<>1904:1907; Russia experienced four years of
extreme political disorder with the First Russian Revolution (the 1905
Revolution) at the center
*--Here are main sources of
disorder =
*--These were the main streams that flowed into the flood of events called the
1905 Revolution [1905 REVOLUTION LOOP]
*--The main results of the 1905 Revolution =
- widespread rural disorder [LOOP on "peasants"]
lent urgency to broad public political mobilization [LOOP on "union"]
- the first formal, elected legislative assembly in Russian history,
THE STATE DUMA
- the last great gesture of the imperial reform tradition, the agrarian reforms
of PETR STOLYPIN
*--Peacetime civic activism, as an expression of civil society and what might be
called grassroots interest-politics, did not reach these levels again for eighty years
*--English scholar Bernard Pares was on the scene
and observed some of the major political events of this era [bibliography]
\\
*--Boris Nikolaevich Mironov,
The social history of Imperial Russia, 1700-1917 (2000)
presents the most comprehensive historical analysis
of the rise of civil society and the rule of law in the centuries prior to
revolutionary crises in the early 20th century
*--Andrew Verner, The Crisis of Russian Autocracy: Nicholas II and the 1905 Revolution
*--Thomas S. Pearson,
Russian Officialdom in Crisis: Autocracy and Local
Self-Government, 1861-1900
*--Jacob Walkin,
The Rise of Democracy in Pre-Revolutionary Russia: Political and
Social Institutions Under the Last Three Tsars
On the 1905 Revolution itself =
*--Abraham Ascher,
The Revolution of 1905. Volume 1:Russia in Disarray.
2:Authority Restored
*------------------------, "German Socialists and the Russian Revolution of
1905", MIR:260-77
*--Sidney Harcave,
The Russian Revolution of 1905
*--A. E. Healy, The Russian Autocracy in Crisis:1905-1907
(Hamden CN:1976)
<>1904:1905; German sociologist
of world fame and influence, Max Weber
(1864-1924), published articles, later a
book, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.
This famous book revealed the depths of Weber's "disenchantment" with the
direction of his beloved "bourgeois" European culture. The rise of market
economies in the 19th century promised liberal freedoms. When the Protestant
ethic inspired the early spirit of capitalism and was inspired by it in turn,
the market economy liberated human energies. Entrepreneurial enterprise rested
on the "saintly" European shoulder like a light and welcome cloak. But now
economic enterprise in this great "second industrial revolution" had become
routinized and bureaucratic. It threatened creative energies with incarceration
in a "disenchanted" industrial giganticism and financial managerialism.
The light cloak had become "an iron cage" [TXT of
the famous "iron cage" expression at the bottom of Ch. 5] [TXT
of Ch. 5 as whole]
[TXT
of Ch. 2] [Excerpts = CCS:668-98
| CCS,2:67-97]. More Weber bibliography =
[W][CWC:151 | CCS:359-61,
409]
*--In these years Weber's attentions were pulled west and east,
toward USA and then toward Russia
*--First, he
visited USA in order to give a lecture at the St. Louis "Louisiana Purchase
Exposition" [world's fair]). As a result of this
visit, he wrote a long article "Protestant Sects and the Spirit of Capitalism"
(1906) [TXT].
This noteworthy article has been neglected, perhaps because of the similarity of its title with the famous book
above. Here Weber wrote, "In the past and up to the very present, it has been a
characteristic precisely of the specifically American democracy that it did not constitute
a formless sand heap of individuals, but rather a buzzing complex of strictly exclusive,
yet voluntary associations"
*--Then Weber turned east, toward Russia (for which he
studied Russian in order to follow the portentous 1905 Russian Revolution)
\\
*--Reinhard Bendix was one of the most influential Weber acolytes in the USA. He relied
heavily on Weber for his essay "The Cultural and Political Setting of
Economic Rationality in Western and Eastern Europe", in Reinhard Bendix, ed.,
State and Society: A Reader in Comparative Political Sociology (2nd
ed., 1973, on shelf next to 1st ed., 1968)
<>1904:Geographical Journal 23:424-31. USA
geo-politician H. J. Mackinder published "The Geographical Pivot of History". Russia,
he wrote, was the geo-political heartland within which the future of the world
was to be determined [MAP]
\\
*--Parker, Historical Geography:29, 329, 371-4, 377
<>1904:Russian
writer of growing world fame Leo Tolstoy on
church and state [VSB,3:733]
<>1904:USA Senator from
Indiana Albert Beveridge published
The Russian Advance after traveling the
Trans-Siberian Railroad [RFP2,1:153-67]
*--Beveridge made a "pilgrimage" to Leo Tolstoy's Tula estate "Yasnaia poliana"
[ID]. Kurt Grotz has kindly supplied photos
relating to Beveridge's visit = [pix]
[pix]
[pix]
*--This railroad trip across Siberia and Russia was a sobering personal revelation about "racial" harmony
among
Russians and Chinese in Manchuria, and thus a
direct challenge to his famous imperialist speeches
in the previous decade
*--By the end of his life, Beveridge was writing
a
biography of Abraham Lincoln
<>1904:USA sociologist Thorstein Veblen published The
Theory of Business
Enterprise [excerpts in CCC3,2:900-27 | CCS:660-7
|
CCS,2:40-7]. He emphasized historical particularities of time
and place rather than universal laws of economics. He felt that an industrial and
engineering elite offered the best resolution--a "technocratic" resolution--of
the social and economic dislocations caused by large-scale industrial modernization
<>1904:USA Chicago |
Pavel
N. Miliukov delivered lectures which were one year later published in book
form as
Russia and Its Crisis.
He strove to explain Russian politics to Americans [cf. RRC2,2#35]
*--Miliukov sought an explanation of Russian particularity in its medieval
history, so unlike that of "The West" [TXT]
*--He also put great weight on the shape Peter the Great gave to Russian history
[ID]
*--Miliukov was a professor of history, but he was also a political activist who
drew close to the
Zemstvo
liberal movement, only now in the process of organizing itself formally as a
political party
<>1904ja02:ja05; Saint Petersburg |
Union of Liberation [Soiuz
Osvobozhdeniia] founding conference agreed on political program [DPH:296]
*--Liberal political parties were now functioning more or
less openly within Russia
*--And a vigorous union movement
added strength to a surprising and broad public mobilization that appeared
before the Russio-Japanese war broke out and continued at a heavier pace
thereafter
<>1904ja26:1905au23; Manchuria | Russo-Japanese war opened when Japan attacked Russian outposts.
The war lasted only 20 months but brought an
end to over 200 years of promising and
largely peaceful relations. This war shaped the 20th century
experience of both nations =
*--Japan won and was inspired by its ability to defeat a great
European power but embittered by diplomatic failure at the end of the war
*1904fe10:Russia and Japan mutually declared war [TXT] [RFP2,1:168-70]
*--Japan/Korea treaty
*--General A. N. Kuropatkin wrote
The Russian Army and the Japanese War
*1905:1909; British documents on foreign affairs--reports and papers from the
Foreign Office confidential print... Series A, Russia, 1859 -1914
*--This remote and unpopular war provided a disturbing background to Russian
domestic political events as mounting crisis became the 1905 Revolution
\\
*--Denis Warner and P. Warner,
Tide at Sunrise: A History of the Russo-Japanese War,1904-1905
*--J.N. Westwood,
Russia Against Japan, 1904-1905:A New Look at the Russo-Japanese War
<>1904fe:Plehve approved charter of
Assembly of Saint Petersburg workers. Recreated state-controlled labor
unions or "police socialism". Soon
Orthodox priest Father Gapon was in charge
*--The union movement expanded well beyond the factory
floor and flourished well beyond state control
*--Wage-labor, like all other Russian social formations
in these years, was shaking off state efforts to protect and expand old tsarist
social/service hierarchies. Imperial social formations no longer fit on those
hierarchies. Russian society was transformed, in part as a result of natural
demographic and economic changes but also in part as a result of reforms
introduced by the state itself over the previous four decades
<>1904sp:Zemstvo liberal
Dmitrii Shipov met
a third time with Plehve and Witte
<>1904sp:SoO cnf considered cdt
[Ganelin:54]
<>1904ap:Plehve refused to approve several blx zmv elx
(e.g., MVA:Shipov,Fed) where Zmv mobilized selves on VsR scale to aid wrx effort
<>1904my04:SRs
Draft program [H05:268-73] The big agrarian socialist
movement was working to define itself as an organized political party
<>1904jy15:Socialist Revolutionary Party "Battle
Organization" assassinated Russian Interior
Minister, Count Viacheslav Plehve, ending his
15-year career
*--Plehve was the last powerful "official reactionary" Interior Minister. His was the
last gasp of a policy that dominated the reign of Alexander III and, so far,
that of
Nicholas II. Over the previous twenty years, statist reactionaries had been rolling
back the Great Reforms, shifting the body-politic toward their imagined two-part
pre-modern order = (1) autocratic absolutism, managed in the interests of
certain insider elites and resting at the upper tip of (2) stable pyramidal
social/service hierarchies. And yet Plehve was a reactionary who with reluctance
and without consistency understood the need for certain measured and tightly
controlled reforms [EG]
*--SRs issued a declaration to peasants explaining their position on political terror
[TXT],
giving specific emphasis to Plehve's role in the suppression of Peasant disorder in Kharkov and Poltava
provinces [ID]
*--Boris Viktorovich Savinkov (1879-1925) was an SR
leader and active participant in the assassinations of Plehve and, six months later, Grand Prince
Sergei Aleksandrovich [ID]
\\
*--Amy Knight, “Female Terrorists in the Russian Socialist Revolutionary Party”
[TXT]
<>1904au26:1905ja; Russian Interior Minister Sviatopolk-Mirskii abandoned reactionary policies of his assassinated
predecessor and
tried moderation for five crucial months
*--Once again (as
in the first Russian epoch of political terror) the state appeared to
respond to the threat of
terror with concessions to a fledgling civil
society. It was both tragic and ironic that the immaturity of Russian civil
society and its inability to respond with strength to governmental concession
followed straight from oppressive state policy over the previous decades, eased
now only in a time of revolutionary crisis
*--Assassination of Plehve and elevation of Sviatopolk-Mirskii marked the end of
a quarter-century era of reactionary state policy [LOOP
back two decades]
*--And they marked the beginning of the 1905 Revolution [read on to 1904de12 to
continue the 1905 LOOP]
*--Political concessions made by Nicholas II only whetted the appetite of oppositional forces. An old revolutionary truth appeared
vindicated = Opposition intensifies when authorities make concessions to it
<>1904se08:+; Russia | BzmvS mtg regularly;
planned no06:Zmv mtg [Ganelin:14]
<>1904se17:se25; Paris conference
of revolutionary and oppositional political parties [H05:54-5
| Ganelin:13-15,54]
<>1904oc25:Dmitrii Shipov met with Sviatopolk-Mirskii to seek approval of
national Zemstvo Congress [Ganelin:16-21]
*--A sign of
crisis, the tsarist state wavered between repressive and
concessionary actions
<>1904oc31:BzmvS mtg- S-M who wld not approve open, lgl
mtg of Zmv [Ganelin:22]
<>1904no:Union
of Liberation
issued
program [VSB,3:724]
*--Over the next months, the Union encouraged formation of various separate
unions of vocational intelligentsia, engineers and technicians. These were not
state-sponsored but voluntary "grass-roots" unions
<>1904no04:+; Sviatopolk-Mirskii report
[GARF, cited in Ganelin:56] Nicholas I agreed with the report [Ganelin:32]
<>1904no06:no09; Saint
Petersburg | First national congress of Zemstvo, led by Dmitrii Shipov, issued 11 theses [VSB,3:741-3
| H05:279-81 |
MR&C2:385]
*--Banquet campaign began
<>1904de:Paris | Russian liberal & revolutionary
political parties
agreed to cooperate (SDs did not participate). Signed declaration = "None of the
parties represented at the meeting, in uniting for concerted action, thinks for
a moment of abandoning any point of its particular program, or of the tactical
methods of the struggle which are adapted to the necessities, the forces, and
the situation of the social elements, classes, or nationalities whose interests
it represents. [Extreme expropriation of property and
terrorism sharply divided this wide spectrum of oppositional parties.] But, at the same time, all declare that the principles expressed
below are recognized by all of them: (1) The abolition of the autocracy;
revocation of all the measures curtailing the constitutional rights of
Finland. (2) The substitution for the
autocracy of a democratic régime based on
universal suffrage. (3) The right of every nationality to decide for itself;
freedom of the national development, guaranteed by the law; suppression of all
violence on the part of the Russian government, as practiced against the
different nationalities." Points (1) & (2) dispatched the
autocratic-bureaucratic state and traditional social/service hierarchies
*--Miliukov acknowledged that this declaration left out
any reference to economic reform. The groups could not agree on that, but
decided to put off the political struggle between liberals, who were moderate on
the matter of economic reform, and socialists, who pushed for economic
egalitarianism. After clearing autocracy and dysfunctional social/service
hierarchies out of the way, these political parties
would be free to renew
struggle among themselves, having defeated a common enemy, the tsarist state,
and substituted democratic for old tsarist social relations [MR&C2:381-2]
<>1904de02:de06 & de08;
Russian ministers debated Sviatopolk-Mirskii report
*--Witte wrote draft of de12:Ukaz (below) [MR&C2:387]
<>1904de05:Russia | Union of engineers & technicians,
the first professional union [PR&R]
*--In this same month an Academic union formed to link publicly active forces in
universities. Chemist Vladimir Vernadskii at Moscow University was a major force
in this movement. Over the next few weeks, under the urging of the
Union of Liberation, SPB Elektrotechnicheskii Institut
professor A. A. Brandt pulled together a programmatic statement of higher
educational issues which was signed by 342 professors, and was issued in early
1905 as "The Declaration of the 342"
*--State manipulated labor unions began to show some
independence from official control
*--Institutions of higher learning were at the forefront of aroused public
activism, but universities and other scholarly
institutions acted in close harmony with movements throughout the whole imperial
social-political-economic organism
\\
*--WCS
<>1904de11:(NS?)Saint Petersburg labor demonstration [MR&C2:366-7]
<>1904de12:Russian Emperor Nicholas II decree [Ukaz] to
Russian Imperial Senate [H05:282-5 |
MR&C2:387-8 | Ganelin:39-41] The tsarist state acknowledged, "When ...
the need for a given change seems advisable, WE consider it necessary to proceed
with the execution of that change, even though it leads to substantive
innovations in the law".
*--What seemed at first to be a specific concession to Zemstvo political demands
was also a "crack in the edifice" of unlimited autocratic authority and decades
of reactionary state policy. As Tocqueville put it, "The most dangerous moment
in the life of any bad government is when it starts to improve itself"
*--Thus this de12:Ukaz might be taken as the first moment of formal state
involvement in the Revolution of 1905
*--Zemstvo liberals rose to the forefront of broader national political
mobilization. Thus the 1905 LOOP parallels the Zemstvo
LOOP
*1905 LOOP
<>1904de13:de31; Azerbaijan, Baku oil
fields | General strike among petroleum workers
*1905:Baku oil fields patrolled by Cossack troops
[pix]
*--More on petroleum
<>1904de20:Manchuria | Russian forces in Port Arthur
capitulated to the Japanese
<>1904de30:French socialist movement tried to create
Union of French Socialists Parties [DPH:325-6]
<>1905:1916; Germany |
Albert Einstein's relativity
theory published
<>1905:English political
theorist A. V. Dicey published his Harvard University lectures on liberalism
and collectivism, Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution, which
were nothing less than a history of democracy in England in the 19th century [CCS,1:791-802]
<>1905:USA | Western Federation of
Miners [WFM], a radical labor union that broke with AFL seven years earlier, met secretly
with Daniel De Leon [W], the head of the
Socialist Labor Party [W], and Eugene
Debs, ex-leader of the American Railway Union and now head of the Socialist Party (founded
in 1900)
*--The Industrial Workers of the World [IWW or "Wobblies"] grew out of this
meeting. William "Big Bill" Haywood was a leader who opposed ordinary
labor unions because they sought compromise and non-revolutionary
resolution of the "class struggle". He opposed compromise with political
institutions unless they promoted revolution. Haywood reflected a US version of
the familiar split within socialism
[ID]. The IWW thrived mainly in the USA West and had
fewer than 100,000 members. WW1 weakened the IWW, especially since its opposition to USA
involvement after 1917 seemed to some unpatriotic
*--University of
Oregon "Labor Project"
*--Eugene Debs ran for the Presidency three times on the Socialist Party ticket [see his
1908my23:campaign speech delivered in his hometown, Girard KS = "The Issue"
[TXT] delivered during his third
campaign]. His two-decade political
career has been all but forgotten in American political culture
*--Political parties, protest movements and labor
unions were coalescing. In this process, civil society sometimes expanded. At other times it narrowed or became more tightly
focused. Social-economic concepts of "class warfare" reflected
the stubborn refusal of social elites to cooperate in the establishment of an
appropriate place for wage-labor in the post-industrial body-politic. The more
radical wing of the labor movement thus largely ignored the
political-institutional concepts embodied in the notion of civil society
[ID]. Social-economic formations raised barriers against one another. Those
oriented toward the interests of industrial workers found it hard to include
elite social formations. Elite social formations, for their part, intensified
their efforts to limit the success of organized wage-labor. The center of
attention shifted from how social-economic groups might adjudicate differences
via effective political-institutional mediation to how one or the other
social-economic faction might seize the state and wield it in its own particular
interests. Elite formations were more often successful. Wage-labor efforts in this direction
were declared to be
criminal conspiracy
<>1905ja09:Saint Petersburg | "Bloody Sunday"
opened when a large but peaceful assembly of factory workers and their families
marched toward the Winter Palace, residence of Emperor Nicholas II and his
family. The assembly carried a petition composed by union leaders Father Georgii Gapon & Ivan
Vasimov [TXT]
[H05:285-9 |
DIR2:380-3 | CCC2,2:593-6
| DPH:297-300 | VSB,3:743-4]
*--Troops opened fire, thus showing that violence was not a monopoly of revolutionary
terrorists
*--Father Gapon described Bloody Sunday [Eye:415-18]
*--The diverse union movement was
consolidating its forces. Labor unions increased pressure on officials and added
to that already exerted by growing peasant and Zemstvo political mobilization. Here at
the beginning of this
revolutionary year 1905, Russian factory workers made their dramatic entry
*--The wage-labor LOOP continues. If you would like for now to skip over the
detailed account of wage-labor in the Russian 1905 Revolution,
click here
<>1905ja11:Russian ministers
ignored Witte request to discuss the tragic implications of Bloody
Sunday [see above]
*--Moscow Governor General Dmitrii Trepov transferred to
post of Petersburg Governor General and commandant of the Petersburg garrison
with significant martial-law authority. (He was the son of
an infamous previous SPB Governor General)
*1905 LOOP
<>1905ja17; Moscow Agricultural Society member Aleksei
Ermolov reported to Nicholas II about the Gapon incident [H05:124-5
| *1925:KrA#8:49-69 | Page:68-9]
<>1905ja18:Russian Council of Ministers
met [Ganelin:69]
<>1905ja22:oc22; A.G. Bulygin replaced Sviatopolk-Mirskii as Interior
Minister. Bulygin lasted nine months, through the October crisis
<>1905ja22:Moscow Noble Assembly passed
"loyal" conservative resolution and a liberal resolution [H05:105]
Gentry politics vacillated
<>1905ja29:Saint
Petersburg | Shidlovskii Commission was created to investigate labor situation
in the capital city. The commission was named after its leading figure, Senator
Shidlovskii; not to be confused with Sergei Shidlovskii,
a founder of the Octobrist political party. Commission members were not only
bureaucrats but also representatives of workers themselves. Politically aroused
workers overwhelmed bureaucrats on the Commission, and it soon had to be
dissolved
*--Official fear of spontaneous popular initiative, especially that among wage-laborers, was so great that the commission was quickly dissolved [H05:122-3]
<>1905fe03 and 1905fe11:Council of Ministers met [Ganelin:85f] Topic = Should elected representatives of the public
be brought into government?
<>1905fe04:Moscow | SRs "Battle Organization" assassinated the
Emperors uncle, Grand Prince Sergei Aleksandrovich, with a bomb
*--Boris Savinkov participated in this
shocking terrorist attack, but double agent Azev (with ties
both to the SRs and the tsarist Interior Ministry police) played
the
central role [H05:127]
*--Political terror was a
two-edged sword, it cut in all directions, deranging both those who wielded it
and those against whom it was wielded. Similarly, it served the interests of
both terrorist who hoped to "disorganize" the government and state reactionaries
who were quick to use the fear of terror as an excuse for broad reactionary
measures and the cessation of reform
*--Nonetheless, for about a year terror was diluted in the
great flood of revolutionary actions coming in from all sides. But then
terror once again flared up
<>1905fe18:Tsar Nicholas II issued ukaz authorizing ordinary subjects
to petition him for relief of grievances
*--Interior Minister A.G. Bulygin's rescript
followed, stating that the tsar would soon "assemble the most trustworthy
men, having the confidence of the people and elected by them, to undertake the
preliminary examination and consideration of legislative measures" [cf.
