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[narrator] It's been a centurysince the Russian Revolution
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and the formation of the world'sfirst communist state.
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But how did it happen?
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How could the mighty Romanov dynasty,that lasted for 300 years,
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fall to a ragtag group of revolutionaries,
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who brought with them Joseph Stalinand a brutal reign of terror?
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[Rayfield] Lenin understood it wasn'tyour numbers that mattered,
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it wasn't your popular supportthat mattered,
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you just paralyzed the country
by occupying the key points,
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and then you take over.
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Revolutions don't happen
from the dispossessed and the starving,
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they happen from the middle class,and it's always been true.
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[narrator]
But at the heart of the Russian Revolution
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lay a very personal battle
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between Lenin's Ulyanov familyand the royal family,
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who were determinedto retain autocratic rule.
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The tsarina used to say
that Russia likes to feel the whip.
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There was always the feelingthat the tsars
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had the divine right of kings,
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they had a sort of God-given obligationto rule themselves and the autocrats.
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So, there wasn't really spacefor democracy.
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[Sebestyen] The disaster that's happenedto Russia since
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is substantially downto mistakes made by Nicholas II.
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He is utterly, utterly useless.
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[Rappaport]
He was a man who shouldn't have been tsar.
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He wasn't suited
to the onerous task of monarch.
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[narrator] The errors made by the tsarwould bring an empire to its knees.
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But no one could have predictedthat Vladimir Lenin
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would be the manto seize control in the chaos.
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[Rayfield] Lenin understood that poweris constrict in certain knots,
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that you take over a railway junction,
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you take over a telephone exchange,and you've already got a city.
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[Sebestyen]
Lenin was in a tradition
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of Russian leadership,and was a very strong part of it.
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He had a profound effect on Russia
that we are really still feeling now.
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[Beer] 1917 in a sense recaststhe ideological map of Europe.
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As the century progresses,
the ideological map of the world.
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[narrator]
March the 13th, 1881, Saint Petersburg.
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The tsar, Alexander II, is on his wayto his army's military roll call.
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He's traveling in a bulletproof carriage,gifted to him by Napoleon III.
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It had proved necessary as the tsarhad faced numerous assassination attempts
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during his reign.
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[Rayfield]
Many people wanted
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to get rid of the tsarand his government.
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But the fact that in middle of
the 19th century you had two inventions...
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...the revolver
and high-explosive dynamite,
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both of which were widespread in Russia,
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which enabled quite amateurish people
to get together
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and organize an assassination.
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[Beer] This is really a kindof sustained terrorist campaign.
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There are multiple attemptson the life of the tsar,
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attempts to blow up his carriage.
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One terrorist, over a period of months,working as a carpenter
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in the Winter Palace,manages to plant a body of explosives,
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which very, very nearly kill Alexander II.
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I mean, 11 people are killed,
about 56 are injured.
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It's sort of those moments where he was
in the wrong room at the right moment,
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as it were,and the explosion just missed him.
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[narrator] But this time,the tsar would not be so fortunate.
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Alexander's legs are shredded,his stomach cut open by shrapnel.
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His dying body is carriedto the Winter Palace,
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where his family, the Romanovs,
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who have ruled Russiafor nearly three centuries,
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are horrified to lay their eyes upon him.
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[Rayfield] He only lasted 90 minutes,
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and the bomber himself, also,
lasted 90 minutes.
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His legs were blown off, too.
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[Beer] The assassination of Alexander II,it's kind of Russia's 9/11.
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I've read newspaper reports that come outin the days after the assassination,
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and they are astonishingly graphic
about the physical damage
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inflicted on Alexander's body.
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They sort of start talking
about the shattered legs
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and the tendons hanging out and stuff.
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What they're describing is this wound
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that has been inflictedon the body of the state,
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you know, so,the king's two bodies clearly there.
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[narrator]
The group responsible
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for this attackis Narodnaya Volya, the People's Will.
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The conspirators would be hangedfor their crimes,
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but the movement would continue,
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and it would soon attract the attentionsof one Aleksandr Ulyanov,
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eldest son of the Ulyanov familyand elder brother to Lenin,
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the man who would eventuallyeliminate the Romanovs completely.
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But in 1881,the People's Will's predictions
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do not come to pass.
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There is no great revolutionfollowing the death of Tsar Alexander II.
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He's succeeded by his son,Alexander III,
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who, upon viewing his dying father,
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vowsto never let the same fate befall him.
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Despite the enormous unrest,Russian autocratic rule would continue.
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[Welch] Alexander III consideredAlexander II way too lenient.
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I mean, he'd liberated the serfs.
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So, Alexander III decidedto come down hard on Russia,
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and he was anywaya very sort of forceful character
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who used to bend forks
in knots at the table.
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And he apparently was able to walk
through doors without opening them.
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He was a huge man.
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And undermined his son, unfortunately,by calling him girly
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when the tsar was a child,
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and I don't know that the tsar,Nicholas,
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ever emerged from that repressionfrom his father
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and that sort of undermining.
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[Rayfield]
Alexander III has a very bad press.
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People say stagnation, reaction,
and all that is true.
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On the other hand, there were
some good things about Alexander III.
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He never declared war on anybody,unlike Alexander II,
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who's extremely aggressive,
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made war on the Turkish Empire,on the Chinese.
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He also listened to his ministers.He may have been a reactionary,
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but he appointed somevery competent ministers,
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and, in his reign, Russia railwaysbecame one of the best service in Europe,
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Russian post office, too.
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He was a boring manand he liked the bottle,
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but there were things to be said for him.
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[Beer] It seems sort of counterintuitive,
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but Russia was actuallya fantastically dynamic society
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in lots of ways in this period.Really from its defeat in the Crimean War
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in the 1850s, it understandsthat it has to industrialize
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if it is to remain competitiveon the international stage.
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So, the defeat in the Crimea at the handsof the French and the British
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laid bare the fact
that Russia was an undeveloped state.
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Its peasant armies were no match
for the Western powers,
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and so, if Russia wants to remainin the game, it needs to industrialize.
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[narrator] Russia was modernizingat an extraordinary rate,
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but its political systemremained deeply autocratic,
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unlike almost all other European nationsof the era.
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[Sebestyen] Because of the conditionsof Russia at the time,
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normal, middle-class families
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weren't allowed any form
of political expression at all.
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That was the main problem.
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So, any normal, middle-class family,
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the son would have enteredthe revolutionary,
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the radical political sect.
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[Beer] There was a waveof repression against Russian radicals,
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oppositionists, and so on.
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Some of these peopleare clearly dangerous.
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Some of these people have plottedto kill the tsar,
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members of the Imperial Family, or,
you know, regional governors and so on.
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[Rayfield] There's a general paradoxthat a dictatorship,
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as long as it's strict and severe,is safe.
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The moment it starts to liberalize,
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it gives an inchand the people take a yard.
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Once the people detect a weakness,
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or a division,
then the whole thing starts to fall apart.
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[narrator] One such personwho got caught up in this radical world
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was Aleksandr Ulyanov,known to his family as Sasha.
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He was the eldest Ulyanov son,and elder brother to Vladimir Lenin.
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[Sebestyen] The Ulyanov familywas not a typical family.
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There was a very small casteof civil servants in Russia,
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and the father was a schools inspector.
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And he'd reached a position
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in the civil service
that gave him the rank of a noble.
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That was a very, very small percentageof people in Russia.
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But they weren't that rich.
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Lenin's elder brother, like Lenin himself,
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brilliant intellectually, covered in
gold medals from school and university,
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and he joined a student group,and they decided to make a bomb,
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and attempted to kill Alexander III.
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[Beer] The plan is to assassinateAlexander II's heir, Alexander III,
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when Alexander III is goingto be attending a ceremony
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to commemorate the assassinationof his father.
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And Aleksandr Ulyanov, he's the kind of,
you know, master bomb maker.
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[Rayfield] The People's Will
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was more of a mysticthan an ideological association.
