CausesIt is widely believed that the 1905 revolution was a Spontaneous rising / accidental rather than it being planned. The increase in Strikes etc. had a more social / economic focus rather than a political one despite the best efforts of revolutionaries. Industrial recession plus bad harvests had increased unrest pre-1905 and Economic pressures on Russian people – taxation, low wages, and growing unemployment. This Combined three main opposition classes – workers + peasantry + reformist middle classes leading to a broad base. Furthermore Incompetence of the Tsarist... regime to deal with tensions and problems in Russia meant that that Government’s policy of repression led to Witte Chairman of the Council of Ministers continue to be frustrated at the lack of Tsar’s understanding suggesting government policy was a ‘…mixture of cowardice, blindness and stupidity.’ Events in Russia’s foreign policy and military also fuelled the revolution. Russian fleet destroyed at Tsushima in May 1905, they surrendered the fight against Japan 1905 war. Government was blamed for defeat which led to further outrages . The summer of 1905 contained several instances of troops / sailors disobeying orders and in June 1905 Crew of the Potemkin battleship mutinied whilst at sea . They Sailed to Odessa where there were supporters and led to the Authorities retaliating . Alone with Humiliation of Treaty of Portsmouth , handing over control of Port Arthur Events January: Father Gapon wanted on the 22nd January to lead a peaceful march of workers and families to the Winter Palace to present a petition asking for relief from terrible conditions. However on January 9: Bloody Sunday took place. 150,000 striking workers and their families march through St. Petersburg to deliver a protest to the Tsar, they were shot and ridden down on multiple occasions by the army. Father Gapon repeatedly called out, ‘There is no God any longer. There is no Tsar.’This led to an incease in spontaneous workers' strikes. February 4th the Grand-Duke Sergei Alexandrovich is killed by an SR assassin as protests grow. February 18th Reacting to the growing troubles, Nicholas II orders the creation of a consultative assembly to report on constitutional reform; the move is less than the revolutionaries want, but it gives them impetus. June: Soldiers used against strikers in Lodz.June 18: Odessa is halted by a large strike. June 14-24: Sailors mutiny on the Battleship Potemkin. August 6: Tsar issues a manifesto on the creation of a state Duma; this plan, created by Bulygin and nicknamed the Bulygin Duma, is rejected by revolutionaries for being too weak and having a tiny electorate. October: unrest had grown into a general strike. In cities workers formed themselves into elected councils known as soviets. They represented workers demands, but could also be a potential base for political agitation October 9: As telegraph workers join the strike, Witte warns the Tsar that to save Russia he must make great reforms or impose a dictatorship. October 13: In cities workers formed themselves into elected councils known as soviets. They represented workers demands, but could also be a potential base for political agitation October 17: Nicholas II issues the October Manifesto, a liberal scheme proposed by Witte. It grants civil liberties, the need for Duma consent before passing lawsOctober: Lvov joins the Constitutional Democrat party, which includes the more radical zemstov men, nobles and scholars; conservative liberals form the Octobrist Party. These are the people who have led the revolution so far. October 18: N. E. Bauman, a Bolshevik activist, is killed during a streetfight triggering a street war between the Tsar supporting right and the revolutionary left. October 19: The Council of Ministers is created, a government cabinet under Witte; leading Kadets are offered posts, but refuse. October 26-27: The Kronstadt mutinyOctober 30-31: The Vladivostok Mutiny. November 24: Tsar introduces 'Provisional Rules', which at once abolish some aspects of censorship, but introduce harsher penalties for those praising 'criminal acts'. December 3: The St. Petersburg Soviet is arrested en masse after Socialist Democrats hand out weapons. December 10-15: The Moscow Uprising, where rebels and militias try to take the city through armed struggle; it fails. No other major rebellions take place, but the Tsar and the right react: the police regime returns and the army sweeps across Russia crushing dissent. December: Nicholas II and his son given honorary membership of the Union of the Russian People; they accept.
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