• Concessions FAILED to stop violence: Oct 1905-Oct 1906 → 3,611 govt officials killed (17k by 1916).
• Unrest suppressed piecemeal by severe repression.
◦ St Petersburg Soviet arrested. 1905 uprising of Moscow Soviets brutally crushed.
◦ Repression ↑ under PM Stolypin: 1,400 executed in 1906 → noose = 'Stolypin's .'
◦ By 1907, Poland, Finland & ⅔ of Russia under martial law.
• HOWEVER, Stolypin's agrarian reforms: peasants allowed to consolidate holdings & leave mir → created wealthier 'kulaks' (middle-class farmers), weakened mir resistance to govt.
3. Overturning the constitutional promises
• Feb 1906: gave his State Council the power of veto.
• 6 May 1906: Laws’ -- giving the Tsar: veto of decisions, could dissolve Duma & make laws, control of administration, foreign policy & army/ Duma was forbidden to discuss financial matters.
4. Political Parties formed
• The Duma developed parliamentary procedures, and parties:
◦ A ‘Union of Russian People’ Party (URP) who wanted to return to autocracy;
◦ Liberals who accepted the October Manifesto (the ‘Octobrists’);
◦ A Constitutionalist Democratic Party (the ‘Kadets’);
◦ The Social Democrats refused to attend the 1st Duma, but the 'Mensheviks' participated in 3rd & 4th;
◦ The Social Revolutionaries (SRs) boycotted every Duma (except the 2nd).
5. Soviets
• The Soviets were suppressed in December 1905, but the idea did not go away.
What was 1905?
Historians debate its significance:
• Pares: monarchy survived w. “half a constitution”.
• Ascher: revealed deep social/economic issues; Tsar’s concessions only bought time.
• Lee: marked a return to repression after Tsarist reforms.
• Fitzpatrick: “unsatisfactory”: no reforms, no w/c unity, Army still powerful & pro-Tsar.
• Morison: turning point in political awareness for ordinary Russians.
Causes
1. Coronation catastrophe
• May 1896: Tsar Nicholas’ coronation → tragedy at KHODYNKA Field. Surge killed 1,282 people as gifts (mugs, bread) were distributed.
• Nicholas still held the evening ball → reputation for indifference to people’s suffering.
2. Universal unrest: riots, strikes & terrorism
a. Student anger
• 1899: student protests vs govt repression → Army conscription for 183 Kiev students, expulsions, exile.
• 1901-04: assassinations of Bogolepov, Sipyagin, & Plehve by student protesters/SRCO.
b. Peasant anger
• 1902-03: peasants rebelled (Ukraine, European Russia), burned nobles’ homes, required Army intervention.
• SR Party (1902) promoted terrorism, esp. via its COMBAT ORGANISATION (SRCO).
• 1903-05: 'Years of the Red COCKEREL' – mass arson/uprisings.
c. Industrial workers’ anger
• 1896-97: St Petersburg textile strike spread nationally.
• Concessions FAILED to stop violence: Oct 1905-Oct 1906 → 3,611 govt officials killed (17k by 1916).
• Unrest suppressed piecemeal by severe repression.
◦ St Petersburg Soviet arrested. 1905 uprising of Moscow Soviets brutally crushed.
◦ Repression ↑ under PM Stolypin: 1,400 executed in 1906 → noose = 'Stolypin's NECKTIE.'
◦ By 1907, Poland, Finland & ⅔ of Russia under martial law.
• HOWEVER, Stolypin's agrarian reforms: peasants allowed to consolidate holdings & leave mir → created wealthier 'kulaks' (middle-class farmers), weakened mir resistance to govt.
3. Overturning the constitutional promises
• Feb 1906: gave his State Council the power of veto.
• 6 May 1906: FUNDAMENTAL Laws’ -- giving the Tsar: veto of decisions, could dissolve Duma & make laws, control of administration, foreign policy & army/ Duma was forbidden to discuss financial matters.
4. Political Parties formed
• The Duma developed parliamentary procedures, and parties:
◦ A ‘Union of Russian People’ Party (URP) who wanted to return to autocracy;
◦ Liberals who accepted the October Manifesto (the ‘Octobrists’);
◦ A Constitutionalist Democratic Party (the ‘Kadets’);
◦ The Social Democrats refused to attend the 1st Duma, but the 'Mensheviks' participated in 3rd & 4th;
◦ The Social Revolutionaries (SRs) boycotted every Duma (except the 2nd).
5. Soviets
• The Soviets were suppressed in December 1905, but the idea did not go away.