Initial Consolidation Flashcards

1
Q

Why was government administration an issue for the Bolsheviks upon coming to power?

A
  • Since the Bolsheviks lacked experience in administration to be able to effectively govern Russia
  • The Civil Service was often unsupportive of the Bolsheviks and thus didn’t help with the administrative issues
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2
Q

What political issue split Bolshevik figures such as Zinoviev and Kamenev from Lenin?

A

The issue of whether to lead a socialist coalition of the Soviet or as a single party

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3
Q

Why was the Constituent Assembly an initial concern for the Bolshevik party?

A

Since elections for the CA were due to take place in November 1917 and it was clear the Bolsheviks were not going to win a majority in the elections. This would delegitimise their right to rule.

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4
Q

How many tonnes short of grain was Russia to supply its needs when the Bolsheviks came to power? The German takeover of which country exacerbated this?

A

13m tonnes short of grain.

The takeover of Ukraine exacerbated this issue.

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5
Q

Which groups went on strike/failed to cooperate in opposition to the Bolshevik takeover?

A

Banks, major ministries, railways, post and telegraph offices

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6
Q

What was the name of the organisation set up to govern Russia? What gave it an air of legitimacy?

A

Sovnarkom - it was created in the name of the All-Russian Congress of Soviets and its members were chosen by the central committee of the Congress of Soviets.

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7
Q

What type of democratic approach did Lenin adopt? What did he say to justify this?

A

Democratic Centralism
Lenin argued that the Bolsheviks were the only ones sufficiently educated in Marxism and revolution and that they knew the way to achieve a truly socialist society

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8
Q

How did Sovnarkom deal with the un-cooperative Civil Service?

A

The Senior Officers were arrested and Junior Officers were promoted in their places.

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9
Q

How did Sovnarkom deal with the initial opposition from the Banks?

A

Bolshevik troops forcefully overran the banks on the 17th November and removed the necessary funds from them

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10
Q

On what date was opposition press banned? How was this reinforced?

A

27th October 1917– the MRC sent troops to smash up opposition presses

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11
Q

What was the decree on land?

A

The decree on land was that private ownership of land was abolished – land was to be distributed by the local commune

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12
Q

When did Lenin announce plans to collectivise agriculture?

A

February 1918

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13
Q

What were the problems with Sovnarkom’s handling of the land issue?

A
  • Peasants who received their allocated land from the commune often treated it in a private manner, instead of working as a collective
  • The distribution of land broke up larger farms which had economies of scale
  • Lenin’s announcement to collectivise agriculture and the forced requisitioning of grain prompted more subsistence farming
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14
Q

How many peasant uprisings were there in European Russia between July and November 1918?

A

100

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15
Q

What was the decree on worker’s control? Which approach contradicted this?

A

Transferred power of the running of factories to factory committees, instead of bourgeois managers.
The policy of state capitalism however acknowledged that the bourgeoisie would still be needed during the transition period to socialism due to their experience and skill

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16
Q

What was the aim of Lenin’s April 1918 article on the “Immediate Tasks of the Soviet Government?” What key measure did it introduce?

A
  • To reinforce state capitalism
  • To promote better behaviour from workers
    It introduced a wage system that corresponded with output and hence undermined the socialist promise.
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17
Q

How much did industrial output fall between 1917 and 1918?

A

2/3

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18
Q

What did the Bolsheviks do to overcome the issue of the factory committees not always being dominated by Bolsheviks?

A

They got state commissars to run the directives for the factories instead of the workers committees

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19
Q

What was the name of the Supreme Council of the National Economy set up in December 1917? What did it take over and do?

A

Vesenkha
Took over control of heavy industries (oil, steel and cal) and banks. Nationalised the railways and cancelled all foreign debts. Provided more central control over key parts of the economy and reduced the chaos on the transport system.

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20
Q

What did State Capitalism mean in practice?

A

Recognising the importance of the bourgeoisie; accepting that salaries would continue to vary based on skill and position; accepting some business would remain in private hands and that the factory committees would have to have a more supervisory role

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21
Q

What was the daily bread ration in Petrograd by February 1918?

A

50g

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22
Q

How many Bolshevik party members were there in October 1917 and August 1918?

A

October 1917 = 40,000 members August 1918 = 7,000 members

23
Q

When was the Cheka set up? What did they do and who ran it?

A

Cheka set up in December 1917. Felix Dzerzhinsky ran it. They had unlimited powers of arrest, detention and torture so sought to seek out any opponents to the Bolshevik regime

24
Q

What other decrees were granted to try to gain the popular support of the people?

A

Abolition of hereditary titles, decree of equality, decree on social insurance, decree to self-determination for the minorities in the empire, decree on the democratisation of the army, decree on secularism, decree on freedom of religious choice

25
Q

Why did Lenin allow the elections for the constituent assembly to go ahead?

