The Bolsheviks come to power: the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English Russian |
Veröffentlicht: |
London
Pluto Press
2017
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Ausgabe: | New edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register |
Beschreibung: | li, 400 Seiten Illustrationen, Porträts |
ISBN: | 9780745399980 9780745399997 |
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Contents
List of Illustrations xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Note on Transliteration, Dates, and Terminology xv
Preface to the Centenary Edition xvii
Introduction xxxiii
THE JULY UPRISING 1
THE BOLSHEVIKS UNDER FIRE
PETROGRAD DURING THE REACTION 39
THE INEFFECTIVENES OF REPRESSION 51
THE BOLSHEVIK RESURGENCE 83
THE RISE OF KORNILOV 94
KORNILOV VERSUS KERENSKY IIO
THE BOLSHEVIKS AND KORNILOV^ DEFEAT I29
THE QUESTION OF A NEW GOVERNMENT 151
aALL POWER TO THE SOVIETS!* l68
LENINS CAMPAIGN FOR AN INSURRECTION 191
OBSTACLES TO AN UPRISING 209
THE GARRISON CRISIS AND THE MILITARY
REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE 224
ON THE EVE 249
THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER 273
• EPILOGUE 305
Notes 315
Selected Bibliography 358
Index 379
Index
Adzhemov, Moisei, 256
Akselrod, Alexander, 218
Alekseev, Gen. Mikhail, 96, 100, 101
and defeat of Kornilov, 114, 146,
149-50, 152
in formation of new government
(Aug.), 151-53, 156
on Kornilov, 97
and rise of Kornilov, 106, 332n
Alekseeva, Ekaterina, 220
Aleksei I (Tsar), 225
Aleksinsky, Grigorii, 15, 17—19, 21,320n
Alexandra (Empress), 97
Alliluev, Sergei, 32
All-Russian Bolshevik Party Conference
(April Conference), xxxviii, xlii—xliii,
9, 60, 62, 134
All-Russian Committee for the
Salvation of the Country and the
Revolution, 306—8
All-Russian Congress of Peasants’
Deputies, see All-Russian Executive
Committees; Central Executive
Committee; First All-Russian
Congress of Soviets; Second All-
Russian Congress of Soviets
All-Russian Congress of Workers’ and
Soldiers’ Deputies, see All-Russian
Executive Committees; Central
Executive Committee; First All-
Russian Congress of Soviets; Second
All-Russian Congress of Soviets
All-Russian Executive Committees
(soviets), xli, 52, 109, 172
criticized (July), 45, 46
and defeat of Kornilov, 129-34, 137,
138, 143, 148
district soviets differ with, 77
dominant elements in, 76
in formation of new government
(Aug.), 151, 153, 157-64
in garrison crisis, 240—41, 243
and ineffectiveness of repression, 53,
78
in July uprising, 2, 12—13, 15—16, 29
Kornilov affair and Lenin’s shift on,
170
and Kornilov-Kerensky dispute, 108,
110-13
and Lenin’s arrest (July), 33
military dictatorship and, 95
and new Soviet government (Oct.),
306
and October uprising, 260
and preparation for uprising, 213,
215,221
and reaction to July days, 17—18,
20-25, 34-35, 43, 63-64
38o · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
All-Russian Union of Trade and
Industry, 95
Amur (mine layer), 274, 277, 278, 285,
289
Anarchists, 10, 237
Angarsky, N. S., 329n
Anisimov, V. A., 34, 77, 174
Antonov-Ovseenko, Vladimir, 30, 48,
153, 312
in garrison crisis, 234-37, 241, 247
in Military Revolutionary
Committee, 245
in new Soviet government, 306
in October uprising, 249, 262
in preparation for uprising, 211, 214,
234
in seizure of power, 274, 278, 281,
286, 288, 299-301
Antselovich, Naum, 218
April Conference (Seventh All-Russian
Bolshevik Party Conference), xxxviii,
xlii-xliii, 9, 60, 62, 134,3l6n
“April Theses” (Lenin), xlii, 171-72
Apushkin, General, 334n
Arosev, I. Ia., 327n
“August 14 Program,” 112-13, 184,
334n
Aurora (cruiser), 144, 254, 269, 274,
277-78, 285, 286, 288, 289
Avilov, Nikolai, 306
Avksentiev, Nikolai, 55, 68
and Democratic State Conference,
184,185
and new government (Aug.), 163, 165
and October uprising, 259
and Preparliament, 201
and seizure of power, 276—77
Azev, Evno, 18
Bagdatiev, Sergei, 9, 30, 319n
Bagratuni, Gen. Iakov, 244, 248,
285-88
Baltic Fleet, see Russian naval units
Baluev, General, 127
Baranov, Aleksei, 262-63
Baranovsky, Col. V. L., 335n
“Before the Congress of Soviets”
(Zinoviev), 190
Belishev, Alexander, 269
Berzin, Ia. A., 250, 251, 272, 325n
Bethmann-Holweg, Moritz August von,
5
Birzbevye vedomosti (newspaper), 3, 36,
215, 250
Black Hundreds, 26, 27, 42-43, 79, 97,
205
Blagonravov, Georgii, 274, 282, 285—
86, 288-89
Bogdanov, Boris, 161, 163
and Congress of Soviets, 292
at Democratic State Conference,
176-77
and garrison crisis, 247
and new government (Aug.), 165
Bogdanov, Mikhail, 140
Boky, G. I., 199, 217,326n
Boldyrev (SR spokesman), 161—62
Bolshevik Central Committee, 8-9,
3l6n 325n
conference of (July 13—14), 59—62,
66-70
and Congress of Soviets, 188—89,
344n
debates over July policy of, 48, 49
and defeat of Kornilov, 134—38, 336n
and demonstrations (April, June),
xlviii-1
division within (Sept.), 174, 187—88
and formation of new government
(Aug.), 159
in garrison crisis, 234, 235, 239, 242,
246
and ineffectiveness of government
repression, 57—59
Index ·
in July uprising, 1, 11—13, 16
lack of control by, xxxviii
Lenin and, during Kornilov affair,
169
and Lenin s call to insurrection
(Sept.—Oct.), 179-82, 313
in Lenins campaign for insurrection,
193-210, 345n
Military Organization and, 72—74;
see also Bolshevik Military
Organization and Military
Revolutionary Committee, 232—33,
239
moderates control, xlii—xliii
and Moscow State Conference,
110-11
new coalition government (Sept.) and,
187, 34ln
and new Soviet government, 309—10
in October uprising, 23, 52, 353n
and preparation for uprising, 212
and reaction to July days, 64, 66
and Sixth Congress, 83, 84
Bolshevik Military Organization,
xxxviii—xxxix, 1—li, 233, 312, 316n
arrest of top leaders of, 47
charges of insurrection against
members of, 54
damaged by July days, 776
and defeat of Kornilov, 135—38, 142,
143, 337n
in garrison crisis, 231, 234—36, 244,
348n
and ineffectiveness of government
repression, 57, 59, 327n
in July uprising, 8—13
and Lenin s call to insurrection
(Sept.), 181
and Lenin s campaign for
insurrection, 201
in October uprising, 261
381
in preparation for uprising, 211, 212,
216, 217, 221, 224, 347n
in seizure of power, 281
and Sixth Congress, 83, 84
soldiers in, xlvi, xlviii
Bolshevik Moscow Regional Bureau,
