Page 1
NCERT TEXTBOOK QUESTIONS SOLVED
Activities
Q1. Imagine that you are a striking worker
in 1905 who is being tried in court for
your act of rebellion. Draft the speech
you would make in your defence. Act
out your speech for your class.
Ans. Good morning all and sundry!
I have done what I should do. We, the
workers, are the most suppressed
sections of the society. Our working
hours are so long. If we want a
reduction in it to eight hours, it is
fully justified. We are not machines.
We are after all human beings. Like
other human beings, we also need
relaxation. We are compelled to do
work in such hazardous conditions
and that too against such poor
wages. If we are striking to get our
conditions improved, it should not be
considered as an act of rebellion. We
are right and our demands should be
fulfilled.
Q2. Write the headline and a short
news item about the uprising of 24
October 1917 for each of the following
newspapers:
• a Conservative paper in France
• a Radical newspaper in Britain
• a Bolshevik newspaper in Russia
Ans. Students are suggested to develop
headlines and short news items
themselves.
Q3. Imagine that you are a middle
level wheat farmer in Russia after
collectivisation.
You have decided to write a letter
to Stalin explaining your objections
to collectivisation. What would you
write about the conditions of your life?
What do you think would be Stalin’s
response to such a farmer?
Ans. Respected Sir,
I am a middle level wheat farmer
after collectivisation. My family is
big and now it is quite difficult for
me to look after it properly. We are
in fact dying of starvation. Your
collectivisation technique has ruined
me and my family. I had made assets
of land with great effort. And now it
has been taken away from me in a
second. It is not justified. I, therefore,
request you to please do me a favour
and return my land to me.
The letter would not have produced
desired effect on Stalin. He would
have sent his men to imprison this
farmer.
Questions
Q1. What were the social, economic and
political conditions in Russia before
1905?
Ans. The social, economic and political
conditions in Russia before 1905
were not at all sound.
• Social conditions: Russian society
before 1905 was divided into three
classes—the clergy, nobility and
peasants. The condition of the
peasants was pathetic. They cultivated
most of the land. But the nobility,
the crown and the orthodox church
owned large properties. The peasants
had to pay heavy redemption dues.
There was great unrest among these
peasants. They wanted the land of
the nobles and fought for them.
Frequently, they refused to pay rent
and even murdered landlords.
• Economic conditions: About 80
per cent of the Russian empire’s
population earned their living from
agriculture. Industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production, but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops. Many
factories were set up in the 1890s,
when Russia’s railway network was
extended and foreign investment in
industry increased. By the 1900s
in some areas, factory workers and
Page 2
NCERT TEXTBOOK QUESTIONS SOLVED
Activities
Q1. Imagine that you are a striking worker
in 1905 who is being tried in court for
your act of rebellion. Draft the speech
you would make in your defence. Act
out your speech for your class.
Ans. Good morning all and sundry!
I have done what I should do. We, the
workers, are the most suppressed
sections of the society. Our working
hours are so long. If we want a
reduction in it to eight hours, it is
fully justified. We are not machines.
We are after all human beings. Like
other human beings, we also need
relaxation. We are compelled to do
work in such hazardous conditions
and that too against such poor
wages. If we are striking to get our
conditions improved, it should not be
considered as an act of rebellion. We
are right and our demands should be
fulfilled.
Q2. Write the headline and a short
news item about the uprising of 24
October 1917 for each of the following
newspapers:
• a Conservative paper in France
• a Radical newspaper in Britain
• a Bolshevik newspaper in Russia
Ans. Students are suggested to develop
headlines and short news items
themselves.
Q3. Imagine that you are a middle
level wheat farmer in Russia after
collectivisation.
You have decided to write a letter
to Stalin explaining your objections
to collectivisation. What would you
write about the conditions of your life?
What do you think would be Stalin’s
response to such a farmer?