H05:129-30, and MR&C2:394-5]
<>1905fe24:Manchuria, Mukden | Japanese forces defeated Russian forces
*--For the tsarist state, international crisis mixed with domestic crisis.
The 1905 Revolution LOOP extends through the next 30 or so SAC entries
*1905mr31:German Kaiser Wilhelm visited Tangiers, seeming to threaten French imperialist
claims, and to threaten possible imperialist war. French politicians, perhaps influenced
by Russian experience in Manchuria, reacted to this theatrical show of naval power. They
divided on whether to become more militant against Germany or to build stronger economic
ties with Germany so as to forestall war [BNE:199-200]
*--In that same season, the esteemed French socialist leader
Jean Jaurès was refused
permission to deliver an anti-war speech in Berlin which argued that the threat of war did
not derive from conflict between the great majority of French and German
wage-laborers. Instead, it derived inevitably from capitalist/European imperialist
conflict, unrestrained on the global scene [BNE:200-1]
<>1905fe28:Office clerks & bookkeepers union
came to life
<>1905mr:1905my; Paris | Union of Liberation program [H05:273-9]
*1905au:French translation issued
*--The Union of Liberation's three years of
bold liberal opposition (largely abroad) were at their end, as the main leaders transferred
all energy into the new Union of Unions which was
centered in Russia itself and focused the energies of several unions of
professional workers
<>1905mr:Russian Monarchical Party [Monarkhicheskaia Partiia] founded by state servitors [chinovniks],
high-ranking aristocrats, and other "official reactionaries"
*--Compare this "official aristocratic" group and its political
views with the rural gentry aristocrats
<>1905mr12:Russian teachers formed grammar-school union;
soon physicians & lawyers formed unions
<>1905mr14:Russian Emperor issued Ukaz on freedom of
religion
<>1905ap03:Russian pharmacists' union
<>1905ap05:Russian writers' union
*1905:1907; Maksim Gorky organized the publishing house "Znanie" [knowledge]
dedicated to the promotion of works by progressive writers. Gorky also composed
radical pamphlets in connection with the revolutionary events of this year, for
which he was imprisoned, only to be released after wide public protest
*1906wi:Maksim Gorky left Russia, traveled to USA,
visited France and settled in Italy for seven productive years
<>1905ap07:Tver Governor Urusov reported no
"general dissatisfaction" or rebelliousness among peasants. Villagers were not
much interested in "the anti-government struggle on questions of constitutions
and political rights". They were interested only in land, taxes and the war. On
that last subject, peasants were patriotic, but "in truth the present war is not
popular among the peasants since it is carried on far from Russia, and is fought
for the benefit of profiteers ... and not really for Russian interests".
Peasants read newspapers closely and "are closely acquainted with all questions
found in papers of various political views." Of course, they "interpret all news
from the point of view that suits them". Urusov noted that, whatever their
political tendency, newspapers tended to rile up peasants. Peasants nearly
everywhere entertained the assumption that redemption payments and other forms
of taxation would soon come to an end. Contradicting himself, Urusov reported
that peasants closely followed national events in newspapers, and when they read
of the reform promises in the tsarist ukaz, followed by
even clearer promises in the Bulygin rescript, they
moved ahead with their own initiatives, keyed to their perceptions of their own
interests. Increasingly villagers decided to cease unbearable payments now. Then
there is the matter of robbing wood from the privately owned forests, all
justified on the basis of felt inadequacy of land distributed to peasants at
the time of emancipation and more
recent injustices worked on rural labor. Urusov described how "four or five
years ago the government office of agriculture and State lands took away from
peasant use, and enclosed, many publicly rented fields, long under lease of
peasants who had raised the fields to a fine condition after many years of
labor. Then these areas were turned over to the protection of the forest guards.
This ruined the peasants and placed them in unbearable straits since they needed
the land badly. Besides that, the peasants ..., under the influence of recent
events [i.e., spread of violent seizure of land by peasants], are openly saying
that since they have insufficient land of their own they intend to use that of
the landlords...." Villagers who work in urban factory environment return home
and stir up trouble. Peasants do not much sympathize with factory workers.
Agitators have little influence. [Page:69-71]
*--S. D. Urusov,
Memoirs of a Russian Governor
*--Petr Stolypin wrote report on the year 1904 in Saratov
Province [VSB,3:801-2]
*--Statistics on landed property in Russia in this year [VSB,3:764-6]
<>1905ap17:Russian Emperor issued Ukaz re. religious
tolerance for Old-Ritualists [Raskolniki] [VSB,3:766]
*--The tsarist state moved to heal
an old and great wound to the Russian
"body-politic"
<>1905ap19:Geneva & Paris | Russian SDs debated
at Congress #3. In the meantime, back home in Russia, events slipped more deeply
into actual revolution
*--SDs split and issued Bolshevik Party and Menshevik Party programs [McC1:28-30
|
Harding:313-4]
*1904:German (Polish-born) social-democrat Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919
[ID]) joined the debate about how Marxism ought to be
applied to "backward" Russia. She was a thinker able always to anchor theory in
solid practical experience and political-economic actualities. Her essay was
published in the German Social-Democratic Party newspaper Neue Zeit [New
Times] under the title "Organizational Questions of the Russian Social
Democracy" [TXT]
This essay was later published under a more polemical title, "Leninism or Marxism?"
[And even later translated and published in reverse chronological order with her
1918 essay "Russian Revolution", edited by Bertram Wolfe,
Russian Revolution
and Leninism or Marxism?]
*--Rosa Luxemburg became a central figure
in the European social-democratic movement | Her writings on the internet =
W-TXT
*--Bolshevik resolutions on the peasant movement, on SRs, and
on liberals
[VSB,3:714-15]
*--Lenin expressed his views on the peasantry in these months [VSB,3:715]
*--In this year Lenin addressed the question of religion
[BMC1:624-5] Some years later on the related topic of ethics and morality [BMC1:626]
*--Henceforward Russian Marxists, who had formed one
Social Democratic Party
for nine years, operated as two -- Bolsheviks and Mensheviks
<>1905ap22:26; Moscow Zemstvo Congress #2 deliberated on need for new election law (the
so-called "Four-Tail" election policy: Voting should be equal, direct,
universal, and secret) [H05:142-3]
<>1905ap27:Russian women's rights
union were a reflection of mounting revolutionary crisis in Russia, but also of
general European trends.
Organizations grew in number, size and ambition (for example, the suffrage [election
rights] movement intensified). Voting rights for women meant one thing in lands were men
could vote; it meant yet more in lands where no one had the right to vote. Feminism was becoming a public movement
for women's rights
*1906:English suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst photographed as she was arrested [P20:1]
*--Later memoirs of Russian upper-class women's everyday life in this revolutionary epoch,
Memories of Revolution
*--Henri Troyat, a Russian emigre author in France, wrote a fictionalized memoir/social
history of Russian everyday life in the early 20th century,
Daily Life in Russia under the Last
Tsar
\\
*--Anna Hillyar and Jane McDermid,
Revolutionary
Women in Russia, 1870-1917 (2000), chapter 5 & conclusion
*--Nataliia Pushkareva,
Women in Russian History: From the Tenth to the Twentieth Century
*--Richard Stites,
The Women's
Liberation Movement in Russia: Feminism, Nihilism, and Bolshevism, 1860-1930
*--Linda Harriet Edmondson,
Feminism in Russia, 1900-1917
<>1905my:Russia | Kokovtsov kmm re.mfg
[Roosa"Russ.Ind"(1975)]
<>1905my:Russian railroad labor union
<>1905my08:my09; Moscow |
Union of Unions [Soiuz soiuzov] founding meeting as a national
organization, including 14 unions of academics, lawyers, agricultural
accountants, medical doctors, veterinarians, railroad personnel, journalists and
writers, zemstvo constitutionalists, women's and Jewish rights activists, and
other engineers and technicians. Zemstvo constitutionalists withdrew after this initial meeting, but by the
summer others joined
*--Program = convene Constituent Assembly with representatives elected according
to universal, direct, equal and secret ballot to determine the
political/institutional future of Russia
*--Pavel Miliukov presided over a 32-person Central
Bureau which included AA Brandt, AI Ventskovskii, YaN Gordeenko, IN Denisevich, SM
Kliachko, LI Lutugin, DF Sverchkov, GD Sidamonov-Eristov, ND Sokolov, and FR
Ul'man
*1905my22:Moscow | Union of Unions,
congress #2. Representatives of the
radical intelligentsia joined workers in this union
*--The Union of Unions blossomed quickly over the previous
three months. It played the role of central clearing house for many union organizations
over the next half year. It continued in that role into the intense weeks of revolutionary mobilization
after the huge Peasant Union joined forces with it. It lost some of its momentum as
activists fanned out into now-legal political parties campaigning for seats in
the new State Duma
*1926:MVA | Professional'noe dvizhenie: Materialy i dokumenty [ORBIS UW]
<>1905my14:my16; Tsushima
Straits between Korea and Japan | Japanese annihilated 32 Russian naval vessels that had
come all the way from European waters
<>1905my24:my26; Zemstvo congress #3
\\
*--H05:159-60
<>1905je14:je25; Russian Black Sea fleet, Odessa port | Russian
sailors revolted on naval Battleship Potemkin (pronounced PaTIOMkin) [Page:76-7]
*1905je20:SDs issued a leaflet titled "To the Whole Civilized World". The
leaflet acknowledged the relationship of foreign war to domestic war (i.e.,
revolution) when it announced that "a grandiose picture of a great war of
liberation has presented itself before your very eyes"
*--The battleship rested in the Odessa port long enough to hold a funeral on
shore for a sailor killed in the uprising on board. Authorities were alarmed at
the great mass of city residents who took to the streets in sympathy. Troops
were dispatched to regain control over the port. The Potemkin disembarked and
sailed hither and yon seeking a safe port and also trying to enlist other ships
of the line to join them in revolt
*1905je25:Romanian authorities allowed the ship a safe harbor in the Black Sea
port of Constance
<>1905je09:Tver guberniia village elder
Nil Smirnov issued
declaration based on decisions taken at the Ryleev village assembly = The person
of the peasant is inviolable. The people must be given freedom of conscience,
speech, press, assembly, unions and strikes. Peasant courts must function like
all other courts. Peasants, and "yes, all persons", who suffer for their religious
beliefs must at once be pardoned and released. Free grade schools must be
introduced that teach various trades. Higher education must be as open to
peasants as to other classes. "All government organs without exception must be
under control of popular representatives, elected by the people themselves under
their own system without any educational qualifications. Those elected should
also require no property and educational standards but need only to be literate
and of legal age." The Land Captain and the
separate peasant status must be abolished. District bureaucracy must be
restricted in its guardianship over peasants. Local village institutions should
replace district administration. Land should be available to those who work it.
Every peasant should receive an adequate amount of land from the village, and
the government must provide material aid for its cultivation. Collective
responsibility for taxes and all forms of indirect taxes should be abolished.
Government should convoke an
assembly of the people to decide if the Russo-Japanese war should continue.
Peasants suffer such hardships that death might be
preferable to life. [Page:73]
<>1905jy:Russia, Peterhof | Secret state conference [H05:161(foolish description) & 165]
<>1905jy06:jy09; Moscow | Zemstvo congress#4 petitioned Nicholas II [H05:160]
<>1905au06:Saint Petersburg |
Interior Minister S.G. Bulygin submitted his constitutional project which called
for the creation of a State Duma with limited
advisory powers [Raeff2:142-52 | VSB,3:702-3
| DPH:300]
*--Full Russian text in GDR:30-54]
<>1905au13:Moscow | All-Russian
Peasant Union [Vserossiiskii
Krest'ianskii Soiuz] founding Congress
*--Kursk guberniia peasants followed actions of Congress through the journal
Russkoe slovo [Russian word] [VEO, Agrarnoe dvizhenie v Rossii v
1905-1906 gg., 1:56]
*--For past three years, rural
dissatisfaction mounted. Now peasants mobilized in a
way not unlike all other social groups caught up in the 1905 revolutionary era
[PR&R:446-8]
\\
*--Robinson, ch6 (hungry villages), ch7 (peasant
world), ch8 (decline of nobility & rise of "Third Estate"), ch9 (origins of
1905)
*--Maureen Perrie,
Agrarian Policy:107-111
*--Stephen Dunn,
Peasants of Central Russia
*--Beatrice Farnsworth and Lynne Viola, eds.
Russian Peasant Women
*--Sir John Maynard,
The Russian Peasant and Other Studies
*--Mary Matossian, "The Peasant Way of Life". In
The Peasant in
Nineteenth-Century Russia
*--Christine D. Worobec,
Peasant Russia: Family and Community in the Post-Emancipation
Period
<>1905au17:Russia | Provisional regulation of university
promised university autonomy
<>1905au23:se05; USA
NH | Russia-Japan treaty negotiations to end Russo-Japanese War
lasted 2 weeks and ended with the signing of the Portsmouth Treaty [TXT]
[W TXT] [McC1:11-12
| RFP2,1:170-2]
*--USA President Theodore Roosevelt lent his good offices in the negotiations
between Russia and Japan. In ten remarkable years, a new
overseas US imperialism had become a noteworthy factor in global politics,
even if old Europe might not yet have been ready to take seriously the gravity
of USA, or Japan, or Russia, for the matter

A postcard commemorating New Hampshire negotiations
Left to right = Russian Finance Minister Count Sergei Witte, Baron Rosen,
US President Theodore Roosevelt,
Japanese Ambassador to the US Kogoro Takahira, and Japanese Foreign
Minister Jutaro Komura
[SOURCE]
*--In this year, an early case in international law (i.e., law beyond the limits
of nation-states), was heard when an English Russian Commission of Inquiry
convened [RWP1,2:167-70]
*--For Russia, crises in international relations and domestic politics seemed to be abating, so
the tsarist state entered the critical October days
still hoping to suppress mass unrest with a combination of force and
uncertain promises of reform
\\
*--Saul,2:153-8, 459-507
*--Alan Kimball,
"The United States and the Soviet Union: Toward a Mutual Pacific Frontier"
(1984)
*--John A. White,
The Diplomacy of the Russo-Japanese War
<>1905se12:se15; Moscow | Zemstvo congress
#5,194 members
*1905 LOOP
<>1905se19:Moscow railroad strike [H05:175-6]
<>1905fa:Buryat gatherings represented indigenous
opposition to tsarist imperialist authority in their lands [GRH:162]
<>1905oc:Baltische konstitutionelle Partei formed, made
up of conservative German gentry aristocrats
*--Lithuanian & Latvian nationalist movement under way
*1905oc:Kursk | People's Party (implying
"National Party") [Narodnaia Partiia] founded,
aristocratic and conservative. Gentry politics or state
servitor politics?
<>1905oc07:Russian
railroad strike began after a union
member was arrested [VSB,3:744]
<>1905oc08:Petersburg
Governor General Trepov issued decree
limiting rights of public assembly. This futile act flew in the face of mounting,
near-universal public mobilization which was filling public places in all the larger cities of
the Empire
<>1905oc09:Sergei Witte, fresh
back from treaty negotiations that settled the Russo-Japanese War,
submitted a bold memo to Nicholas II [VSB,3:703-4]
<>1905oc11:Russian
wage-laborers submitted petition on working
conditions to Witte & he replied [Nevison:18-19]
<>1905oc12:oc18; Moscow | Partiia narodnoi svobody [Party of Popular Freedom], a bold new liberal
party, the first openly organized political party in Russian history, held its founding congress. They were not best known by their formal name.
Instead, the name "Constitutional Democrats" came into wider usage. In fact,
they became best known by the Russian initials for Constitutional Democrat, "KD".
And these two Russian letters sounded like the unflattering French word for an
adolescent in military training, "KA-DEH" [cadet]. Thus a back-formed nickname
also came into wide usage = Kadety (Cadets)]
*--Program [McC1:33-5 | H05:292-300
| DIR2:405-10 | DIR3:438f | VSB,3:724]
*1905oc14:Pavel Miliukov addressed congress of this most important liberal
political party [VSB,3:726]
*--KDs prepared for the anticipated
State Duma
\\
*--Terence Emmons,
The Formation of Political Parties and the First National Elections
in Russia
<>1905oc13:Witte submitted
yet another bold memo to Nicholas II. Witte's personal
views did not get in the way of his practical political good sense [VSB,3:704-5]
<>1905oc13:Saint Petersburg Soviet [of Workers' Deputies] met
for the first time as the wage-labor strike movement spread along Russian rail
lines
*--The Soviet representing a new and more explicitly political-institutional form of
wage-labor mobilization
<>1905oc14:Moscow general strike began
after more than a week of mounting work stoppage, led by the railroad unions. Georgii Khrustalev-Nosar, described the strike movement
=
Within ten days strikes
had seized the entire network of Russian railways, extending over 40,000
kilometers and employing 750,000 clerks and workers. Out of Moscow, as the
center, the strike flame sent its rays spreading to the periphery. The railway
strike predetermined the general strike.
The strike movement traveled on
steel rails and shut down factories, plants, -- all of life in the industrial
centers. [...] The strike revolution gave birth to the Soviet [Page:80-1]
<>1905oc14:Russian Emperor issued Ukaz in
order to gain some control over freedom of assembly, which was now an altogether
"voluntary" association, totally out of the control of official "assignment"
<>1905oc15:Council of Ministers closed all
Russian universities
<>1905oc16:All-Russian general strike began; a
remarkable, massive, open,
national rebellion [H05:180-9]
*-- Wage-labor political behavior was so far in essence
not unlike the behavior of other "working people", rural, urban, clerical,
professional (including university professors
and students) -- they all went out on strike
<>1905oc17:Russian
Emperor Nicholas II issued October Manifesto [TXT]
[Russian TXT] [Other
reprints =
VSB,3:705 |Mehlinger:331-2
| DIR2:384-5 | GRH:627-8 | McC1:13-4
| H05:195-6 |
CCC2,2:596 | DPH:301-2]
*--This simple manifesto seemed to promise much. The projected State Duma seemed
to be an elected parliamentary organization with apparent authority over the
tsarist "cabinet" (ministers, "the government") and over all new legislation.
This was the first progressive reform of governmental/administrative
institutions since the
creation of the Zemstvos forty years
earlier, and its immediate institutional implications exceeded anything
since the time of Alexander I or perhaps since the time of Peter I
*--Two days after signing the Manifesto, Nicholas II wrote in his diary =
Through all these horrible days, I constantly
met Witte. We very often met in the early morning to part only in the evening
when night fell. There were only two ways open; to find an energetic soldier and
crush the rebellion by sheer force. That would mean rivers of blood, and in the
end we would be where had started. [Petersburg Governor
General Trepov had issued orders to troops in the Petersburg garrison, "do not
spare the bullets", but he now bowed to practical considerations = force would
no longer work .] The other way out would be to give to the
people their civil rights, freedom of speech and press, also to have laws
confirmed by a State Duma - that of course would be a constitution. Witte
defends this very energetically. [Boldface added]
Almost everybody I had an opportunity of
consulting is of the same opinion. Witte put it quite clearly to me that he
would accept the Presidency of the Council of Ministers only on the condition
that his program was agreed to, and his actions not interfered with. We
discussed it for two days and in the end, invoking God's help, I signed. This
terrible decision which nevertheless I took quite consciously. I had no one to
rely on except honest Trepov. There was no other way out but to cross oneself
and give what everyone was asking for.
*--Suppression or concession, that was the debate. After
several decades of irresolution
with respect to the legacy of Alexander II, the tsarist state was now forced
at one moment to both quell vast disorder AND pick up the pace of
reform. The Manifesto made extensive concessions to society,
but Nicholas II and the insider elites around him may not have meant to fulfill
all the promises of the October Manifesto. The promise of a
State Duma calmed a nation in the grip of near universal
and spontaneous rebellion. Only the most radical elements among mobilized
wage-laborers and discontented villagers were ready to push toward further
revolutionary accomplishment. The irony was that these contrary trends --
general calm and worker radicalism -- allowed certain voices within the tsarist
state once again to resist reform and to entertain the dream of statist reaction
through suppression
*--Much hung on the big and immediate question about how the grand promises of
the October Manifesto might be actualized in newly drafted
Fundamental Laws
\\
*--H05:193-5, 210<>1905oc17:Saint Petersburg
Soviet newspaper Izvestiia
[News] began publication [VSB,3:745]
<>1905oc17:Sergei Witte
reported to Emperor Nicholas II in connection with his assignment to coordinate the
actions of the several ministries in preparation for the formation of a State Council.