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The idea if we bring down the very top,
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they'll all be so terrified
that the system will disintegrate
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and they'll be a sort of peasant uprising
out of which a new order will arise,
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but they had begun to read Marx.The trouble with reading Marx, of course,
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is Marx predicted the last placethere'd be a revolution would be Russia.
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So, it was still that romantic ideaof kill the tsar
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and everything will naturally reform.
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[Beer]
A bomb that's packed with pieces of metal
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that have been dipped in strychnine
to inflict maximum number of fatalities.
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I mean, that's worth remembering.
But the plan is undone by the Okhrana,
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and they have windof the attempt on the tsar's life,
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and the terrorists are arrestedand rounded up within a matter of days.
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[Rayfield]
Of course they were sentenced to death.
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Alexander III very generously said,
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"Those that repent, I will reprieve.
Those that don't repent, I will hang."
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Sasha said, "That would be going againstmy principles to ask for a reprieve."
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His mother begged him to.
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The hanging of Sasha, that is often seenas what motivated Lenin.
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[Sebestyen] Often these thingsare personal, not political.
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When his brother was arrested,his mother rushed to the city.
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Vladimir, the future Lenin,tried to organize transport
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to get her to the nearest train station,and he traced around bourgeois Simbirsk
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to try and get someonewho would go with his mother.
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Absolutely all of them refused,
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and that changed his entire perspectiveabout bourgeois liberals
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and the other middle class,
and it was-- That was overnight.
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And from then on,
he just abused the liberals,
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and the way the family
were snubbed because of this
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changed him as much as any other politics.
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[narrator] Sasha Ulyanov was hangedon the 20th of May, 1887.
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Lenin entered the undergroundrevolutionary movements
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following the path laid outby his brother,
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and just like Sasha,Lenin would be tracked
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by the secret policeof the Russian Empire, the Okhrana.
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[Sebestyen] Every country hada spy organization, of course,
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but Russia was the first onethat had an entire massive organization
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to suppress dissentwherever they seemed to find it.
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They had a vast operationto open people's mail.
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[Rayfield] The Russian secret policehad agents everywhere.
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It not only had departmentsin Saint Petersburg and Moscow
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and most of the main cities,it had a French department, as well,
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keeping an eye on the exiles.
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The Okhrana always kept an eye on them,
tailing them round Europe.
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You had to stay one move ahead.
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So, you spent 16 years effectivelygoing from one bolt-hole to another,
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always one step aheadof the secret police.
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[Sebestyen] On the biggest influenceson Lenin, before he read Marx,
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was a novelby a guy called Nikolay Chernyshevsky
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called What Is to be Done?
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It's a pretty lousy novel,
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but the hero is a selfless,devoted revolutionary
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who gives himself up to the causeand walks 20 miles a day,
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does 150 press-ups,
abstains from alcohol.
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And he modeled himselfon this character quite deliberately.
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Lenin always said this book,which he'd read one summer five times,
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influenced him morethan anything by Marx.
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[narrator]
Lenin was forced to cover his tracks
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as he traveled around the country,
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trying his best avoid the attentionof the authorities.
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At the same time, Nicholas,the heir to the throne,
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was also on his travelsaround the Russian Empire and beyond.
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It was a voyage of great fanfare,but it came to a shocking end in Japan.
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[Rayfield] His father triedto give him some responsibility,
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decided it wouldn't do any harm to put himin charge of the Trans-Siberian Railway.
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So, he'd crossed Siberia,went all the way to Vladivostok,
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and then he was senton a mission to Japan,
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which ended disastrously,because Nicholas was suddenly attacked
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by a Japanese policeman...
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Tsuda Sanzō, who took out his saberand slashed him on the head,
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and did quite a considerable amountof damage.
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[Welch] Otsu, as far as I could see,was a bit of a one-off.
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I didn't feel that it was a movement
amongst the Japanese against the tsar,
237
00:14:16,267 --> 00:14:18,367
who the Japanese themselveswere horrified by.
238
00:14:18,433 --> 00:14:21,500
[Rayfield] Japan had only been opento Europeans for about 35 years
239
00:14:21,567 --> 00:14:24,233
and there was a generalxenophobic suspicion.
240
00:14:24,300 --> 00:14:28,367
This Japanese policeman thought himselfas a samurai defending Japanese honor.
241
00:14:28,433 --> 00:14:31,067
Nicholas took it very well,he just stood there smoking,
242
00:14:31,133 --> 00:14:33,033
refused even to sit down to be bandaged,
243
00:14:33,100 --> 00:14:36,033
but, in fact, a large part of his skullhad been cut out
244
00:14:36,100 --> 00:14:38,233
and he suffered from headachesever afterwards.
245
00:14:38,800 --> 00:14:41,733
And it may well have prejudiced him
against the Japanese
246
00:14:41,800 --> 00:14:44,633
because after that,
in his correspondence,
247
00:14:44,700 --> 00:14:47,133
he refers to the Japanese as macaques,
as monkeys,
248
00:14:47,200 --> 00:14:50,500
and he became convinced that
they were utterly inferior to the Russians
249
00:14:50,567 --> 00:14:53,300
and therefore could easily be conquered
in any future war.
250
00:14:56,633 --> 00:15:00,333
[narrator] The Otsu incident may have beena near miss for the Romanov family,
251
00:15:00,667 --> 00:15:03,200
but it was a foreboding of things to come.
252
00:15:06,767 --> 00:15:08,433
Just a couple of years later,
253
00:15:08,500 --> 00:15:11,733
Tsar Alexander IIIwould suddenly fall ill.
254
00:15:12,133 --> 00:15:15,267
He passed away at the age of just 49,
255
00:15:15,333 --> 00:15:18,667
leaving behind his thoroughlyunprepared son Nicholas
256
00:15:19,233 --> 00:15:20,567
to inherit the throne.
257
00:15:23,400 --> 00:15:27,800
Alexander died fairly unexpectedly
of kidney disease
258
00:15:28,033 --> 00:15:29,500
when he was still in his 40s.
259
00:15:29,567 --> 00:15:33,267
I mean, Nicholas had expected
to have another 20 years
260
00:15:33,633 --> 00:15:39,233
to prepare for this onerous responsibility
of ruling this enormous empire.
261
00:15:39,300 --> 00:15:40,700
The problem was the successions.
262
00:15:40,767 --> 00:15:43,000
That's the problem
with a hereditary monarchy,
263
00:15:43,067 --> 00:15:45,000
the monarch has to die at the right time.
264
00:15:45,500 --> 00:15:48,500
When Alexander III died--
And he was only 49.
265
00:15:49,133 --> 00:15:52,033
--his minister said,"It was a pity he didn't die much earlier,
266
00:15:52,100 --> 00:15:53,300
so, we had a boy tsar,
267
00:15:53,367 --> 00:15:56,033
who couldn't make any decisionsfor at least ten years,
268
00:15:56,100 --> 00:15:59,400
or much later,so that Nicholas could've grown up a bit."
269
00:15:59,767 --> 00:16:02,367
But Nicholas was alwayssomewhat infantile.
270
00:16:03,067 --> 00:16:06,000
[Rappaport]
He was terrified when his father died
271
00:16:06,067 --> 00:16:10,667
at the prospect of havingto take on so much responsibility,
272
00:16:10,733 --> 00:16:14,267
for which he had really receivedvery little training.
273
00:16:16,400 --> 00:16:19,100
[narrator]
Just a week after his father's burial,
274
00:16:19,167 --> 00:16:20,767
Nicholas married Alix of Hesse,
275
00:16:21,000 --> 00:16:24,700
a German princess,who would became Tsarina Alexandra.
276
00:16:25,233 --> 00:16:29,600
Her background would prove challengingfor the Romanov family during World War I.
277
00:16:30,133 --> 00:16:34,800
But Nicholas's enormous problemsas monarch started far sooner than that.
278
00:16:35,033 --> 00:16:39,467
In fact, from the day of his coronation,he was off to a dreadful start.