88, 89, 111, 135, 195
Bolshevik Party
and alliance with left parties, xli—xlii
attacks on offices of (July), 43, 44, 53
and defeat of Kornilov, 132, 139
and district soviets, 77, 81
gains made by, among workers,
xlv—xlviii
German funds for, 14—15
ineffectiveness of attempt to repress,
51-54
internal organization of, xxxix,
310-13
Military Organization criticized by,
71-72
origin of, xxxv—xxxvi
and reaction to July days, 17—19,
26-38
resurgence of (after July), 83—93,
111-12
Sixth Congress of, xxxviii, 62, 83—90,
132, 134,173,174, 198, 313
support for goals of, xxxv
takes over Kshesinskaia mansion, 8—9
Bolshevik Petersburg Committee,
xxxviii, xlii, 1, 50, 73, 312, 316n
and Congress of Soviets, 189
and defeat of Kornilov, 134—36, 138,
337n
and garrison crisis, 233—34
and ineffectiveness of government
repression, 57, 62—70, 327n
in July uprising, 8—12
and Lenins call to insurrection, 179,
181
3ó2 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
in Lenin’s campaign for insurrection,
193-200
Lenin’s moderation (Sept.) and,
172-73
Military Organization criticized by,
71
in October uprising, 265, 268
and preparation for uprising, 216—19
and reaction to July, 62—70
and Sixth Congress, 83
Bonch-Bruevich, Vladimir M., li, 1, 3,
7,44
Bregman, Lazar, 144
Breshko-Breshkovskaia, Ekaterina, 201
Breslav, Boris, 210—11
Brest-Litovsk, Treaty of (1918), 310
Broido, Mark, 231, 292
Brusilov, Gen. Aleksei, 96, 97, 99-103,
106
Bubnov, Andrei, 57, 74, 325n, 326n,
32Sn
and Congress of Soviets, 187
and defeat of Kornilov, 135, 136
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 181
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 195, 199-201, 203
and Lenin’s shift in September, 173
in October uprising, 250, 251
and preparation for uprising, 216-17,
219, 234
in seizure of power, 290
at Sixth Congress, 88—90
Buchanan, George, 40, 152
Bukharin, Nikolai, 57, 72, 87, 88, 181,
325nt 326n
Bulat, A. A., 36
Burishkin, A. A., 343n
Burtsev, Vladimir, 19
Bykhovsky, Naum, 290
Cadets (in defense of Winter Palace),
274, 278, 280-91, 295, 298-301, 305
Capital punishment issue, 77-81, 91,
100-106
Central Committee, see Bolshevik
Central Committee
Central Executive Committee (soviets),
xli, 196, 306
capital punishment and, 91
and defeat of Kornilov, 142
district soviets and, 81—82
and garrison crisis, 236—37, 241
and ineffectiveness of repression, 54,
56-57, 328n
and July uprising, 15-16
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 205
and new government (Aug.), 158, 165
and new Soviet government, 309—10,
357n
and October uprising, 271
and preparation for uprising, 212, 214
and reaction to July days, 17—20,
24-25, 31, 33-35,39, 49-50,321n
Sixth Congress and, 87
Chamberlin, William Henry, xxxiv
Cheremisov, Gen. Vladimir
army reform and, 102-5
and defeat of Kornilov, 149, 333n
in garrison crisis, 226—27’, 229—31,
244
and seizure of power, 287, 302, 305,
355n
Chernov, Viktor, xlv, 22, 26, 27, 174
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 158, 163, 165—66
Chkheidze, Nikolai, 7, 35, 112, 174, 175
and Democratic State Conference,
185
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 16, 165
Chudnovsky, Grigorii, 223, 312
in garrison crisis, 245
Index
in seizure of power, 274, 276, 281,
283—84, 300, 301
City Duma, see Duma, Petrograd City
Club Pravda, 9, 70
Committee for Struggle Against the
Counterrevolution, 132, 138—41,
148, 149, 132-33, 161, 166, 170, 232,
337n-38n
Congress of Soviets, see First All-
Russian Congress of Soviets; Second
All-Russian Congress of Soviets
Constituent Assembly, xxxviii, xlv, 173,
201-2, 311
Congress of Soviets and, 214
and Democratic State Conference,
184,185
elections for, xxxix, 4, 22, 37, 190,
306, 357n
and garrison crisis, 227, 228, 237, 247
and insurrection, 203—5, 256, 260
and July uprising, 4
Kornilov affair and, 131
new Provisional Government (Aug.)
and,159, 160, 163, 165
and new Soviet government, 309
and seizure of power, 287, 288, 347n
Council of People s Commissars, 306—7
Council of the Republic,
see Preparliament
“Crisis Has Matured, The” (Lenin), 193
Dan, Fedor, 23-24, 35, 90, 194
in Congress of Soviets, 292
in Democratic State Conference, 186
and garrison crisis, 237, 243
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 165, 34ln
in October uprising, 258—60
and preparation for uprising, 215, 216
and seizure of power, 291
Daniels, Robert V., xxxiv
* 383
Dashkevich, Petr, 47, 153, 250, 280,
283-84
“Declaration of Principles” (July 8), 21,
23-25
Declaration of Soldiers’ Rights (March),
101
Delo naroda (newspaper), 292
Democratic State Conference (Sept.),
164, 165, 174-88, 191, 192, 198, 113
De» (newspaper), 19
Denikin, Gen. Anton I., 100—104, 127,
149, 333n
Desimeter, Col. L. P., 96, 146, 149
“Directive Number One” (Oct.), 249,
256
Directory, 125, 130-31, 157, 170
District soviets, see Petrograd district
soviets
Diterikhs, Gen. Mikhail, 271
Dolgorukov, Gen. A. M., 117
Dostoevsky, Fedor, 99
Dubrovin, Dr., 27
Dukhonin, Gen. Nikolai, 225
Duma, Petrograd City, 39, 43
and defeat of Kornilov, 141, 149
elections for, 91—93
and new Soviet government, 306
and seizure of power, 288—90, 295,
296, 298-99
Duma, State, xl, 22, 76, 110
Provisional Committee of, 39, 44—46,
80
Dybenko, Pavel, 30, 48, 153, 262—63,
306
Dzenis, Osvald, 47, 268—69
Dzerzhinsky, Felix, 57, 74, 75, 325n,
328n
in October uprising, 250, 251
and preparation for insurrection, 181,
203, 234
Dzevaltovsky, I. I., 327n
Dzhaparidze, Alesha, 86—88
384 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
Economy, the
Bolshevik power and, 198, 199
factories, 6-8, 53-54, 63-64,66,
169, 303,331n
food shortage, xliii, 3-4, 94, 167,
331n
fuel shortage, xliii, 4, 167, 331n
workers’ situation in, xliii—xlvi
Edinstvo (newspaper), 19
Efremov, Ivan, 55, 60
Elizarova, Anna, 32
Emelianov, Nikolai, 34
Eremeev, Konstantin, 274
Erlikh, Genrikh, 295
Ermolenko, Lieutenant, 14
Executive Commission, see Bolshevik
Petersburg Committee
Executive Committee (All-Russian
Congress of Peasants’ Deputies), xli,
110, 295, 298; see also All-Russian
Executive Committees
Evdokimov, Grigorii, 200
Factories, 6—8, 53—54, 63-64, 66, 169,
303, 331n
Factory-shop committees, xlvi, 136,
140, 216, 237, 246
Central Soviet of, 141, 308
Fadeev, Aleko, 46-47