He said unrest "has seized various sosloviia" and has its roots much deeper than
partial imperfections of government or in society, or as result of political
extremists. Roots are found "in the disturbed equilibrium between the
aspirations of conscious elements [in society] and the external forms of their
life". Russian society had outgrown the old order. It would have a new order
based on "civic liberty". Political institutions must be "raised to the level"
of the "moderate majority of the people". Witte urged immediate granting of
civil liberties and the equalization of "all Russian citizens before the law,
without distinction of religion and nationality". He urged the creation of an
elected legislature, and he insisted that the Imperial State Council should also be
elected.. He advised Nicholas II to understand that a great empire like Russia
was filled with a wide variety of factionalized interests. The monarch should
rise above them. Do not interfere in any way in the elections, he advised. Stand by the
1904de12 decree. When the Duma meets, do not oppose it
unless it presents a clear threat to the grandeur of Russia. Public activism
should be suppressed only when it threatened society itself or the state
[Mehlinger:333-5 | Doctorow, "Government" | H05:289-92 | Russian text GDR:91-4]
*--This began the final phase of Witte's career as statesman,
serving as Russia's first "Prime Minister", but perhaps, without his
knowing it, also serving as a
stop-gap concession while certain tsarist insiders regrouped and revolutionary fervor abated
*--Witte urged the necessity for authentic
concessions to society. It would be a half year later, on 1906ap23,
after the revolutionary storm was weathered, that Witte and the rest of Russia
learned in detail what tsarist authority intended to do. Meanwhile, Russia had a
long and difficult winter ahead =
<>1905oc18:Moscow workers passed labor strike resolution
[VSB,3:744]
<>1905oc19:oc20; Saint
Petersburg | Nicholas II issued a second Manifesto in connection with the
revolutionary crisis. Now he restructured the State Council into an appointed
legislative chamber, a second chamber now attached to the earlier unicameral and
elected Duma promised in the first manifesto. He
also structured the Council of Ministers into a body independent of the Duma and
under direct tsarist authority. There would be no authentic "cabinet", no formal
interdependency between Duma and ministers [McC1:17-18]
*--Sergei Witte moved ahead as if the promises of the October Manifesto were
still fully realizable. He called a government conference on upcoming elections to the new
State Duma. "State Duma" was still just a
revolutionary promise and not yet fully defined. But Witte could not delay the novel and
delicate task of courting for revolutionary government service certain of the "public men" associated with Zemstvo
activism and other forms of elite urban activism
*1905 LOOP
<>1905oc19:1906wi; Emperor Nicholas II letters to
his mother [PFM:89-92]
<>1905no:1907; Union of Russian Peoples [Soiuz
russkikh liudei], a reactionary political party, formed and composed its program [VSB,3:728 | DIR2:410-16]
*--Later founded Black Hundreds [Chernye sotny] (anti-Semitic, reactionary political party)
*--What is the relationship of "reactionary social movements" like this and
"official reactionary" policy?
<>1905no:Russian SRs
program [McC1:32-3 | DIR2:399-405
| DIR3:431-8]
<>1905no03:Russian Imperial Decree cut peasant
redemption payments in half for next year & abolished them altogether as of 1907 [DIR2:385-6
| DIR3:415-17
| DPH:302]
A forty-year-old deficiency in the greatest
of the great reforms thus was corrected. Reforms continued under
high-pressure
revolutionary circumstances
<>1905no06:no10; Moscow | All-Russian
Peasant Union Congress #2 [H05:219]. Max Weber numbered
members at 500, but more nearly 200 [MWG:243-4]
*1907:1915; Journalist report on peasants in Saint Petersburg [Nevison:49f]
<>1905no06:no13; Moscow | Zemstvo congress #6 (last).
Pavel Miliukov was admitted to
organizational committee and claimed readiness to support Witte government
[PR&R:533]. Congress sent deputation to see Witte
= Sergei Muromtsev, Fedor Kokoshkin, and Ivan Petrunkevich.
These deputies insisted that ministers in the new government be responsible to (under
the authority of) the Duma rather than to the tsar [PR&R:534 | Manning,Crisis:187 says Witte refused to see deputation]
*--Ivan Petrunkevich, Memoirs of a Social Activist [ORBIS]
<>1905no10:no14; Moscow-Saint Petersburg | Octobrist
Party [Soiuz 17 Oktiabria; Union of October 17] founded.
Aleksandr Guchkov (1862-1936), Geiden &
Dmitrii Shipov
were at
conference#1. This moderate political party issued a program [McC1:35-6
| VSB,3:726-8]
The Octobrist Party attracted urban industrialists and financiers,
most of whom were also big landowners. Sergei Shidlovskii
was a member
*1905no11:Saint Petersburg | All-Russian Trade and Industrial Union [Vserossiiskii
Torgovo-Promyshlennyi Soiuz] founded; soon joined Progressive Economic Party
[Progressivnaia ekonomicheskaia partiia]
*--Non-bureaucratic or "civilian" urban political elites were coming
to life
<>1905no15:(oc15??) Saint Petersburg dmx
fnd PPP [MWG:64 or259]
<>1905no16:Moscow | Committee of the All-Russian Peasant Union
arrested six days after their second congress
<>1905no17:Vladimir Province, Kovrov District Land Captain reported to
the Provincial Governor about rural disorders. "In the city of Kovrov a nest of
troublemakers has been stirring, and they include people of various classes [sosloviia]
and professions. They cover themselves by functioning as local zemstvo
officials, working on agricultural committees and economic councils and serving
on the committee for public temperance. This group has grown significantly and
persistently carries on its evil work. They distribute pamphlets by
Henry
George, revolutionary leaflets and proclamations. They circulate appeals
[off-prints?] of an edition of Donskaia rech' [voice of the Don, a
newspaper] which contains the French 18th century
Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizen, and distribute large quantities of harmfully oriented newspapers to
the peasants free of charge. They make tours of the villages and conduct secret
discussions with [...] ruinous effects upon the population. Many workers among the
peasants (I assume that they are paid by the agitators) promise all kinds of
future gains and recruit their fellow villagers, who, as is known, are extremely
ready to trust the tale-bearers and know-it-alls of their own villages. In daily
mass meetings in the workshops even visiting orators lecture on all manner of
subjects. It is rumored that some of the workmen are armed. In the evenings,
youth walk about boldly singing revolutionary songs. The townsfolk, fearing
unpleasantness, try to avoid leaving their homes at such times. In these
meetings both the workers and the peasants of my region take part. Seeing that
they get away with their illegal activity these people act insolently and teach
this to the peasants. || All pronouncements of the Moscow Peasant Union appear
in the villages in the form of proclamations which call for changing the old
ways ... yes, even of banishing the chiefs, the clerks and land captains from
the district peasant assembly [volostnoi skhod] [Page:72]
<>1905no17:no20; Moscow Union of Landowners [Soiuz zemlevladel'tsev]
meeting called for statist reactionary
measures and suppression of peasant disorder [MWG
1/10:250] Gentry politics
<>1905no19:no20; Saint
Petersburg | Sergei Witte conference with conservative Zemstvo congress members,
most of them in the recently formed Octobrist Party
[PR&R:534] = Aleksandr Guchkov & Mikhail Stakhovich; also Evgenii
Trubetskoi, & Dmitrii Shipov [who had become
embroiled in high politics over the
previous three years and would again in a most unlikely role as leader of
anti-Bolshevik forces in the time of the
revolutionary civil war]. Over the previous month, Witte had been courting
such "public men", representatives of progressive Zemstvo and urban
economic life [GFF:703-10 |
MWG:265-6] Witte also conferred with Fedor Golovin, Georgii L'vov, &
Fedor Kokoshkin.
Witte offered to cooperate with these "public men" if they moderated their political stance
*--These "public men", however,
still demanded a Constituent Assembly
& universal suffrage [PR&R:532] In demanding
a Constituent Assembly, they sought to wrest from the tsarist ministerial elite
and to give to elected representatives
the power to design the new Fundamental Laws. In other words, they sought to
take from tsarist bureaucrats and give to the public the power to make an actuality out of
the grand and vague promises in the October Manifesto
*--Still, Witte offered Ministry of
Manufacturing and Industry to wealthy industrialist Aleksandr Guchkov who refused on
grounds that Witte named reactionary career police administrator Petr Durnovo
to the all-important post of
Interior Minister [MWG:116 & 264]
*--Other Zemstvo liberals
and figures from the urban public shared the scrupulous
unwillingness of Guchkov to be compromised.
Thus the Witte effort to form a mixed government of
tsarist bureaucrats and "public men" collapsed
*--Witte all alone now with only the state. And most
powerful state servitors were ready to see him fail [GO de05]
*--Forty-years of Zemstvo politics had
come to this, though the Zemstvo continued
to play an important role in national life
*1905 LOOP
<>1905no22:Committee of the Post & Telegraph union
arrested
<>1905no22:Moscow then Saint Petersburg | Georgii Khrustalev-Nosar became chairman of workers' Soviet [WRH3:496-7
| *1913:RRe#2:89-100]
<>1905no24:Russia | End of preliminary
censorship
*--The imperial state brought an end to the
110-year-old constraint on Russian
print culture. Unfinished business of the
"great reform" era was taken up again under revolutionary pressure. A steady trickle of reform continued
*--GO 1905de02
\\
*--Daniel Balmuth,
Censorship in Russia, 1865-1905
*--Charles Ruud,
Fighting Words: Imperial Censorship and the Russian Press, 1804-1906
<>1905no26:Moscow | President of
workers'
Soviet, Khrustalev-Nosar arrested, and 26-year-old Leon Trotsky (1879-1940) replaced him
*1905no26:de05; Saint Petersburg | Nevison:77-80 (diary)
covered these critical 11 days
<>1905de02:Saint Petersburg
workers'
Soviet issued Financial Manifesto calling on peasants to refuse to make
redemption payments, demanding all wages be paid in gold or hard coin, full weight, and
recommending all wage-laborers
withdraw deposits from banks, "demanding all payments in gold" [VSB,3:746
| DPH:303-4 | Postgate:385
(part)]
*--State moved to suppress eight newspapers, this just over one week after the
passage of a new and progressive censorship reform
<>1905de03:Saint Petersburg Soviet members arrested during meeting in Free
Economic Society building
*--Trotsky mug-shot [pix]
*1906oc:Nosar and Trotsky testified at
their trials [VSB,3:748]
*--The workers' Soviet faded from scene after two vigorous
months of existence
*1907:Trotsky wrote Our Revolution, a description of those two vigorous
months or organized revolutionary politics. This early work by Trotsky was based
on his Marxist vision of history and his personal experience [TXT
of ch.5]. The more general study of the 1905 Revolution [TXT]
grew out of Our Revolution and contained the first versions of
Trotsky's contribution to general Social Democratic ideology, the notion of
"permanent revolution" [TXT
of preface]
*--The memory and myth of the workers' Soviet lingered. Twelve years later, the
Soviet revived and Trotsky returned
from exile and emigration just as the old Regime
collapsed in the 1917 Revolution
<>1905de04:Kostroma newspaper reported debates in
peasant gatherings. Sameti village assembly [sel'skii skhod] passed two
resolutions: (1) in view of land shortage, all land should be gathered in common
property on conditions determined by representatives elected nationally, and (2)
in the realm of politics it is essential that the people rule, without regard
for soslovie or other qualifications at the central and the district
levels, with freedom of conscience, association, assembly and expression. The
passport system must be abolished and amnesty of all those earlier prosecuted
for political activities and rural disorders. The Sameti assembly voted to join
the All-Russian Peasant Union. An assembly in Tonkin district vowed not be pay
taxes until the following measures were taken: (1) End the oppression by
Land
Captains, (2) institute peasant administration, carried out by peasants
themselves, not just on paper, but in fact, (3) institute an assembly of all
soslovie, (4) create equal rights for all peasants, (5) institute a
constituent assembly on the basis of the four-member formula [? four-tailed
electoral formula?], (6) refuse to participate in the Duma elections, (7) land
must be the the free property of those who work it [GDR:161-2]
Peasants had more in mind than burning gentry estates
<>1905de04:Petersburg |
Octobrist Party held its second conference
<>1905de05:de07 & de09; Tsarskoe Selo
"monarchical cnf" included Wtt gvt & ShpD, Gch Korf, PL Bobrinskii, VA
[MWG:266 | protocol, Byloe 3(25) (1917 September):217-65]
<>1905de07:de19; Moscow strike
& revolutionary disturbance [Nevison in Moscow?]
*--Resolution [VSB,3:746-8]
<>1905de11:Russian Election law for
State Duma signaled governmental retreat from promises in the
October Manifesto [ID] [Russian text
GDR:94-102]
*--Official reaction regained some of its momentum after
the setbacks of the previous 18 months
*1905 LOOP
<>1906:French highway engineer
and political ideologist Georges Sorel (1847-1922) wrote
Reflections on Violence [CCC2,2:954-63 |
BMC1:566-71 | BMC4:633-41]
*--Sorel, among other things, extolled the positive virtues of political violence
or terrorism
<>1906ja:Persia
(Iran), Tehran and its suburbs the site of mounting popular disorder. Iranian people over the preceding decade
demanded a curb on royal authority and the establishment of the rule of law. The shah ignored the challenge to his authority. Now
the religious establishment, the merchants, and other classes mounted open protests. Merchants and clerical leaders fled
from probable arrest by the shah. They sought sanctuary in mosques
*1906je:Tehran | Persian shah reneged on a promise to permit the establishment of a "house of justice", or consultative
assembly. In response, 10,000 people, led by merchants, took sanctuary in the compound of the British legation in Tehran
*1906au:Persian shah was forced to issue a decree promising a constitution
*1906oc:Persian elected assembly convened and drew up a Constitution that provided for strict limitations on royal
power, an elected parliament, or Majlis, with wide powers to represent the people, and a government with a cabinet subject
to confirmation by the Majlis
*1906de30:Persian shah signed the revolutionary Constitution and died five
days later. Within the year 1907, Supplementary Fundamental Laws provided,
within limits, for freedom of press, speech, and association, and for security
of life and property. The hopes for constitutional rule were not realized,
however, as a result of (1) internal political weakness and (2) imperialist
interference =
(1) 1907:1921; Persian shah Mohammad Ali and the Majlis engaged
in constant struggle, then Bakhtiari chiefs and other grandees took over
(2) 1907au18:1919;
For 12 years, leading up to and through the duration of WW1, English-Russian entente
divided Persia/Iran into English and Russian spheres
<>1906:USA, NYC | Maxim Gorky, "City of the Yellow
Devil" [Hasty:128-43], "Boredom"
[TXT]
*--On cultural relations in these years, see Saul,2:387-96,
459-65, 557-67
<>1906ja:ap26; Saint Petersburg events described by Nevison:309-16
<>1906ja:Socialists-Revolutionaries [SRs], now a
huge, unified and nation-wide party, held their First
Congress and issued a program,
which included reaffirmation of the need for "terroristic
struggle, central and local, individual and mass". The program furthermore
stated that "the new debauch of arbitrary rule finds the party once again at its
battle station" [VSB,3:719-21]
*--By this time the SRs concluded that the autocratic state had betrayed the promises
in the October Manifesto [ID]. This purely institutional
issue, the betrayal of democratic political promises made in October, remained
an issue over the next decade and fed popular discontent in the year 1917
[EG]
*--That month in Tambov Province, Battle Organization activist Mariia
Spiridonova assassinated Luzhenovskii, an important activist in the "Black
Hundreds" movement. In this new era of legal public mobilization across the full
political spectrum, terror had become also a weapon in
the struggle between different political parties and factions
*--However, within the ranks of the SRs, a "right-wing"
broke away (i.e., revolutionary moderates -- if
such a phrase is not wholly oxymoronic). These "moderates" lost patience with
underground conspiracy and terrorism and committed to open political action. They formed a new party known variously as the
Narodno-sotsialisticheskaia (Trudovaia) partiia [People's Socialist (Labour)
Party] or Trudovaia narodno-sotsialisticheskaia partiia [Labouring
People's Socialist Party]. In short, they were called Narodnye sotsialisti
[People's Socialists (it is uncomfortable and misleading but possible to translate that as
"National Socialists")]. They were nicknamed "NSs or "EnEsses"
*1906se:NSs expressed willingness to achieve their goals via political engagement
in the State Duma. Leading members were NF Annenskii, VA Miakotin, AV
Peshekhonov, VG Bogoraz-Tan, SYa Elpat'evskii, VI Semevskii, etc.
*--Soon NSs issued their own journal, Narodno-sotsialisticheskii
obozrenie [People's Socialist Review] which sought to make Russia a democratic republic, to transfer
unused, privately owned land to the peasantry (with compensation to the
landowners), and outright
nationalization of (excessively) huge landed estates [latifundia estates]. Also
monastic, royal and governmentally owned land should be nationalized and
distributed to peasants
*--NSs extended their organization down to the local level as they campaigned
for seats in the Duma. The
first NSs party conference was held the following April
<>1906ja:Russian
Marshals of nobility (i.e., chairmen of regional
noble assemblies) gathered and passed a resolution in which they declared their willingness to
help their sovereign restore peace and achieve the promises of the October
Manifesto. However, they acknowledged serious difficulties and thus made
recommendations [FFS:200-3] =
- The state issued decrees [ap17 and
oc17] promoting freedoms that have never been
defined, thus loosing anarchy and disorder on the country. Political wavering
creates an opening for revolutionary outbursts. Suspicions grow that the
promises from the tsar will not be fulfilled. Disorder must be quelled
- Convene the Duma as soon as possible. Quickly issue instructions on how this is to be done
- Russia is a single, indivisible whole. No regional or national separatism
should be allowed
- Russians need to be protected when they are living among a majority of
non-Russians
- Freedom of conscience must not limit the preeminence of the Russian
language and Orthodox Church
- Economic self-regulation should be granted in outlying areas while
protecting Russian interests
- The State Duma should take the fundamental solution of the agrarian
question to be its number one priority
- The inviolability of private property must be the guiding principles, with
certain defined exceptions
- Colonization of distant frontiers must be facilitated by local discussion.
State land should be offered to migrants
- Financial policy must be revamped so as to promote agricultural
productivity and marketing
- The state should promote consolidation of
peasant landholdings and termination of strip farming
- Allow peasants to claim their share of community land, consolidate it as separate households,
and sell them if they move [this an early call for conversion of peasant
villagers into
farmers]
- The Peasant Bank should
promote economic security of peasants. Government should assume some of the
financial burden of loans. Interest rates should be lowered to the same level
as those in the Noble Bank
- "Arable state lands and forests ... and also crown lands [should] be made
available to agriculturists with payment set according to accessed value.
[...] Twenty-four marshals hold a separate opinion: twenty one marshals regard
crown lands as private property, and three oppose consideration of this
question at the congress"
- Strong state authority must be exerted at the local level in order to
suppress violence and plunder
- Rules must be clearly stated and enforced to protect individual
liberty from violence and work stoppage or desertion
More Gentry politics
<>1906ja05:11; KDs Party Congress#2 [Vtoroi]
<>1906ja22:Nizhnii Novgorod
peasant petition outlined long history of
discontent in their village Malyi Seskin, ending with a list of seven demands =
(1) forests, lands and ponds owned by institutions, ministries [kabinetskie],
private individuals, monasteries, churches and gentry [pomeshchich'i]
should be turned over to to those who work them, under conditions of communal
land management [obshchinnogo zemlepol'zovaniia] (2) direct and indirect
taxes should be abolished and replaced by graduated progressive taxes (3)
universal and obligatory [primary and secondary] education and accessibility to
higher educational institutions to all who wish, at state expense (4) freedom of
expression, press, assembly, union and strike (5) inviolability of the
individual, home and correspondence (6) abolition of capital punishment,
military quartering and courts martial, and (7) swift convocation of the State
Duma. Signed by 90 peasants in assembly, with their elder [starosta], and
with notary signature of district police captain [ispravnik] [GDR:163-4] Minsk area ditto [164-5]
\\
*--Oleg Bukhovets subjected about 200 peasant
petitions of this era to aggregate analysis and offered a summary of their
content
<>1906ja30:Russian women's
Progressive Party, program [FFS:303-8]
<>1906fe:gbx Zmv mtg, conflict pro- &
anti-lbx [MWG]
<>1906fe:German sociologist Max Weber published "Zur Lage...", the first of two
monograph-length studies of the Russian Revolution of 1905, for which purpose he learned
the rudiments of Russian. First and second study published together
in MWG [Weber]
<>1906fe05:Congress#1,
Vserossiiskaia Torgovo-promyshlennaia partiia
[cf.1905no11:] Liberal industrialist Pavel P. Riabushinskii used phrase "class consciousness" & urged
resistance to "intelligentsia socialism" [OCP:274]
*--Urban "bourgeois" consciousness came to life under
conditions of revolutionary crisis
\\
*--"Association of Industry and Trade, 1906-1917" in
MERSH
*--"Riabushinskii", a Russian English-language website
[W] | Russian-language website
[W]
<>1906fe08:fe12;
Octobrist Party held a conference
<>1906fe20:Tsarist manifesto and
two ukazes about two chambers of the new legislative body. (1) The Imperial State Council [Sovet]
would now be made up of delegates, one half elected and one half appointed by
the tsar. Earlier, all were appointed by the tsar. (2) A "second house", the State Duma
would be made up of elected delegates, but elections were not to be direct.