Ans. Respected Sir,
I am a middle level wheat farmer
after collectivisation. My family is
big and now it is quite difficult for
me to look after it properly. We are
in fact dying of starvation. Your
collectivisation technique has ruined
me and my family. I had made assets
of land with great effort. And now it
has been taken away from me in a
second. It is not justified. I, therefore,
request you to please do me a favour
and return my land to me.
The letter would not have produced
desired effect on Stalin. He would
have sent his men to imprison this
farmer.
Questions
Q1. What were the social, economic and
political conditions in Russia before
1905?
Ans. The social, economic and political
conditions in Russia before 1905
were not at all sound.
• Social conditions: Russian society
before 1905 was divided into three
classes—the clergy, nobility and
peasants. The condition of the
peasants was pathetic. They cultivated
most of the land. But the nobility,
the crown and the orthodox church
owned large properties. The peasants
had to pay heavy redemption dues.
There was great unrest among these
peasants. They wanted the land of
the nobles and fought for them.
Frequently, they refused to pay rent
and even murdered landlords.
• Economic conditions: About 80
per cent of the Russian empire’s
population earned their living from
agriculture. Industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production, but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops. Many
factories were set up in the 1890s,
when Russia’s railway network was
extended and foreign investment in
industry increased. By the 1900s
in some areas, factory workers and
craftsmen were almost equal in
number. Most industry was the private
property of industrialists. Government
supervised large factories to ensure
minimum wages and limited hours of
work. But factory inspectors could not
prevent rules from being broken. As
a result, workers were living a very
miserable life. They had no political
rights. Their working hours were too
long. Their wages were too meagre
and their working conditions were
too hazardous. Unemployment was
a common phenomenon in Russia
before 1905.
• Political conditions: Russia at the
time of the revolution was under
the autocracy of Tsar Nicholas II.
He believed in the Divine Rights of
Kings. People were not satisfied with
his governance. The Russian empire
that Nicholas II ruled was vast.
Besides the territory around Moscow,
the Russian empire included current
day Finland, Latvia, Lithuania,
Estonia, parts of Poland, Ukraine and
Bearus. It stretched to the Pacific
and comprised today’s central Asian
states, as well as Georgia, Armenia
and Azarbaijan. The majority religion
was Russian Orthodox Christianity
which had grown out of the Greek
Orthodox church but the empire
also included Catholics, Protestants,
Muslims and Buddhists.
Q2. In what ways was the working
population in Russia different from
other countries in Europe before 1917?
Ans. (i) Before 1917, the vast majority of
Russia’s people were agriculturists.
About 85 per cent of the Russian
empire’s population was engaged
in agriculture. This proportion was
higher than in most European
countries. For instance, in France
and Germany the proportion was
between 40 per cent and 50 per cent.
(ii) U nl i ke Europe, i n Russi a
industrialisation started late. As
a result, industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops.
(iii) Russian peasants had no respect for
the nobles who got their power and
position through their services to the
Tsar, not through local popularity.
This was unlike France where, during
the French Revolution in Britain,
peasants respected nobles and even
fought for them.
(iv) In Russia, peasants were violent and
frequently refused to pay rent and
even murdered landlords. In 1905,
such incidents took place all over
Russia. This was not found in any
of the European countries.
(v) Unlike European peasants, Russian
peasants pooled their land together
periodically and their commune
divided it according to the needs of
individual families.
Q3. Why did Tsarist autocracy collapse in
1917?
Ans. Several factors led to the collapse of
Tsarist autocracy in Russia:
(i) Tsar Nicholas II was not an efficient
ruler. He still believed in the
autocratic rights of the king. His
policies brought deep dissatisfaction
among the common mass.
(ii) Tsarina Alexandra’s German origins
and poor advisers, especially
Rasputin, made the autocracy very
unpopular.
(iii) The bureaucracy that Tsar Nicholas
II recruited was too inefficient. The
recruitment of the members was
done on the basis of privileges and
patronage, not on merit. This was a
major factor that paved the way for
the downfall of Tsarist autocracy.