A
  • He had come to power too late to really stop them
  • He would be very unpopular if he did stop them
  • The Left SRs in Sovnarkom (5 members) were keen to keep them going ahead
  • It would be hypocritical to stop them as the party had criticsed the PG for delaying them
  • Trade unions threatened further strikes if they didn’t go ahead
26
Q

How many votes did the SRs get in the CA elections? The Bolsheviks?

A
SRs = 40.4%
Bolsheviks = 24%
27
Q

Amongst which important groups did the Bolsheviks achieve support for the CA elections?

A

Soldiers and workers

28
Q

What was the consequence of the demo by the Union for the Defence of the Constituent Assembly on the 28th November?

A

The Kadets were blamed for the demo and its leading members were arrested

29
Q

What did Lenin’s theses on the 12th December argue?

A

Lenin argued that the Soviet’s power (stemming from the votes of the people) cancelled out the need for a bourgeois Constituent Assembly

30
Q

What did Sovnarkom agree to do about the Constituent assembly?

A

Let the CA carry out its first meeting before closing it down

31
Q

Why was the Capital put under martial law on the 5th January, the day the CA met?

A

A demonstration marching to the Tauride palace in support of the CA was fired on by the red guard

32
Q

How did the Bolsheviks assert their dominance in the CA?

A

Their delegates jeered at other parties’ ones when they spoke. Members of the Red Guard with guns filled the room intimidatingly.

33
Q

What triggered the Bolsheviks to leave the CA?

A

Their motion to retract the powers of the CA to make legislation was voted down

34
Q

Which group prompted the CA meeting to adjourn before not letting them back in the following day?

A

Bolshevik Troops

35
Q

When was the closure of the CA approved by the Congress of Soviets?

A

8th January 1918

36
Q

How did Lenin justify the closure of the CA?

A
  • Claimed the CA represented and was the Bourgeoisie
  • Argued the will of the people was shown in the revolution, not elections
  • Claimed the elections for the CA were rigged (difficult to distinguish between SRs and Left SRs in the election results)
  • Explained that the Bolsheviks represented the proletariat, not the whole population
37
Q

Why was their little successful opposition to the closure of the CA?

A
  • The SRs didn’t want to use force to assume power and hence reverted to ineffective legal means
  • The strikes and demonstrations took place in the cities were the Bolsheviks had support and forces to put down the opposition
  • The peasants were unaware of many of the events and were somewhat appeased by the decree on land distribution
38
Q

Why was Lenin (and Stalin) keen to end the war?

A
  • War benefitted the capitalists
  • War was a financial drain and caused socio-economic issues
  • To cut Russia’s losses early
  • To keep receiving financial backing from the Germans
  • To enact promise of “Peace, Bread, Land” and thus bring popularity to the party
39
Q

Which group of Bolsheviks wanted to continue the war as a revolutionary crusade to spark and European socialist revolution?

A

The left communists and Bukharin

40
Q

What was the approach towards the war situation from Trotsky which was actually adopted?

A
  • Eventual peace after some stalling in the hope that a revolution would take hold in Germany or Austria-Hungary
41
Q

What forced Sovnarkom to sign the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk?

A

Lenin’s threat to resign in conjunction with the rapid advance of German troops (had made 150 miles in 5 days)

42
Q

How many roubles reparations were prescribed in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk?

A

3bn roubles

43
Q

What countries were lost under the treaty? How many people did this equate to?

A

Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania, Bessarabia, Estonia and Finland
52m people

44
Q

How much farm land was lost from BL?

A

27%

45
Q

How much of Russia’s railway lines were lost?

A

26%

46
Q

What proportion of Russia’s iron and coal reserves were lost?

A

74%

47
Q

What name was attached to the treaty of Brest-Litovsk because of its embarrassing and crippling nature?

A

Diktat

48
Q

Who resigned from Sovnarkom after the signing of the treaty? Why was this damaging? Why was this perhaps also an advantage?

A

The Left SRs
This reduced the legitmacy of the Bolsheviks as the Left SRs gave Sovnarkom greater representation of the Soviet and thus people
However, it allowed the Bolsheviks to rule independently without needing to appease them

49
Q

Why did the treaty have a negative impact on the nationalists and loyalists of the country?

A

They felt betrayed by the treaty, especially since so much of the Russian Empire was lost which had been fought for over generations by Tsars.

50
Q

Who did the Left SRs assassinate in July 1918 to try and undermine the treaty and spark conflict?

A

The German Ambassador in Moscow

51
Q

Who was the commander who crushed the uprising of the left SRs?

A

Vatsetis

52
Q

When was the decision to sign the treaty of Brest-Litovsk ratified?

A

At the 7th PC in March 1918

53
Q

What event backed up Lenin’s decision to sign the peace with the Germans?

A

The defeat of the Germans on the Western Front in August 1918