Faerman, Mikhail, 269
February revolution (1917), xxxvi—xxxvii,
xliii—xliv
Fedorov, G. F., 175
Fenikshtcin, Iakov, 200
Ferro, Marc, xxxiv
Filipovsky, Vasilii, 292
Filonenko, Maximilian, 99—104, 106,
107, 335n
Finisov, R N., 146, 149
Finland, 1, 34,144, 168,179,197, 235
Finland, Regional Executive Committee
of Army, Fleet, and Workers in, 168,
193, 197,209-10, 237
First All-Russian Congress of Soviets
(June), xlviii-xlix, 21, 23, 291; see also
All-Russian Executive Committees;
Central Executive Committee;
Executive Committee; Second All-
Russian Congress of Soviets
First City Conference (Bolshevik;
Petrograd), xlii
Flakserman, Galina, 202
Flakserman, Iurii, 204, 206
Flerovsky, Ivan, 46, 273, 277
Fofanova, Margarita, 191, 263—66,
323n, 345n
Food shortage, xliii, 3-4, 94, 167, 331n
Francis, David, 40
Freedom in Struggle (newspaper), 332n
“From a Publicist s Diary” (Lenin),
192-93
Fuel shortage, xliii, 4, 167,33In
Ganetsky, Iakov, 17
Garrison conference, 233, 236—37,
240-41
Gazeta-kopeika (newspaper), 36, 215
Gendelman, Mikhail, 293—94
Gessen, S. M., 219
Gippius, Zinaida, 126
Gogol, Nikolai, 7
Goldberg (soldier), 240
Gobspravdy (newspaper), 29, 324n
Gobs soldata (newspaper), 19, 20, 39,
229, 240
Gorin, Alexander, 77, 81, 139
Gorky, Maxim, 19, 215,325n
Gots, A. R., 90, 174
and Congress of Soviets, 292
and Democratic State Conference,
184, 185
and garrison crisis, 247
and October uprising, 258—60
Index
Government, see Constituent Assembly;
Council of People s Commissars;
Preparliament; Provisional
Government; Soviets
Groza (newspaper), 43
Guchkov, Alexander, xxxix, xlv, 96, 136
Gvozdev, K. A., 287
Gzhelshchak, Frants, 293
Helsingfors, 30, 143, 146, 157, 168, 273
“Heroes of Fraud and the Mistakes of
the Bolsheviks” (Lenin), 191—92
Holy Russia, 43
Iakovleva (Bolshevik), 203—4, 346n
Ilin-Zhenevsky, Alexander F., 46, 47, 72
on Central Committee (post-July),
57-58
in October uprising, 261, 347n
at Sixth Congress, 84—85
Interdistrict Committee, 77, 81, 83, 84,
316n
Interdistrict Conference of Soviets, 77,
78, 80-84, 138-40, 32Sn
Ioffe, A. A., 181,200
Iudenich, Gen. Nikolai, 106
Iurenev, Konstantin, 86, 88
Iurenev, Petr, 115, 125
Ivanov, Vasilii, 67
Ivashin, Anton, 47
Izvestiia (newspaper), 202, 227, 228
and July uprising, 3
and Kornilov, 105, 111, 129
and reaction to July days, 19—20, 43,
45
Izvestiia Kronshtadtskogo soveta
(newspaper), 157
July uprising, 1—82
ineffectiveness of repression following,
51-82
reaction to, 17—50
’ 385
June 10 demonstration, xlviii, 3
June 18 demonstration, lviii—xlix
Kadets (Constitutional Democrats;
Party of Peoples Freedom), xxxix,
170, 175, 192, 310
district soviets and, 82
in elections to City Duma, 91, 93
general policy position of, 95
in July uprising, 2—3, 318n—19n
and Kornilov, 103—5, 112, 139, 333n
and Lenins campaign for
insurrection, 200, 205
and October uprising, 259
in Provisional Government, 25,
151-54, 159, 162-66, 183-86
and reaction to July days, 19, 21, 22
and a Soviet government, 292
Kadlubovsky, Karl, 269
Kaganovich, Lazar, 327n
Kaledin, Gen. Aleksei, 106, 112, 114,
304
Kaliagin, P. S., 269
Kalinin, Mikhail, 12, 135, 136, 218,
219
Kamenev, Lev, xli, 239, 312, 325n
at April Conference, xlü, 316n
and Congress of Soviets, 187, 188,
293, 298, 301, 306
and defeat of Kornilov, 132, 134
and Democratic State Conference,
176-78, 184, 188
and garrison crisis, 242
general views of, xxxviii, 173, 317n,
320n
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 181,
187
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 192—93, 196, 199,
203-8, 345n, 346n
Military Organization and, 72
386 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 159-65,341n
in new Soviet government, 309, 310
in October uprising, 250-51, 272
and preparation for uprising, 212—14,
216, 217, 221-23, 347n
on Presidium of Petrograd Soviet, 175
and reaction to July days, 30—33, 37,
47-49, 57
in seizure of power, 289, 303
Sixth Congress and, 83, 85
Stalin compared with, 66
Kamkov, Boris, 183
and Congress of Soviets, 292, 296—97,
304
and October uprising, 257, 258, 35In
and preparation for uprising, 213-14
Kapelinsky (Menshevik-
Internationalist), 302,303
Karinsky, N. S., 29, 32, 55-57
Kartashev, Anton, 187
Katkov, George, xxxiv
Kaurov, V. N., 323n
Kedrov, Mikhail, 72
Kerensky, Alexander R, xxxv, 5, 44
becomes prime minister, 21, 25-28,
55,322n
and defeat of Kornilov, 129—50
and Democratic State Conference,
177-78, 185-86
fall of, 274-78, 284, 287, 300-6,
308, 314,355n
in formation of a new government
(Aug.), 151-67
and funeral of cossacks, 40-41
and garrison crisis, 225-31, 244
ineffectiveness of repression under, 76
internal policies of, 51, 52
and July uprising, 2
Kornilov vs., 110-28, 33^«
Lenin and, during Kornilov affair,
169-70
and Lenin as German agent, 14, 28
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 191-95, 201, 203, 205
military dictatorship and, 99
new coalition government under
(Sept.), 186-87,343n
and October uprising, 249, 253-61,
265, 266, 268, 270-72
preparation to overthrow, 210, 211,
216-17
in Provisional Government (April),
xl, xlv
and reaction to July days, 30, 68,
323n
and rise of Kornilov, 100-108
seeks soviet’s support, 35
social disintegration alarms (Aug.),
94-95
soldiers and réintroduction of death
penalty by, 75
Kharash, Iakov, 293, 294
Kharitonov, Moisei, 67, 68, 199, 218
Khaustov, Flavian, 30, 48, 277, 327n
Khinchuk, Lev, 293—94
Khopor (mine layer), 274
Khovrin, Nikolai, 30, 48
Kishkin, Nikolai, 216
in formation of new government
(Aug.), 151,343л, 355n
during seizure of power, 285—87, 299,
300
Klembovsky, General, 100, 120, 127,
149
Kokoshkin, F. R, 125, 165
Kolchak, Adm. Aleksandr, 96
Kolbin, I. N., 158
Kollontai, Alexandra, 202
and Congress of Soviets, 292
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 181
in Lenin’s campaign for insurrection,
203, 206
and preparation for uprising, 210
Index
during reaction to July days, 30—31,
48, 55-56,325n
Sixth Congress and, 83
Kolmin, G. F., 173
Konovalov, Alexander, 187, 201
and rise of Kornilov, 106
and seizure of power, 270, 284, 287,
299-301
Kornilov, Gen. Lavr, 90, 305
biography of, 96—100
defeat of, 129-52, 183, 187, 312, 313,
355n
effects of defeat of, on Lenin, 132—35,
167-71, 173, 180, 204, 205
formation of new government