279
00:16:48,500 --> 00:16:51,600
[Rayfield]
At his coronation in Moscow in 1896,
280
00:16:51,667 --> 00:16:55,100
there was a big park called Khodynkain western Moscow,
281
00:16:55,167 --> 00:16:58,267
and the government had arrangedfor coronation mugs
282
00:16:58,333 --> 00:17:00,600
and little bags of goodies
to be given out.
283
00:17:01,000 --> 00:17:02,733
[yelling and cheering]
284
00:17:03,700 --> 00:17:05,633
The fencing and the gates were all wrong,
285
00:17:05,700 --> 00:17:08,300
and so, when the crowds pressedto receive their goods,
286
00:17:08,367 --> 00:17:09,533
there's a terrible crush.
287
00:17:12,367 --> 00:17:16,100
Some 1500 people died,and that was a terrible tragedy.
288
00:17:17,100 --> 00:17:20,500
[Welch] That night there was a partyat the French Embassy,
289
00:17:20,567 --> 00:17:25,133
and he didn't want to go to it,but he was persuaded to go to the event,
290
00:17:25,200 --> 00:17:28,567
and it was forever held against himas deeply insensitive.
291
00:17:30,500 --> 00:17:33,700
[Rappaport] He had to relyon his ministers to advise him.
292
00:17:33,767 --> 00:17:37,600
But fundamentally from day one,the job of being tsar
293
00:17:37,667 --> 00:17:41,733
was pretty much agreedand dictated by his wife.
294
00:17:41,800 --> 00:17:47,300
She was very entrenched in the concept
of autocracy and their divine right.
295
00:17:49,567 --> 00:17:52,433
[narrator] Nicholas was strugglingin his new role as tsar,
296
00:17:52,500 --> 00:17:55,600
but the man who would eventuallyreplace him as ruler of Russia
297
00:17:55,667 --> 00:17:57,667
was in a far worse predicament.
298
00:17:58,167 --> 00:18:02,067
Lenin had been captured by the authoritiesand was charged with sedition.
299
00:18:02,500 --> 00:18:06,667
In 1897, he was sent to exile in Siberiafor three years,
300
00:18:06,733 --> 00:18:10,333
which could often bea far less challenging experience
301
00:18:10,400 --> 00:18:12,233
than might at first appear.
302
00:18:14,033 --> 00:18:16,433
[Rayfield] He was sent tothe quite pleasant town of Minusinsk.
303
00:18:16,500 --> 00:18:19,067
He had his wife with him,he had his mother-in-law,
304
00:18:19,133 --> 00:18:22,267
he had a monthly allowance,on which he could keep a cow,
305
00:18:22,700 --> 00:18:24,167
and a serving maid.
306
00:18:24,233 --> 00:18:27,467
He had a maid of 12,
whom he paid one ruble a month,
307
00:18:27,533 --> 00:18:30,300
and kept her in a sort of cageunder the stairs.
308
00:18:30,367 --> 00:18:33,033
So much for Bolshevik egalitarianism.
[chuckles]
309
00:18:33,100 --> 00:18:37,000
[Beer] He writes home,saying that he's ice skating and shooting,
310
00:18:37,067 --> 00:18:42,100
and maintains this phenomenal levelof correspondence
311
00:18:42,167 --> 00:18:45,067
with a kind of conspiratorial network nowthat really stretches
312
00:18:45,133 --> 00:18:48,800
across the Russian Empire
and beyond to Europe.
313
00:18:50,800 --> 00:18:53,300
[Rayfield] Once you were there,you were housed quite nicely.
314
00:18:53,367 --> 00:18:56,267
In Russia people never feltthat prisoners were to be avoided,
315
00:18:56,333 --> 00:18:58,100
have a friendly chat with a murderer.
316
00:18:58,167 --> 00:19:00,533
People used to goto the prisons at Easter,
317
00:19:00,600 --> 00:19:02,600
as people go to the zooto feed the animals.
318
00:19:02,667 --> 00:19:03,800
It was not a bad life.
319
00:19:06,633 --> 00:19:09,300
[narrator] Lenin's exile ended in 1900.
320
00:19:09,667 --> 00:19:12,467
He would soon begin his travelsacross Western Europe,
321
00:19:12,533 --> 00:19:15,400
where he would meetother Marxists and dissidents
322
00:19:15,467 --> 00:19:18,033
who were playing the downfallof the Russian monarchy.
323
00:19:18,367 --> 00:19:22,533
But for now, Leninand these agitators seemed insignificant.
324
00:19:22,800 --> 00:19:25,300
There were far more pressing concerns.
325
00:19:25,600 --> 00:19:30,267
The Russian Empire was surroundedon two sides by rising military powers.
326
00:19:30,333 --> 00:19:32,367
To the west, Kaiser Wilhelm,
327
00:19:32,433 --> 00:19:36,000
under whose rule Germany had been unifiedin 1871.
328
00:19:36,067 --> 00:19:41,133
To the east, Emperor Meiji,whose restoration of Japan in 1868
329
00:19:41,200 --> 00:19:44,433
had forged anotherrapidly industrializing state.
330
00:19:44,667 --> 00:19:48,400
The first battle would be with Japanin 1904.
331
00:19:57,600 --> 00:20:00,267
Few world observers expectedan Asian military
332
00:20:00,333 --> 00:20:03,200
to challenge a European powerat this time.
333
00:20:03,633 --> 00:20:08,533
Japan's surprising success in the conflictfueled social unrest throughout Russia,
334
00:20:08,600 --> 00:20:12,300
which came to be knownas the 1905 Revolution.
335
00:20:15,267 --> 00:20:19,067
[Welch] The Russo-Japanese Warwas very bad for morale,
336
00:20:19,133 --> 00:20:22,200
because the Russians were trounced,and their fleet was destroyed.
337
00:20:22,267 --> 00:20:25,700
And that didn't help the tsar
in his bid to be popular.
338
00:20:26,767 --> 00:20:31,600
[Rayfield] A war being lost was a mixtureof embittered soldiers and sailors,
339
00:20:31,667 --> 00:20:35,700
whose lives had been just thrown awayin a hopeless war against the Japanese,
340
00:20:35,767 --> 00:20:38,533
an appalling disgraceful defeat.
341
00:20:39,267 --> 00:20:42,533
Coming home finding that factories
weren't paying properly and so on,
342
00:20:42,600 --> 00:20:45,233
there were shortagesand there was general disarray.
343
00:20:45,300 --> 00:20:48,133
And it was an opportunityfor disaffected soldiers
344
00:20:48,200 --> 00:20:49,300
to organize themselves.
345
00:20:52,533 --> 00:20:55,233
[narrator]
The response to the civilian unrest
346
00:20:55,300 --> 00:20:57,500
and demands for reform would be brutal.
347
00:20:57,767 --> 00:21:01,033
Imperial troops opened fireon the protestors.
348
00:21:01,100 --> 00:21:03,767
The events of Bloody Sunday,as it came to be known,
349
00:21:04,000 --> 00:21:07,600
would damage Tsar Nicholas'sreputation forever.
350
00:21:11,333 --> 00:21:14,267
[Rayfield] Well, the Bloody SundayMassacre was, in some ways,
351
00:21:14,333 --> 00:21:17,000
typical of Nicholas II's reign,
352
00:21:17,067 --> 00:21:21,733
that either he had to have much more sense
or he needed a good spin doctor,
353
00:21:21,800 --> 00:21:23,000
and he had neither.
354
00:21:23,067 --> 00:21:27,000
[Beer] The revolutionary partiesare all caught off guard by 1905.
355
00:21:27,067 --> 00:21:28,800
Nobody predicted Bloody Sunday.
356
00:21:29,067 --> 00:21:34,067
Uh, it's clear that the war, you know,
is going disastrously with Japan.
357
00:21:34,133 --> 00:21:38,167
There was no real sense that Russiahad reached a kind of turning point.
