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The Response to the Outbreak of the War. Beattie, Mikayla , Natasha, Julia. Popular discontent w ith the political and economic circumstances forgotten. People prayed, shouted, carried flags – Long Live Russia. Bowed to Tsar. Repaired division between Tsar and people.
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The Response to the Outbreak of the War Beattie, Mikayla, Natasha, Julia
Popular discontent with the political and economic circumstances forgotten. • People prayed, shouted, carried flags – Long Live Russia. • Bowed to Tsar. Repaired division between Tsar and people. • Bruce Lockhart, British vice-consul in Moscow – ‘Revolution was not even a distant possibility’. Response 1- Public Support
Durnovo was a member of the upper class through his role in bureaucracy. • Later became a minister of the interior under prime minister Witte. • Durnovo provided the clearest warming to Nicholas of the grave dangers involved in war. • In February 1914 he argued that Russia would be irreparably damaged whether it won or lost. • He said “If Russia lost, the financial and economic consequences of defeat can be neither calculated or foreseen.” • It will undoubtedly spell total disintegration of our entire national economy. • If Russia won the war the only benefit would be the easy defeat or the socialist movement. Response 2- Durnovo’s Warnings
Lenin declared the war to be merely another example of the wealthy bourgeois upper class manipulating the toiling masses for their gain. • “We summon you to a social revolution.” –Lenin • He called for the immediate formation of socialist groups that would go to the front to win over their fellow workers. • Lenin’s approach received little support. Lenin’s Condemnation