following defeat of, 159—67, 340n
garrison crisis compared with affair
involving, 228—29
Kerensky vs., 110—28, 335n, 336n
on Lenin, 109
rise of, 94—109
Kotsiubinsky, Iurii, 47
Kozlovsky, Mechislav, 17
Krasnov, Gen. Petr, 305, 306, 308, 309
Krasnovsky (commissar), 227
Krestinsky, N. N., 325n
Kronstadt naval base, xliv, 28, 273—74
Kronstadt sailors, see Sailors
Kronstadt Soviet, 30, 90, 144, 158, 262,
330n
Krupskaia, Nadezhda, 32, 182, 265,
345n
Krylenko, Nikolai, 47, 153, 209, 327n
and Congress of Soviets, 305
in garrison crisis, 242
in new Soviet government, 306
and preparation for uprising, 221
in seizure of power, 302
Krymov, General, 109, 305
and defeat of Kornilov, 131, 142, 146,
148-51
removal of, 118
and rise of Kornilov, 116, 120, 128
387
Kshesinskaia, Mathilde, 8—9, 35
Kshesinskaia mansion, 8—9, 26, 27, 53,
62
Kuchin, Georgii, 293—95
Kudelko, I. U., 47, 153
Kuzmin, A. L, 26, 276
Land reform, 4—5, 22, 169, 172, 303,
306
Larin, Iurii, 84—85, 223, 322n
Lashevich, Mikhail
in garrison crisis, 242
in Lenin s campaign for insurrection,
198-200
and Military Revolutionary
Committee, 245
in October uprising, 249, 269
Latsis, Martin
and defeat of Kornilov, 135
in July uprising, 13
and Lenins campaign for
insurrection, 200, 201
and Military Revolutionary
Committee, 233—34
and obstacles to an uprising, 209,
217-18
in October uprising, 268
and reaction to July days, 63—66
Lazimir, Pavel, 234, 237, 241, 242, 249
Lebedev, Vladimir, 5, 6
Left Socialist Revolutionaries, 24, 168,
209
and Congress of Soviets, 291—93,
296-98, 304
and Democratic State Conference,
176, 183
and district soviets, 77
in garrison crisis, 246, 247
and Lenin s campaign for
insurrection, 205
in Military Revolutionary
Committee, 237
388 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
and new Soviet government, 308-10,
356n
in October uprising, 250, 251, 254,
257-61, 268,352n
in preparation for uprising, 213-15
and reaction to July days, 24, 25
and seizure of power, 306
Lenin, Vladimir Ilich, 233,325n
and Bolshevik competition for
influence in Petrograd Soviet
(Sept.), 175
calls for insurrection (Sept.), 178-82,
187, 188, 313
calls for revolution (April), xxxix, xli,
316n—17n
campaigns for insurrection, 191-208,
344n—45n
charges against, 55-56
and defeat of Kornilov, 132-35,
167-71, 173, 180, 204, 205, 337n
and garrison crisis, 234-36
as German agent, 14-19, 28, 31,
37-38
and government crackdown on
Bolshevik Party, 26, 27
July theses of, 59-60, 66-70, 326n
and July uprising, li, 1, 3, 6, 7, 9-14
Kornilov on, 109
leadership of, 311—12
leftist regime sought by, 246—47
manifesto by, as ultimate source of
Soviet political authority, 303-4
Martov and, 24
Military Organization and, 75
in new Soviet government, 306, 309,
310
in October uprising, 251, 256,
263-67, 272,353n
party concept of, xxxix
political biography of, xxxv-xxxviii
in preparation for uprising, 209—12,
216, 220-24
and reaction to July days, 23, 30,
32-38, 44, 54, 57, 168, 312, 323n
reactions of, to Central Committee
conference of July 13-14, 61-62
renews slogan “All Power to the
Soviets,” 169-74,342n, 344n
in seizure of power, 274-76, 278-81,
290-91, 294-96, 303, 306, 314
situation confronting (April), xli-xliii
Sixth Congress and, 83-90, 329n
Stalin compared with, 66
“Letter to Comrades” (Lenin), 256
“Letters from Afar” (Lenin), xxxvii,
181
Levitsky, Gen. B. A., 271-72
Liber, Mark, 44,163, 165, 292
Listokpravdy (newspaper), 47
Livshits (Left SR), 215-16
Lomov, Georgii, 88
and Lenin s call to insurrection, 181
in Lenin s campaign for insurrection,
195, 203-4
in new Soviet government, 306
in October uprising, 249, 250
Loos, Avgust, 227-28
LudendorfF, Gen. Erich F. W., 5
Lukianov, Fedor, 295
Lukomsky, Gen. A. S., 109, 125, 335n
Lunacharsky, Anatolii, 312
and Congress of Soviets, 292, 297-98,
303, 304
and defeat of Kornilov, 131, 134
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 158
in new Soviet government, 306
and reaction to July days, 31-33,
46-48
in seizure of power, 279
Sixth Congress and, 83
Stalin compared with, 66
Lvov, Georgii, xxxix, xl, 28
Index
and Bolsheviks receiving money from
Germans, 15, 17
resigns, 21, 22, 55
Lvov, Vladimir Nikolaevich, 121—26,
150, 335ny 336n
Maklakov, Vasilii, 40, 112, 126, 165
Malenkaia gazeta (newspaper), 18, 26,
30
Maliantovich, Pavel, 55, 287, 294, 300
Malkin (reporter), 298
Manuilov, Alexander, xxxix, 31Sn
Manuilsky, Dmitrii, 33, 81, 87
Martov, Iulii, 24—25, 31, 56
capital punishment opposed by, 90
in Congress of Soviets, 292—96, 298,
302, 303
and Democratic State Conference,
182,183
on directories, 130
district soviets and, 82
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 163, 165
and October uprising, 257—58
and preparation for uprising, 215—16
and seizure of power, 302, 303
Sixth Congress and, 85
Martynov, Gen. E. I., 96—98
“Marxism and Insurrection” (Lenin),
179-80
Maslenikov, A. M., 45, 46, 80—81
Maslenikov, V., 157—58
Maslov, Semion, 290
Maslovsky, S. D., 67
Maximalists, 209, 214
Mekhonoshin, K. A., 241, 242, 327n
Meigunov, Sergei, xxxiv
Menshevik-Internationalists, 24, 176,
83, 209, 214
in Congress of Soviets, 292, 304, 306
in district soviets, 77
389
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 158, 159, 164
and new Soviet government, 308—9
in October uprising, 257—61
in preparation for uprising, 215
Mensheviks, xxxvi, xli, xln, 192, 312,
313
and Congress of Soviets, 291—96,
302,314
and defeat of Kornilov, 132—35
and Democratic State Conference,
176
in district soviets, 76, 77
in elections to Petrograd City Duma,
93
in garrison crisis, 231, 232, 245
and July Central Committee
resolution, 60—62
and July uprising, 6, 13—14
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 205
Lenins revised stand on (Sept.),
169-74
lose in Petrograd Soviet, 90
lose ground among workers, xlv—xlvi
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 153-54, 164-66, 34ln
Menzhinskaia, L. R., 57, 75
Menzhinsky, V. R., 74
Metallist factory, 63—64, 154
Michaelis, George, 5
Mikhailov, Mikhail, 46—47
Military League, 95, 117, 156, 331n
Military Organization, see Bolshevik
Military Organization
Military Revolutionary Committee, 232
creation of, 232—34
defends new Soviet government
(Oct.), 306-8
in garrison crisis, 236—48, 349n,
350n
Military Organization and, 234—36