358
00:21:38,600 --> 00:21:43,400
[Rappaport] This was a spontaneous protestthat then ended in a bloodbath,
359
00:21:43,467 --> 00:21:47,500
because the tsarist authoritiesattacked the protestors.
360
00:21:48,300 --> 00:21:52,433
[Welch] He wasn't therewhen the troops opened fire.
361
00:21:52,500 --> 00:21:55,433
He just responded very badly.
362
00:21:55,500 --> 00:21:57,667
He sensed that he was getting less popular
363
00:21:57,733 --> 00:22:01,533
and when he became knownas Nicholas the Bloody,
364
00:22:01,600 --> 00:22:06,633
he started to spend most of his timeat the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoye Selo,
365
00:22:06,700 --> 00:22:10,467
which was about 15 miles awayfrom Saint Petersburg.
366
00:22:10,533 --> 00:22:13,767
He realized there might bea threat of assassination.
367
00:22:14,533 --> 00:22:17,800
[narrator] 1905 had been a dreadful yearfor the Romanovs,
368
00:22:18,033 --> 00:22:20,467
but the protest did eventually die down,
369
00:22:20,533 --> 00:22:24,800
and, crucially, the Russian armed forcesremained loyal to the throne.
370
00:22:25,467 --> 00:22:27,600
A peace treaty was declared with Japan,
371
00:22:27,667 --> 00:22:31,533
with a deal brokeredby U.S. President Teddy Roosevelt.
372
00:22:32,167 --> 00:22:35,600
Lenin and his accomplices across Europe,just like everyone else,
373
00:22:35,667 --> 00:22:40,033
had been caught completely off guardby the events of 1905.
374
00:22:40,267 --> 00:22:41,500
Out of nowhere,
375
00:22:41,567 --> 00:22:46,100
it seemed that the revolution they weresearching for was occurring spontaneously.
376
00:22:46,567 --> 00:22:49,200
But in the end,the tsar remained in power,
377
00:22:49,267 --> 00:22:52,567
and although a parliament called the Dumahad been set up in response,
378
00:22:52,633 --> 00:22:54,633
it was flawed from the beginning,
379
00:22:54,700 --> 00:22:59,067
and Nicholas had the abilityto veto any and all legislation.
380
00:23:00,133 --> 00:23:02,400
[Sebestyen]
There had been anger and resentment,
381
00:23:02,467 --> 00:23:05,767
and, also,they were losing a war against Japan.
382
00:23:06,000 --> 00:23:08,100
That was big profound shock to the system,
383
00:23:08,167 --> 00:23:10,667
and that changed the middle class's view
384
00:23:10,733 --> 00:23:12,733
about the kind
of political system they had,
385
00:23:12,800 --> 00:23:15,300
and the autocracy substantially.
386
00:23:15,367 --> 00:23:18,633
That, "We're so useless,we can even lose a war against Japan,"
387
00:23:18,700 --> 00:23:20,367
that had a really profound impact.
388
00:23:21,167 --> 00:23:22,533
[Beer] Lenin says that, you know,
389
00:23:22,600 --> 00:23:25,033
"My generation won't liveto see the revolution."
390
00:23:25,100 --> 00:23:29,067
You know, there is this sense that
this was like a one-shot deal,
391
00:23:29,133 --> 00:23:30,067
and we blew it.
392
00:23:30,133 --> 00:23:31,567
We weren't organized enough,
393
00:23:31,633 --> 00:23:34,533
we weren't ableto give direction and purpose
394
00:23:34,600 --> 00:23:38,033
to what was a sortof spontaneous popular uprising.
395
00:23:38,100 --> 00:23:40,567
[Rappaport] Lenin, even right up to 1917,
396
00:23:40,633 --> 00:23:45,633
was quite despairing that revolution,as his vision of revolution,
397
00:23:45,700 --> 00:23:48,667
was ever gonna actually happen
in his lifetime.
398
00:23:49,400 --> 00:23:54,167
So, 1905 was kind of a dry run
for what might come later,
399
00:23:54,233 --> 00:23:57,033
but it wasn't planned as a revolution.
400
00:23:59,400 --> 00:24:02,067
[narrator] For now, the tsar seemed safe.
401
00:24:02,133 --> 00:24:03,733
The war had come to an end,
402
00:24:03,800 --> 00:24:06,700
and the revolutionary fervorhad died down.
403
00:24:07,333 --> 00:24:08,800
But it was not to last.
404
00:24:09,033 --> 00:24:13,433
In the next few years,both the Romanov family and Ulyanov family
405
00:24:13,500 --> 00:24:15,000
would be introduced to figures
406
00:24:15,067 --> 00:24:17,667
that would prove criticalin Russia's future.
407
00:24:18,633 --> 00:24:22,167
For Lenin, it was a Georgiannamed Ioseb Dzhugashvili,
408
00:24:22,600 --> 00:24:24,667
later to be known as Stalin,
409
00:24:24,733 --> 00:24:28,767
although upon first appearanceLenin was unimpressed.
410
00:24:31,467 --> 00:24:34,033
Lenin was the leader
of that Bolshevik section,
411
00:24:34,100 --> 00:24:38,200
and was already, you know, the top man,
and Stalin was a nobody, really.
412
00:24:38,667 --> 00:24:41,233
[Rayfield]
At first Lenin hardly noticed Stalin,
413
00:24:41,300 --> 00:24:45,333
but later on in Vienna he noticed Stalinwas a very, very useful handyman.
414
00:24:45,800 --> 00:24:49,700
Lenin had a sort of rather patronizingview of non-Russians,
415
00:24:50,233 --> 00:24:52,267
so, he called him"this wondrous Georgian."
416
00:24:52,333 --> 00:24:54,500
Stalin was regarded as extremely useful.
417
00:24:54,567 --> 00:24:58,367
He was some sort of gofer, you know,
he never refused to do anything.
418
00:24:58,433 --> 00:25:03,567
He was always happy to kill, to rob,
he never balked at anything.
419
00:25:03,633 --> 00:25:05,800
He could do things physically,get into a fight.
420
00:25:06,033 --> 00:25:09,133
Lenin quite admired that about Stalin,he was as tough as anything.
421
00:25:09,200 --> 00:25:11,333
He had a quality of intimidating people
422
00:25:11,400 --> 00:25:14,133
and above all,he hardly ever talked, unlike Trotsky.
423
00:25:14,533 --> 00:25:16,633
That's why Stalinand Trotsky never got on.
424
00:25:17,400 --> 00:25:20,467
Stalin's secret wasto appear far less knowledgeable,
425
00:25:20,533 --> 00:25:22,767
far less intelligent, than he really was.
426
00:25:23,200 --> 00:25:24,733
He understood a lot of languages.
427
00:25:24,800 --> 00:25:27,000
He was an extraordinary judgeof character.
428
00:25:27,067 --> 00:25:29,800
Stalin's secret was notto find the strongest people
429
00:25:30,033 --> 00:25:31,000
to work with him.
430
00:25:31,067 --> 00:25:33,200
The strongest people might wantto succeed you.
431
00:25:33,267 --> 00:25:35,300
He always chose the omega male.
432
00:25:35,367 --> 00:25:37,300
He had his sort of allies with him
433
00:25:37,367 --> 00:25:40,500
and he knew howto make people feel they needed him.
434
00:25:40,800 --> 00:25:44,600
A year later when they met again, Lenin
couldn't remember any of his other names.
435
00:25:44,667 --> 00:25:48,333
He literally didn't remember meeting him.
But he made himself very useful,
436
00:25:48,400 --> 00:25:50,467
particularly when they neededto raise money.
437
00:25:57,533 --> 00:26:00,767
[narrator] The Romanovs were alsoabout to come into contact
438
00:26:01,000 --> 00:26:02,300
with a mysterious figure
439
00:26:02,367 --> 00:26:06,100
from the fringes of the Russian Empire,Rasputin.
440
00:26:06,167 --> 00:26:09,733
Tsar Nicholas's only son Alexei,the heir to the throne,
441
00:26:09,800 --> 00:26:12,333
had been diagnosed with hemophilia.
