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Revolutionary Leadership and the Russian Orthodox Church in 1917

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

John D. Basil
Affiliation:
associate professor of history in theUniversity of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.

Extract

Witnessing the widespread internal discord plaguing the new Russian regime after the abdication of Nicholas II in March of 1917, one contemporary activist expressed fear that centrifugal forces.from within constituted the greatest challenge to the democratic revolution. Signs of disharmony quickly appeared among the revolutionary leaders themselves. The liberals in the Provisional Committee of the State Duma and the moderate socialists in the Executive Committee of the Petrograd Soviet found themselves at swords' points even before the first Provisional Government was officially established, and as months passed the animosity grew. Not long after the establishment of the new government the bickering spread beyond the ruling circles, disrupting orderly working relations between the new regime and the institutions surviving from the old. It appeared as though the collapse of the monarchy encouraged divisiveness precisely when survival depended on cooperative action.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1979

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References

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