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  1. 13 de abr. de 2022 · The February revolution, Petrograd, 1917 by Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi, 1941-Publication date 1981 Topics ... Pdf_module_version 0.0.18 Ppi 360 ...

  2. Thisisarevised,enlargedandreinterpretededitionofTheFebruaryRevolution,Petrograd,1917,first publishedin1981byUniversityofWashingtonPress,isbn9780295957654.

  3. A Leaderless Uprising: The February Revolution (February 23rd-25th): Multiple stresses on the Russian lower classes led to the February revolution in 1917. The. military was fighting in World War I despite a poor industry; there were not enough supplies to feed. and arm the troops.

  4. 1 de sept. de 2017 · February, in Lavrov’s view, was not a “bourgeois” revolution, as Marxist historians have claimed, but just the opposite: February interrupted a legitimate (because it came from above) “bourgeois” revolution that began in the era of the Great Reforms; it ushered in a time of “plunder and pillage” and the “catastrophe” of the leadership of L’vov and Kerenskii.

    • Joseph Bradley
    • 2017
  5. February Revolution, (March 8–12 [Feb. 24–28, old style], 1917), the first stage of the Russian Revolution of 1917, in which the monarchy was overthrown and replaced by the Provisional Government. This government, intended as an interim stage in the creation of a permanent democratic-parliamentary

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. 29 de jun. de 2020 · PDF. Split View. Cite. Permissions. Share. Issue Section: Europe: Early Modern and Modern. On March 2, 1917, after just over a week of increasingly severe disturbances in Petrograd, the Russian capital, Tsar Nicholas II abdicated in favor of his brother, Grand Duke Mikhail.

  7. The February Revolution ( Russian: Февральская революция ), known in Soviet historiography as the February Bourgeois Democratic Revolution [note 1] and sometimes as the March Revolution, [a] was the first of two revolutions which took place in Russia in 1917.