Russian Revolution
When bread riots toppled an empire and Lenin seized the moment.
Also known as October Revolution · Bolshevik Revolution · February Revolution · Red October
Hero image: "A steam locomotive of the early XX century on the set of the series 'Chronicles of the Russian Revolution', Novy Peterhof station station, December 8, 2022" by Vasilii Martynov is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
In short
In 1917, Russia's tsarist government collapsed and was replaced by a communist state, reshaping the country's politics, economy, and society for nearly a century. The upheaval began with worker strikes and military mutinies in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) in March, forcing Tsar Nicholas II to abdicate, then accelerated in October when Vladimir Lenin's Bolsheviks seized power. The revolution's ripple effects redrew maps, inspired movements worldwide, and made the Soviet Union a global superpower.
The five-minute version
What actually happened.
Russia in early 1917 was a state barely holding together. Tsar Nicholas II's decision to lead the army personally during World War I left his wife Alexandra in charge, a move that handed power to the inept and corrupt Grigori Rasputin. The war was going catastrophically—Russia had lost roughly 2 million soldiers by 1917, and the empire was hemorrhaging resources. Food shortages in Petrograd sparked bread riots on March 8, 1917 (February 23 by the old Julian calendar Russia was still using). Workers abandoned factories. Soldiers refused orders. Within days, the Tsar abdicated.
What followed wasn't one revolution but two. The February Revolution established a Provisional Government, which made the fatal mistake of keeping Russia in World War I. By October, soldiers were starving, peasants wanted land, and workers wanted change—conditions the Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, knew how to exploit. On October 25, 1917 (October 12 on the Julian calendar), Lenin's party seized the Winter Palace in Petrograd and took control of the government. It was remarkably swift: accounts suggest fewer than 100 people died in the actual takeover. But what came after was anything but swift or bloodless.
The Bolsheviks faced immediate opposition from multiple fronts. The White Army, composed of anti-Bolshevik forces, launched the Russian Civil War that would last until 1922 and kill roughly 5 to 9 million people. Lenin consolidated power ruthlessly—he dissolved the Constituent Assembly in January 1918, established the secret police (the Cheka), and signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March 1918, surrendering huge chunks of territory to Germany to exit World War I. By 1921, the Bolsheviks had won the civil war, but the economy was in ruins.
The revolution's global significance was immense and immediate. For communists worldwide, it proved that revolution was possible. For Western powers—Britain, France, the United States, and others—it was an existential threat they tried to snuff out through military intervention and later diplomatic isolation. The Russian Revolution didn't just change Russia; it split the world. By the 1920s, the international order had a new kind of state actor, one that explicitly rejected capitalism and promised a different future. Whether you saw that as salvation or catastrophe depended almost entirely on where you stood.
What Stalin's USSR became is a separate story. What matters about 1917 is that Lenin and the Bolsheviks proved a determined revolutionary party could seize control of a vast empire and hold it, even against overwhelming odds. They showed that the old rules—aristocracy, monarchy, capitalist order—could be broken in a matter of weeks. That possibility, more than any specific policy, is what reverberated around the world for the rest of the 20th century.
Timeline
How it actually unfolded.
February Revolution begins
Strikes and protests erupt in Petrograd over food shortages and World War I casualties. Workers, soldiers, and civilians clash with police; the military begins defecting to the protesters.
Tsar Nicholas II abdicates
Unable to control the unrest, Nicholas II signs the abdication manifesto, ending 300 years of Romanov rule. A Provisional Government takes power, promising democratic reforms and continued war involvement.
Lenin returns to Petrograd
Vladimir Lenin arrives at the Finland Station after years of exile in Switzerland. He immediately calls for 'peace, land, and bread' and rejects the Provisional Government's authority.
July Days uprising crushed
Bolshevik-led demonstrations in Petrograd are violently suppressed by Provisional Government forces. Lenin flees to Finland; the Bolsheviks are temporarily weakened but not destroyed.
Bolsheviks seize power
Lenin's Red Guards occupy key government buildings in Petrograd with minimal resistance. The Bolsheviks claim authority and begin dismantling the Provisional Government.