(iv) Russia’s participation in the First
World War proved disastrous for
it. The war was initially popular in
Russia and people rallied around Tsar
Nicholas II. As the war continued,
though, the Tsar refused to consult
Page 3
NCERT TEXTBOOK QUESTIONS SOLVED
Activities
Q1. Imagine that you are a striking worker
in 1905 who is being tried in court for
your act of rebellion. Draft the speech
you would make in your defence. Act
out your speech for your class.
Ans. Good morning all and sundry!
I have done what I should do. We, the
workers, are the most suppressed
sections of the society. Our working
hours are so long. If we want a
reduction in it to eight hours, it is
fully justified. We are not machines.
We are after all human beings. Like
other human beings, we also need
relaxation. We are compelled to do
work in such hazardous conditions
and that too against such poor
wages. If we are striking to get our
conditions improved, it should not be
considered as an act of rebellion. We
are right and our demands should be
fulfilled.
Q2. Write the headline and a short
news item about the uprising of 24
October 1917 for each of the following
newspapers:
• a Conservative paper in France
• a Radical newspaper in Britain
• a Bolshevik newspaper in Russia
Ans. Students are suggested to develop
headlines and short news items
themselves.
Q3. Imagine that you are a middle
level wheat farmer in Russia after
collectivisation.
You have decided to write a letter
to Stalin explaining your objections
to collectivisation. What would you
write about the conditions of your life?
What do you think would be Stalin’s
response to such a farmer?
Ans. Respected Sir,
I am a middle level wheat farmer
after collectivisation. My family is
big and now it is quite difficult for
me to look after it properly. We are
in fact dying of starvation. Your
collectivisation technique has ruined
me and my family. I had made assets
of land with great effort. And now it
has been taken away from me in a
second. It is not justified. I, therefore,
request you to please do me a favour
and return my land to me.
The letter would not have produced
desired effect on Stalin. He would
have sent his men to imprison this
farmer.
Questions
Q1. What were the social, economic and
political conditions in Russia before
1905?
Ans. The social, economic and political
conditions in Russia before 1905
were not at all sound.
• Social conditions: Russian society
before 1905 was divided into three
classes—the clergy, nobility and
peasants. The condition of the
peasants was pathetic. They cultivated
most of the land. But the nobility,
the crown and the orthodox church
owned large properties. The peasants
had to pay heavy redemption dues.
There was great unrest among these
peasants. They wanted the land of
the nobles and fought for them.
Frequently, they refused to pay rent
and even murdered landlords.
• Economic conditions: About 80
per cent of the Russian empire’s
population earned their living from
agriculture. Industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production, but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops. Many
factories were set up in the 1890s,
when Russia’s railway network was
extended and foreign investment in
industry increased. By the 1900s
in some areas, factory workers and
craftsmen were almost equal in
number. Most industry was the private
property of industrialists. Government
supervised large factories to ensure
minimum wages and limited hours of
work. But factory inspectors could not
prevent rules from being broken. As
a result, workers were living a very
miserable life. They had no political
rights. Their working hours were too
long. Their wages were too meagre
and their working conditions were
too hazardous. Unemployment was
a common phenomenon in Russia
before 1905.
• Political conditions: Russia at the
time of the revolution was under
the autocracy of Tsar Nicholas II.
He believed in the Divine Rights of
Kings. People were not satisfied with
his governance. The Russian empire
that Nicholas II ruled was vast.
Besides the territory around Moscow,
the Russian empire included current
day Finland, Latvia, Lithuania,
Estonia, parts of Poland, Ukraine and
Bearus. It stretched to the Pacific
and comprised today’s central Asian
states, as well as Georgia, Armenia
and Azarbaijan. The majority religion
was Russian Orthodox Christianity
which had grown out of the Greek
Orthodox church but the empire
also included Catholics, Protestants,
Muslims and Buddhists.
Q2. In what ways was the working
population in Russia different from
other countries in Europe before 1917?
Ans. (i) Before 1917, the vast majority of
Russia’s people were agriculturists.