Delegates were chosen in a four-tier process designed to mute the popular will [VSB,3:769-70
| MWG] [Russian text
GDR:102-]
*--Ministries were not put under the authority of the two-chambered legislature.
They remained responsible only to the tsar
*--The tsar no longer was formally described as having "unlimited autocratic
power" [neogranichennaia samoderzhavnaia vlast']. The word "unlimited"
was removed from his title
*1905 LOOP
<>1906fe21:Russian National Congress of Old-Ritualists
[Raskolniki] sent address to Emperor Nicholas II [FFS:298-9]
<>1906fe22:fe23; Russian laws handed down with respect to
relationship of southern imperial possessions to the new legislative institutions [GDR:123-33]
<>1906mr06:Russian State Duma election began
<>1906mr08:Russia | Ekaterinoslav guberniia Nobility
submitted address to Emperor Nicholas II which showed how village disorders
vexed
gentry politics, yet also showed how anxious gentry were
for the Emperor to honor the promises made in the
October Manifesto [FFS:203-6]
<>1906mr08:Russian Senate received two ukazes about management of
state budget [GDR:132-5]
<>1906mr08:mr11; Russian state took measures to maintain control
over the electoral process [GDR:136-41]
<>1906ap07:ap12; Russian Council of Ministers
deliberated with Nicholas II about the new Fundamental Laws [VSB,3:770-2]
<>1906ap10:ap25; Stockholm | Russian SDs Congress #4 (The
Unity Congress [!!]) tried to bring Russian Marxists back together. However, the Menshevik/Bolshevik split widened. Mensheviks A.S. Martynov and P.B. Aksel'rod
explained differences with Bolsheviks [VSB,3:716-17]
*--Agrarian program [VSB,3:801]
*--In this year, the German Social Democratic
leader Karl Kautsky [pix] on meaning of the 1905 Russian Revolution, w/ preface by
Vladimir Lenin [Hardy:352f] German and Russian Marxists
sought common ground in the interpretation of this vital European event
<>1906ap14:Sergei Witte
resignation became widely known. Witte memoirs gave bitter account of events leading to
this [cf. VSB,3:748-50 and DIR2:418-25]
*--In mid April, Russian state secured loan and thus felt bolder in its desire
to reverse large parts of the concessions granted in the
October Manifesto. It no longer needed
Witte
<>1906ap17:San Francisco earthquake described by USA author
Jack London [Eye:418-21]
<>1906ap22:ap23; Congress of Noble Circles passed
a resolution which symbolized conservative gentry
politics. They called for restoration of law and order, especially the
defense of the principles of autocracy and the enforcement of noble soslovie
privileges and exemptions. They objected to the way in which "unworthy members
and aliens with inappropriate bloodlines" had in recent times been elevated to
prominent positions [FFS:206-10]
<>1906ap23:Russia's new Fundamental
Laws issued [TXT]
[original draft, Council of Ministers draft, & final version:
Mehlinger:336-44 | cf. DIR2:387-93
| DIR3:417-25 | VSB,3:772-4
|
DPH:395-6 | GDR:141-60]
*--New laws defined the powers of the Duma and the relation
of the Duma legislature to the tsarist government (the ministries and their apparat) in
ways that caused most to conclude that the Fundamental Laws betrayed the promises of the
October Manifesto [ID]
<>1906ap27:1906jy08; First
State Duma formally opened with KDs playing a central roll [VSB,3:774-6] but lasted only two months and two weeks
*--First Duma heard Emperor Nicholas IIs speech from throne & responded in an
oppositional mood [RRC2,2#39 | PR&R:546-60 |
Nevison:325-6]
*--Ten weeks of intense struggle between elected legislators and tsarist government
followed
*--Over on the government side, the Emperor appointed confirmed monarchist
Ivan Goremykin
Prime Minister to replace Witte; Petr Stolypin
became Interior Minister [WRH3:498-509]
*--Vasilii Maklakov (a scrupulously moderate member of the KD Party),
The First State Duma: Contemporary Reminiscences
*--The First Duma was eventually dissolved by tsarist authority
*--The Second Duma was hardly more settled
<>1906ap27:+; First Duma Labor Group [Trudovaia Gruppa;
best known as Trudoviki] formed in the midst of parliamentary
proceedings, with 96 then 107 members, including Ivan Zhilkin, Aleksei Alad'in
and Stepan Anikin, all educated professionals, journalists or teachers
*--Trudoviki were much influenced by the All-Russian Peasant Union and the SRs, but
they were nonetheless a distinct product of the actual political situation that
newly elected delegates, many of them from the village, found within
the new parliament. They were an authentic product of labor
political mobilization, particularly the mobilization of rural labor into an
organized political party
<>1906my:dvr.unx (??soiuz zemledel GO 05no17) fnd; cnx gnt pty
<>1906my05:State Duma replied to Emperor Nicholas II
speech [RRC2,2:445-49 | Harper:40-1
| VSB,3:776-7]
<>1906my08:je01; State Duma, for four
weeks, debated agricultural problems, including the old problem of landed
estates, much influenced by the legislative agenda of the Trudoviki
*1906my08:Russian KDs position
on agrarian question, "Project of the 42" [GDR:168-72]
*1906my17:Samara guberniia peasant woman wrote letter to
State Duma [GDR:180-1]
<>1906my13:Government declaration & State Duma vote
of no confidence in Goremykin government [RRC2,2#40
| VSB,3:777-8] Stenographic record of part of Duma session [GDR:160]
<>1906my23:Trudoviki agrarian program, "Project of the 104" [GDR:172-4]
*1906je02:Samara
Province
peasants "instructed" Duma [GDR:165-8]
*1906je10:Penza Province peasants petitioned
State Duma
[GDR:168]
<>1906je11:Russian nationwide nobles congress sent
address to Nicholas II defending the "inviolability of property rights"
of gentry landowners [VSB,3:800]
*--The previous seventeen years of gentry politics, here
defined as promotion and defense of exclusive noble soslovie interests
and landowning power, was a clear failure, just as it had been
a half century earlier
\\
*--Robert
Edelman,
Gentry Politics on the Eve of the Russian Revolution: The
Nationalist Party, 1907-1917
*--Roberta Thompson Manning,
The Crisis of the Old Order in Russia: Gentry and
Government (1982)
<>1906je20:Emperor Nicholas II
had "list" of prospective new coalition government on the basis of
which Stolypin
and Governor General Trepov negotiated with the KDs.
Stolypin, representing a new generation of tsarist officialdom, now moved toward
the center of official events. Trepov, representing an older generation
(though only 51 years old), died three months later, ending his
year and a half near the center.
\\
Tuck:127-8 says negotiations failed because the government acted too late, because
conflict between bureaucrats and KDs too deep, and because
Pavel Miliukov was too
"doctrinaire"
<>1906jy04:State Duma Agrarian Commission
reported [GDR:175-80]
<>1906jy06:Old-guard monarchist-absolutist
statesman Goremykin out and Petr Stolypin in as Prime
Minister. Two days later =
*1906jy08:jy09; First Duma dissolved [VSB,3:778
| CCC2,2:597-8 | DPH:306-7
| Russian text, Rospuska Gosudarstvennoi, in GDR:181-3]
*1906jy09:Stolypin made further unsuccessful effort to form
coalition government [GFF:710-21]
<>1906jy10:Finland | Dissident delegates from the suppressed State Duma,
with KDs and the Trudoviki at their center, fled to
Finland and issued the Vyborg Manifesto [McC1:43-4
| VSB,3:779 |
Meeting described in Harper,Russia:50-51 |
Nevison:351-2]
*--The Vyborg Manifesto marked the end of the KDs' nine-month revolutionary period.
There was no significant popular response to the radical proposals in the
Manifesto
*--That day, Pavel Miliukov described Duma and "extreme parties" in a newspaper
article
*--Years later the more moderate liberal, Vasilii Maklakov, remembered
with regret this First Duma and its extremism [VSB,3:780-2].
Events sheared the KDs of their bellicose behavior. They now settled into life as a
parliamentary party beginning with the Third Duma
*--Moisei Ostrogorski (1854-1919) revised his big theoretical
study of political parties on the basis of his disillusionment as KD deputy to the First
Duma
*1905 LOOP
<>1906jy10:London International Peace Conference |
Maksim
Kovalevskii delivered speech [Nevison:360-1] Nevison described voluble crowds at the
Conference, caught up in the excitement of the Russian "march of democracy" [358]
<>1906jy17:In the style of the Vyborg Manifesto,
revolutionary appeals continued from the dispersed groups within the First Duma.
Trudoviki & SDs,
joined by representatives of the SRs and Railroad Union,
appealed to soldiers & sailors [Nevison:352-4] Their slogan was "land and
liberty"
*1906jy18:Trudoviki & SDs, now joined by SRs, All-Russian
Peasant Union and railroad unions, appealed to peasants
[Nevison:354-6]
<>1906au:Germany | Max Weber published the second installment of his quick study of
the First Russian Revolution
*--Both the first and the second monographs have been pulled together as
The Russian Revolutions
*--Weber was interested to see if liberalism could be united with social
democracy in Russia, thus to provide a model to be followed by other "disenchanted", dead-end
and "bourgeois" political parties in his world.
He was disappointed.
He dubbed the political results of the 1905 Russian revolution
"Pseudo-constitutionalism" [Scheinkonstitutionalismus]
<>1906au19:Stolypin saw to the
creation of field court-martial squads to quell unrest in the countryside [VSB,3:783]
*--A week earlier Stolypin's dacha was the target of a deadly terrorist attack
[ID] [VSB,3:782-3]
*1905:1909; Government statistics on political crime reported 2,390 executions
for "terrorism", most of them following the Stolypin
electoral-law coup [VSB,3:750]
*--In these days Stolypin issued several policy statements [VSB,3:783-5
| McC1:44-6]
*--Peasant unrest was brought under some control
<>1906se:Russian
universities reopened after nearly a year in official
suspension
<>1906oc03:oc07;
Trudoviki held their first Conference
in preparation for the Second Duma
*--That month the growing faction of terroristic and action-oriented members of
the SR Party broke away to form the Union of SR Maximalists [3
paragraph ID]
*--That fall, the right-wing party Black Hundreds also prepared for the upcoming elections by
issuing a position paper
[W]
Prime Minister Petr Stolypin

<>1906no09:Tsarist ukaz outlined ambitious new
departures in agrarian reform. The new policy was announced according to Article 87 of the
Fundamental Laws which gave the new Prime Minister Stolypin
and the ministries authority to legislate when the Duma was not in session. The policy was
formulated independently from the contentious debate in the dissolved First Duma, even
though the urgency for further peasant reform was made apparent in that
Duma [TXT] [VSB,3:803-4
|
McC1:142-4]
*--The first year under the October Manifesto and
the subsequent Fundamental Laws seemed to be working more nearly in the
interests of the established bureaucratic absolutism and less in the interests
of those whose political activism forced the Emperor to issue the October
Manifesto
*1906oc05:Russian Decree on Peasant Rights, issued under Stolypin's influence,
laid the groundwork for this ambitious November ukaz. The October decree not only opened the new era in
peasant reform but represented a long-delayed finalization of the
1861 serf emancipation [VSB,3:802-3]
This final reform measure to come out of the 1905
Revolutionary period was the greatest
*--Article 87 required that the State Duma eventually ratify such measures as this, but
it was
four years before that happened. In the meantime,
peasant political mobilization waned, and Stolypin
entered into the phase of his greatest accomplishments
*1905 LOOP
<>1907:1912; Russian statesman,
ex-Finance Minister (and ex-Prime Minister) Sergei Witte wrote his
Memoirs, covering the big moments in his illustrious career
[Excerpts = DIR3:451-60]
<>1907:1917; Polish-born member of SDs over
previous ten years, Felix Dzerzhinskii
(1877-1926) arrested and sent to Siberian prison and exile for nine years,
described in publication of his
Prison Diary and
Letters
<>1907:French philosopher
Henri Bergson (1859-1941) published
Creative Evolution, an idealist critique of
scientific knowledge [CCC2,2:1027-34 |
BMC1:594-6 | BMC4:623-6]
<>1907:Philippine Islands | USA sponsored elections to a
national legislature. This was the second such elected legislature in all of Asia, and the
first in a client state closely supervised by a patron state (USA)
<>1907:Moscow
"Religious-Philosophical Society in Honor of Vladimir Solov'ev" formed
*--Solov'ev died in 1900 at age 47, ending a brilliant 26-year career that contributed to the
reorientation of Russian thought, from positivism to various shades of
"spiritualism"
*1901:1903; Saint Petersburg "Religious-Philosophical" meetings were a prelude
to the Moscow group [Florovsky,2:252-8].
Other events also characterized a new "spirit" in Russian high culture =
*1905:Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, Peter
& Alexis (v3 of trilogy "Christ & Anti-Christ")
*1906:friends published Nikolai Fedorov's "The Question of
Brotherhood..." [Edie,3:16-54]
*1906:Leo Tolstoy, "Meaning of the Russian
Revolution" [Raeff3:323-57], then in 1908 The Law of Love and the Law of Violence
*1906:Nikolai Losskiis The Intuitive Basis of Knowledge became first
translation into English of a technical work of Russia philosophy [Edie,3:321-42]
*--Evgenyi Trubetskoi was a leading figure in the Moscow group and author later of
"The Bolshevist Utopia and the Religious Movement in Russia" [RRS]
*--Aleksandr Bogdanov, "Matter as a Thing-in-Itself" [Edie,3:393-404]
*--Also see Nikolai Grot [RRS:61-80], Vasilii Rozanov [91-104],
Sergei Bulgakov [135-160], Viacheslav Ivanov [161-74], Georgii Chulkov [on mystical
anarchism:175-86], Georgii Florovskii (George Florovsky) [225-46], Pavel Novgorodtsev
[247-64]
*--Writers Aleksandr Blok and Andrei Belyi were involved in these
developments
*--The Vekhi group was influenced by this society
\\
*--Florovsky,2:233-83
<>1907mr07:1907je03; Second
State Duma opened more than a half year after the First Duma was dissolved,
and it lasted just under three months before the state dissolved it as well
*1907mr06:Stolypin appeared in contentious session with Duma [VSB,3:785-7]
*1907ap16:ap20; NSs held their First Conference and sent 16 representatives to
the Duma, but their moderate politics were drowned in the fervor of
revolutionary opposition, and they soon faded from the scene, after only about
one year of existence, not to reappear again until
the days in which the Imperial old
regime collapsed
*1907my03:Agrarian Commission received SRs agrarian program, signed by 104
deputies. Trudoviki and the All-Russian Peasant Union submitted their own
program, but there was not enough time left to the Second Duma to consider
either at length
*--The Trudoviki were near the end of their
one-year existence
*--The Peasant Union was at the end of his
18-month revolutionary existence
*1907my10:Stolypin delivered speech to Duma on peasant question
with the famous concluding line, "Those who oppose our state system [...] require great
upheavals; we require a great Russia!" [VSB,3:804-5
| RRC2,2#41]
*1923je:Slavonic
Review#2,4:36-55 | Bernard Pares, "The Second Duma" (an English eyewitness
account) [More Pares]
*--Not until the Third Duma did parliamentary
politics settle into a more permanent pattern of relationship with the tsarist
state
<>1907my12:London | Russian SDs at Congress #5 heard
Lenin's report on peasantry [VSB,3:808-9]
Marxism was
never strong in its comprehension of peasants, but now
Lenin worked to bring his
doctrine in line with Russian economic realities and revolutionary opportunities.
Many felt he was just importing the agrarian program of the SRs
*--Peasant mobilization over the preceding two and one half
years was effectively at its end, but the peasant
question was far from settled
<>1907je03:Manifesto dissolving
Second Duma [TXT] [VSB,3:787-8 | McC1:47-8]
*--Petr Stolypin coup d'etat imposed a new election law
while Duma was no longer in session [Russian GDR:357-95]
*--As revolutionary disorder subsided (or should we say "was suppressed") and as
the statist-oriented new election law took effect, the Third Duma met and was
the first session of the State Duma to last its full
five-year term
*1934:Three decades later, as Stalinism began to set down its roots in Soviet
Russian life, the west European political refugee Petr Struve wrote memoirs of Russian liberal activists in the 1905
Revolution. He asserted that if at any time the
liberals had succeeded in forming a cabinet, they would have had to fight
revolutionary maximalists to the death, just as did Stolypin, either that or
"capitulate pitiably before the triumphant mob" [*1934ja:SEER#12,35:366]
One sniffs in this 1934 statement about "the triumphant mob" more
nearly the scent of the anti-democratic European political atmosphere in the
era of
Stalin, Hitler and Mussolini than of the political atmosphere in the time of
the Second Duma
*--Stolypin's coup marked the end of the political crisis known as the "First
Russian Revolution" =
*1905 LOOP begins again
<>1907je:Hague | Second
International Peace Conference
*--First Conference
*--Major conventions signed at
these two conferences aimed to strengthen the possibility of international law [TXT]
*--USA supported these conventions (Spanish-American War
[ID] and Panama adventure
[ID] now behind it) while Russia opposed them (need to re-arm after Russo-Japanese War
[ID])
*--Second International's Stuttgart Resolution on militarism and International Conflict
supported the Hague resolutions [DPH:224-6]
*--Replaced after WW1 by World Court
[ID]
\\
*--Saul,2:521-3
<>1907jy30:(13.7.40 Meiji): Saint Petersburg | Russian-Japanese treaty re. Manchuria, Korea & Mongolia [DIR2:432-4
| DIR3:473-78]
In essence, the treaty divided Manchuria into "North Manchuria" under Russian
authority and "South Manchuria" under Japanese authority. Korea was granted
fully to Japan (with "most favored nation" status assigned to Russia). Outer
Mongolia was granted to Russia
*--Ernest B. Price,
The Russo-Japanese Treaties of 1907-1916 Concerning
Manchuria and Mongolia
*--More treaties in Japanese-Russian international
relations [DIR2:]
<>1907au18:1919;
English-Russian entente [TXT]
[DIR3:467-72]
*--Iran (Persia) was divided between Russia & England for 12 years, throughout WW1
and into the first post-war years. Working together, the two imperialist rivals
ended the hope that the Iranian Constitutional Revolution might inaugurate a new
era of independence. Two competing empires agreed to divide a third party,
Persia, into spheres of influence. The Russians took the northern sphere, the
British the southern and eastern. A central neutral sphere was preserved between
the two where they were free to compete with one another for economic and
political advantage
*--Iran had struggled to preserve
its own Persian spheres of influence over the
previous century, but now it appeared to be fully under European
imperialist dominion =
*1908je:Persian shah deployed his Persian Cossack Brigade, under Russian command, to bomb the Majlis
building, arrest deputies, and close down the assembly. However, Iranians
continued to resist =
*1909jy:In Tabriz, Esfahan, Rasht and elsewhere, Iranian resistance to the shah coalesced in a wide-spread constitutional
movement which marched from Rasht and Esfahan to Tehran, deposed the shah, and reestablished the constitution. The ex-shah
went into Russian exile. Constitutional forces triumphed, but they faced serious difficulties. Upheavals in the time of
Constitutional Revolution and civil war undermined stability and trade
*1910jy:Persian shah in Russian exile, and with Russian imperial support, landed troops in Persia in an attempt to
overthrow parliamentary rule and
regain his throne
*--Afghan independence was brought under "protection" of England. Also at this
time Russia and England
settled disagreements over Tibet, continuing
that mountainous region's 200-year
vulnerability to great powers
*--Eight years earlier, Lord Curzon, who was then English Viceroy of India, explained
the interlocking relationship of Iran
(Persia),
Afghanistan, India
and other English imperialist domains. He emphasized the threat posed by Russia to these territories "which
Great Britain regards with good reason as falling within her sphere of
influence" [BNE:185-7]
*--But now, eight years later, England sought to placate Russia in anticipation of the need
for wide alliance against Germany, here on the eve of WW1. Energy politics (oil)
also played a role in a era of transition to petroleum-powered military navies
*--In this same year, 1907, English Foreign Office official Sir Eyre Crowe
[ID] reacted to growing
German naval power and outlined one of the first European descriptions of how an
"arms race" might be managed and how it might run out of control [P20:55
and PWT2:262-4 emphasize those pages from Crowe's long report that
indicated Germany's yearning for expansion and power | BNE:201-8
presents a far more subtle excerpt that does more justice to Crowe's honest and
intelligent assessment of the world situation]
*--This English/Russian entente completed the "Triple Entente" (France, Russia and
England) which isolated Germany and set the European diplomatic stage for alliance among core "allies" in WW1 [DIR2:426-31
| ORW:147-8 | CCC2,2:620-1]
*--The Great Game was coming home, and it was increasingly
obvious that Russia was the least competent of the big players, now having
allowed herself to be put in a hostile relation to Germany, contrary to her own
interests [EG], but strongly beneficial to England and France
*--British documents on the origins of the war, 1898-1914
v4.