442
00:26:12,400 --> 00:26:17,000
The tsar and tsarina were searchingfor anyone who could help their ailing son
443
00:26:17,067 --> 00:26:21,433
and Rasputin seemed to be the only figurewho was capable of doing so.
444
00:26:25,167 --> 00:26:29,700
[Welch] He met them initially at a teawith the so-called Black Sisters,
445
00:26:29,767 --> 00:26:34,433
who were the Montenegrin princesses,Milica and Anastasia,
446
00:26:34,500 --> 00:26:39,200
who had invited himto Milica's palace for tea.
447
00:26:40,333 --> 00:26:44,167
Then it was several months afterwardsthat Alexei fell
448
00:26:44,467 --> 00:26:46,433
and was bleeding badly,
449
00:26:46,500 --> 00:26:51,467
and they thought of asking Rasputin to tryand heal him,
450
00:26:51,533 --> 00:26:52,433
and he did.
451
00:26:52,500 --> 00:26:58,333
But the questions always remainas to how he cured him or even if he did,
452
00:26:58,400 --> 00:27:01,133
or whether
he just calmed the Tsarina down,
453
00:27:01,200 --> 00:27:03,500
because she believe he was a man
of God.
454
00:27:03,567 --> 00:27:05,200
There's also an interesting thing
455
00:27:05,267 --> 00:27:08,400
that aspirin was beginningto be used as a painkiller,
456
00:27:08,467 --> 00:27:11,233
and Rasputinwas always very against medication
457
00:27:11,300 --> 00:27:15,200
and he recommended they not use aspirin,and that might have helped.
458
00:27:18,033 --> 00:27:20,400
[Rappaport]
If Alexei had not been a hemophiliac,
459
00:27:20,467 --> 00:27:22,467
history could have been quite different,
460
00:27:22,533 --> 00:27:25,767
because it created such resentment,
461
00:27:26,333 --> 00:27:29,633
the invitation of Rasputin
into the Imperial Family,
462
00:27:29,700 --> 00:27:34,733
that that in itself helped bring about
the downfall of the dynasty.
463
00:27:38,700 --> 00:27:42,233
Rasputin's presence would cause scandalin Russia.
464
00:27:42,300 --> 00:27:44,533
Endless rumors began to spread
465
00:27:44,600 --> 00:27:48,167
about the exact natureof his involvement with the Romanovs.
466
00:27:50,367 --> 00:27:52,167
[Rayfield]
First of all he was kept a secret.
467
00:27:52,233 --> 00:27:53,767
The press was forbidden to mention him,
468
00:27:54,000 --> 00:27:57,233
which immediately made people thinkthere was something terrible going on.
469
00:27:57,300 --> 00:28:01,000
Until about 1912 when press restrictions
were abolished in Russia
470
00:28:01,100 --> 00:28:03,767
and it was impossible
to stop the papers printing everything,
471
00:28:04,000 --> 00:28:06,100
and then Rasputin sold papers.
472
00:28:06,167 --> 00:28:08,033
The journalists absolutely loved him.
473
00:28:08,100 --> 00:28:10,633
You could follow him,you could get all sorts of stories
474
00:28:11,200 --> 00:28:14,100
from restaurant owners,from prostitutes about his behavior.
475
00:28:14,167 --> 00:28:16,000
Police would sell their stories to him.
476
00:28:16,067 --> 00:28:18,733
He became the sort ofnews-making phenomenon.
477
00:28:20,167 --> 00:28:26,167
[Welch] In 1911, there were lettersdisseminated around by an old friend,
478
00:28:26,233 --> 00:28:31,733
which had very passionate notesto Rasputin from the tsarina.
479
00:28:31,800 --> 00:28:35,267
You know, "I kiss you warmly,"
things like that.
480
00:28:37,800 --> 00:28:40,333
[narrator]
Rasputin's presence was bringing
481
00:28:40,400 --> 00:28:42,667
the Romanov family reputation into ruins.
482
00:28:42,733 --> 00:28:47,533
But in 1913, a chance to repairsome of the damage seemed possible.
483
00:28:48,033 --> 00:28:51,167
That year marked 300 years of Romanov rule
484
00:28:51,233 --> 00:28:54,267
and huge tercentenary celebrationswere planned
485
00:28:54,333 --> 00:28:57,100
that would hopefully boost public morale.
486
00:28:57,167 --> 00:29:02,300
However, yet another assassination attemptwould soon undo everything.
487
00:29:09,600 --> 00:29:11,400
[gunshot, and crowd yelling]
488
00:29:13,133 --> 00:29:16,667
Archduke Franz Ferdinandwas gunned down in Sarajevo.
489
00:29:17,667 --> 00:29:20,133
World War I was about to begin.
490
00:29:20,567 --> 00:29:25,000
Russia's failure against the Japanesenearly brought an end to Nicholas's rule.
491
00:29:25,067 --> 00:29:28,433
He would not survive a defeatagainst the Germans.
492
00:29:31,800 --> 00:29:34,167
[Rayfield] Considering the Germans alreadyhad the British
493
00:29:34,233 --> 00:29:35,600
and the French to cope with...
494
00:29:36,167 --> 00:29:40,167
with their enormous empires
of Indians and Algerians and so on,
495
00:29:40,233 --> 00:29:42,800
and that very soonthe Americans would come into the war,
496
00:29:43,033 --> 00:29:45,100
you would've thought Russiawould've had hope.
497
00:29:45,167 --> 00:29:47,233
But the Russian Army was a peculiar army
498
00:29:47,300 --> 00:29:51,167
in that the officers were enthusiastic,but the soldiers were not.
499
00:29:51,233 --> 00:29:54,667
The soldiers had been,many of them, part of a defeated army,
500
00:29:54,733 --> 00:29:57,500
most of them had nothingagainst the Germans whatsoever,
501
00:29:57,567 --> 00:29:59,533
and they didn't see them as an enemy.
502
00:30:01,033 --> 00:30:03,700
The corruption in the civilian area,
503
00:30:03,767 --> 00:30:07,333
where no boots were produced,no rifles produced,
504
00:30:07,400 --> 00:30:09,100
and so, soldiers were told to go in
505
00:30:09,167 --> 00:30:12,500
and pick the first rifle and pair of bootsoff the corpse in front of you.
506
00:30:12,800 --> 00:30:16,033
There were desertions,and murder of officers, and so on.
507
00:30:20,100 --> 00:30:23,167
[Welsh] I think that it was generallyconsidered a disaster
508
00:30:23,233 --> 00:30:27,667
when he decided to take over the troopsand get rid of Grand Duke Nicholas,
509
00:30:27,733 --> 00:30:29,667
who was probably a very good general.
510
00:30:29,733 --> 00:30:33,567
He was certainly a more imposing figurethan the tsar.
511
00:30:34,067 --> 00:30:40,167
And that did apparently
leave the tsarina and Rasputin in charge.
512
00:30:40,233 --> 00:30:43,133
The war was an absolute disaster
for Russia.
513
00:30:43,200 --> 00:30:47,067
An autocrat has gotta be judgedon the autocrat's decision,
514
00:30:47,133 --> 00:30:48,767
and it was a disastrous decision.
515
00:30:49,000 --> 00:30:50,633
And an even bigger decision was
516
00:30:50,700 --> 00:30:54,600
he put himself in chargeof the military strategy,
517
00:30:54,667 --> 00:30:56,633
which was a terrible mistake,
518
00:30:57,200 --> 00:30:59,800
because once it goes wrong,he's the only one you can blame.
519
00:31:00,033 --> 00:31:02,667
And there was a stalemateon the Eastern Front.
520
00:31:02,733 --> 00:31:06,367
The Germans had alreadyoccupied large tracts of Russia.
521
00:31:06,433 --> 00:31:10,333
There was absolutely no willamongst the army to carry it on,
522
00:31:10,400 --> 00:31:12,433
desertions were on a massive scale,
523
00:31:12,500 --> 00:31:15,033
there was almost no wayfor a Russian victory.