390 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
in October uprising, 249-72,353n
in seizure of power, 273-304, 313—14
Miliukov, Pavel, xxxix, xliv-xlv, 1,40,
91
drifts rightward, 95
in formation of new government
(Aug.), 151, 165
on Kerensky, 113
Kornilov and, 106, 112-15, 169
and military dictatorship, 99
Miliutin, V. P., 74,316ny 325n
and Democratic State Conference,
176
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 1S1
in new Soviet government, 306, 309,
310
in October uprising, 250, 272
and preparation for uprising, 222
at Sixth Congress, 88
Mogilev
Kerensky in, 55, 100-2
Kornilov in, 103, 105, 107, 108,
118-20, 122, 124
Molotov, Viacheslav, 326n
in Lenin’s campaign for insurrection,
200
and Lenin’s July theses, 60
and reaction to July days, 67-69
in seizure of power, 289
Moscow Bolsheviks, 60, 88, 89, 111,
133-34, 181, 203-4
Moscow Regional Bureau, see Bolshevik
Moscow Regional Bureau
Moscow State Conference (Aug. 12-14),
110-17, 133-35,175, 344n
Moskvin, Ivan, 200
Mstislavsky, Sergei, 213, 292,352n
Muralov, Nikolai, 111
Muralov, M. K., 325n—26n
Nabokov, V. D., 91
Napoleon 1,96, 239
Narchuk, Viktor, 69-70
Nekrasov, Nikolai, xxxix, 318n-֊19n
and July uprising, 14, 15,320n
in Provisional Government, 26
and rise of Kornilov, 108, 125
Nevarovsky, Nikolai, 228
Nevsky, Vladimir L
in garrison crisis, 234-36
and July uprising, 13
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 201
in preparation for insurrection,
211-12,217, 224, 348n, 350n
and repression, 72, 74, 75,327n
New York Times, xxviii-xxix
Nicholas II (Tsar), xxxi, xxxvii, 8, 43,
99
Nikitin, Aleksei, 154, 301
Nikitin, Boris, 32
Nogin, Viktor, 3l6ny 320n, 326n
and Congress of Soviets, 292
and Democratic State Conference,
188
fears coup (Aug.), Ill
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 181,
187
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 206,345n
opposes Lenin in July, 60
in new Soviet government, 306, 310
in October uprising, 250
in preparation for uprising, 222
and reaction to July days, 33-34, 36,
329n
at Sixth Congress, 88
Northern Region Congress of Soviets,
209-16, 233, 235,345n
Noulens, Joseph, 40
Novaia Rus’ (newspaper), 248
Novaia zhizn (newspaper), 19, 56, 93, 1
33, 202, 215,222, 223
Novoe vremia (newspaper), 104
Index
391
Officer corps, military dictatorship
favored by, 95, 96, 331n see also
Kornilov, Gen« Lavr
Okopnaiapravda (newspaper), 6, 29, 30
Olminsky, 326n
“On Compromises” (Lenin), 169—73,
176, 178, 182
“On the Current Moment” (Stalin), 66,
158, 329n
“On the Current Political Situation”
(Stalin), 85
“On the Government Question”
(Kamenev), 159—60
“On the Political Situation,” 132
“On Slogans” (Lenin), 61, 69, 85, 88
“On Unification,” 132, 133
“One of the Fundamental Questions of
the Revolution” (Lenin), 170, 171
“Order Number One” (March 1), xliv,
317n
Ordzhonikidze, Sergei, 33—35, 59
Osipov, Gavril, 70
Osipov, Ivan, 70
“Our Triumph and Our Tasks”
(Zinoviev), 177
Palchinsky, Petr, 283, 285, 286, 299
Panina, Sofia, 290
Pankratov, V., 15, 17-19, 21, 320n
Paradelov, Gen« Nikolai, 285—87
Pavlov, I., 277
Peasants
and defeat of Kornilov, 148
and preparation for uprising, 217
Sixth Congress and, 87
and socialism in Russia, xxxviii
Soviet regime (Sept.) and, 172
See also Soviets
Pereverzev, Pavel, xlv, 14, 15, 21, 55,
320n
Peshekhonov, Aleksei, xlv, 3
Pestkovsky, Stanislav, 262
Peter the Great (Tsar), 7
Peter and Paul Fortress
in July uprising, 2, 11, 26, 27
reserve headquarters in, 251
and seizure of power, 274, 282, 285,
286, 288, 289, 299, 301
taking of, 245—46, 249
Petersburg Committee, see Bolshevik
Petersburg Committee
Peterson, Karl, 294
Petrograd, 7—9, 315n
effects of reaction to July days in,
42-45
why Study, XXXIV—XXXV
Petrograd City Conference, see First
City Conference; Second City
Conference
Petrograd City Duma, see Duma
Petrograd district soviets, xl—xli, xlvi,
308
and defeat of Kornilov, 138—40, 143
and ineffectiveness of repression,
76-82
Petrograd garrison, see Garrison
conference; Soldiers
Petrograd Soviet, 312
Bolshevik competition for influence
in (Aug.; Sept.), 90, 174—75
capital punishment and, 105
and defeat of Kornilov, 138, 139,
339n
district soviets and, 77, 80
dominant elements in, 76, 343n
emergence of, xl—xli
extreme left strengthened in (Sept.),
189-90
and formation of new Provisional
Government (Aug.),
and garrison crisis, 227, 228, 230—48,
348n, 349n
influence of (April), xliv—xlv
in July uprising, 2—5, 7, 9—13
392 ♦ THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
Kornilov and, 97, 98
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 194, 198-99
and October uprising, 249, 250,
254-55, 263
and preparation for uprising, 212,
216, 221
and seizure of power, 274-76, 278,
279, 288, 313—14
Petrograd Trade Union Soviet, 83, 139,
141, 153, 218, 221, 308
Petrogradskdia gazeta (newspaper),
26-27, 32, 35, 36, 43
Petrogradskii listok (newspaper), 18
Petropavlovsk (battleship), 146, 157
Piskunov, Ivan, 47
Plehve, Viacheslav, 99
Plekhanov, Georgii, 18-19
Podvoisky, Nikolai, 71-72, 74,326n,
327n
in garrison crisis, 234-37
in July uprising, 13
and Lenins campaign for
insurrection, 201
in Military Revolutionary
Committee, 245
in October uprising, 249, 265, 268
and preparation for insurrection, 212,
224, 234
in seizure of power, 274, 280—82,
290-91
Poletaev, Nikolai, 323n
“Political Situation, The” (Lenin), 69
Polkovnikov, Gen. Georgii
and garrison crisis, 226, 241, 243,
244
and October uprising, 251, 272
and preparation for insurrection, 216
and seizure of power, 284, 285
Polovtsev, Gen. Petr, 2, 53, 54
Pravda (newspaper), xlii, xlvi, 3l8n
closed, 29, 59, 72
and July uprising, 6, 12, 16
offices of, raided, 25, 53
and reaction to July days, 17, 19, 47,
66
Preobrazhensky, Evgenii, 329n
Preparliament (Council of the Republic)
function of, 185-86, 188, 189
and garrison crisis, 225—26, 246, 248
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 192, 196, 198-202
and new Soviet government, 306
in October uprising, 255-62, 271
and preparation for uprising, 215
in seizure of power, 274, 276-78,
284,285
Prokhorov, Sergei, 218, 219
Prokopovich, Sergei, 284, 290, 298, 299
Proletarii (newspaper), 74, 91, 92, 3l8n
Proletarskoe delo (newspaper), 46-47,
210, 252, 324n
Pronin, Aleksei, 262