About 85 per cent of the Russian
empire’s population was engaged
in agriculture. This proportion was
higher than in most European
countries. For instance, in France
and Germany the proportion was
between 40 per cent and 50 per cent.
(ii) U nl i ke Europe, i n Russi a
industrialisation started late. As
a result, industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops.
(iii) Russian peasants had no respect for
the nobles who got their power and
position through their services to the
Tsar, not through local popularity.
This was unlike France where, during
the French Revolution in Britain,
peasants respected nobles and even
fought for them.
(iv) In Russia, peasants were violent and
frequently refused to pay rent and
even murdered landlords. In 1905,
such incidents took place all over
Russia. This was not found in any
of the European countries.
(v) Unlike European peasants, Russian
peasants pooled their land together
periodically and their commune
divided it according to the needs of
individual families.
Q3. Why did Tsarist autocracy collapse in
1917?
Ans. Several factors led to the collapse of
Tsarist autocracy in Russia:
(i) Tsar Nicholas II was not an efficient
ruler. He still believed in the
autocratic rights of the king. His
policies brought deep dissatisfaction
among the common mass.
(ii) Tsarina Alexandra’s German origins
and poor advisers, especially
Rasputin, made the autocracy very
unpopular.
(iii) The bureaucracy that Tsar Nicholas
II recruited was too inefficient. The
recruitment of the members was
done on the basis of privileges and
patronage, not on merit. This was a
major factor that paved the way for
the downfall of Tsarist autocracy.
(iv) Russia’s participation in the First
World War proved disastrous for
it. The war was initially popular in
Russia and people rallied around Tsar
Nicholas II. As the war continued,
though, the Tsar refused to consult
the main parties in the Duma,
support were thin. Anti-German
feeling ran high.
(v) Russia’s army lost badly in Germany
and Austria between 1914 and 1916.
There were over 7 million casualties by
1917. As they retreated, the Russian
army destroyed crops and buildings
to prevent the enemy from being able
to live off the land. The destruction
of crops and buildings led to over
3 million refugees in Russia.
The situation discredited the
government and the Tsar.
(vi) Peasants and workers formed large
section of Russia’s population. But
their condition was too miserable.
The Tsar never paid even a slight
attention to their condition.
All the above-mentioned factors
prepared such a condition in Russia
in which Tsarist autocracy was
bound to collapse.
Q4. Make two lists: One with the main
events and the effects of the February
Revolution and the other with the
main events and effects of the October
Revolution. Write a paragraph on who
was involved in each, who were the
leaders and what was the impact of
each on Soviet history.
Ans. 1. The main events of the February
Revolution:
(i) In the winter of 1917, conditions
in the capital, Petrograd were grim.
There had been exceptional frost and
heavy snow. This aggravated food
problem. Food shortages were deeply
felt in the workers’ quarters.
(ii) Parliamentarians wishing to preserve
elected government, were opposed
to the Tsar’s desire to dissolve the
Duma.
(iii) On 22 February, a lockout took place
at a factory on the right bank of the
River Neva. The next day, workers
in fifty factories called a strike in
sympathy. In many factories, women
led the way to strikes. Demonstrating
workers crossed from the factory
quarters to the centre of the capital,
i.e. the Nevskii prospect. Soon the
government imposed a curfew.
Demonstrators dispersed by the
evening, but they came back on the
24th and 25th of February.
(iv) They also came in force in the streets
of the left bank of the River Neva on
the 26th. On the right bank were
the fashionable areas, the Winter
Palace, and officials buildings. On
the 27th, they ransacked the police
headquarters. The streets thronged
with people raising slogans about
bread, wages, better hours and
democracy.
2. Effects of the February Revolution:
(i) The Tsar abdicated on 2 March.
Thus, monarchy was brought down.
Soviet leaders and Duma leaders
formed a provisional government to
run the country.
(ii) Russia’s future would be decided
by a constituent assembly, elected
on the basis of universal adult
suffrage.
3. The main events of the October
Revolution:
(i) The October Revolution occurred
due to the conflict between the
provisional government and the
Bolsheviks, of which Lenin was the
leader.