524
00:31:18,233 --> 00:31:20,733
[narrator] The winter of 1916not only saw the chill
525
00:31:20,800 --> 00:31:23,500
of inevitable defeat for the Russian Army,
526
00:31:23,567 --> 00:31:27,433
it also saw a shockingand painful loss for the Romanovs.
527
00:31:31,600 --> 00:31:33,767
Certain members of their extended family
528
00:31:34,000 --> 00:31:39,167
would not tolerate Rasputin's influenceover the tsar and tsarina any longer.
529
00:31:41,367 --> 00:31:45,100
[Rappaport] There was growing resentmentwithin the Romanov family
530
00:31:45,167 --> 00:31:48,467
among the relatives,who were absolutely appalled
531
00:31:48,533 --> 00:31:51,633
at Alexandra's close relationship
with Rasputin.
532
00:31:51,700 --> 00:31:54,133
Because they believed all the gossip,
as well.
533
00:31:54,200 --> 00:31:56,267
And it reached a point
where they were saying,
534
00:31:56,367 --> 00:31:58,767
"Well, not only have we gotto get rid of Rasputin,
535
00:31:59,000 --> 00:32:01,667
this evil Machiavellian influence,
536
00:32:01,733 --> 00:32:05,000
we've actually got to get rid of herand lock her up in a nunnery."
537
00:32:05,067 --> 00:32:07,633
She was causing a lot of trouble.
538
00:32:07,700 --> 00:32:10,467
[Welsh] It was the aristocrats
539
00:32:10,533 --> 00:32:15,433
who felt that Rasputin was bringingthe whole Romanov name down.
540
00:32:15,600 --> 00:32:19,500
One of the problems here
was that nobody knew why
541
00:32:19,567 --> 00:32:21,300
Rasputin was always going to court,
542
00:32:21,367 --> 00:32:25,033
and it was to cure the boy, Alexei.
543
00:32:25,100 --> 00:32:28,133
But because nobody knewthat Alexei was ill,
544
00:32:28,200 --> 00:32:32,200
nobody could tell the aristocratswhy he was still being welcomed at court.
545
00:32:32,267 --> 00:32:35,433
[Rayfield] Rasputin was blamedas being a German agent.
546
00:32:35,500 --> 00:32:38,800
They were convinced he was giving adviceto the Tsar to make peace,
547
00:32:39,033 --> 00:32:40,533
at least with the Germans.
548
00:32:40,600 --> 00:32:42,533
So, a conspiracy was formed
549
00:32:42,600 --> 00:32:45,667
with the connivance of many people
in the government.
550
00:32:46,200 --> 00:32:50,067
[Welsh] Two of the assassins both leftquite detailed memoirs
551
00:32:50,133 --> 00:32:51,667
and descriptions of the killing.
552
00:32:51,733 --> 00:32:54,433
There are quite a few discrepanciesin both the memoirs.
553
00:32:54,500 --> 00:32:58,367
He ended up in the river,but he was tipped over a railing,
554
00:32:58,433 --> 00:33:02,233
and he ended up with a lot of woundson his face and head.
555
00:33:02,300 --> 00:33:05,533
And nobody's sure whether it was
because he was beaten up or whether...
556
00:33:05,600 --> 00:33:08,333
Whether it was trying
to transfer the body.
557
00:33:08,400 --> 00:33:12,433
The plotters were incompetent,
they didn't know how to handle guns,
558
00:33:12,500 --> 00:33:14,333
they couldn't even kill him efficiently.
559
00:33:15,067 --> 00:33:19,533
And, eventually, it took three bulletsbefore they finally killed the poor man.
560
00:33:19,600 --> 00:33:24,300
It was an ignominious wayto get rid of Rasputin.
561
00:33:24,367 --> 00:33:27,433
At the time,they were greeted as national heroes.
562
00:33:27,500 --> 00:33:31,667
Everyone thought they'd saved Russiaby killing Rasputin.
563
00:33:40,133 --> 00:33:44,333
[narrator] Rasputin's time at courthad come to an end in brutal fashion,
564
00:33:44,700 --> 00:33:47,300
and it would not be longbefore the Romanovs themselves
565
00:33:47,367 --> 00:33:51,067
would also be seen offin equally bloody circumstances.
566
00:33:51,467 --> 00:33:55,600
Just as in 1905, during the disastersof the Russo-Japanese War,
567
00:33:55,667 --> 00:33:58,667
civil unrest was aboutto break out in Russia.
568
00:33:59,133 --> 00:34:01,200
The historic city of Saint Petersburg
569
00:34:01,267 --> 00:34:04,200
would see the beginningsof the February Revolution.
570
00:34:04,267 --> 00:34:09,000
It had been renamed Petrograd,literally "Peter's city," in 1914,
571
00:34:09,067 --> 00:34:11,300
as Saint Petersburg had been thought
572
00:34:11,367 --> 00:34:13,500
too Germanic a name at a time of war.
573
00:34:14,133 --> 00:34:17,600
But the new designation did nothingto contain the revolutionary fervor
574
00:34:17,667 --> 00:34:19,467
that was unleashed in the city.
575
00:34:20,167 --> 00:34:22,200
It soon became so overwhelming
576
00:34:22,267 --> 00:34:26,133
that Tsar Nicholas IIwas forced to step down.
577
00:34:33,400 --> 00:34:36,500
[Welsh] He couldn't quite accepthow bad the crisis was.
578
00:34:36,567 --> 00:34:41,367
He had this passivityand resistance to crisis.
579
00:34:41,433 --> 00:34:44,800
He had to be driven to abdicate,
and he finally did.
580
00:34:45,033 --> 00:34:48,500
But the tsarina always believed
that had she been with him
581
00:34:48,567 --> 00:34:52,467
she would have been ableto dissuade him from abdicating.
582
00:34:52,533 --> 00:34:57,700
He really hoped he was doing
a kind of grand gesture to save Russia,
583
00:34:57,767 --> 00:35:01,667
and so, it was done
out of a genuine love of country.
584
00:35:05,567 --> 00:35:07,567
[narrator]
With Nicholas having vacated the throne,
585
00:35:07,633 --> 00:35:10,267
a power vacuum was created in Russia
586
00:35:10,333 --> 00:35:14,533
with two major factionsin Petrograd fighting for control.
587
00:35:14,600 --> 00:35:17,467
On one side was a councilof workers and soldiers
588
00:35:17,533 --> 00:35:20,000
known as the Petrograd Soviet,
589
00:35:20,067 --> 00:35:22,633
which soon countedLeon Trotsky as a member.
590
00:35:22,700 --> 00:35:25,500
On the other side wasthe Russian Provisional Government,
591
00:35:25,567 --> 00:35:29,300
which had been quickly establishedby ministers who'd served under the Tsar.
592
00:35:30,033 --> 00:35:33,600
They would move the Romanov familyto Siberia for safekeeping,
593
00:35:33,667 --> 00:35:37,300
but soon nowhere in Russia would be safe.
594
00:35:40,333 --> 00:35:45,133
The Provisional Government represents
a vision of a liberal Russia
595
00:35:45,200 --> 00:35:50,367
where you'd have a communityof citizens who are given equal rights,
596
00:35:50,433 --> 00:35:54,633
but you probably enshrine a liberal orderbased around representative government.
597
00:35:54,700 --> 00:35:57,667
The Soviet representsa very different kind of Russia.
598
00:36:00,100 --> 00:36:02,567
The Provisional Government made
a halfhearted attempt
599
00:36:02,633 --> 00:36:04,300
to continue with the war.
600
00:36:04,367 --> 00:36:06,667
But because it couldn't cometo a decision,
601
00:36:06,733 --> 00:36:08,400
it couldn't get the economy going,
602
00:36:08,467 --> 00:36:11,500
it couldn't satisfy even the housewivesfor bread and so on.
603
00:36:11,567 --> 00:36:13,333
So, more and more dissatisfaction.