Provisional Government, xlii
capital punishment issue and, 77-81,
91,100-106, 322n
composition of, in Feb., xxxix֊xl;
in May, xlv; in July, 26; in Sept.,
186-87
and defeat of Kornilov, 130-50
and Democratic State Conference,
185-87
fall of, xxxiii—xxxv, 273—90, 293,
295, 296, 298-306, 310-14, 355n
formation of a new (Aug.), 151-67
garrison crisis undermining, 225-48
generals’ demands made, 97, 101; see
also Kornilov, Gen. Lavr
impotence of (Aug.), 94-95
ineffectiveness of repressive policies of
(July—Aug.), 51-58
and July uprising, 2, 3, 10, 13-16
and land reform, 4-5
Index
393
Leni ns call for insurrection against
(Sept.—Oct.) 5 178—82
Lenin’s campaign for insurrection
against, 191—208
and Lenin’s July theses, 59—60,
66-70
Moscow Conference and, 110—17,
133-35, 175
plans to overthrow (June), 1—li
prime ministers of, see Kerensky,
Alexander F.; Lvov, Georgii
reaction to July days under, 20—41,
51, 52, 312, 322n
Sixth Congress and, 83—85
soldiers’ and sailors’ view of, xliv
Soviet support for, xxxvii, xxxviii, xli,
xlviii—xlix, 35, 36
Stalin s view of (July), 67
uprising against (Oct.), 249—72
Pskov, 55, 229, 230, 233, 271, 272, 305
Public Safety, Committee of, 288
Pulkovo Heights, 308
Purishkevich, Vladimir, 45—46, 80—81,
114, 156
Putilov, Aleksei, 96, 114, 115, 146
Putilov factory, 64, 83, 154
Rabochaia gazeta (newspaper), 93, 105
Rabochii (newspaper), 129, 169, 318n,
337n
Rabochii puť (newspaper), 31Sn
and garrison crisis, 228—29, 234, 248,
249
and Lenin’s call for uprising, 172, 182
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 190—92
and preparation for insurrection, 209,
210, 213, 222
and seizure of power, 250, 252, 254,
256, 267
Rabochii i soldat (newspaper), 72—74, 91,
252-53, 318n
Rabotnitsa (newspaper), xlvi, 318n
Radkey, Oliver H., xxxiv, 166
Rakhia, Eino, 35, 266, 272, 345ny 346n
Rakhia, Iukka, 197, 199, 200, 218, 272,
346n
Rappaport, Viktor, 81
Raskolnikov, Fedor, 33On, 347n
charges against, 55—56
in garrison crisis, 242
and reaction to July days, 30—32,
47-49
Rasputin, Grigorii, 45
Ravich, Savva, 218
Rech*(newspaper), 3, 19, 42, 93, 243
Red Guards, 211, 219; see also Workers
Reed, John, 266, 282-83, 291, 298-99
Reiman, Michael, 242
Remnev, Afanasii, 30, 48
Republican Center, 96, 117
Riabushinsky, P. P., 106
Riazanov, David, 36, 312
and Democratic State Conference,
188
in garrison crisis, 247
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 196
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 163, 164
in preparation for insurrection, 215,
223
Riga, 83, 94, 119, 225
Rikhter, V. N., 130
Rodichev, Fedor, 40, 113—14
Rodzianko, Mikhail, 44, 150, 226
Romanovsky, Gen. I. P., 335n
Rosenberg, William G., xxxiv
Roshal, Semion, 30, 48, 49, 55-56, 277
Rozmirovich, E. F., 327n
“Rumors of a Conspiracy” (Lenin), 133,
134, 135
Russian army
disintegration of, 98—100
394 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
German offensive against, 22—23,
334n
halting political activity in (Sept.),
116
Kornilov reform of, 100-105; see also
Kornilov, Gen. Lavr
and Lenins call to insurrection
(Sept.), 180
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 197
offensives of, 1—li, 5—6
a Soviet regime and (Sept.), 172
steps to prevent disintegration of,
28-29
See also Cadets; Officer corps; Soldiers
Russian military units
armies
First, 229
Second, 295
Third, 295
Fifth, 5, 217
Eighth, 98, 99, 103
Eleventh, 22
Twelfth, 229, 293
corps
First Cavalry, 117
Third Cavalry, 116—18, 120,
124-27, 131, 146, 305,335n
divisions
First Don Cossack, 116, 120, 127,
148, 149
Fifth Cossack, 117
Eighth Don Cossack Artillery,
335n
Savage, 116—18, 120, 127, 136,
146,148, 335n
Tenth Cavalry, 335n
Ussuriisky Mounted, 116, 120, 127,
146, 148, 149
brigades
Osetinsky Foot, 335n
regiments
Cherkessky, 148, 335n
Dagestansky, 335n
Egersky Guards, 227, 236
First Don Cossack, 271
First Machine Gun, 2,48, 51-52,
198
First Reserve Infantry, 70
Second Machine Gun, 156
Fourth Don Cossack, 240, 271
Fourteenth Don Cossack, 240, 271,
353n
Fourteenth Mistavsky Hussar, 27
180th Infantry, 51—52
Grenadier, 51-52
Ingushsky, 148,335n
Izmailovsky Guards, 262
Kabardinsky, 335n
Keksgolmsky, 262, 269, 274, 280
Latvian Rifle, 294
Litovsky Guards, 71, 143, 154, 250,
254
Pavlovsky, 245, 268, 274, 280
Petrogradsky Guards, 26, 156
Preobrazhensky Guards, 26, 32,
154, 282
Semenovsky, 26, 269, 282
Tatarsky, 335n
Volynsky Guards, 26, 35, 154
battalions
First Petrograd Women’s Shock,
248, 255, 261, 262, 270
Third Cycle, 301-2
Fifth Cycle, 302
Sixth Engineer, 143, 154, 250, 269
Moscow Women s Battalion of
Death, 113, 117
Petrograd Carters’, 143
companies
First (Sixth Engineer Battalion),
269
miscellaneous
Kuban Cossacks, 235
Index ·
Little Russian Dragoons, 27
Second Baltic Fleet Detachment,
148, 227-28, 274
Russian naval units
fleets
Baltic, 143, 168, 200, 225, 263,
273-74
Black Sea, 26
Russian navy, see Russian naval units;
Sailors; specific ships
“Russian Revolution and Civil War,
The” (Lenin), 169, 172, 182
Russian Social Democratic Workers’
Party, xxxvi; see also Bolshevik Party;
Mensheviks
Ruzsky, Gen. Nikolai, 100, 332n
Rutenberg, Petr, 285, 286
Rykov, A. L, 326n
and Democratic State Conference,
176, 188
and Lenin s call for insurrection, 181,
187
in Lenin s campaign for insurrection,
206, 345n
in new Soviet government, 306, 309,
310
in October uprising, 249
opposes Lenin in July, 60
in preparation for insurrection, 222
on Presidium of Petrograd Soviet, 175
Sadovsky, Andrei, 231, 234, 241, 242,
274
Sailors
Baltic defeats and, 225—26
Bolshevik strength among, xlv—xlviil
and defeat of Kornilov, 139, 143, 144,
146, 148
and February revolution, xliv
in July uprising, 9—10, 13
Kerensky condemns, 28
395
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 154, 157-59, 167
in October uprising, 262—63, 269,
272-74
political behavior of, xxxv
and reaction to July days, 28—30, 47
and rise of Kornilov, 105
in seizure of power, 274, 276—78,
282, 300-301
See also Soviets
Sakharov, Vasilii, 47—48, 55—56, 70,
277
Samarin, Col. Georgii, 149
Saveliev, Maximilian, li, 1, 60, 67—69,
326n
Savinkov, Boris, 22—23, 99, 116
Kornilov and, 106—8, 118—20,
122-26, 150, 334n, 335n
and military dictatorship, 100
resignation of, 152
Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets
(Oct.)
