The February Revolution, Petrograd, 1917 is the most comprehensive book on the epic uprising that toppled the tsarist monarchy and ushered in the next stage of the Russian Revolution.
Hasegawa presents in detail the intense drama of the nine days of the revolution, including the workers' strike, soldiers' revolt, the scrambling of revolutionary party activists to control the revolution, and the liberals’ conspiracy to force Tsar Nicholas II to abdicate. Based on his previous work, published in 1981, the author has revised, enlarged, and reinterpreted the complexity of the February Revolution, resulting in a major and timely reassessment on the occasion of its centennial.
Publication date: December 11, 2018
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Maps
List of Abbreviations
1 Russia Enters the War
2 The Political Crisis of the Summer 1915
3 Deepening Gulf: The Government and the Liberals, 1916
4 Petrograd during the War
5 The War and the Workers
6 The War and the Revolutionary Parties
7 The Tsar, the Tsarina, and the Government
8 The Security of Petrograd
9 The Liberal Opposition
10 The Liberals, Conspiracies, and the Freemasons
11 The Workers and the Revolutionary Parties
12 The Beginning: February 23
13 The Second Day: February 24
14 The General Strike: February 25
15 Bloody Sunday: February 26
16 The Insurrection, February 27
17 The Formation of the Petrograd Soviet
18 The Formation of the Duma Committee
19 The First Steps of the Duma Committee
20 The Petrograd Soviet and the Masses
21 The ‘Transfer’ of Power
22 Nicholas II and the Revolution
23 The Duma Committee and the Monarchy
24 The Stavka and Counterrevolutionary Attempts
25 The Abdication of Nicholas II
26 The Duma Committee’s Delegates
27 The Formation of the Provisional Government
28 Grand Duke Mikhail Aleksandrovich’s Renunciation of the Throne
29 The Provisional Government, the State Duma, and the Birth of Dual Power
30 Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
“[Tsuyoshi Hasegawa's] achievement in creating a superbly clear and detailed, indeed encyclopaedic, rendering of the whirlwind of events that plunged Russian society into crisis in February 1917 and gave birth to ‘Dual Power’ is formidable scholarship.”
—Simon Cosgrove, Europe-Asia Studies
“This book continues to be the definitive account of the February Revolution: Hasegawa has effectively used the wide variety of materials published in the yearssince his original book to provide an exemplary account of the revolution.”
—Peter Waldron, American Historical Review