European imperialism and European war were fertilized together
<>1907oc15:Petersburg director of the Chief Prison
Administration A.M. Maksimovskii assassinated by Ragozinnikova [VSB,3:809-10]
<>1907no01:1912je09; Third
State Duma, elected according to the new Stolypin electoral law, lasted
its full term, four and a half years
*--The First and Second
Dumas were less legislatures
than revolutionary tribunals. They were overpowered by statist forces, and, with
the Third State Duma, the three-year-long 1905 Revolution
was at an end. Now we ask, did it accomplish anything =
*1907no16:Stolypin defended his "get-tough" program before the Third Duma [VSB,3:788-9
|
Full Russian text GDR:398-402]
*1908de08:Prime Minister Petr Stolypin's "wager on the strong" speech
delivered to Third Duma and debated [VSB,3:805-7]
Stolypin pushed for
serious peasant reform
*--A notable accomplishment of the Third Duma was the first vigorous and effective primary
education program
*1908mr11:Evgraf Petrovich Kovalevskii introduced education bill [VSB,3:817] But still, restrictions on Jews were maintained [VSB:818]
*1910:1911; Aleksandr Guchkov was elected president of the Third
Duma
*--The Fourth Duma, elected in 1912, was to be more nearly a part of the history of WW1 than it was of Russian
democracy, so this Third Duma is the historical laboratory for testing Russian
"readiness" for parliamentary democracy
*--About the importance of budgetary authority in the growth of parliamentary
power [WRH3:509-10 | *1912:RRe#1:14-48]
*--About
political parties in the mature State Duma period [WRH3:511-21]
*--The "revolutionary era" of political
party formation seemed over as groups got down to work within the Duma
structure. The Third Duma was a political environment within which the KDs,
Octobrists and other moderate political parties thrived
*--However, large and more radical groups, the SRs and SDs, were
marginalized and continued to organize themselves in anticipation of a future
revolutionary situation. The obdurate revolutionary quality of SR and SD
programs was not just a peculiarity of Russian experience. A darkening political mood influenced the evolution of political parties
throughout Europe on the eve of WW1
*--The Third State Duma was Stolypin's finest hour
*--Aleksandr Izvolskii,
Recollections of a Foreign Minister
*--Vladimir Gurko,
Features and Figures of the Past: Government and Opinion
in the Reign of Nicholas II
*--Vladimir Kokovtsov,
Out of My Past: The Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov, Russian Minister of
Finance, 1904-1914, Chairman of the Council of Ministers, 1911-1914
\\
*--Jeffrey Brooks,
When Russia Learned to Read: Literacy and Popular Literature,
1861-1917
*--Ben Eklof,
Russian Peasant Schools
*--William H. Johnson,
Russia's Educational Heritage
*--Geoffrey A. Hosking,
The Russian Constitutional Experiment: Government and Duma,
1907-1914
*--R. B. McKean,
The Russian Constitutional Monarchy, 1907-1917
*--Ben-Cion Pinchuk,
The Octobrists in the Third Duma, 1907-1912
*--R. W. Thurston, "Police and People in Moscow, 1906-1914" | *1980jy:RRe#39:320-38
*--N. B. Weissman,
Reform in Tsarist Russia: The State Bureaucracy and Local
Government, 1900-1914
<>1908:Root-Takahira agreements
<>1908:USA FBI organized
<>1908jy23:Turkey
(Ottoman Empire) | "Young Turks", led by Mustafa Kemal
(1880-1938) and others, launched nationalist/reformist movement aimed to modernize Turkey
in order better to resist foreign manipulation. The movement was less Ottoman
and imperialist than it was
Turkish nationalist
*--More Ottoman Turkey
<>1908au:London | Russian SRs held First General Party Conference under
leadership of Viktor Chernov [VSB,3:810-11]
<>1908se:Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina [W]
Russia's attentions called back to Balkans nearly 30 years
after chastisement in Berlin. The Great Game was about to make its final contribution to
the catastrophe of World War One
<>1908no:Russian poet Aleksandr
Blok seemed to welcome a revolutionary future, though with dread, as he anticipated the
destruction of the intelligentsia: "The People & the Intelligentsia" [Raeff3:359-63] Blok took on other interpretive issues in
"Catiline: A Page from the History of World Revolution" [RRS:291-320]
*--Blok never let go of his revolutionary
fascination and dread
*--Andrei Belyi, another Symbolist poet, wrote on "Revolution and Culture" [RRS:271-90]
Some of his essays have been translated
\\
*1979:1980; ENG.OX| Avril Pyman, The life of Aleksandr Blok| v1= The
distant thunder, 1880-1908| v2= The release of harmony, 1908-1921 (rich in long citations from original sources)
<>1908de29:English financier Lord
Furness delivered a speech extolling virtues of controlling markets by combination of
large corporations, monopolies, economic cartels, or, here, "amalgamations"
[CCC2,2:795f CCC3,2:870-6]
*--Three years earlier John P. Davis warned of overweening power of big business =
Corporations:
A Study of the Origin and Development of Great Business Combinations and of their Relation
to the Authority of the State
<>1909:Austrian
psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud delivered lectures in USA
on origin and development of psychoanalysis [CCC2,2:1061-83]
<>1909:Russian
intellectuals published Vekhi [Signposts; Landmarks] a collection of essays
critical of the Russian intelligentsia [ID], especially its
revolutionary radicalism. New trends in Russian thought [ID]
reflected in this anthology = Nikolai Berdiaev,
Sergei Bulgakov, Gershenzon, Izgoev, Kistiakovskii, Struve,& Frank [VSB,3:812-14]
Fellow intelligenty protested
*--Struve, "The Intelligentsia and the National Face" [RRS:265-70]
*1909ja30:Tolstoy wrote "A Letter to a Revolutionary" [VSB,3:816-17]
*1909:Paris |Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, Zinaida Gippius, and D. Filosofov published
Tsar i
revoliutsiia
*--See also Viacheslav Ivanov and M. O. Gershenzons later philosophical reflections
in the post-revolutionary period,
Correspondence Across a Room
(1984)
*1917:Mikhail Nesterov portrait of Pavel Florenskii and Nikolai Bulgakov,
pix in Olga's Gallery
<>1909:Lenin published Materialism &
Empirio-Criticism [Edie,3:410-36]
*--Prominent Russian philosopher Liubov Akselrod [pseudonym "Ortodoks"], a
powerful womans voice among Russian Marxists, reviewed Lenins essay [Edie,3:457-63].
Still an émigré, Lenin had to content himself with
philosophical ramblings in isolation from actual politics
<>1909fe12:USA NYC | The National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People [NAACP] [W]
describes how the group was "formed by a group of black and white citizens committed
to helping to right social injustices". FOUNDERS: Mary White Ovington, Dr. Henry
Moscowitz, Oswald Garrison Villiard, William English Walling, Ida Wells-Barnett and W.E.B.
DuBois led the "Call" to renew the struggle for civil and political liberty
<>1909:+; Cubism introduced in
west European
painting, with Pablo Picasso
playing a leading role
<>1909fe20:Italian newspaper Le Figaro featured
"Initial Manifesto of Futurism" on its front page. Birth of a movement
that rejected 19th century esthetics [CWC:6-15]
*--The author was the poet F. T. Marinetti, a man of great inherited wealth =
"We affirm that the world's magnificence has been enriched by a new beauty: the beauty of speed! A racing car whose hood
is adorned with great pipes, like serpents of explosive breath -- a roaring car that seems to ride on grapeshot is more
beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace. We want to hymn the man at the wheel, who hurls the lance of his spirit across
the Earth, along the circle of its orbit."
Marinetti drove a 1908 four-door, four-cylinder Fiat Brevetti convertible, top
speed, forty miles an hour [pix]
*--Marinetti wrote, “We will glorify war -- the only true hygiene of the world -- militarism, patriotism,
the destructive gesture of the anarchist, the beautiful Ideas which kill, and the scorn of woman”
*--On the question of WW1, and chauvinistic militarism in general, the Dada [ID] movement
moved in a direction opposite to the Futurists
*--These movements opened an epoch of extreme innovation in
European fine arts
<>1909jy25:English Channel first crossed by air. French pilot Louis Blériot
described feat [Eye:422-3]
<>1909oc12:Japanese Prince Ito
killed by Korean terrorist, causing Japan to impose an imperialist dictatorship in Korea.
China and Japan in conflict this year over Manchuria
*--USA alarmed, proposed neutralization of the entire Manchurian railroad network, but Japan and Russia rejected this idea
*--USA Secretary of State-to-be Knox received letter from Theodore Roosevelt warning about
Japan [F/Russia/ and /mainland/ in TXT]
<>1910:English journalist and
pundit Norman Angell, The Great Illusion [TXT], disputed the
possibility that modern warfare could bring benefit to a nation [CCC3,2:1277-96]
*--In this year, French intellectual Charles Péguy published Notre Jeunesse.
Here he exposed what he thought was a two-pronged attack on his beloved French
Republic, one from the left and the other from the right [CCC3,2:1045-66].
Born of peasant stock, he refused a commission as officer in WW1. He died
fighting in the ranks with his fellow citizens at the Battle of the Marne
*--Italian Nationalist Association founder declared, "Just as socialism teaches the
proletariat the value of class struggle, so we must teach Italy the value of international
struggle. But international struggle is war? Well, then, let there be war! And nationalism
will arouse the will for a victorious war, ... the only way to national redemption" [P20:3]
*--French socialist leader Jean Jaurès published anti-war statement L'Armée nouvelle
[CCC2,2:1107-16 | CCC3,2:1067-76]
*--In these pre-WW1 years, Henri Massis and Alfred de Tarde published The Young People
of Today which attacked the liberalism and positivism
[ID] of
the older generation and praised the patriotic, religious, and heroic future of French
youth. It promised that "nothing can be more useful for the renewal of the fatherland
than a generation that is athletic, realistic, un-ideological, virtuous, and fit for
economic struggles, since nothing can better insure the revitalization and the health of
the race". [CWC:16-35]
<>1910:Russian political activist and theorist Moisei
Ostrogorski published
Democracy and the Party System in the United States: A Study
in Extra-Constitutional Government, based on a vast earlier book,
Democracy and the Organization of Political Parties
[TXT] By 1910 Ostrogorski had experienced disappointment as an
active member of the KDs in the First Russian Duma.
Ostrogorski lived many years in the USA. Experience and study made him skeptical about political parties.
Like so many Europeans of the day, he was now unsure of the received tradition of
19th-century optimism and liberalism. He described a tendency toward oligarchic
manipulation of the larger party membership. He called such parties
"cadre
parties". "Cadre" came to mean a designated and trained
managerial
elite. Contradictions vexed liberalism from the
outset [ID]. Now in the
early 20th century it suffered also from a degree of internal corruption of
central principles
<>1910:Petersburg liberal intelligentsia [ID] defended their cause against
the attacks launched the year before by the Vekhi group. Pavel Miliukov,
Maksim Kovalevskii, Ivan
Petrunkevich, Konstantin Arsen'ev, Mikhail Tugan-Baranovskii, and others contributed chapters to
Intelligentsiia v Rossii: Sbornik statei [Excerpts
= VSB,3:814-16]
*1991:In the last year of the Soviet Union,
Vekhi and
Intelligentsia were republished together
<>1910:Russian Bolshevik branch of the SDs drew up
pessimistic platform. They anticipated no Marxist revolution
soon [VSB,3:811-12]
<>1910ja18:England, Liverpool | Suffragette
[a woman fighting for the right to vote] Lady Constance Lytton,
disguised as a laboring-class woman, described how police force fed her in
the Walton Gaol [jail] [Eye:423-5]
<>1910fe08:USA | Knox memo to the Russian state
\\
Zabriskie
<>1910je14:Russian Third Duma
passed complicated Stolypin land law, four years after the initial tsarist ukaz [VSB,3:807-8]
*--Stolypin Land Law sought to allow peasant families to claim farming land as their own
that had been traditionally subject to periodic redistribution within the village
assembly [mirskoi
skhod] or peasant commune
*--Later these scattered holdings could be consolidated into single farmsteads, though the
technical and social complexity of consolidation was never fully resolved. These reforms
also promoted peasant migration to the new lands of Siberia, Central Asia, and the
piedmont of the northern Caucasus Mountains. Costs and other passport
difficulties associated with migration to Siberia via the Trans-Siberian
Railroad were eased for pioneer-minded peasants in European Russia
[TXT] Witte's confidence in
railroads, central to his system
introduced two decades earlier, was being confirmed
*--Serious agrarian reform
preceded Stolypin [GO 1649:Moscow 1797mr24 1837:1841].
The Emancipation of the serfs in 1861 is the
single most famous event. Now the state returned to the countryside to complete the
job only started in the 19th century
*--Andrei Koefoed,
My Share in the
Stolypin Agrarian Reforms
*--Old "Russian hand" among English pundits, Donald Mackenzie Wallace offered a few
"whiggish" remarks on the State Duma and
Stolypin in the 1912
edition of his famous book
Russia [VSB,3:790]
*--The Stolypin reforms may be seen as a
belated effort to put the various modernizing reform measures of the previous century on a more
solid basis. Having worked on the upper stories of this new tsarist structure for over 100
years, the imperial state now got serious about work on the foundations and first floors. Too
little, too late?
*--These reforms may also be seen as part of a conceptual development in
macro-economic thought in Europe since the time of
Adam Smith. Teodor Shanin has
argued [Roots
of Otherness,2:4-7] that Stolypin represents "the second amendment" to
classical economic theory, in which the state takes charge of social relations
and the economy in the interests of the state, in which the state follows a
failed peasant revolution with a "revolution from above", a state revolution
designed to transform peasant life and guarantee the strength and security of
the state. Friedrich List represents
what Shanin calls "the first amendment"
*--Peasant life still was difficult. Every day life
in the Russian village seemed doomed by glacial changes associated with economic
"modernization" around the whole globe. Those who struggled to preserve village
traditions, or to build a future based on recapturing them, could be
"conservatives", "revolutionaries", cultural idealists,
reactionary atavists or just plain
curmudgeons. Consider this
idealized peasant market scene painted by Boris Kustodiev. [Check earlier
artistic representations of peasants
(1)
(2)] Yet the forces of industrial modernization and imperialist
intervention into traditional village life were eradicating ancient rural ways
everywhere. One of the last great theoretical efforts to defend the vitality and
survivability of village life was the Russian theorist Aleksandr Chaianov
[ID] (Remember Howells, Weber and
Veblen)
*1909ap19:Law on trans-Ural settlement [VSB,3:818]
*--The Stolypin reforms aimed to transform the institutional foundations of
Russian village everyday life. The largest socio-economic objective was to
convert villagers into farmers and to find a way to accommodate those who were
willing to become Siberian settlers to get this done
[pix]. Promotion of rural prosperity via pioneer settlement to open lands
put Russia in line with earlier trends of US history
[ID] which seemed to encourage the hearty "yeoman farmer". The future of rural life did not seem to hold the same
promise as the past. Still, a certain number of Russian
farmers prospered.
But what of those squeezed off the land and into the ranks of the new class,
wage-laborers?
*1910se:Stolypin returned from a tour of peasant settlement in Siberia and
reported to Nicholas II. He had earlier expressed the concern that "the
democracy of Siberia will crush us". His meaning of democracy was largely
social, not political/institutional. He meant to say that a "peasant sea" might
wash over complex hierarchical Russia, but he was not frightened because he felt
industrialization would check that possibility. Now he reported that "after a
fearful convulsion, Russia undoubtedly is going through a powerful economic and
moral upsurge, to which also the harvest of the last two years contributes
strongly. Siberia is growing fabulously; in the waterless steppes which two
years ago were regarded as unfit for settlement, during the last few months
there have grown up not only villages but almost cities. And the mixed current
of right and poor, strong and weak, registered and irregular migrants bursting
through from Russia into Siberia is in general a wonderful and powerful
colonizational element. I would add, an element that is firmly monarchist, with
a right, pure, Russian outlook." He went on to express this cautious excitement
= "All this and much else -- these are urgent and immediate questions.
Otherwise, in an unconscious and formless manner will be created an enormous,
rudely democratic country, which soon will throttle European Russia." In other
words, his reforms were working, perhaps too well. Thus measures had to be taken
to make sure they did not tumble out of state control. The very psychology of
the people had changed, "among the peasants already there have appeared apostles
of land settlement and agricultural improvements. I saw
members of the First Duma from the peasant-revolutionaries who are now
passionate homesteaders [khutoriane] and devotees of order. And how right
you are, Your Majesty, how rightly you fathomed what is going on in the soul of
the people, when you write that the fundamental questions for the government are
land settlement and migration. One must apply enormous forces to these two
problem and not let them languish."
*1912jy05:Another law on trans-Ural settlement [VSB,3:889]
*--Here are some illustrations of traditional rural ways in Russia =
*--Housing
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix] [pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
*--Arts and crafts [pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
*--Every day life [pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
[pix]
*-- Stolypin had little interest in protecting
"traditional rural ways"
\\
*--Robinson, ch11 and ch12
*--David A. J. Macey,
Government and Peasant in Russia, 1861-1906: The Prehistory of
the Stolypin Reforms
*--D. W. Treadgold,
The Great Siberian
Migration: Government and Peasant in
Resettlement from Emancipation to the First World War
*--George L. Yaney,
The Urge to Mobilize: Agrarian Reform in Russia, 1861-1930
*--A. V. Zenkovsky,
Stolypin: Russia's last Great Reformer
*--Georgii A. Pavlovsky,
Agricultural Russia on the Eve of Revolution
*--Vladimir P. Timoshenko,
Agricultural Russia and the Wheat Problem
*--George Tokmakoff,
P. A. Stolypin and
the Third Duma
*1977se:SlR#36:377-98 | J. Y. Simms, "The Crisis in
Russian Agriculture at the End of the 19th Century: A Different View"
*--R. Hennessy, The Agrarian Question in Russia 1905-1917:The Inception of the Stolypin
Reform. Giessen:1977
*--Mary Shaeffer Conroy, Petr Arkadevich Stolypin: Practical Politics in Late Tsarist Russia.
Boulder:1976
<>1910jy07:(4.7.43 Meiji) Petersburg | Russian-Japanese
treaty (1912:and 1916:other treaties) [DIR2:434-9]
<>1910au08 (NS au22):Japan
annexed Korea. Tension
between Japan and China
over Manchuria
\\
*--Peter S. H. Tang, Russian and Soviet Policy in Manchuria and Outer Mongolia, 1911-1931.
