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Military Revolutionary Committee

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Facsimile of the Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee proclamation of the overthrow of the Russian Provisional Government

The Military Revolutionary Committee (Milrevcom) (Russian: Военно-революционный комитет, Voyenno-revolyutsionny komitet) was the name for military organs created by the Bolsheviks under the soviets in preparation for the October Revolution (October 1917 – March 1918).[1] The committees were powerful directing bodies of revolt, installing and securing the Soviet power. They executed a role of provisional extraordinary organs the Bolshevik power.

The most notable ones were those of the Petrograd Soviet, the Moscow Soviet, and at Stavka. The Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee was created on 29 October [O.S. 16 October] 1917.[2]

Creation

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The idea for organization of the armed revolt battle center belongs to Vladimir Lenin.[1] In his letter "Marxism and Revolt" directed to the Central Committee of RSDLP (b) in September 1917, he put on the agenda the task of preparing an armed uprising, writing:

And to treat the revolt in a Marxist way, that is, as an art, we at the same time, without losing a moment, must organize headquarters of the insurgent groups ...[1]

The decision of Central Committee of RSDLP(b) of October 23 and 29, 1917 on enhanced preparation for the armed revolt hastened the creation of uprising bodies at central and local levels. The MRC were elected from representatives of the Bolsheviks' party, soviets, factory or soldier committees, Bolshevik Military Organizations (Voyenka), Red Guards, and others.[1] The committees were of various levels such as gubernial, city, county, district, volost; while in the Army were frontlines, army, corps, division, and regimental. On occasions the functions of the Military Revolutionary Committee were performed by revolutionary committees. The military revolutionary committees were not uniform in terms of their social and party composition, however most of them were predominantly represented by Bolsheviks.

The first headquarters of armed uprising became the Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee, that was created by the Petrograd Soviet on October 25, 1917.[1] Prior to a victorious moment of the uprising in Petrograd there were over 40 Military Revolutionary Committees in the country, the main activity of which was military and technical preparations for the forthcoming revolt.

List

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During the "Triumphant advance of Soviet power" there was a mass establishment of MRCs. Many MRCs appeared on initiative of the arrived delegates of the 2nd All-Russian Congress of Soviets. Big squad of commissars, emissaries, agitators was sent to various country's regions by the Petrograd MRC on direction of the Central Committee of RSDLP(b).[1] The Bolshevik's party composed the committees of experienced organizers.

Creation date Name Head (composition) Notes
October 29 Petrograd MRC Pavel Lazimir (Leon Trotsky,[3] Andrei Bubnov, Moisei Uritsky, Yakov Sverdlov, Felix Dzerzhinsky, Joseph Stalin)[4]
October 31 12th Army MRC Jānis Čarin (Karl Gailis [ru],[5] Jānis Krūmiņš-Pilāts [lv])[6] Until November 8, 1917, existed illegally in Cēsis
November 4 Estonia MRC Ivan Rabchinsky [ru][7] (Jaan Anvelt, Viktor Kingissepp)
Pskov MRC Vasili Panyushkin [ru] Name changed to Northern Front (from November 8, 1917)
November 7 Moscow MRC [ru] Georgy Oppokov (Grigory Usievich [ru], Nikolay Muralov, Jānis Pieče [lv], Aleksandr Arosev, Vladimir Smirnov)
Voronezh revkom Alexey Sergeevich Moiseyev [ru]
November 8 Ryazan MRC Arkady Syromyatnikov [ru]
November 9 Minsk MRC Aleksandr Myasnikyan (Moisei Kalmanovich [ru], Vilhelms Knoriņš, Kārlis Landers) Renamed to Western Front and Northwestern Region
Samara MRC Valerian Kuybyshev
Tula revkom Grigory Kaminsky
November 10 Tomsk MRC Aleksei Belenets [ru][8]
November 11 Kiev MRC Leonid Pyatakov [ru][9] (Andriy Ivanov, Volodymyr Zatonsky, Mykhailo Bohdanov [uk], Oleksandr Horvits [uk; ru])[10] Recreated as Kiev revkom on January 28, 1918
Smolensk revkom Semyon Ioffe
November 21 Dagestan MRC Ullubi Buinaksky [ru]
November 27 Orenburg MRC Samuil Tsvilling [ru]
December 1 Southwestern Front MRC Grigory Razzhivin (Vasili Kikvidze [ru])
December 15 Romanian Front MRC Pyotr Baranov (Aleksandr Krusser [ru], Vladimir Yudovsky [ru])
December 20 Barnaul MRC Matvei Tsaplin [ru]
December 23 Kharkov MRC Comrade Artyom (Valery Mezhlauk, Moisey Rukhimovich)
Yekaterinburg MRC Nikolay Krestinsky
Vinnitsa MRC Nikolai Tarnogrodsky [uk][11]
Odessa MRC Vladimir Yudovsky [ru]
Simferopol MRC Jānis Miller [ru]
December 29 Sevastopol revkom Yuri Gaven
January Astrakhan revkom Mina Aristov [ru][12]
Shuya MRC Mikhail Frunze
January 10 Caucasus Army MRC Grigory Korganov (Boris Sheboldayev)
January 23 Don MRC Fyodor Podtyolkov [ru] (Mikhail Krivoshlykov [ru])[13]
January 30 Kuban - Black Sea MRC Yan Poluyan [ru]
March 2 Semirechye MRC Pavel Vinogradov [ru]

Influence

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In the weeks following the October insurrection, military revolutionary committees based on the MRC of Petrograd were set up throughout the other soviets and helped cement Bolshevik control. These other MRCs were formed by locals but agents from the Petrograd MRC were often in positions to give advice or direction. By the end of October 1917, representatives from the Petrograd MRC were on assignments in at least forty-four cities as well as 113 military units throughout Russia, Turkestan, and the Caucasus.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Military Revolutionary Committees. Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ Trotsky, Leon, Lessons of October: "On October 16th the Military Revolutionary Committee was created, the legal Soviet organ of insurrection." Accessed 27 August 2007
  3. ^ Richards, Michael D.; Waibel, Paul R. (24 January 2024). Twentieth-Century Europe: 1900 to the Present. John Wiley & Sons. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-119-87873-5.
  4. ^ David R. Shearer & Vladimir Khaustov, Stalin and the Lubianka: A Documentary History of the Political Police and Security Organs in the Soviet Union, 1922–1953
  5. ^ Gailis Karl Andreyevich Archived 2012-10-31 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Krumin, Janis
  7. ^ Rabchinsky, Ivan Vasilyevich. Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  8. ^ Aleksei Belenets
  9. ^ Leonid Pyatakov
  10. ^ Horvits Oleksandr Archived 2015-01-20 at the Wayback Machine. Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  11. ^ Tarnogrodsky Nikolai Archived 2015-01-23 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Mina Aristov
  13. ^ Krivoshlykov Mikhail. Soviet Historical Encyclopedia.
  14. ^ Rigby, pp. 42-43

Further reading

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  • Resis, Albert (July 1977). Lenin on Freedom of the Press. Russian Review, Vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 274–296.
  • Rigby, T.H. (Jan. 1974). The First Proletarian Government. British Journal of Political Science, Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 37–51.
  • Utechin, S.V. (Oct. 1958). Bolsheviks and Their Allies after 1917: The Ideological Pattern. Soviet Studies, Vol. 10, No. 2, pp. 113–135.
  • Lenin, V.I. Marxism and Revolt. Full collection of articles (Марксизм и восстание, Полн. собр. соч.). Ed. 5. Vol. 34
  • Questionnaires of councils of the Central Industrial district (October 1917 – January 1918). "Historical Archives". 1960