(ii) Lenin feared the Provisional
Government would set up a
dictatorship. In September, he
began discussions for an uprising
against the government. Bolshevik
supporters in the army, soviets and
factories were brought together.
(iii) On 16 October 1917, Lenin
persuaded the Petrograd Soviet
and the Bolshevik party to agree
to a socialist seizure of power. A
military revolutionary committee was
appointed by the Soviet under Leon
Trotski to organise the seizure. The
date of the event was kept a secret.
Page 4
NCERT TEXTBOOK QUESTIONS SOLVED
Activities
Q1. Imagine that you are a striking worker
in 1905 who is being tried in court for
your act of rebellion. Draft the speech
you would make in your defence. Act
out your speech for your class.
Ans. Good morning all and sundry!
I have done what I should do. We, the
workers, are the most suppressed
sections of the society. Our working
hours are so long. If we want a
reduction in it to eight hours, it is
fully justified. We are not machines.
We are after all human beings. Like
other human beings, we also need
relaxation. We are compelled to do
work in such hazardous conditions
and that too against such poor
wages. If we are striking to get our
conditions improved, it should not be
considered as an act of rebellion. We
are right and our demands should be
fulfilled.
Q2. Write the headline and a short
news item about the uprising of 24
October 1917 for each of the following
newspapers:
• a Conservative paper in France
• a Radical newspaper in Britain
• a Bolshevik newspaper in Russia
Ans. Students are suggested to develop
headlines and short news items
themselves.
Q3. Imagine that you are a middle
level wheat farmer in Russia after
collectivisation.
You have decided to write a letter
to Stalin explaining your objections
to collectivisation. What would you
write about the conditions of your life?
What do you think would be Stalin’s
response to such a farmer?
Ans. Respected Sir,
I am a middle level wheat farmer
after collectivisation. My family is
big and now it is quite difficult for
me to look after it properly. We are
in fact dying of starvation. Your
collectivisation technique has ruined
me and my family. I had made assets
of land with great effort. And now it
has been taken away from me in a
second. It is not justified. I, therefore,
request you to please do me a favour
and return my land to me.
The letter would not have produced
desired effect on Stalin. He would
have sent his men to imprison this
farmer.
Questions
Q1. What were the social, economic and
political conditions in Russia before
1905?
Ans. The social, economic and political
conditions in Russia before 1905
were not at all sound.
• Social conditions: Russian society
before 1905 was divided into three
classes—the clergy, nobility and
peasants. The condition of the
peasants was pathetic. They cultivated
most of the land. But the nobility,
the crown and the orthodox church
owned large properties. The peasants
had to pay heavy redemption dues.
There was great unrest among these
peasants. They wanted the land of
the nobles and fought for them.
Frequently, they refused to pay rent
and even murdered landlords.
• Economic conditions: About 80
per cent of the Russian empire’s
population earned their living from
agriculture. Industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production, but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops. Many
factories were set up in the 1890s,
when Russia’s railway network was
extended and foreign investment in
industry increased. By the 1900s
in some areas, factory workers and
craftsmen were almost equal in
number. Most industry was the private
property of industrialists. Government
supervised large factories to ensure
minimum wages and limited hours of
work. But factory inspectors could not
prevent rules from being broken. As
a result, workers were living a very
miserable life. They had no political
rights. Their working hours were too
long. Their wages were too meagre
and their working conditions were
too hazardous. Unemployment was
a common phenomenon in Russia
before 1905.
• Political conditions: Russia at the
time of the revolution was under
the autocracy of Tsar Nicholas II.
He believed in the Divine Rights of
Kings. People were not satisfied with
his governance. The Russian empire
that Nicholas II ruled was vast.
Besides the territory around Moscow,
the Russian empire included current
day Finland, Latvia, Lithuania,
Estonia, parts of Poland, Ukraine and
Bearus. It stretched to the Pacific
and comprised today’s central Asian
states, as well as Georgia, Armenia
and Azarbaijan. The majority religion
was Russian Orthodox Christianity
which had grown out of the Greek
Orthodox church but the empire
also included Catholics, Protestants,
Muslims and Buddhists.
