholas responded by promising the formation of a series of representative assemblies, or Dumas, to work toward reform.
  • Russian Constitution of 1906

    Russian Constitution of 1906
    refers to a major revision of the 1832 Fundamental Laws of the Russian Empire, which transformed the formerly absolutist state into one in which the emperor agreed for the first time to share his autocratic power with a parliament
  • Battle of Tannenberg ends

    Battle of Tannenberg ends
    The Battle of Tannenberg ends: the Russian Second Army is decimated by a much smaller German force
  • Workers demand raise

    Workers demand raise
    workers in the city’s largest factory (the Putilov engineering factory) demanded a 50% wage increase so that they could buy food. The management refused so the workers went on strike.
  • Bolsheviks revolt in russia

    Bolsheviks revolt in russia
    Led by Bolshevik Party leader Vladimir Lenin, leftist revolutionaries launch a nearly bloodless coup d’État against Russia’s ineffectual Provisional Government. The Bolsheviks and their allies occupied government buildings and other strategic locations in the Russian capital of Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) and within two days had formed a new government with Lenin as its head. Bolshevik Russia, later renamed the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), was the world’s first Marxist state.
  • Bolsheviks move

    Bolsheviks move
    The Bolsheviks move their capital from Petrograd to Moscow for safety reasons.
  • Treaty of Riga

    Treaty of Riga
    Treaty of Riga. Armistice between Russia and Poland.
  • The Kronstadt rebellion

    The Kronstadt rebellion
    The Kronstadt rebellion was an attempt to instigate an anti-Bolshevik revolution in early 1921. It took shape on Kronstadt, an island fortress and military garrison just a few miles from Petrograd. The Kronstadt uprising was sparked by the failure of Bolshevik economic policy, food shortages and worsening conditions.
  • USSR is established

    USSR is established
    in post-revolutionary Russia, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) is established, comprising a confederation of Russia, Belorussia, Ukraine, and the Transcaucasian Federation (divided in 1936 into the Georgian, Azerbaijan, and Armenian republics). Also known as the Soviet Union, the new communist state was the successor to the Russian Empire and the first country in the world to be based on Marxist socialism.