and basis for new government,
189-94, 199, 209-18, 313
convocation of, 166, 187—89, 356n
deliberations of, 292—98, 301—6
and garrison crisis, 224—28, 233—36,
239, 242, 246, 247, 34Sn
and October uprising, 250—54, 260,
263, 266-68, 273, 347n
opens, 291—92
and seizure of power, 274, 279,
290-91, 306, 314
See also First All-Russian Congress of
Soviets
Second City Conference (Petrograd;
Bolsheviks), 63, 64, 66—70
Semenov, E. P., 98
Sergeev, F. A 326n
Sergei (Grand Duke), 99
Seventh All-Russian Bolshevik Party
Conference, see April Conference
3$ 6 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
Shakhovsky, D. L, 31Sn
Shaumian, Stepan, 181, 326n
Shcherbatov, General, 127
Shingarev, Andrei, xxxix, 91, 318n
Shliapnikov, Alexander, 33, 221, 306
Shmidt, Vasilii, 141, 221
Shotman, Alexander, 34-35, 37, 212,
219, 221,345n, 347n
Shreider, Grigorii, 39, 288, 289, 298,
300
Shugrin, Konstantin, 330n
Shumiatsky, Boris, 72
Sidorin, V. I., 146
Sixth Congress (Bolshevik Party; July
28—August 3), xxxviii, 62, 83—90,
132, 134, 173, 174, 198, 313,329«,
340n
Skobelev, Mikhail, xlv, 5, 6, 163, 174
Skvortsov, Ivan, 306
Sladkov, Ivan, 280
Slavkin, Eliazar, 70
Slutsky, Anton, 67-69, 173, 327«, 343n
Smilga, Ivar, 13, 66, 74, 168, 376«,
326n
in Lenin’s campaign for insurrection,
193, 199, 200
in October uprising, 272
in preparation for uprising, 210, 214
at Sixth Congress, 87-88
Smirnov, Sergei, 187
Smolny Institute, 129, 130, 266-67,
336n
Snodgrass, John Harold, xl
Social Democratic Party, 36
Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs; Socialist
Revolutionary Party), xli, xlv, 192,
209, 312, 313, 357n
Battle Organization of, 99
Central Committee of, 117
at Congress of Soviets, 291-95, 314
and defeat of Kornilov, 132-35, 139,
141
and Democratic State Conference,
176
in district soviets, 76, 77
in elections to Petrograd City Duma,
92-93
in garrison crisis, 231, 232, 245
and July Bolshevik Central
Committee resolution, 60, 62
and July uprising, 6, 13-14
Kornilov affair and Lenin’s shift in
thinking about, 169—74
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 204, 205
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 153, 158,159, 161-66,34ln
and new Soviet government, 306,
352«
Petrograd Soviet and, 90, 174-75,
343n
popular opinion (June) and, lix, 330n
and reaction to July days, 20, 43-44,
59-61, 64
See also Left Socialist Revolutionaries
Society for the Economic Rehabilitation
of Russia, 96, 115, 146
Sokolnikov, Grigorii, 57, 74, 172, 326n
and Congress of Soviets, 187
and defeat of Kornilov, 130
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 181
in Lenin’s campaign for insurrection,
192-93,199, 200, 203
in preparation for uprising, 211, 212
at Sixth Congress, 87, 88
Soldat (newspaper), 74, 75, 91, 92,
136-37, 234, 248, 249,318n, 337«,
340n
Soldatskaiapravda (newspaper), xlvi, 6,
29, 46, 70, 72, 3l8n
Soldiers
Bolshevik strength among, xlv-xlviii,
90
Index
and defeat of Kornilov, 139, 143, 144,
146, 34ln
district soviets and, 78—82
and February revolution, xliv
in garrison crisis, 225—48
ineffectiveness of repression on,
52-53, 70-71
in July uprising, 1-3, 5—7, 9—11»
13-14, 16
Military Organization and, xlvi,
xlviii; see also Bolshevik Military
Organization
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 154-56, 159, 160, 167
in October uprising, 250, 254—55
political behavior of, xxxv, xxxviii,
343n
in preparation for insurrection,
215-19, 224
and reaction to July days, 28—29,
51-53, 70-71, 75-76, 78
and rise of Kornilov, 105—7
in seizure of power, 276
See also Soviets
Soviet, see All-Russian Executive
Committees; Central Executive
Committee; First All-Russian
Congress of Soviets; Northern Region
Congress of Soviets; Second All-
Russian Congress of Soviets
Soviets, xlii, 187, 340n
defended (Sixth Congress), 198
emergence of, xli
future of (post-July days), 67—69
in garrison crisis, 227, 231, 236, 245
independence of, destroyed, 310
influence of, xliv—xlv
July resolution of Bolshevik Central
Committee and, 60—62
July uprising and power to, 2, 3
Lenin on failure of (July), 62
397
and Lenin’s call to insurrection
(Sept.), 181-82
Lenins shift on (Sept.), 169—74, 179
Martov and power to, 24, 25
and preparation for insurrection,
224-25
and reaction to July days, 20, 59—60,
312-13
Sixth Congress and future of, 85—90
See aho Petrograd Soviet; and specific
soviet institutions; for example: All-
Russian Executive Committees
Spiridonova, Maria, 292
Stalin, Iosif, 57, 60, 74, 92, 232, 3l6n,
326n, 344ny 353n
at Democratic State Conference, 176,
188
and Lenin’s call for insurrection
(Sept.), 181
in Lenin’s campaign for insurrection,
192-93, 203, 345n
in new Soviet government, 306
in October uprising, 252, 253, 272
in preparation for insurrection, 225,
234, 34ln
and reaction to July days, 32, 33,
66-69
at Sixth Congress, 85—89
Stark, Leonid, 262
Stasova, Elena, 345n
State Council, dissolved, 22
State and Revolution, The (Lenin), 35,
168, 323n
Steklov, lurii, 44, 161
Stepanov, V. A., 318n
Strikes
hunger, 50, 153, 211
July, 5
Moscow Conference and, 111
political, 6—7
Sukhanov, N. N., 202
and Congress of Soviets, 292—94
398 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
on garrison crisis, 243
and Kornilov, 128, 132, 137
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 165
and seizure of power, 280
Sulimova, Maria, 36—37, 323n
Suny, Ronald G., xxxiv
Sverdlov, Iakov, 57, 59, 60, 74, 75,316n,
326n
and Congress of Soviets, 187
in garrison crisis, 231, 241, 242
and Lenin’s call for insurrection, 181
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 201, 202, 204
and Lenin’s return to Petrograd
(Sept.), 182
in October uprising, 249, 250, 264,
327n
at Sixth Congress, 84
Sverdlova (Bolshevik), 219—20
“Tasks of the Revolution, The” (Lenin),
170, 171, 192-93
Tarasov-Rodionov, A., 281, 289
Teodorovich, Ivan, 306, 310
Ter-Arutuniants, Mikhail, 47, 153
Tereshchenko, Mikhail, xxxix-xl
and July uprising, 14, 15
in Provisional Government, 26, 154,
187
and rise of Kornilov, 100, 101, 108,
127
and seizure of power, 301
“To All Workers, Soldiers, and
Peasants,” 303-4
“To the Citizens of Russia” (Lenin),
274-75
“To Workers, Peasants, and Soldiers,”
194-95
Tolkachev, A., 277
Tolstoi, Aleksei, 263
Tolstoy, Leo, 7
Tovarishch (newspaper), 28
Trade Union Soviet, see Petrograd Trade
Union Soviet
Transport system, xliii
Tretiakov, S. N., 106
Trotsky, Lev D., xxxviii, 153, 173, 234,
312, 31671, 322n, 326n
at Congress of Soviets, 187, 292,
296-98, 303
and defeat of Kornilov, 132
and Democratic State Conference,
176-78, 183, 186, 188, 192
during garrison crisis, 231-32, 237,
240-43,248,348n
and July uprising, 12
and Lenins call for insurrection
(Sept.), 181-82,344n
and Lenin s campaign for
insurrection, 192-93, 196, 201,
203
Military Organization and, 72
in Military Revolutionary
Committee, 240, 245
in new Soviet government, 306, 309
in October uprising, 249, 250-54,
263, 266-68, 272
and Petrograd Soviet, 90, 175, 189,
313
and preparation for insurrection, 212,
221, 222, 225
and Preparliament, 201-2
and reaction to July days, 19, 31—32,
47-50
in seizure of power, 278, 279
Sixth Congress and, 83, 85, 86
Stalin compared with, 66
Trubetskoi, Prince Grigorii, 127—28
Tsentrobalt (Central Committee of the
Baltic Fleet), 30, 48, 143, 157, 237,
306
Tsentroflot (Central Executive
Committee of the Navy), 148
Index
Tsereteli, Iraklii, 23, 36, 174
and defeat of Kornilov, 131, 148
and Democratic State Conference,
184-87
and formation of new Provisional
Government (Aug.)» 158
and Provisional Government, xxvii,
26, 55, 161, 164, 165, 320n
and reaction to July days, 68, 32In
Turgenev, Ivan, 7
Tyrkova, Ariadna, 40, 91
Ulianov, Maria, Ii, 1, 33
Unemployment, shortages resulting in,
4
Union of Cossack Troops, 105
Union of Landowners, 95
Union of Metalworkers, 141, 221
Union of Officers of the Army and
Navy, 95, 105, 117, 119, 127, 156,
331n
Union of Railway Workers, 142; see also
Vikzhel
Union of Saint George Cavaliers, 95,
105, 156, 331n
Uritsky, M. S., 181, 203, 204, 234, 250,
326n
Vainshtein, S. L., 130
Veinberg, Gavril, 67, 68