Q2. In what ways was the working
population in Russia different from
other countries in Europe before 1917?
Ans. (i) Before 1917, the vast majority of
Russia’s people were agriculturists.
About 85 per cent of the Russian
empire’s population was engaged
in agriculture. This proportion was
higher than in most European
countries. For instance, in France
and Germany the proportion was
between 40 per cent and 50 per cent.
(ii) U nl i ke Europe, i n Russi a
industrialisation started late. As
a result, industry was found in
pockets. Prominent industrial areas
were St. Petersburg and Moscow.
Craftsmen undertook much of the
production but large factories existed
alongside craft workshops.
(iii) Russian peasants had no respect for
the nobles who got their power and
position through their services to the
Tsar, not through local popularity.
This was unlike France where, during
the French Revolution in Britain,
peasants respected nobles and even
fought for them.
(iv) In Russia, peasants were violent and
frequently refused to pay rent and
even murdered landlords. In 1905,
such incidents took place all over
Russia. This was not found in any
of the European countries.
(v) Unlike European peasants, Russian
peasants pooled their land together
periodically and their commune
divided it according to the needs of
individual families.
Q3. Why did Tsarist autocracy collapse in
1917?
Ans. Several factors led to the collapse of
Tsarist autocracy in Russia:
(i) Tsar Nicholas II was not an efficient
ruler. He still believed in the
autocratic rights of the king. His
policies brought deep dissatisfaction
among the common mass.
(ii) Tsarina Alexandra’s German origins
and poor advisers, especially
Rasputin, made the autocracy very
unpopular.
(iii) The bureaucracy that Tsar Nicholas
II recruited was too inefficient. The
recruitment of the members was
done on the basis of privileges and
patronage, not on merit. This was a
major factor that paved the way for
the downfall of Tsarist autocracy.
(iv) Russia’s participation in the First
World War proved disastrous for
it. The war was initially popular in
Russia and people rallied around Tsar
Nicholas II. As the war continued,
though, the Tsar refused to consult
the main parties in the Duma,
support were thin. Anti-German
feeling ran high.
(v) Russia’s army lost badly in Germany
and Austria between 1914 and 1916.
There were over 7 million casualties by
1917. As they retreated, the Russian
army destroyed crops and buildings
to prevent the enemy from being able
to live off the land. The destruction
of crops and buildings led to over
3 million refugees in Russia.
The situation discredited the
government and the Tsar.
(vi) Peasants and workers formed large
section of Russia’s population. But
their condition was too miserable.
The Tsar never paid even a slight
attention to their condition.
All the above-mentioned factors
prepared such a condition in Russia
in which Tsarist autocracy was
bound to collapse.
Q4. Make two lists: One with the main
events and the effects of the February
Revolution and the other with the
main events and effects of the October
Revolution. Write a paragraph on who
was involved in each, who were the
leaders and what was the impact of
each on Soviet history.
Ans. 1. The main events of the February
Revolution:
(i) In the winter of 1917, conditions
in the capital, Petrograd were grim.
There had been exceptional frost and
heavy snow. This aggravated food
problem. Food shortages were deeply
felt in the workers’ quarters.
(ii) Parliamentarians wishing to preserve
elected government, were opposed
to the Tsar’s desire to dissolve the
Duma.
(iii) On 22 February, a lockout took place
at a factory on the right bank of the
River Neva. The next day, workers
in fifty factories called a strike in
sympathy. In many factories, women
led the way to strikes. Demonstrating
workers crossed from the factory
quarters to the centre of the capital,
i.e. the Nevskii prospect. Soon the
government imposed a curfew.
Demonstrators dispersed by the
evening, but they came back on the
24th and 25th of February.