Durham NC:1959
<>1910no07:Leo Tolstoy died,
ending a career of national and international cultural and "spiritual" influence
that spanned about a half century
*--Vladimir Chertkov's memoir on the last days of Tolstoy [TXT]
<>1911:English
labor activist and public intellectual L.T. Hobhouse defended
liberalism in its modern evolution toward welfare legislation, Liberalism [CCS,1:803-24]
*--Hobhouse continued the tradition of Thomas Hill Greens brand of English liberalism with its attention to the good of the whole community
as well as to individual liberty, and its emphasis on health, education and welfare,
all three vital elements in the accommodation of wage-labor
in the industrializing body politic
[PWT2:176-9]
<>1911:German Social
Democratic Party activist Robert Michels
became pessimistic about prospects for democracy in modern industrial societies and wrote
critically about political parties, A Sociological Study of the
Oligarchical Tendencies of Modern Democracy [CCS:507-31
| CCS,1:7 897-921]
<>1911:USA abrogated 1832:treaty of Navigation and Commerce with Russia,
in part because of treatment of Russian Jews. Powerful banker and associate of
the Harriman railroad companies, Jacob Schiff, played a role, as did the USA
diplomat and Progressive Party activist, Oscar Straus. See Straus'
The American spirit
(1913), especially the section on Russia and America
*--Jewish emigration to USA was fast
making it a a rival to Russia in the size of its Jewish population. This demographic fact
helps explain growing US sensitivity to the problems of anti-Semitism. Many Jewish
emigrants to USA came from the Russian Empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
*--This demographic influx can be compared with the Russian experience in the 1770s
*--Rose Cohen, Out of the shadow: A Russian Jewish girlhood on the Lower East Side
[original publication in 1918]
*--Joseph Boyarsky,
The life and suffering of the Jew in Russia; a historical review of Russia's advancement
beginning with the year 987 A.D. to the close of the nineteenth century; a description of the special laws
enacted against the Jews, and reasons thereof (Los Angeles, 1912)
*1992:Yelena Khanga published her family’s unusual émigré experience in USA,
Soul to Soul:
A Black Russian American Family,1865-1992
\\
*--Tony Michels,
A Fire in Their Hearts: Yiddish Socialists in New York| Many Jews who migrated to USA came
from the Russian imperial Pale of Settlement, Ukraine and Poland. Many of them thought of Russian culture
as the model of modern, this-worldly spiritual greatness. What the Jewish intelligentsia meant by Russian
culture largely meant the progressivist traditions of the Russian radical intelligentsia
[ID]. They set about
creating a political movement in the “Yiddish” language, a German-based language often written in the Hebrew
alphabet. Most middle and eastern European Jews in the 19th century spoke Yiddish. The movement formed up
political parties and published a significant periodical literature
*--By the early 21st century, Yiddish progressivism had disappeared in USA and in Europe.
And the Yiddish language survived mainly as a significant enrichment of slang
expression in English and other European tongues
*--Saul,2:233-57, 292-6, 396-401, 474-7, 523-7, 567-9, 582-4
*--Steven Cassedy,
To the Other Shore: The Russian Jewish Intellectuals Who Came to America
(1997)
<>1911my:1911de; Persian government hired US businessman W. Morgan Shuster
[ID] treasurer general
in an effort to reform national finances. Shuster got into big trouble when he
sought to collect taxes from powerful officials who were Russian protégés. He dispatched a tax department police force into the Russian zone. The
Russians came to the support of their protégés
*1911de20:Persian Majlis (parliament) unanimously refused a Russian ultimatum demanding Shuster's dismissal.
Russian troops, already in the country, moved to occupy Tehran
*--Native Bakhtiari chiefs and their
troops surrounded the Majlis building, forced acceptance of the Russian ultimatum, and shut down the assembly, once
again suspending the constitution. Bakhtiari efforts prevented Russian
occupation of the capital but momentarily terminated the Majlis
*1911:1921; For a decade, through WW1 and its immediate aftermath, Bakhtiari chiefs and other powerful notables
governed Persia
*1914:1918; Throughout WW1, Russian, British, and Ottoman troops occupied Persia
*--Shuster returned to the United States and wrote
The Strangling of Persia,
a scathing indictment of Russian and British meddling in Persian affairs. Shuster decried the influence of the Great Powers
and concluded that "it was obvious that the people of Persia deserve much better than what they are getting, that they wanted us to succeed, but it was the British and the Russians who were determined not to let us succeed".
Iranian political modernization
was delayed decades
<>1911my09:Serbia, Beograd |
Constitution of "Union or Death" [Black Hand], a secret para-military
political organization dedicated to wresting from the control of the Austrian
and Ottoman empires all territories they considered part of the
Yugoslav "national" heritage [TXT]
<>1911jy:USA | Great international
energy corporation Standard Oil broken into smaller companies
*--VIDEOTAPE
= [tape 1] Episode 1: Traces the rise of the oil business, controlled by John D.
Rockefeller, and how reporter Ida Tarbell wrote a famous expose of Rockefeller.
Looks at Rockefeller's legacy, the rise of modern business, and Tarbell's
example of modern investigative journalism. Episode 2: Shows how Shell Oil and
Royal Dutch merged, then challenged Rockefeller's Standard Oil. Explores how oil
transformed daily life all over the world, made Russia a great power, and helped
the Allies win World War 1
*--In just a third of a century, oil or
petroleum corporations had become the most strategic trans-national industry
*1912:1970; Next half century's growth of major trans-national petroleum
corporations illustrated on three tables =
Table #1
Table #2
Table #3
*1921:+; Seattle native Anna Louise Strong
visited Russia and reported on the petroleum industry there
<>1911se01:Kiev opera house, in
the presence of Nicholas II, Dimitrii Bogrov, both a revolutionary terrorist and and agent
of the secret police, assassinated Prime Minister Petr Stolypin, a premature end to a
brilliant seven years at the official center of Russian events
*--Over the previous decade of political
terror SRs in their Battle Organization had carried out 263 acts of
terrorism. They assassinated 2 state ministers, 33 provincial governors, 16 city
mayors, 7 generals, 15 colonels, and 26 police spies. Seventy seven terrorists
were apprehended and executed
*1911:Polish-born English-language novelist
Joseph Conrad published
Under Western Eyes, a penetrating fictional
account of Russian émigré revolutionist in underground Geneva. The novel
reflected European fascination with "bomb-throwing anarchists" and political
terrorism
*--Is terrorism a variety of interest-politics? Whose
interests are/were served?
<>1912:German general (retired) Friedrich von Bernhardi
published popular, pro-war book, Deutschland und der nächste Krieg [Germany and
the next war] [CWC:55-69]
<>1912:Russian avant painter
Wassily Kandinsky published
Concerning The Spiritual In Art, And Painting In Particular

*--View a large collection of Kandinsky paintings in
Olga's Gallery
*--Innovation in the fine arts seemed to presage a new
revolutionary epoch for mankind, despite the fact that a large portion of the
population felt little more than, at best, puzzlement and, at worse, revulsion,
when exposed to work like Kandinsky's
<>1912:USA election year marked
apex of "progressive" movement. In opposition to these trends, National
Association of American Manufacturers (NAM) resisted welfare
reform & social insurance; growing labor-union movement
undecided [Rimlinger:62-86]
*--West Virginia Brown Mine.
A photo by
Lewis W. Hine of a young driver in the Brown mine. By this time the young
man was a one
year veteran, working from 7:00am to 5:30pm daily. Legislation regulating child
wage-labor was
held to be unconstitutional until the
Roosevelt New Deal Era
<>1912fe12:China declared a
republic by Sun Yat-sen (1866-1925)
*--This the consequence of the Chinese Emperor's abdication and the collapse of
the nearly 300-year-old Manchu Dynasty
at the end of a tragic half-century of
subordination to "Western" imperialist powers
<>1912fe26:Saint Petersburg | Mikhail Rodzianko,
president of State Duma (a member of the Octobrist
Party) and loyal subject of the tsar, was brave enough to report to Emperor Nicholas II
about the antics of Grigorii Rasputin and their harm to
Russia
*--Rodzianko wrote his memoirs of these pitiful events
and this pitiful time,
Reign of Rasputin
[Excerpt = DIR2:440-9 | DIR3:479-90]
\\
*--"Rodzianko" website with English-language quotes from documents
[W]

Contemporary cartoon showed
Nicholas II and his wife
in Rasputin's control
<>1912ap04:Russia experienced
widespread labor demonstrations in protest against the
massacre of something between 200 and 500 Siberian workers in the gold fields of the Lena River region
*1912ap09:ap11; State Duma discussed Lena incident [VSB,3:820-1]
*1912je23:Health and accident insurance act passed to protect industrial workers.
An elected "Social Insurance Council" was created (including labor deputies) [VSB,3:820-1
| Rimlinger
outlined 1914:social insurance bill which the Council proposed to Fourth Duma =
TXT]
*1912:1914; Despite strict censorship intended to prevent any inflammatory
material reaching the screen, many early Russian films achieved a remarkably
candid portrayal of social conditions for the laboring poor
*1912:Vasilii Goncharov's The Peasants' Lot [Krestianskaia dolia]
portrayed the hardship of rural life, and
*1914:Evgenii Bauer's early film,
Silent Witnesses [Nemye svideteli] dealt frankly with servants'
views of their masters in a Moscow mansion [VIDEOTAPE]
*1925: The Great Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein produced the film "Strike"
[Stachka] which portrayed worker unrest in the St. Petersburg
Putilov Factory [VIDEOTAPE]
*1927: Vsevolod Pudovkin made a film that traced the life of a Russian peasant
in the years prior to the 1917 revolutions, "The End of St. Petersburg" [Konets
Sankt-peterburga] [VIDEOTAPE]
*--Gleb Panfilov directed a movie "Vassa", an adaptation of Maksim Gorky's
bitter tale of a manipulative "bourgeois" woman, treating family like she
treated laborers in her factories [VIDEOTAPE]
*1907:1913; Island of Capri | Émigré author Maksim Gorky
produced some of his greatest works: the novel Mother
[TXT]
[TXT] and his three-part autobiography which opened with "My Childhood" [Detstvo].
The final part, "My Universities" [Moi universitety] was not completed
until 1923. Gorky became deeply involved in Soviet revolutionary politics over
the next quarter of a century, but he never again reached the levels of literary
quality and productivity achieved between
1898 and 1913
*--Despite growing unrest, Russian Marxism found itself,
after a third of a century, with only a slim hope of success in Russia. The
industrial laboring class was just too small a portion of the population
there
\\
*1964de & 1965mr:SlR | Leopold Haimson, "Social Stability..."
<>1912ap27:Russian decree ordered officers and soldiers of the Russian army
in time of war to spare civilians and their properties, to spare the wounded and
imprisoned enemy, to honor the unarmed enemy soldier who sought mercy, and
to refrain from plundering the dead [VSB,3:819].
This on the eve of an early demonstration of the vicious
possibilities of modern total war
<>1912je09:Full five-year term of Third
State Duma ended
<>1912je15:Russian judicial reform reinstituted the
elected justice of the peace [mirovoi sud] [VSB,3:819-20]
*--The position of the Land Captain in the countryside was weakened, but this
widely despised institution continued to function more or less
as it had for 23 years
<>1912oc17:1913jy30; Balkan
crisis in international relations resulted in two Balkan Wars. Metaphorically
speaking, European Imperialism took this first of two big, booted steps out of Asia and
Africa
and back into the heart of Europe
*--The first step was into the south Slavic territories
[this the meaning of "Yugoslavia"]
between the Turkish Ottoman Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire where two vicious
Balkan wars were fought in which 142 thousand died. Turkey (Ottoman Empire) lost European territory in war
[MAP]
*--International imperialist conflict struck home, while domestic
wage-labor
problems intensified in pace with the incredible growth of industrial productive power
*--The second step reached further into central and western
Europe two years later when the first mechanized total global war broke out (WW1).
Great powers come into conflict within Europe, and their worlds came
shaking down in a short six year period
*--It could be said that
three-quarters of a century in "the Great
Game" now yielded catastrophe
*--International imperialist competition [DPH:220-9, 268-71]
*1894:1914; Correspondence between Tsar Nicholas II and Kaiser Wilhelm
*--British documents on the origins of the war, 1898-1914 vv9-10
*--S. D. Sazonov, Fateful Years, 1909-1916 [memoirs of Russian Foreign Minister]
LND:1928 [Excerpts VSB,3:798-9 | DIR2:467-73]
\\
*--W. Bruce Lincoln, In War's Dark Shadow: The Russians Before the Great War.
NYC:1983
*--Donald M. Wallace, Russia (LND:1912) [914.7 W155]
*----------. Russia: On the Eve of War and Revolution (Princeton:1984) [DK262.W29]
<>1912no15:1917oc06; Saint Petersburg | Fourth State Duma
lasted nearly five years. Its first 21 months of peace-time existence were plagued by
growing international crisis as well as by deteriorating domestic economic and social
conditions. Its accomplishments did not promise to equal those of the Third State Duma
*--See for example the statistics on state finances, 1900-1913, and Kokovtsov's
report on economic development, 1904-1914 [VSB,3:822-6]
Even with the serious crises of war and
revolution, and whatever one might want to conclude
about economic conditions among the majority of the population, the wage-labor
poor, it can be said that the Russian economy,
since the introduction of the Witte system,
had been very beneficial in the financial life of the state and of the grandee
elites tapped into state power
*1911:1914; Merchant P. A. Buryshkin described Moscow industrialists [VSB,3:826-7
| Russian
memoirs]
*--Then came World War One with two and a half years of military disaster
*--The State Duma collapsed with the Romanov dynasty
after 1917mr02
<>1913:German political economist Werner Sombart
published Zur Geistesgeschichte des modernen Wirtschaftsmenschen [A contribution to
the spiritual history of modern businessmen, translated into English in 1915 as The
Quintessence of Capitalism], combining social science methods with the subtle new
discipline psychology [CCS,2:98-125]
<>1913:Spanish scholar and
essayist Miguel de Unamuno (1864-1936), Del sentimiento trágico de la vida (1921: Eng.
translation,
The Tragic Sense of Life) [CCC2,2:1096-1104] In many ways an "anti-modernist", Unamuno
was modern in his use of paradox and irony, and his strong sense of individual
independence. He was also a firm defender of liberalism against
the many statist doctrines that gripped Spain in the 1930s, and he might be said to have
died defending this cause
<>1913:USA Federal Reserve Act
<>1913mr01:Pravda | Russian émigré revolutionary
leader Vladimir Lenin, "Historical Fate of the Doctrine of Karl Marx" (among
other things, on Russia and Asia) [StH:3-5 | shorter excerpt:
KMM:246-7]
*--Petersburg police filed ID
photo of young Georgia revolutionary, Soso Dzhugashvili, who would later
gain world fame as Joseph Stalin
<>1913mr03:USA, WDC | "Votes
for Women", a detail from cover of the Official program - Woman suffrage procession [
source ]

*--In this year in USA (Hartford CN) English Suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst
delivered
lecture
on why feminists must be militant [P20:11 |
PWT2:187-90]
and the English physician Almroth E. Wright published book in which he argued
The
Unexpurgated Case Against Woman Suffrage [P20:15]
*1914wi:English Fabian activist Mabel Atkinson delivered lectures which demanded the
combination of women's social and political rights with the general progressive,
scientific platform of the socialist movement [CWC:35-54]
*--Library of Congress website on USA
suffrage movement
*1914:M.I. Pokzovskaya, Working Conditions for Women in the Factories [P20:95]
*--Celebration of "International Women's Day" marked the
beginning of the end of the Russian old regime
\\
*--Joni Lovenduski and Jill Hills, eds.,
The Politics of the Second Electorate: Women
and Public Participation, Britain, USA, Canada, Austria, France, Spain, West Germany,
Italy, Sweden, Finland, Eastern Europe, USSR, Japan | ch.3:33-51 (USA)
ch.13:278-98 (USSR)
*--Donald B. Meyer,
Sex and Power: The Rise of Women in America, Russia, Sweden, and
Italy
*--Julia Bush,
Women Against the Vote: Female Anti-suffragism in Britain
*--Rose Glickman,
Russian Factory Women: Workplace and Society 1880-1914
<>1913my29 (NS):Paris | Russian composer Igor Stravinsky "Rite
of Spring" [W] caused
riots when premiered by Sergei Diaghilev's Ballet Russe
[W]
*--With the outbreak of WW1, Stravinsky went into permanent exile from his
homeland. He was to become perhaps the most important composer of the 20th
century. He did not return, even for a visit, until a tumultuous
half century had passed.
*--Diaghilev, "Complex Questions: Our Imaginary Decadence" [RRS:81-90]
*--In he two decades before the outbreak
of WW1, Russian fine arts established themselves at the forefront in a
fantastic epoch of European high cultural creativity
*--Russian contributions to world music in the early 20th century were many
*--Nicolas Slonimsky [Nikolai Slonimskii],
Music since 1900
(1st edition, 1937) (pt1) Descriptive chronology, 1900-1937. (pt2) Concise biographical
dictionary of twentieth-century musicians. (pt3) Letters and documents: Motu proprio of
Pope Pius X on sacred music. The black list of disapproved music. Three anti-modernist
poems: 1884, 1909, 1924. The art of noises. Society for Private Musical Performances in
Vienna (a statement of aims) Music and the classes (the ideological platform of the
Russian Association of Proletarian Musicians) Futurist manifesto of aeromusic. History of
the Dalcroze method of eurythmics. Letter from George Bernard Shaw. Letter from the
president of the Composers' League in Japan. What is atonality? (A radio talk by Alban
Berg) Gebrauchsmusik and Gemeinschaftsmusik. Letter from Arnold Schoenberg
on the origin of the twelve-tone system
\\
*--Wagar on early 20th-century Russian arts [3
paragraph TXT]

1913:Paris. Vaslav Nijinsky
danced in "Afternoon of a Faun"
<>1914ja:Russian Prime Minister was again
Ivan Goremykin.
Eight months before the outbreak of WW1, power was shifting toward
anti-Witte/anti-Stolypin factions. The Finance Ministry fell into the hands of
insider profiteers, ready to rig imperial procurement in ways that allowed large
sums of state revenue to flow into their pockets
<>1914fe:Russian statesman Petr Durnovo memo on futility
of war with Germany [TXT] The
old police official and ex-Interior Minister was at the end
of his career, but he saw that the Russian Empire might be too
*--Excerpts = VSB,3:793-8 | GRH:3-23 | DIR2:450-66
| RRC2,2#42
<>1914ap:USA CO, Ludlow mining
region | US troops opened fire on striking miners and their families in an episode that
came to be known as "The Ludlow Massacre". This military attack on the
wage-labor encampment set up by the Rockefeller company was commemorated in a song written by Oklahoma-born folk singer
Woody Guthrie [TXT]
[SOUND]
<>1914jy21 (NS):Belgrade | Austrian ambassador
Baron von Giesl delivered Austrian Response to the assassination by Serbian terrorists of
Austrian Archduke Ferdinand. What Austrian imperialists saw as an evil act of
terror with Europe-wide political/military implications seemed to the Serbian
resistance movement something of a local triumph [P20:59]
*1914je28 (NS):Yugoslavia, Sarajevo | Borijove Jevtic, a conspirator
in the murder of the Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand, described events [Eye:441-4]
*--World War One, the Europe-wide catastrophe that had been looming for years,
now was triggered. Local South-Slavic national independence,
the century-long dream, was permanently
injured as the agony of Yugoslavia
stretched into the 20th century and beyond
<>1914jy29
(NS):Paris | Last meeting of the International Bureau of the Second
International.
European socialists tried unsuccessfully
to control rising patriotic fervor in their own midst as WW1 loomed [CWC:69-82]
*1914jy30 (NS):French socialist leader of immense popular appeal, Jean Jaurès
[pix] [pix]
[pix], was assassinated by a fanatical
French patriot. An idealist, Jaurès sought to reconcile Marxist materialism with his own philosophy. He did not
promote revolution. Instead he worked for progressive and peaceful international
and inter-class relations. He defended Dreyfus [ID] and
worked for the separation of church and state. He believed that
political democracy and economic socialism were compatible and were a practical
possibility in his time. He struggled against the forces of war growing stronger
by the day within the European capitalist political-economies, as well as within
the ranks of social-democracy. He advocated
diplomatic rather than militaristic resolution of the crisis in Europe. The
crisis, in his view, was caused
by European policy itself. The long and futile career
of Jean Jaurès ended when he was killed on the very eve of the great
catastrophe, WW1
*--Socialist and wage-labor movements in Europe and North
America faced a great crisis. Chauvinistic patriotism [aggressive identification
of national grandeur with the military assertiveness of one's own nation-state]
spread among the working people. Chauvinistic patriotism dissolved factional
struggle of wage-labor with employers into a general stew of national
bellicosity. Chauvinistic patriotism displacing whatever internationalism the
movements had been able to impart over the previous decades. French and German
workers ceased to be brothers and became to one another ridiculous "frogs" and beastly "huns".
The people flocked to the flag to sacrifice themselves in this vast and holy
struggle
*--European social-democracy and the Second International
were dealt a blow from which they were only very slowly able to recover.
Militarism trumped socialism, but it also devoured the remains of
post-Napoleonic European "conservatism" and liberalism, at least for the time being.