604
00:36:13,400 --> 00:36:15,400
[Sebestyen]
Lenin was in Zurich at the time.
605
00:36:15,467 --> 00:36:18,267
Someone entered his rooms
in his lodging house and said,
606
00:36:18,333 --> 00:36:20,133
"Have you heard there's a revolution?"
607
00:36:20,200 --> 00:36:22,233
At first he didn't believe it,then he did.
608
00:36:22,300 --> 00:36:24,767
And he wanted to get back to Russiaas soon as possible.
609
00:36:25,000 --> 00:36:26,533
From the moment the war started,
610
00:36:26,600 --> 00:36:29,800
Lenin was totally against the war.
611
00:36:30,033 --> 00:36:33,567
His line was,"Better that this country should lose...
612
00:36:33,633 --> 00:36:37,800
The better that kaiserism winsthan tsarism continues."
613
00:36:38,033 --> 00:36:41,600
So, he was basically sayinghis own country should lose the war.
614
00:36:46,200 --> 00:36:48,667
[narrator]
Lenin was in a difficult situation.
615
00:36:49,067 --> 00:36:51,033
In order to get from Switzerland to Russia
616
00:36:51,100 --> 00:36:53,300
to take advantageof the February Revolution,
617
00:36:53,367 --> 00:36:55,333
he would have to travel through Germany,
618
00:36:55,400 --> 00:36:57,267
with whom his country was at war.
619
00:36:57,667 --> 00:37:00,500
A complicated deal would haveto be brokered.
620
00:37:04,133 --> 00:37:06,367
[Rayfield] I would say it wasn't Leninwho made his move,
621
00:37:06,433 --> 00:37:08,500
it was the German High Commandthat made the move.
622
00:37:08,567 --> 00:37:12,067
[Sebestyen] He had been offeredkind of inducements from the Germans.
623
00:37:12,133 --> 00:37:15,167
They'd offered him money,
and he'd always refused it.
624
00:37:15,667 --> 00:37:18,300
But now he was less scrupulous.
625
00:37:19,500 --> 00:37:22,633
He agreed to the famous sealed trainthrough Germany.
626
00:37:22,700 --> 00:37:24,433
In the German point of view,
627
00:37:24,500 --> 00:37:27,500
it seemedlike a perfectly reasonable tactic.
628
00:37:28,100 --> 00:37:29,667
[Rappaport] Lenin didn't make the deal.
629
00:37:29,733 --> 00:37:32,233
Lenin never got his hands dirty.
630
00:37:32,300 --> 00:37:35,567
Lenin never directly did something
631
00:37:35,633 --> 00:37:37,667
that might be politically damaging.
632
00:37:38,233 --> 00:37:41,767
The deal to get himand his cohort of followers
633
00:37:42,000 --> 00:37:44,633
back to Russia when revolution broke
634
00:37:44,700 --> 00:37:48,000
was negotiated by intermediaries.
635
00:37:48,067 --> 00:37:51,367
So, he had to go on this torturous journeyup through Germany,
636
00:37:51,433 --> 00:37:53,633
across to Sweden,all the way up through Sweden,
637
00:37:53,700 --> 00:37:55,267
to Finland and down.
638
00:37:55,700 --> 00:37:57,700
[Rayfield] That train deposited Lenin
639
00:37:57,767 --> 00:38:00,433
at the Finland Stationin Saint Petersburg.
640
00:38:01,467 --> 00:38:04,033
Now, if the Provisional Government had
had the sense
641
00:38:04,100 --> 00:38:06,433
to turn up with a small group
of people to meet him
642
00:38:06,500 --> 00:38:09,800
and arrest him on the spot...
But they couldn't get around to it.
643
00:38:10,033 --> 00:38:11,500
They were incredibly inefficient.
644
00:38:12,167 --> 00:38:14,567
[Beer] Lenin's genius, when he arrivesat the Finland Station
645
00:38:14,633 --> 00:38:17,167
and he gives a speechfrom the armored car,
646
00:38:17,333 --> 00:38:20,400
he calls for all power to the Soviets.
647
00:38:20,567 --> 00:38:24,400
And that's not a call for direct democracy
648
00:38:24,467 --> 00:38:26,367
rather than representative democracy.
649
00:38:26,433 --> 00:38:31,633
That's a call for
this much more brutal exclusive vision
650
00:38:31,700 --> 00:38:36,467
of a revolutionary future,
in which everyone who was on top before
651
00:38:36,533 --> 00:38:38,267
will now be at the bottom.
652
00:38:38,333 --> 00:38:41,267
[Sebestyen] The dual power system meantthat everything had to be agreed
653
00:38:41,333 --> 00:38:44,067
by the Sovietand the Provisional Government,
654
00:38:44,133 --> 00:38:46,533
which led to paralysis.
655
00:38:46,667 --> 00:38:49,233
Lenin was very, very good at using this.
656
00:38:49,300 --> 00:38:53,200
He was incredibly skillfulat the black arts and propaganda,
657
00:38:53,267 --> 00:38:54,733
and used it rather brilliantly.
658
00:38:54,800 --> 00:38:58,233
And he loved the revolution,
this part of the revolution.
659
00:38:58,300 --> 00:39:00,733
The Bolsheviks do nearly
overplay their hand, you know.
660
00:39:00,800 --> 00:39:06,167
In the July Days, they do try
to stage an uprising in Petrograd,
661
00:39:06,233 --> 00:39:07,467
and it is crushed.
662
00:39:08,067 --> 00:39:12,233
[Sebestyen] In the middle of July,Lenin is charged with treason.
663
00:39:12,400 --> 00:39:15,367
There is informationcoming out about money
664
00:39:15,433 --> 00:39:18,167
that the Bolsheviks acceptedfrom the Germans.
665
00:39:18,233 --> 00:39:22,167
So, he's under arrest,and he escapes to Finland,
666
00:39:22,233 --> 00:39:25,467
and is out of the countryfor quite a lot of the while,
667
00:39:25,533 --> 00:39:28,067
then comes back and insists,
668
00:39:28,133 --> 00:39:29,733
"There is no power in this country.
669
00:39:29,800 --> 00:39:34,233
Let's take over the railway station,
and the post offices, and power is ours.
670
00:39:34,300 --> 00:39:37,100
It's there for the taking.Take it from the street.
671
00:39:37,167 --> 00:39:38,533
We can do it."
672
00:39:52,400 --> 00:39:54,433
[narrator] Lenin's beliefin the profound weakness
673
00:39:54,500 --> 00:39:55,633
of the Provisional Government
674
00:39:55,700 --> 00:39:57,567
would prove justified.
675
00:39:57,633 --> 00:40:00,333
Russia's October Revolution had begun,
676
00:40:00,400 --> 00:40:04,300
and the Bolsheviks's attemptat a coup d'état would spark a civil war
677
00:40:04,367 --> 00:40:07,067
that would last until 1922.
678
00:40:09,133 --> 00:40:12,033
[Sebestyen] Without Lenin, there wouldn'thave been a Bolshevik Revolution
679
00:40:12,100 --> 00:40:14,567
and there wouldn't have beenany second revolution.
680
00:40:14,633 --> 00:40:18,633
And he pushed and pushed and pushedhis party members with him.
681
00:40:18,700 --> 00:40:20,400
They were very, very reluctant,
682
00:40:20,467 --> 00:40:22,600
because they were scared of being shot
683
00:40:22,667 --> 00:40:24,400
or they're scared it wouldn't work.
684
00:40:24,467 --> 00:40:29,433
There wasn't one particular sparkthat week or that month that led it,
685
00:40:29,500 --> 00:40:31,667
it was Lenin saying, "This is our chance."
686
00:40:31,733 --> 00:40:34,467
[Beer] Lenin's regime is a governmentthat's born in war.
687
00:40:34,767 --> 00:40:37,400
So, really, it's helpfulto think about the period,
688
00:40:37,467 --> 00:40:39,633
I think, from 1914 to 1921,
689
00:40:39,700 --> 00:40:42,000
as one of continuous warfare.
