
Petrograd, July 4, 1917. Street demonstration on
Nevsky Prospekt just after troops of the Provisional Government have opened fire with machine guns.
The 'July Days' refers to events in
1917 that took place in
Petrograd,
Russia, between
July 4 and
July 7 (
Julian calendar) (
July 16-
July 20,
Gregorian calendar), when soldiers and industrial workers in the city rioted against the
Russian Provisional Government.
Bolsheviks led the attack, but it failed and their leader
Vladimir Lenin went into hiding, while other leaders were arrested.
[1][2] The outcome of the July Days represented a temporary decline in the growth of Bolshevik power and influence in the period before the
October Revolution.
Causes
Alexander Kerensky, then minister of war and navy, ordered a vast Russian
offensive against
Austro-Hungarian forces on
16 June. Despite initial successes, the Russians were defeated and the operation ended on
July 2, quickly to be followed by a combined counter-offensive by
German and
Austro-Hungarian forces on
6 July.
Anti-war feelings were rife among the populace at that time. These feelings intensified with the news of the failed offensive. Discontented workers started protests which soon spiraled into violent riots.
Bolshevik involvement
Lenin believed that while the workers in Petrograd were radicalised, the country as a whole was not ready for revolution, therefore if the workers tried to seize power in Petrograd alone they would be defeated. Bolshevik party had a choice to either throw their weight behind the demonstrations and possibly be crushed, or abstain and risk the possibility that many workers would lose faith in them. In the end the Bolsheviks joined the demonstrations, but did not to push for outright revolution. The goal of this was that their credibility would not be damaged in the future.
[3]
According to Professor of
Western New England College Gerhard Rempel, "This was one of Lenin major miscalculations. He thought the time was ripe for a Bolshevik coup. But the masses were not yet ready for anything as radical as he had to offer. The uprising only brought out a few radicals besides the active Bolsheviks. It was easily crushed by the forces of the Provisional Government."
[4]
Consequences
Kerensky ordered the arrest of Lenin and the other leading Bolsheviks, accusing them of inciting revolt with
German financial backing.
Lenin successfully fled and went into hiding in Finland, but many other Bolshevik leaders were arrested, including
Trotsky and
Lunacharskii who were apprehended on
22 July. They remained in prison until Kerensky released them in response to the
Kornilov Affair.
References
1. ''A History of Western Society''. Chapter Outlines. ''Chapter 27: The Great Break: War and Revolution'', Seventh Edition. John P. McKay, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Bennett D. Hill, Georgetown University; John Buckler, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
2. "In July 1917, a half-baked Bolshevik uprising against the Government failed. Trotsky went to prison but Lenin escaped to Finland." (''Key Themes of the Twentieth Century'' by Philip Sauvain. p.54)
3. Prichard, Gareth ''The October Revolution'' (lecture) 2007-05-22 University of Canterbury
4. The Russian Revolution of 1917 by Gerhard Rempel, Western New England College