Verderevsky, Adm. Dmitrii, 154, 284,
287, 289
Verkhovsky, Gen. A. I., 103, 114, 150,
154, 216, 265, 335n~36n
Vikzhel, 142, 308-10
Vinokurov, Vasilii, 64, 217—19
Vishnegradsky, A. I., 106, 114, 115
Vishnevetsky, Nikolai, 47
Voinov, Ivan, 47, 266, 324n
Volia naroda (newspaper), 19, 20
Volodarsky, Moisei, 74, 77, 326n
and garrison crisis, 242
• 399
and ineffectiveness of government
repression, 64, 68, 69
in July uprising, 9» 12—13, 319n
leftists defended by, 90
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 192—93, 197—200
opposes Lenin in July, 60, 61
in preparation for insurrection, 221
and reaction to July days, 33
in seizure of power, 279
at Sixth Congress, 86, 88
Volodin (chairman of sailors’
committee), 228
Wade, Rex, xxxiv
Washington, George, xl
“What We Need” (Stalin), 252
Wilhelm II (Kaiser of Germany), 27,
201, 256
Winter Palace, in October seizure of
power, 274, 278, 280-91, 295,
298-301,305
Workers
Bolshevik strength among, xlv—xlviii,
90
defeat of Kornilov and Red Guards,
139-49, 152, 339n
district soviets and, 78—79, 81—82
economic situation of, xliii—xliv
insurrection and Red Guards, 211,
219
in July uprising, 1-3, 5-7, 9-12
and new Provisional Government
(Aug.), 154-55, 159, 160, 166, 167,
340n
in October uprising, 261—63, 265,
266, 269
opposing new Soviet government,
306, 308-9
political behavior of, xxxv,
xxxvii—xxxviii, 343n
400 · THE BOLSHEVIKS COME TO POWER
in preparation for insurrection,
215-19, 224
rail, under martial law, 106
and reaction to July days, 28-30,
52-54, 63-65, 70, 78
and rise of Kornilov, 105-7
in seizure of power, Red Guards, 274,
277, 280, 300-301
See also Soviets
Workers’ control, 169, 303, 318n
Workers’ Section (Petrograd Soviet), 2,
90, 105
World War I, see Russian army; Russian
military units; Russian naval units
Woytinsky, Vladimir, 42, 99, 167
in garrison crisis, 226, 227, 229-31,
244
in seizure of power, 302
Yagoda, Genrikh, 72
Zakharov, A., 269—70
Zarudny, Alexander, 55
Zavoiko, Vasilii, and rise of Kornilov,
98, 100-104, 122-23, 126-27,332n
Zhakov, Mikhail, 253, 254
Zhivoe slovo (newspaper), 17-18, 35,36,
40, 215, 248, 250,325n
Zinoviev, Grigorii, 239, 312,316n,
344n
charges against, 55-56
and Congress of Soviets, 190, 292
and defeat of Kornilov, 132
and Democratic State Conference,
177
in July uprising, 12, 320n
and Lenin’s campaign for
insurrection, 191-92, 203-8,345n,
346n
in new Soviet government, 309, 310
and October uprising, 272
opposes Lenin in July, 60
in preparation for insurrection,
212-14, 216, 217, 221-23,347n
and reaction to July days, 19, 30-38,
44, 57
and seizure of power, 279
Stalin compared with, 66
Znamensky, Sergei, 163
Znamia truda (newspaper), 213,347n
Bayerische
Staatsbibliothek
Mime ran
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Rabinowitch, Alexander 1934- |
author_GND | (DE-588)142698369 |
author_facet | Rabinowitch, Alexander 1934- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Rabinowitch, Alexander 1934- |
author_variant | a r ar |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV044514611 |
classification_rvk | KK 1040 NQ 5070 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1006776763 (DE-599)BSZ493633006 |
discipline | Geschichte Slavistik |
edition | New edition |
era | Geschichte 1917-1921 gnd Geschichte gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1917-1921 Geschichte |
format | Book |
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geographic | Sowjetunion Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd Sankt Petersburg (DE-588)4267026-3 gnd Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Sowjetunion Sankt Petersburg Russland |
id | DE-604.BV044514611 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:54:41Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780745399980 9780745399997 |
language | English Russian |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029914309 |
oclc_num | 1006776763 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-11 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | li, 400 Seiten Illustrationen, Porträts |
psigel | BSBWK1 |
publishDate | 2017 |
publishDateSearch | 2017 |
publishDateSort | 2017 |
publisher | Pluto Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Rabinowitch, Alexander 1934- (DE-588)142698369 aut Bolʹševiki prichodjat k vlasti The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Alexander Rabinowitch New edition London Pluto Press 2017 li, 400 Seiten Illustrationen, Porträts txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹič 1870-1924 (DE-588)118640402 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1917-1921 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Geschichte Oktoberrevolution (DE-588)4043429-1 gnd rswk-swf Kommunismus (DE-588)4031892-8 gnd rswk-swf Sowjetunion Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd rswk-swf Sankt Petersburg (DE-588)4267026-3 gnd rswk-swf Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd rswk-swf Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹich 1870-1924 / Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹich 1870-1924 Saint Petersburg (Russia) / History / Revolution, 1917-1921 Soviet Union / History / Revolution, 1917-1921 / Russia (Federation) / Saint Petersburg / Soviet Union Sankt Petersburg (DE-588)4267026-3 g Oktoberrevolution (DE-588)4043429-1 s Geschichte 1917-1921 z 1\p DE-604 Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹič 1870-1924 (DE-588)118640402 p 2\p DE-604 Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 g 3\p DE-604 Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 g 4\p DE-604 Geschichte z 5\p DE-604 Kommunismus (DE-588)4031892-8 s 6\p DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF eBook 978-1-7868-0102-9 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, Kindle eBook 978-1-7868-0104-3 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-7868-0103-6, EPUB eBook Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029914309&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029914309&sequence=000002&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 3\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 4\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 5\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 6\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Rabinowitch, Alexander 1934- The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹič 1870-1924 (DE-588)118640402 gnd Geschichte Oktoberrevolution (DE-588)4043429-1 gnd Kommunismus (DE-588)4031892-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118640402 (DE-588)4043429-1 (DE-588)4031892-8 (DE-588)4077548-3 (DE-588)4267026-3 (DE-588)4076899-5 |
title | The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd |
title_alt | Bolʹševiki prichodjat k vlasti |
title_auth | The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd |
title_exact_search | The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd |
title_full | The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Alexander Rabinowitch |
title_fullStr | The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Alexander Rabinowitch |
title_full_unstemmed | The Bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Alexander Rabinowitch |
title_short | The Bolsheviks come to power |
title_sort | the bolsheviks come to power the revolution of 1917 in petrograd |
title_sub | the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd |
topic | Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹič 1870-1924 (DE-588)118640402 gnd Geschichte Oktoberrevolution (DE-588)4043429-1 gnd Kommunismus (DE-588)4031892-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹič 1870-1924 Geschichte Oktoberrevolution Kommunismus Sowjetunion Sankt Petersburg Russland |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029914309&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029914309&sequence=000002&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT rabinowitchalexander bolʹsevikiprichodjatkvlasti AT rabinowitchalexander thebolshevikscometopowertherevolutionof1917inpetrograd |