In general, the command imperative -- the virtues of disciplined management and
control -- was first adumbrated in the France of Louis Napoleon
[ID] and brought to even higher levels
of efficiency under Bismarck in Germany
[ID]. It was now amplified in the second industrial revolution
[ID] and honed to perfection in the imperialized
world [ID]. With the outbreak of WW1, it took
center stage, and the cost to
Europe was staggering =
<>1914au01:1918mr; World
War One represented the second big step of European imperialist militarism, out of the
non-European world and back into the heart of Europe itself. (The first
step occurred only two years earlier.)
*--In Europe, WW1 had two fronts, eastern and western, and lasted four years and three
months
*--War on the eastern front lasted three years and seven months,
until 1918mr
*--War on the western front lasted eight more months, until 1918no. Consider the vast consequences
of this fact, that the two fronts fell quiet at different times and for very
different reasons [EG]
*--Eight million, five-hundred and fifty-five
thousand died in 1563 days of modern industrial total warfare. [Hypertext links
on "battlefield" highlight certain military moments
in WW1]
*--In the largest sense, the war pitted "The Triple Entente" (England, France
and Russia; later as "Allies" Italy and USA joined this coalition) against
"Central Powers" (Germany, Austria and Ottoman Turkey)
*-- [W#1] [W#2]
*--African anti-imperialist leader from Nyassaland, John Chilembwe (1871?-1915) saw the
ironic relationship of WW1 to the colonial empires of the European combatants [BNE:293-4]
*1914jy:St.Petersburg gripped by war frenzy, as described by Sergei N. Kurnakov [Eye:448-50]
*--Roland Doregelès, Paris: "That Fabulous Day" [P20:60]
*--Stefan Zweig, Vienna: "The Rushing Feeling of Fraternity" [P20:62
| PWT2:266-7]
*--Philipp Scheidemann, Berlin: "The Hour We Yearned For" [P20:63
| PWT2:267-8]
*--Bertrand Russell, London: "Average Men and Women Were Delighted at the Prospect
of War" [P20:64]
SOON euphoria waned =
*--Remarque's All
Quiet... described trench warfare [P20:67 |
PWT2:268-71]
*--Siegfried Sassoon, Base Details [P20:69]
*--Wilfred Owen, Disabled [P20:70]
*--Russian declaration of war [ORW:173-4]
*--1910-1914 British documents on foreign affairs.... Series A, Russia, 1859 -1914
(1983)
*--British documents on the origins of the war, 1898-1914
v11
*--Collected diplomatic documents relating to the outbreak of the European War
(1915)
*--Germany and the Revolution in Russia, 1915-1918: Documents from the Archives
of the German Foreign Ministry
*--Maurice Paléologue, An Ambassador's Memoirs
[TXT]
(Last French ambassador to the Russian Court)
*--General Sir Alfred Knox,
With the Russian Army, 1914-1917
(1921)
*--Stanislas Kohn,
The Cost of the War to Russia: The Vital Statistics of European
Russia During the World War (1932)
*--Stanley Washburn, On the Russian Front in World War I: Memoirs of an American War
correspondent. New York:1982
*--International catastrophe of WW1 was the
setting in which Russian revolutionary events were born =
*--GO 1917mr02 for the first decisive
revolutionary turning point in WW1
*--GO 1917oc25 for the second
*--Alexandra, Empress of Russia. The
Letters of the Tsaritsa to the Tsar, 1914-1916 (1923)
*--Nicholas II, Emperor of Russia, The
Secret Letters of the Last Tsar.... (1938)
*----------. The Letters of the Tsar to the Tsaritsa, 1914-1917 (1929) [ORBIS]
*--A selection of these royal letters [VSB,3:847-56]
*--At first, many welcomed the war with
enthusiasm = Mikhail Rodzianko, St. Petersburg [VSB,3:831
| DIR3:511]
*--Many participants in events later described their impressions and offered
their interpretations =
*--S. A. Korff,
Autocracy and Revolution in Russia (1923)
*--G. T. Marye,
Nearing
the End in Imperial Russia (1929)
*--A. A. Mossolov,
At the Court of the Last Tsar,
... 1900-1916 (1935)
*--P. P. Gronsky and N. I. Astrov,
The War and the Russian Government
(1929)
*--Bernard Pares, The Fall of
the Russian Monarchy: A Study of the Evidence (1939; a secondary work, based on
personal experience in Russia and filled w/ long quotes from primary documents) [More
Pares]
*--War-time origins of Russian revolutions [LOOP]
\\
*--Aaron J. Cohen, Imagining the Unimaginable: World War, Modern Art, and the Politics of Public Culture in Russia, 1914-1917 (2008:Nebraska)
*--Boris
L. Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago (a historical novel)
*--Alexander
I. Solzhenitsyn, August 1914 (a historical novel)
*--Mikhail Sholokhov, Quiet Flows the Don (Made into a movie =
VIDEOTAPE)
*--Robert Palmer and Joel Colton, in their 1950s general textbook A History of the Modern World,
offered this description and evaluation of
the culture out of which this war emerged and the damage done to that culture by
war's end = "All the belligerent governments during the war attempted to
control ideas as they did economic production. Freedom of thought, respected everywhere in Europe for half a
century, was discarded. Propaganda and censorship became more effective than any government, however despotic,
had ever been able to devise. No one was allowed to sow doubt by raising any basic questions. [...] People
were trapped in a nightmare whose causes they could not comprehend. Each side wildly charged the other
with having started the war from pure malevolence. The long attrition, the fruitless fighting, the unchanging
battle lines, the appalling casualties were a severe ordeal to morale. Civilians, deprived of their usual
liberties, working harder, eating dull food, seeing no victory, had to be kept emotionally at a high
pitch. Placards, posters, diplomatic white papers, schoolbooks, public lectures, solemn editorials, and
slanted news reports conveyed the message. The new universal literacy, the mass press, the new moving
pictures, proved to be ideal media for the direction of popular thinking. Intellectuals and professors
advanced complicated reasons, usually historical, for loathing and crushing the enemy. In Allied countries
the Kaiser was portrayed as a demon, with glaring eyes and abnormally bristling mustaches, bent on the mad
project of conquest of the world. In Germany people were taught to dread the day when Cossacks and Senegalese
should rape German women and to hate England as the inveterate enemy which inhumanly starved little children
with its blockade. Each side convinced itself that all right was on its side and all wrong, wickedness, and
barbarity on the other. An inflamed opinion helped to sustain men and women in such a fearsome struggle. But
when it came time to make peace [ID] the rooted convictions, fixed ideas, profound aversions, hates, and fears
became an obstacle to political judgment."
*--W. Rutherford, The Russian Army in World War I (1975)
*--B. I. Kolonitskii, Simvoli
vlasti i bor'ba za vlast': K izucheniiu politicheskoi kul'tury.... (2001)
<>1914au04 (NS):Berlin | Hugo Haase, the influential leader of the largest political party in Germany, the Social Democrats,
delivered a speech to the German Reichstag [parliament]. He tried to explain why his party
seemed to reverse itself and vote for war credits in support of the German Imperial Army
as WW1 broke out [CWC:83-7]. Haase did not personally support
the war. He agreed with the European socialist and labor position = The war was in the
interests of European imperialist and militarist forces; the war could mean the death
knell to social democracy and the negation of the
previous half-century of wage-labor activism. He did, however, accept the
nationalistic, German-patriotic argument that the
war might have positive progressive consequences, because it was directed against evil
Russian despotism. Nationalism was the stronger "ism"
*--Thus ended the Second International,
which had built on the legacy of the First
International. A half decade later, after WW1 in 1919, a very different sort
of international took up the cause =
The Third International or Comintern, under
the control first of Lenin then Stalin and the USSR
*--Over the next 25 years, moderate socialism and tightly constrained
labor movements managed however to eke out a certain
existence for themselves. Emerging European statism encroached on
their independence. The 19th-century liberal
tradition (which was never comfortable with
wage-labor activism) seemed to have lost its bounce
<>1914au08(NS):Russian State Duma
met in special session
*--Three memoir accounts of this extraordinary session = French Ambassador Georges Maurice Paléologue,
Mikhail Rodzianko, and Pavel Miliukov [VSB,3:831-3]
<>1914au09:All-Russian Union of Cities founded at a congress of city
mayors in the first days of WW1, suggesting (falsely) that urban political culture might strengthen under conditions of modern total war
*--A few days later, an All-Russian Union of Zemstvos formed with much the same goal = to mobilize social forces to the cause of world war, to supplement
woefully inadequate efforts of government officials [VSB,3:840-1].
War was just too important to be left to generals, or even to government
officials. Total war required total social commitment.
*1914jy:England | No doubt about it, modern total was was big business. Osbert Sitwell described confronting Basil Zaharoff [English pseudonym of Basileios Zacharias], one of the great millionaire European
armaments dealers ("merchants of death") [Eye:444-5] The English made Zaharoff a Knight Grand Cross
of the Order of the Bath after WW1
*1914:1915; England, London | Russian born historian Pavel Vinogradov [Paul Vinogradoff here]
published works [ID] designed to show the
English that they were allied with a people of significant democratic potential. Russians
languished under tsarist authority, but longed for democracy in a way the "Western" allies could applaud. Vinogradov had been
a professor at Moscow University until his resignation in protest over government repression.
He emigrated to England where he became professor at Oxford University. A
half-century of Russian university activism
had by this time put higher education near the center of the fledgling Russian
civil society, and Vinogradov wanted everyone to know that Russian civil society
found roots in deep native traditions
*--War-time conditions in Russia, as well as everywhere else that war was being fought, did not promote local independence but rather
evolution of state-centered social, economic and military mobilizations, early versions of the modern
"military-industrial complex". On both the eastern front and the western front
19th-century liberal traditions came under fire (so to speak)
*--Semen Zagorskii, State Control of Industry During the War
*--The first months of WW1 were a time of great patriotic outpouring, but many Russians perceived that the international catastrophe of war
opened an opportunity for modern national transformation = War-time origins of Russian revolutions [LOOP]
\\
*--Tikhon Polner et al., eds. Russian Local Government during the War, and
the Union of Zemstvos (1930)
*--Michael T. Florinsky, The End of the Russian Empire
(1931; a secondary work filled with long quotes from primary documents)
*--R. Pearson, The Russian Moderates and the Crisis of
Tsarism, 1914-1917 (1977)
<>1914au:Belgium suffered swift destruction of its
fortresses by German Imperial artillery, notably
at Liege [TXT] and very soon after at Brussels
[TXT], then Louvain [TXT]. Modern
industrial-grade warfare shocked old-fashioned noble sensibilities about battle
*1914au21: Brussels (the capital of the technically neutral country Belgium) was run
over by German forces on their way to the strategic Channel ports and Paris. Richard
Harding Davis described events [Eye:445-8]
*--After the fall of Belgium, German intellectuals defended German war actions
[TXT]
<>1914se03:Paris ordered evacuated (prematurely)
[W]. Taxis
delivered fresh recruits to the critical battlefield that would decide the fate
of the great French capital city. But that battle did not take place. The battle of the Marne was a vastly
destructive and bloody victory for the French (with timely help from the
British)
*--For Germany the war in the west was not the desired swift victory,
such as was recommended in the Schlieffen Plan. In the west, the war was already
starting to bog down in trench warfare. Huge battles loomed in the east. Germany
would now have to fight on two fronts, west and east, splitting its troops and
materiel in half
*1914se12:European western front | Brigadier General E.L. Spears described how a French General convinced a soldier,
soon to die before a firing squad for deserting his post, that his death was in
its way patriotic [Eye:450-1]
<>1914se09:German
Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg outlined German war aims in which the treatment of
European neighbor territories resembled German treatment of its imperialist domains in Central
Africa [BNE:208-11]
<>1914se22:German submarine attacks extended the modern battlefield under the sea
[W]
<>1914fa:German WW1 effort enhanced by creation of Kriegsrohstoffabteilung [KRA
or Wartime Raw Materials Division], a hybrid civilian/military institution [private enterprise in tight association with government]. KRA was
designed for effective military mobilization of economic and military resources for the great war
*--Brilliant industrialist Walther Rathenau (1867-1922) headed this early example of modern "military-industrial
complex". Soon Rathenau was out and the German high command took over the institution
*1915:Rathenau reported on KRA to a political group called "German Society 1914" [CWC:117-32]
<>1914no05:Petrograd | Five Bolshevik deputies in Fourth
State Duma arrested
<>1914no10:Belgium,
first battle around the town Ypres resulted in startling casualties on all sides.
For German veterans in the post-WW1 years, this event was mythologized and made
into a sacred moment of German militaristic valor
[EG]
<>1915:1916; Petrograd |
Police surveillance on Rasputin revealed ribald details in the everyday life of the Empress' favorite holy man [VRX:21-56]
\\
*--Elem Klimov historical film about Rasputin,
Agoniia
<>1915:German (Czech-born)
writer Franz Kafka published "The Metamorphosis"
[TXT]
<>1915:London | An elite,
insider group of English public men formed "The Round Table" and began
publication of think-tank style analysis of official English policy in time of war.
They took the shocking impressions of the terrible war as a basis for projecting the
post-war era, in which many of the members of this "private" club were to play
an important role [CWC:102-117]
<>1915:1917; Austrian
psychologist Sigmund Freud delivered series of lectures at the University of Vienna which
came to be known as his General Introduction to Psychoanalysis [CCS:73-113 and CCS,1:213-53, also
includes some later general descriptions by Freud. Other Freud texts in
BMC1:611-17]
*--Freud also began to address everyday life questions
about broader public issues, e.g., "Thoughts for the Times on War and Death" (1915)
[CWC:155-75 | CCS:179-200 |
BPE:617-36]
<>1915ja18:Japan
confronted China with 21 demands [RWP1,3:224-8]
*1915mr15:US Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan responded
*1915my11:Bryan outright rejected Japanese
intentions in China and reaffirmed
"Open Door" policy
<>1915ja19:ja30; German air attacks on ports
in East Anglia extended the modern battlefield into the skies. Submarine attacks at sea
continued
<>1915mr18:English-French attack on Ottoman Turkish Empire (an ally of
Germany and other Central Powers) at Dardanelles failed. Great battle at Gallipoli lasted ten months. Allies landed 500,000 troops, and
300,000 became casualties in this lost cause [W].
Ottoman Turkish commander
Mustafa Kemal became a national
hero as his forces slaughtered British
troops (most of whom were colonials, not Englishmen)
*1915je:Ottoman Empire | Gallipoli assault described by Leonard Thompson [Eye:451-3]. The attack was a gross failure, resulting in almost 214,000
casualties among the soldiers from the British Commonwealth
*--Note how England devoted attention to battlefields outside Europe, in territories essential to British imperial power. EG = six months
before the Gallipoli disaster (1914fa) British forces landed at the southern tip of Iraq at the mouth of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers (where they flow together and into the Persian Gulf). This vital territory was administered from the city Basra. After WW1 the
British saw to the creation there of a "nation" that has become known as "Kuwait"
*1915oc24:England cultivated rebellious spirit among Arabic subjects of Turkey
but not among the Turkish subjects of Turkey. England presenting itself
as a liberator of the peoples of modern-day Syria, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and other areas,
playing on the ethnic tensions between Turks and Arabs [BNE:295-6]
*1915no:British colonial and military officials accepted the failure of their invasion to take all of Iraq from the Ottoman Empire. For the
time being, they laid claim to Basra [??See WWQ map]
*1916wi:English diplomat Mark Sykes met with French counter-part François George-Picot, who brought the French ambassador to
Russia, Maurice Paléologue, into the discussion. These three devised the “Sykes-Picot Agreement” which proposed to slice up all but a
small portion of the core territory of the Ottoman Empire. “The sick man of Europe” was terminal, and these "western" allies were ready
now, after a half century of "life-support"
to assist in what they thought of as some sort of diplomatic "death with
dignity". Among these ambitious schemers, Sykes especially felt “western interests” were threatened by the rise of nationalistic,
progressive- and independent-minded “Young Turks” within the ruins of the old Ottoman Empire. The English and the French had their own
imperialistic claims to the Ottoman inheritance, as did Russia, who had to be
tossed some sort of bone in this largely "Western" inspired process. The Agreement left very little to "Turkey". If
this dismemberment of the old Ottoman Empire had worked, it would have served well the interests of English,
French, Russian and Italian imperialist allies [secret MAP described all this]. Notice the far south-west corner of the map where a
specific scheme was proposed to create an internationally administered territory for the relocation of European Jews after WW1
*1916my16:England and France hammered out a bilateral agreement (excluding other WW1 allies) about how they would divide between them
the Ottoman Empire's Arabic territories [BNE:296-8, with map]
<>1915ap22:Germans the first to use poison gas in the early hours of the
unending Battle of Ypres.
Engineering sciences and industrial technology contributed to modern
battlefield effects [W]
<>1915my27:Russian Congress of War Industries Committee formed to
promote entrepreneurial cooperation with the imperial state in the mobilization of the Russian economy for modern total war.
Aleksandr Guchkov was president through its stormy two years of existence. The Association
of Industry & Trade issued a resolution on the question of needed coordination of economic efforts in war
time [McC1:79-81]
*--G/Shotwell
*--General M. A. Beliaev informed the French ambassador, "You know all about the
dearth of munitions. [...] Just think! In several infantry regiments which have
taken part in the recent battles at least one third of the men had no rifles.
These poor devils had to wait patiently, under a shower of shrapnel, until their
comrades fell before their eyes and they could pick up their arms" [VSB,3:835]
*--General Sir Alfred Knox, With the Russian Army, 1914-1917
(1921) reported much the same (v1:282 ff.) [Excerpts VSB,3:836-40]
*--GO 1915jy
\\
*--MERSH ("War Industries Committee")
*--Lewis H. Siegelbaum,
The Politics of Industrial Mobilization in Russia, 1914-1917
<>1915je01:Germany launched first Zeppelin attack on
London. A major world capital briefly became a battlefield
*1915su:Eyewitness accounts of scenes from the battlefield on the western and eastern fronts [Eye:453-6]
*1915de19:Allied retreat described [Eye:456-7]
<>1915jy:Russian wartime
mobilization aided by formation of Zemgor [an acronym formed by combining Zemstvo +
gorod (city), signifying an organization that combined rural and urban groups, a
nation-wide expression of civil society]
*1915jy11:13; All-Russian Union of Cities a further aid to
wartime mobilization [GRH:131]
*--These were the last significant gasps of two Great Reforms before the old
regime collapsed. The half-century of
Zemstvo existence ended as it began, with
serious resistance from high-ranking insider-grandees of the autocratic regime, even when
Zemstvo efforts represented a rare instance of effective national mobilization. Here we
also see municipal institutions struggling to build on stingy foundations laid by earlier reforms
with their failed promise of independent urban public life or at least
self-administration
*--A. N. Antsiferov, et al. Russian Agriculture during the War
*--Ernest Poole,
The Village: Russian Impressions
*----------. "The dark people": Russia's crisis
\\
*--McC1:77-9
<>1915au:Russia | Special war council created to address needs for military
mobilization [GRH:123]
<>1915au12:Russian State Duma Chairman, Mikhail
Rodzianko, appealed to the tsar to reconsider his decision to relieve and
replace Grand Prince Nikolai Nikolaevich as commander in chief.
Rodzianko begged Nicholas II "not to subject your
sacred person to the dangers in which you may be placed" at the front. He made
so bold as to urge that the war had created such a crisis that it might drag
Nicholas down if he were to associate himself with it. Then he even more boldly
proposed, "Reassure troubled and already alarmed minds by forming a government
from among those who enjoy your confidence and are known to the country by their
public activities" [VSB,3:844-5]
<>1915au25:Russian
State Duma faction, Progressive Bloc, issued a strong
anti-governmental program, signed by V. A. Bobrinskii, V. N. L'vov, I. I.
Dmitriukov, Sergei Shidlovskii, I. N. Efreimov. Pavel
Miliukov, D. D. Grimm, and Baron V. Meller-Zakomel'skii [GRH:134-6 | McC1:71-3
| DIR2:475-6 | DIR3:515-17 | VSB,3:845-7]
*--Grand Prince Nikolai Nikolaevich, uncle to tsar Nicholas II, was the supreme
commander of Russian troops. While he inherited
Peter the Great's physical stature, he did not inherit Peter's leadership
ability. Emperor Nicholas II went to the front in order to take his uncle's
place, thus substituting a commander without stature or ability. The decision to take personal command over a failing war
effort was a serious blow to the prestige of the tsar. Nicholas' fateful
move did not improve the quality of military command at General Headquarters. In fact, war failures could
now be laid directly at the feet of the Emperor
*--Amazing debate in Russian Council of Ministers showed disorder at the highest levels of
Russian statecraft [A. N. Yakhontov,
Prologue to Revolution]
*--The eastern front was sapping Russian political
vitality while it brought new life to war profiteers and opportunists
<>1915se:Russian War Industries Committee and Association
of Industry & Trade aided wartime effort
[VSB,3:841-2 |
GRH:124]
<>1915se:Russia |
Zemgor resolution [GRH:149] More resolutions [DIR3:517-19]
showed vigorous public effort to aid in military
mobilization
<>1915se26:1916my03; Aleksei Khvostov, a member of the
Black Hundreds and leader of rightist factions in the
Fourth Duma, was appointed Interior Minister. He diverted huge sums from the
state treasury to the support of radical rightist publications
*--War-time origins of Russian revolutions [LOOP]
<>1915se29:USA loaned $500M to England and France.