Winter Palace falls
The last seat of the Provisional Government is captured. The storming of the Winter Palace becomes the symbolic centerpiece of Soviet propaganda for decades.
Treaty negotiations begin
Bolshevik delegates, including Leon Trotsky, open peace talks with Germany at Brest-Litovsk. Lenin seeks an exit from World War I regardless of territorial cost.
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk signed
Russia withdraws from World War I, ceding Poland, the Baltic states, Ukraine, and other territories to Germany and Austria-Hungary. The harsh terms enrage anti-Bolshevik forces and fuel civil war.
Tsar family executed
Nicholas II, his wife, and five children are shot by Bolshevik forces in Yekaterinburg, ending the Romanov dynasty and eliminating a rallying point for White (anti-Bolshevik) armies.
The world it landed in
What was on the radio, the screen, and everyone's mind.
The Internationale — Various (traditional revolutionary song)
Though predating the Revolution, it became the de facto anthem of the Soviet state and international communism.
Ode to Joy (Soviet adaptations) — Beethoven / Soviet composers
Revolutionary Russia embraced Beethoven as a symbol of universal brotherhood, though it later restricted 'bourgeois' classical music.
Battleship Potemkin (1925)
Sergei Eisenstein's montage masterpiece celebrated the 1905 precursor uprising and became a model for Soviet revolutionary cinema.
October: Ten Days That Shook the World (1928)
Eisenstein's direct dramatization of the Revolution itself, commissioned as Soviet propaganda and cinematic innovation.
Same week, elsewhere
The Revolution arrived at the intersection of fin-de-siècle nihilism, industrial modernity, and the spiritual exhaustion of World War I. Russian avant-garde art — Constructivism, Suprematism, Futurism — surged in tandem with political upheaval, as if aesthetic and political revolution were inseparable. The chaos of 1917 created space for radical experimentation: Malevich painted black squares, Tatlin designed impossible towers, Mayakovsky wrote violent poetry. By the mid-1920s, Stalin's consolidation of power had already begun strangling this creative ferment.
Then & now
The world the event landed in vs. the one it left behind.
Soviet Union Population
~147 million
1917
Russia: ~144 million
2024
The USSR at its 1989 peak encompassed ~293 million; post-Soviet Russia is roughly half that size.
Global Communist States
1 (USSR)
1917
5 (China, Vietnam, Laos, North Korea, Cuba)
2024
None claim direct Leninist governance; most have adopted market mechanisms while retaining single-party rule.
Russia's Geopolitical Isolation
Severe — sanctions, foreign intervention, diplomatic ostracism
1918
Severe — Western sanctions following 2022 Ukraine invasion
2024
A century apart, yet the fundamental dynamic of Russia as pariah state echoes across time.
Impact
What followed.
The October Revolution of 1917 toppled the Russian Empire and established the world's first communist state, fundamentally reshaping geopolitics for the next seven decades. Lenin's Bolsheviks seized power in a matter of days, creating a rival ideological system that would define the 20th century's greatest conflicts.
Threads pulled by this event
- 1918
Russian Civil War
From 1918 to 1922, the Red Army under Trotsky defeated White forces and foreign interventionists, solidifying communist control and killing roughly 5 million people through combat, disease, and famine.
- 1919
Global Communist Movements
The Comintern, founded in March 1919, coordinated communist parties worldwide, spreading revolutionary ideology and creating competing power structures that reshaped politics across Europe, Asia, and beyond.
- 1922
Soviet Union Established
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was formally created on December 30, 1922, consolidating Bolshevik control over former imperial territories and establishing a one-party communist state that would last until 1991.
- 1928
Stalin's Industrialization and Purges
Stalin's Five-Year Plans beginning in 1928 transformed the Soviet economy through forced collectivization and rapid industrialization, killing millions through engineered famine and political repression.
- 1945
Cold War Begins
The ideological and geopolitical divide between the Soviet Union and the Western powers, rooted in the Revolution's founding antagonisms, erupted into the defining conflict of the second half of the 20th century following World War II.
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