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[also called October Revolution]
Although the Provisional Government survived the Kornilov revolt, popular
support for the government faded rapidly as the national mood swung to the left
in the fall of 1917. Workers took control of their factories through elected
committees; peasants expropriated lands belonging to the state, church,
nobility, and gentry; and armies melted away as peasant soldiers deserted to
take part in the land seizures. The Bolsheviks, skillfully exploiting these
popular trends in their propaganda, dominated the Petrograd Soviet and the
Moscow Soviet by September, with Trotsky, freed from prison after the Kornilov
revolt, now chairman of the Petrograd Soviet.
Realizing that the time was ripe for seizing power by armed force, Lenin
returned to Petrograd in October and convinced a majority of the Bolshevik
Central Committee, which had hoped to take power legally, to accept armed
uprising in principle. Trotsky won the Petrograd garrison over to Soviet
authority, depriving the Provisional Government of its main military support in
Petrograd.
The actual insurrection--the Bolshevik Revolution--began on the morning of
November 6 (October 24) when Kerensky ordered the Bolshevik press closed.
Interpreting this action as a counterrevolutionary move, the Bolsheviks called
on their supporters to defend the Petrograd Soviet. By evening the Bolsheviks
controlled utilities and most government buildings in Petrograd, allowing Lenin
to proclaim the downfall of the Provisional Government on the morning of
November 7 (October 25). The Bolsheviks captured the Provisional Government's
cabinet at its Winter Palace headquarters that night with hardly a shot fired in
the government's defense. Kerensky left Petrograd to organize resistance, but
his countercoup failed and he fled Russia. Bolshevik uprisings soon took place
elsewhere; the Bolsheviks gained control of Moscow by November 15 (November 2).
The Second Congress of Soviets, meeting in Petrograd on November 7 (October 25),
ratified the Bolshevik takeover after moderate deputies (mainly Mensheviks and
right-wing members of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, or SRs) quit the
session. The remaining Bolsheviks and left-wing SRs declared the soviets the
governing bodies of Russia and named the Council of People's Commissars (Sovet
narodnykh kommissarov--Sovnarkom) to serve as the cabinet. Lenin became chairman
of this council. Trotsky took the post of commissar of foreign affairs; Stalin,
a Georgian, became commissar of nationalities. By acting decisively while their
opponents vacillated, the Bolsheviks succeeded in effecting their coup d'état.
On coming to power, the Bolsheviks issued a series of revolutionary decrees
that ratified peasants' seizures of land and workers' control of industry;
abolished legal class privileges; nationalized the banks; and set up
revolutionary tribunals in place of the courts. At the same time, the
revolutionaries now constituting the regime worked to secure power inside and
outside the government. Deeming Western forms of parliamentary democracy
irrelevant, Lenin argued for a dictatorship of the proletariat based on
one-party Bolshevik rule, although for a time left-wing SRs also participated in
the Sovnarkom. The Soviet government created a secret police, the Vecheka (see
below) to persecute enemies of the state (including bourgeois liberals and
moderate socialists). Having convened the Constituent Assembly, which had been
elected in November with the Bolsheviks winning only a quarter of the seats, the
Soviet government dissolved the assembly in January after a one-day session,
ending a short-lived experiment in parliamentary democracy in Russia.
In foreign affairs, the Soviet government, seeking to disengage Russia from
the world war, called on the belligerent powers for an armistice and peace
without annexations. The Allied Powers rejected this appeal, but Germany and its
allies agreed to a cease-fire and began negotiations in December 1917. After
dictating harsh terms that the Soviet government would not accept, however,
Germany resumed its offensive in February 1918, meeting scant resistance from
disintegrating Russian armies. Lenin, after bitter debate with leading
Bolsheviks who favored prolonging the war in hopes of precipitating class
warfare in Germany, persuaded a slim majority of the Bolshevik Central Committee
that peace must be made at any cost. On March 3, Soviet government officials
signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, relinquishing Poland, the Baltic lands,
Finland, and Ukraine to German control and giving up a portion of the Caucasus
region to Turkey. With the new border dangerously close to Petrograd, the
government was soon transferred to Moscow. An enormous part of the population
and resources of the Russian Empire was lost by this treaty, but Lenin
understood that no alternative could ensure the survival of the fledgling Soviet
state.
NOTE: Vecheka (Vserossiiskaia chrezvychainaia komissiia po bor'be s
kontrrevoliutsiei i sabotazhem--VChK)... All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counterrevolution and
Sabotage. The political police created by the Bolsheviks (q.v.) in
1917; supposed to be dissolved when the new regime, under Lenin, had defeated
its enemies and secured its power. But the Vecheka, also known as the Cheka,
continued until 1922, becoming the leading instrument of terror and oppression
as well as the predecessor of other secret police organizations. Members of
successor security organizations continued to be referred to as "Chekisty"
in the late 1980s.
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