The financing of modern war took its dimensions from the giganticism of the second industrial revolution
[W]
<>1915oc:German socialist
journal Der Kampf [The struggle] published Social Democrat Rudolf Hilferding's
"Co-Partnership of Classes?", an attack on the moderate party members who
supported the war and an explanation of his rational socialist
order in which big corporations and businesses would have a role [CWC:87-102]
<>1915no:Russian sailor rebellion [VRX:57-70]. The
international battlefield on the eastern front threatened to become a domestic battlefield. The
western front also experienced military/civilian disorder as the monstrous actualities of modern industrialized war became clearer to all
*--War-time origins of Russian revolutions [LOOP]
<>1916:Russian author
Andrei Belyi published his novel
Petersburg, a powerful piece of political fiction which explored in most
creative ways the meaning of the 1905 Revolutionary period
<>1916:Swiss Protestant
theologian, a leader of a
"neo-orthodox" movement in his church, Karl Barth delivered an address
"The Righteousness of God" [BMC1:667-70 | BMC4:664-7]
<>1916ja31:The Great Zeppelin Raid showed the
potential of that military technology
[W]
<>1916fe05:Switzerland,
Zurich | German avant-garde theater director, critic of WW1, dissenter from the bourgeois culture that
nurtured industrial militarism, Hugo Ball opened the Cabaret Voltaire. The cabaret was located in a neighborhood known to
various counter-culture innovators, e.g., James Joyce and Vladimir Ilich Lenin, as well as to international
war profiteers and covert spies. The cabaret soon became the matrix of the shocking anti-establishment
artistic movement named “Dada” by its leading exponents, the Alsatian Hans Arp and Romanian Tristan Tzara.
No one was sure what “Dada” meant, but many associated it with the Slavic expression “Yes-yes” [Da, da]
*--An early Dada manifesto emphasized the unconscious, chaotic and irrational elements of creativity in
the fine arts [CWC:368] Excerpts, with SAC editor intervention to enhance clarity
of this loose composition =
Every product of disgust capable of becoming a negation of the family = Dada
A protest with the fists of its whole being engaged in destructive action = Dada
Knowledge of all the means rejected up until now by the shamefaced sex of comfortable
compromise and good manner = Dada. Abolition
Of logic, which is the dance of those impotent to create = Dada
Of every social hierarchy and equation set up for the sake of value by our valets = Dada
Every object, all objects, sentiments, obscurities, apparitions and the precise clash of parallel
lines are weapons for the fight = Dada. Abolition
Of memory = Dada. Abolition
Of archeology = Dada. Abolition
Of prophets = Dada. Abolition
Of the future = Dada
Absolute and unquestioning faith in every god that is the immediate product of spontaneity = Dada
Elegant and unprejudiced leap from a harmony to the other sphere =
Trajectory of a word tossed like a screeching phonograph record =
To respect all individuals in their folly of the moment =
Whether it be serious, fearful, timid, ardent, vigorous, determined, enthusiastic =
To divest one’s church of every useless cumbersome accessory =
To spit out disagreeable or amorous ideas like a luminous waterfall, or coddle them --
With the extreme satisfaction that it doesn’t matter in the least --
With the same intensity in the thicket of one’s soul --
Pure of insects for blood well-born, and gilded with bodies of archangels
Freedom = Dada Dada Dada
A roaring of tense colors, and interlacing of opposites and of all contradictions, grotesques, inconsistencies = LIFE
*--Influenced by Italian “Futurists” [ID], the Dada movement refused to go the
direction of Futurists into the glorification of irrational chauvinistic militarism. On the contrary,
Dada sought to bring and end to war and the pull down the civilization that depended
on it. They were pacifists, draft dodgers and political émigrés from many points of the
European compass. They were international and internationalists. Culture could
thus also be seen occasionally as a battlefield
*--The movement attracted the French painter Marcel Duchamp
[ID]
*--Hugo Ball wrote a diary/memoir,
Flight Out of Time (1996)
*--The Dada Reader: A Critical anthology
*--Herschel B. Chipp, ed.,
Theories of Modern Art: A Sourcebook by Artists and Critics (1973)
*--Robert Motherwell, ed.,
The Dada Painters and Poets
*--Dada exerted influence on European artistic movements for
almost two decades
\\
*2006au10:NYR:10, the poet Charles Simic wrote about Dada = “Their revulsion at the butchery of the
Great War, in which about ten million men died, over twenty million were wounded, and several hundred
thousand lost limbs and sight, had a lot to do with what Dada was to become”
<>1916fe21:Battle of Verdun
[W] had raged for
days and now became a colossal battlefield. The
battle consumed 78 divisions and caused 350,000 casualties (wounded, dead or
otherwise lost from the ranks)
<>1916fe:German journal Die
Frau [The woman] published Max Weber,
"The Laws of the Gospel and the Laws of the Fatherland" which sought to explain
why Germany had to worship the god of war, in the name of a great nation's destiny, and
why at different times one might worship the god of the Sermon on the Mount [CWC:151-5]
<>1916fe:Russian Prime Minister Goremykin relieved of duties,
his long career now at an end. The replacement was
a notably unqualified Boris Stürmer (here as nearly everywhere the Russian name
"Shtiurmer" is written in the German orthography to emphasize one of the reasons
for wide-spread discontent associated with his appointment; another reason being
that Rasputin played a role in this affair, perhaps the
moment of Rasputin's most elevated influence)
<>1916ap:At sea, Adolf K.G.E. von Spiegel
described successful U-Boat attack on a steamer [Eye:457-9]
<>1916ap24:ap29 (NS);
Ireland, Dublin General Post Office,
headquarters for a weeklong rebellion against English imperialist rule. About
1500 revolutionaries seized key British government buildings and faced a
counter-attack by British soldiers, many of them Irish. A rebel manifesto read,
''In the name of God and of the dead generations from which she receives her old
tradition of nationhood, Ireland, through us, summons her children to her flag
and strikes for her freedom''. About 450 civilians, soldiers, police and rebels
died in the uprising. Great Britain was in the midst of WW1, therefore Irish
independence seemed traitorous to many, even to many Irish. Fellow Dubliners,
especially wives of the more than 140,000 Irishmen fighting and dying in British
uniform on the western front, cursed rebel survivors who were led away in
handcuffs. However, British authorities executed 16 rebel commanders and
subordinates, transforming them into martyrs and radicalizing the Irish
electorate in favor of guerrilla warfare for independence. W.B. Yeats expressed
it this way in his poem "Easter 1916" = ''A terrible beauty is born''. The
Insurrection inspired Ireland's successful war of independence from Britain. The
international battlefield was unquestionably provoking outbursts on various
domestic battlefields
<>1916jy:Russian Bolshevik leader Lenin, "Imperialism, the Highest Stage of
Capitalism"
[TXT] [CCC3,2:1079-88]
In the 20th century, this text became the central Marxist critique of European imperialism and
ushered in a new age of national liberation movements well beyond the
industrializing European world. It shocked many, including Marxists, to read Lenin's
analysis of how the overthrow of capitalism might come as much from the
non-European social-economic formations under imperialist control as from a
mature western European workers movement within a mature capitalist environment.
Lenin insisted that the imperialized non-European world was capitalism's "soft underbelly".
*1916mr:Lenin, "Socialist Revolution & the Right of Nations to Self
Determination"
*--Russian Marxism had experienced
several ups and downs since the 1880s, but it now found a way to incorporate
the massive issues of war and imperialism into its industrial-revolutionary
ideology
*--Unknown to even its most visionary leaders, Lenin's Russian Marxism was about
to insert itself onto center stage of world
history. After twenty years of isolated
revolutionary cogitation and factional in-fighting, Lenin was about to show
his remarkable skills of revolutionary leadership.
In April, 1917, Lenin returned from
European exile and opened his campaign to fill the political vacuum
caused by the abdication of Nicholas II
\\
Mayer:298-301 top
<>1916jy01:English and French troops began the tragic
Somme offensive [W]
*--Reverend John M.S. Walker described the 21st Casualty Clearing Station during the first 3 days of battle
[Eye:463-4]. The battle resulted in 419,654 casualties
*1916se15:Same battlefield saw first use of tanks, English Mark I, built heavily around the chassis of a
USA Holt tractor. Bert Chaney described [Eye:466-7]
*--Memoirs of this infamous battle
[W]
*--WW1 was bogging down in trench warfare punctuated by occasional and largely indecisive massive attacks
back and forth, straining the capacity of all belligerents. Unrest in the ranks, and among civilians as well,
added to the threat that the home front might become a battlefield in many locales
<>1916jy:USA journal Atlantic Monthly 118:86-97
ran Randolph Bourne's critique of the idea of "assimilation" and defense of a
more pluralistic or multi-cultural approach to citizenship, "Trans-National
America" [TXT]
<>1916oc01:London | Michael MacDonagh described bringing down a German Zeppelin L31 [Eye:467-9]
*--The battlefield was becoming very mechanized, very industrialized
<>1916oc:Okhrana police report on conditions of Russian
everyday life [Florinsky,End:133-7,143,165-7,191,214-15
|
DRR:8-12]
<>1916no01:Russian liberal oppositional leader Pavel Miliukov speech to
State Duma [McC1:88-90 | VSB,3:870]
He said, "When the Duma declares again and again that the home front must be
organized for a successful war and the government continues to insist that to
organize the country means to organize a revolution, and consciously chooses
chaos and disorganization -- is this stupidity or treason?" Voices from the left
of the hall answered Miliukov's rhetorical question, "It's treason!" Miliukov
continued, "In the name of our responsibility to those people who elected us, we
shall fight until we get a responsible government which is in agreement with the
three general principles of our program. Cabinet members must agree unanimously
as to the most urgent tasks, they must agree and be prepared to implement the
program of the Duma majority, and they must rely on this majority not just in
the implementation of this program, but in all their actions."
Miliukov
clearly joined the fate of the domestic political home front to the fate of the
international
eastern front of WW1. Clearly, modern total war
made the question of military mobilization
much more than a simple military question
*--The fateful decision made late in 1905, betraying
the promise made in the October Manifesto to link the new Russian Council of
Ministers to the new Duma, guaranteed a rocky beginning for
parliamentary government, and now, ten years later, the betrayal came home
to roost and proved fatal to all parties involved. The original act
of political betrayal had massive consequences for Russian and world
civilization. Within a year, the autocracy was gone, the Duma was gone, and stunted Russian liberalism
as well as conservatism and social democracy were defeated
<>1916no19:Russian State Duma heard impassioned and
sensational attack on Rasputin, delivered by Vladimir Purishkevich, founding
member of the Union of Russian Peoples, a rabid
monarchist and extreme right-wing delegate to the Duma. The Duma delegates,
right-wing, left-wing, moderate, never mind, they all shouted Bravo [VSB,3:872-3]
It was after this speech that Prince Feliks Yusupov approached Purishkevich with the idea to
assassinate Rasputin
<>1916no25:Petrograd everyday life conditions described
by police [1992no29:MNe#48:4]
<>1916de:London | First issue of Russian Co-operator: a Journal of
Co-operative Unity appeared with brief history of Russian cooperative
movement since 1865 [VSB,3:842-4]
<>1916de:Russian rural conditions described
in a letter by Grand Prince Nikolai Mikhailovich to Emperor Nicholas II [DIR3:519-21]
*1916de:Congress of the Nobility issued resolution [DIR3:521-2]
<>1916de16:Petrograd basement of Prince Feliks
Yusupov's palace.
High-ranking conspirators, led by the dashing Prince, murdered Rasputin, bringing an end to his
four years of high court mischief
*--War-time origins of Russian revolutions [LOOP]
\\
Klimov's film AGONIIA portrays the murder in graphic and tense detail
<>1916de19:English government
took over shipping and mining in order to maximize efficiency of
military mobilization.
Under certain conditions, laissez faire or market economics were found inadequate, even in
the original home of "capitalist economics". In this other sense,
then, the home front was becoming a battlefield
<>1917:Central Asia | Tadzhik people and Khanate of
Bokhara lost independence; became vassal to Russia
<>1917:German industrialist and public figure Walter Rathenau,
taking lessons from three years of WW1-era military mobilization, designed a model for a thoroughly planned "New Economy" in his
book Von kommenden Dingen [In days to come] [CCC2,2:818f | CCC3,2:928-36]
*--The legacy of WW1 military mobilization became a dominant feature of global historical development over the coming century
<>1917ja07:Nicholas II issued a Special
Order of the Day [DIR3:522]
<>1917fe:French troops on
the western front grew restive. Soon open rebellion in the trenches had to be put
down by Marshal Henri Pétain (later famous in WW2 as Nazi puppet ruler of
southern France). As in Russia on the eastern front, so also in France
on the western front, modern total war developed a
domestic battlefield all its own
*--Pétain's memoirs accounted these WW1 days of soldier rebellion [CWC:132-51]
<>1917fe23:Russia | International
Women's Day in Petrograd expanded into massive "street level" demonstrations of war-time working women
*--The
SD "Inter-district" faction [Mezhraiontsy] issued a proclamation on
this occasion
[TXT]
*--Wartime
experience, working and fighting (both in international and internal wars),
strengthened women's movements.
Women's issues now gripped all Europe and North America
*1917:English middle-class woman Naomi Loughnan, Genteel Women in the Factories [P20:71
| PWT2:272-4]
*1916:German woman Magda Trott described Opposition to Female Employment [P20:73]
*1916my04:New York Times reported from Russian newspapers about Russian Women
in Combat [P20:73]
*1917:Russian radical Ariadna Tyrkova, The Emancipation of Women [DRW:51-7]
*--Social and economic protest during the Russian commemoration of International
Women's Day represented the domestication of the international
battlefield. International war was becoming internal war
END OF THE ROMANOV DYNASTY
*1917fe23:mr02; Eight days of intense disorder that followed are sometimes called
"the February Revolution" or "the Second Russian Revolution" [1905 =
"First"] [Some background statistics = McC2:2-7]
*--These days were dramatic, but they had
long-term causes and consequences, and they cannot be understood independently
of the WW1 context = GO to the beginning of war-time origins of Russian revolutions [LOOP]
<>1917fe25:Pskov | From his railroad bivouac near the
front, Emperor Nicholas II prorogued Fourth Duma.
This political/institutional event, which stretched over five days, until
the abdication of Nicholas II, compounded the social and economic disorder =
*1917fe25:fe26; Petrograd | Khabalov report on conditions of everyday
life [VSB,3:878]
*1917fe26:Okhranka (political police) reported on conditions of everyday life
[TXT]
Especially critical was the breakdown of food supply [McC2:7-9]
*1917fe26:Duma President Rodzianko telegrammed Emperor Nicholas II in Pskov = "The situation is serious. The capital is in a state of anarchy. The government is
paralyzed; the transport service has broken down; the food and fuel supplies are completely disorganized. Discontent is general and on the
increase. There is wild shooting in the streets; troops are firing at each other. It is urgent that someone enjoying the confidence of the
country be entrusted with the formation of a new government. There must be no delay. Hesitation is fatal."
<>1917fe27(1430):Petrograd |
Fourth State Duma ignored Nicholas IIs effort to prorogue it [GRH:277-8] Executive
Committee of Fourth Duma formed Provisional Committee [McC2:9-11].
Participant's eyewitness account
[TXT]
*--USA Ambassador David Francis reported to State Department [DRR:12-14]
*--Rodzianko again telegrammed Emperor Nicholas II in Pskov [Chamberlin,1:429
| McC2:11-12 | StH:16(with
letter of Empress to Nicholas II as well)] =
The situation is growing worse. Measures should be taken immediately as tomorrow will be too late. The last hour has struck, when the fate of
the country and dynasty is being decided.
The government is powerless to stop the disorders. The troops of the garrison cannot be relied upon. The reserve battalions of the Guard
regiments are in the grips of rebellion, their officers are being killed. Having joined the mobs and the revolt of the people, they are
marching on the offices of the Ministry of the Interior and the Imperial Duma.
Your Majesty, do not delay. Should the agitation reach the Army, Germany will triumph and the destruction of Russian along with the
dynasty is inevitable.
<>1917fe27(1900):Petrograd Soviet (summoned earlier) met
for the first time and formed Executive Committee [GRH:291-2]
*1917fe27:fe28; Russian State Council telegraphed
Emperor Nicholas II [GRH:279-80]
*1917fe27:mr04; Reactions to February Revolution in its
first days [McC1:92-100]
*1917fe28(02:00):Russian Duma Provisional Committee
proclamation [VSB,3:881]
*1917fe28:Russian General Alekseev telegrammed gloomy report [McC2:12-13]
*--Even before Nicholas passed from the scene, a basis was laid for an amazing
eight-month contest of strength which pitted the "Provisional Committee" (and
subsequent "Provisional Governments") against the
Soviet of Workers and Soldiers Deputies
(and subsequent "Soviets of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Deputies")
<>1917mr02:Pskov, at the front | Emperor Nicholas II abdicated in favor of his
brother Michael
[TXT] [Russian TXT] [PFM:467-8
|
StH:17 | GDR:510-11 | DIR3:524]
*--Nicholas did not want the weight of the crown to fall on his
hemophiliac son
*--Two and a half years of international battlefield
extended the reach of war into the domestic life of belligerent peoples, further than ever
before. And now international and internal war combined to bring down the first of the great powers.
Was the domestic battlefield created by WW1 or would that internal war
(revolution) have happened with or without WW1?
*--Thus the Romanov dynasty, after
more than 300 years, was at its end within a few days. The Emperor was
finished, and the Empire itself was teetering on the brink of disintegration and destruction. Imperial
Russia collapsed in the midst of World War One. And even the loyal high command
seemed ready to move on to something new = "In all the commanding staff
there was not found one man to take action in behalf of his tsar. They all
hastened to transfer to the ship of the revolution, firmly expecting to find
comfortable cabins there. Generals and admirals one and all removed the tsarist
braid and put on the red ribbon" [Trotsky,1]
The Russian Empire was a casualty on the eastern front, but the
eastern front raged on
*--Eight months later, armed units
of the Petrograd Soviet, led by members of
the Bolshevik Party, seized power, but were forced to sign a peace treaty
with Central Powers after three months of
troubled negotiations at Brest-Litovsk. The treaty temporarily stripped from
Soviet control much of the western regions of the old Russian imperial domain. Those territories were partially restored
under Soviet rule after the revolutionary
Civil War, and yet further after WW2.
Then the Soviet Union, the successor to the old empire, dissolved in 1991-1992,
one of the great geo-political transformations of modern world history
*1917mr:The State Duma collapsed; it dissolved itself into ineffective
"provisional" committees and ministries. It officially lived on for
eight-months,
but it ceased to function as "State Duma" at this point. Twelve years of
"experiment" in European-style legislative politics thus came to an
abrupt end. [Parliamentary government of this sort was not to be revived
until after the collapse of the Soviet Union,
seventy-six years later]
*--As international and domestic ("internal") war
raged all around, no one and no organized group planned or knew or guessed what
lay ahead. For better or for worse, a remarkable thing can be said = Only
one public person spoke out clearly and
persistently with his answer to the question, "what's to be done?"
*--The Soviet Revolution (Also known as
"The Bolshevik Revolution" or "Great October" in Soviet historiography) arose
out of war-time and revolutionary disorder, such that caused -- but could not be
cured by -- the February Revolution, or the subsequent era of "Provisional
Governments"
*--Bernard Pares (1867-1949), an English specialist on Russia and author of
several scholarly first-hand accounts of war and revolution there, concluded the
following about the 1917 collapse of the old regime = "The story which emerges from this material is as tragic as
anything I have ever known. Following the events throughout while they were
evolving and later filling in one gap after another in my knowledge of them, I
have become quite convinced that the cause of the ruin came not at all from
below, but from above" [PFM:24] Bernard Pares
had been visiting Russia and was closely familiar with Russian political
developments since the 1905 Revolution
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