(iv) They also came in force in the streets
of the left bank of the River Neva on
the 26th. On the right bank were
the fashionable areas, the Winter
Palace, and officials buildings. On
the 27th, they ransacked the police
headquarters. The streets thronged
with people raising slogans about
bread, wages, better hours and
democracy.
2. Effects of the February Revolution:
(i) The Tsar abdicated on 2 March.
Thus, monarchy was brought down.
Soviet leaders and Duma leaders
formed a provisional government to
run the country.
(ii) Russia’s future would be decided
by a constituent assembly, elected
on the basis of universal adult
suffrage.
3. The main events of the October
Revolution:
(i) The October Revolution occurred
due to the conflict between the
provisional government and the
Bolsheviks, of which Lenin was the
leader.
(ii) Lenin feared the Provisional
Government would set up a
dictatorship. In September, he
began discussions for an uprising
against the government. Bolshevik
supporters in the army, soviets and
factories were brought together.
(iii) On 16 October 1917, Lenin
persuaded the Petrograd Soviet
and the Bolshevik party to agree
to a socialist seizure of power. A
military revolutionary committee was
appointed by the Soviet under Leon
Trotski to organise the seizure. The
date of the event was kept a secret.
(iv) The uprising began on 24 October.
Military men loyal to the provisional
government under Kerenskii seized
the buildings of two Bolshevik
newspapers. Pro-government troops
were sent to take over telephone
and telegraph offices and protect the
Winter Palace. In a swift response,
the Military Revolutionary Committee
ordered its supporters to seize
government offices and arrest
ministers. Late in the day, the ship
Aurora shelled the Winter Palace.
Other vessels sailed down the Neva
and took over various military points.
By nightfall, the city was under the
committee’s control and the ministers
had surrendered.
(v) Uprising took place in other cities
also, and by December the Bolshevik
became successful in controlling the
Moscow-Petrograd area.
4. Effects of the October Revolution:
(i) The October Revolution marked the
beginning of Lenin’s rule over the
Soviet, with Bolsheviks under his
guidance. The Bolshevik Party was
renamed the Russian Communist
Party. Thus, the first communist
regime was established in Russia.
(ii) Most industry and banks were
nationalised in November 1917. Land
was declared social property and
peasants were allowed to seize the
land of the nobility.
(iii) In cities, Bolsheviks enforced the
partition of large houses according to
family requirements. They banned the
use of the old titles of aristocracy.
(iv) The Bolsheviks made peace treaty
with Germany at Brest Litovsk
in March 1918. In the years that
followed, the Bolsheviks became
the only party to participate in
the elections to the All-Russian
Congress of Soviets, which became
the Parliament of the country. Russia
became a one-party state.
Q5. What were the main changes brought
about by the Bolsheviks immediately
after the October Revolution?
Ans. The following changes were brought
about by the Bolsheviks immediately
after the October Revolution:
(i) The Bolsheviks were against private
property. Hence, most industry and
banks were nationalised.
(ii) Land was declared social property
and peasants were allowed to seize
the land of the nobility.
(iii) In cities, Bolsheviks enforced the
partition of large houses according
to family requirements.
(iv) Old titles of aristocracy were banned.
(v) New uniforms were designed for the
army and officials.
(vi) The Bolshevik Party was renamed
the Russian Communist Party.
(vii) The Bolsheviks made peace with
Germany at Brest Litovsk.
(viii) Russia became a one-party state.
(ix) The All-Russian Congress of Soviets
became the Parliament of the country.
(x) Trade unions were kept under party
control.
Q6. Write a few lines to show what you
know about:
(i) Kulaks
(ii) The Duma
(iii) Women workers between 1900 and
1930
(iv) The Liberals
(v) Stalin’s collectivisation programme
Ans. (i) Kulaks
Kulaks were the wealthy peasants
of Russia. In 1927-28, the towns
in Soviet Russia were facing acute
problem of grain supplies. Stalin
believed that these kulaks were
holding stocks in the hope of higher
prices. Hence, it was essential to
eliminate them. As a result, many
kulaks were raided. Their land was
taken away in order to establish
state-controlled large farms.
Read More