690
00:40:42,067 --> 00:40:44,167
The Bolshevik partyat the beginning of 1917
691
00:40:44,233 --> 00:40:46,200
is about 20,000 people.
692
00:40:46,267 --> 00:40:48,767
By the end of the civil war,it's about 1.3 million.
693
00:40:49,000 --> 00:40:52,400
And most of the new recruits are men
694
00:40:52,467 --> 00:40:56,300
whose formative administrative experience
has been in the army.
695
00:40:56,367 --> 00:40:58,767
They are militarized in their psychology.
696
00:41:02,233 --> 00:41:04,133
[Welsh] The actual revolution in Russia,
697
00:41:04,200 --> 00:41:06,000
initially, was very much in Petrograd
698
00:41:06,067 --> 00:41:08,200
and of course Moscow.
699
00:41:08,267 --> 00:41:11,100
The way in which it took holdacross rural Russia
700
00:41:11,167 --> 00:41:15,133
was really very anarchic and violent.
701
00:41:15,200 --> 00:41:20,533
And there were horrific scenesof peasants rampaging across estates,
702
00:41:20,600 --> 00:41:22,800
burning the manor houses down,
703
00:41:23,033 --> 00:41:25,367
slaughtering the occupants,
704
00:41:25,433 --> 00:41:28,600
killing all the cattle
owned by the landowners.
705
00:41:28,667 --> 00:41:30,433
It was very savage.
706
00:41:30,500 --> 00:41:33,800
[Rayfield] The resistance took too longbecause most the army and the navy
707
00:41:34,033 --> 00:41:37,700
were so demoralized thatthey came over to the Bolshevik side.
708
00:41:37,767 --> 00:41:39,333
They were very, very happy
709
00:41:39,400 --> 00:41:41,533
to go around the hospitals,shooting ministers.
710
00:41:41,600 --> 00:41:44,467
There was a general murderous feeling
about the government
711
00:41:44,533 --> 00:41:46,300
which Lenin just released.
712
00:41:52,033 --> 00:41:55,733
[narrator] Lenin was quickly becomingthe most powerful man in Russia.
713
00:41:56,300 --> 00:41:58,433
He'd agreed to an endto the war with Germany
714
00:41:58,500 --> 00:42:00,500
with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.
715
00:42:00,567 --> 00:42:05,067
And his new secret police were commencinga strategy of violent repression
716
00:42:05,133 --> 00:42:07,800
that would become known as the Red Terror.
717
00:42:10,667 --> 00:42:14,333
The now-deposed Romanov familywere being held in safekeeping
718
00:42:14,400 --> 00:42:16,067
by the Provisional Government.
719
00:42:16,133 --> 00:42:18,533
Attempts had been madeto send them into exile,
720
00:42:18,600 --> 00:42:21,100
but the efforts were to no avail.
721
00:42:21,267 --> 00:42:25,367
Soon, the tsar, his wife and children,and his last remaining staff
722
00:42:25,433 --> 00:42:29,767
were captured by the Bolshevik forcesand sent to Yekaterinburg
723
00:42:30,100 --> 00:42:33,200
where they were kept in strict isolation.
724
00:42:37,667 --> 00:42:41,433
At around midnight on July the 17th, 1918,
725
00:42:41,500 --> 00:42:45,800
the family were awoken and escortedinto the basement of the house.
726
00:42:46,367 --> 00:42:48,333
[gunfire, and screaming]
727
00:42:54,267 --> 00:42:56,533
This once all-powerful dynasty
728
00:42:56,600 --> 00:42:59,800
had authorized the executionof Sasha Ulyanov,
729
00:43:00,033 --> 00:43:01,467
Lenin's elder brother.
730
00:43:02,033 --> 00:43:04,133
But now the tables had been turned,
731
00:43:04,200 --> 00:43:06,800
and the Romanovs were no more.
732
00:43:10,033 --> 00:43:13,100
[Welsh]
The tragedy is that they had 11 assassins
733
00:43:13,167 --> 00:43:16,000
for 11 people to be shot.
734
00:43:16,067 --> 00:43:19,800
And when it came to it,
I think the assassins were quite drunk,
735
00:43:20,233 --> 00:43:22,167
and nobody wanted to shoot the children,
736
00:43:22,233 --> 00:43:26,067
so, they shot the tsar and tsarina first.
737
00:43:26,733 --> 00:43:30,300
And the children hada most horrifying death
738
00:43:30,367 --> 00:43:32,300
you could ever imagine or inflict.
739
00:43:32,367 --> 00:43:35,567
And that was brought aboutby their loving parents,
740
00:43:35,633 --> 00:43:37,400
just indirectly over the years.
741
00:43:38,667 --> 00:43:43,267
[Rappaport] Who could have imagined thatthose innocent children would be murdered?
742
00:43:43,333 --> 00:43:47,700
This was why it was so horrifyingwhen it happened.
743
00:43:47,767 --> 00:43:52,800
No one ever imagined those childrenwould be so cruelly murdered.
744
00:43:53,033 --> 00:43:55,433
[Sebestyen] There's no paper trail,but we pretty much know
745
00:43:55,500 --> 00:43:58,233
it would never have happenedwithout Lenin agreeing to it.
746
00:43:58,300 --> 00:44:02,433
No one was gonna kill the Romanovs
without Lenin's say-so.
747
00:44:07,600 --> 00:44:10,667
[narrator]
Nicholas II's mother, the Dowager Empress,
748
00:44:10,733 --> 00:44:14,567
was able to escape the carnageon a ship leaving from the Crimea
749
00:44:14,633 --> 00:44:17,700
along with other membersof the extended Romanov family.
750
00:44:18,333 --> 00:44:21,633
But the dynasty that ruled Russiafor over three centuries
751
00:44:21,700 --> 00:44:24,000
had come to a vicious end.
752
00:44:24,167 --> 00:44:29,200
By 1922, the civil war in the countryhad also reached its conclusion,
753
00:44:29,267 --> 00:44:34,433
with the Bolsheviks victoriousand a new Soviet Union established.
754
00:44:35,233 --> 00:44:38,100
[Rayfield] Lenin began cementingpower as soon as he started.
755
00:44:38,167 --> 00:44:39,767
His organization was so good
756
00:44:40,000 --> 00:44:42,000
that he had the common soldiersand sailors,
757
00:44:42,067 --> 00:44:43,733
and above all he had the secret police.
758
00:44:43,800 --> 00:44:46,533
He had Trotsky,who I think the real genius,
759
00:44:46,700 --> 00:44:49,267
to take a whole lotof disillusioned deserters,
760
00:44:49,333 --> 00:44:50,733
you then create a Red Army,
761
00:44:50,800 --> 00:44:53,033
one of the most brilliant armiesin the world.
762
00:44:53,100 --> 00:44:57,767
With Trotsky's military geniusand Lenin's organization and subversion,
763
00:44:58,000 --> 00:45:00,000
I think he consolidated all the time.
764
00:45:01,600 --> 00:45:04,333
He absolutely used terror.
765
00:45:05,033 --> 00:45:07,667
[Sebestyen] Not only that,he was very, very good at lying.
766
00:45:07,733 --> 00:45:10,333
He was very skillful aboutbuilding majorities,
767
00:45:10,400 --> 00:45:12,333
building groups loyal to him.
768
00:45:13,267 --> 00:45:15,467
[Rappaport]
After the revolution, people were saying,
769
00:45:15,533 --> 00:45:19,133
"Yes, we need a republic and we need,you know, a constitution and all that,
770
00:45:19,200 --> 00:45:21,167
but we still need a firm tsar, as well."
771
00:45:21,233 --> 00:45:23,000
They kind of wanted the two.
772
00:45:23,067 --> 00:45:26,233
They couldn't quite
disassociate themselves.
773
00:45:26,667 --> 00:45:30,200
It's this ideaof the protective all-embracing tsar
774
00:45:30,267 --> 00:45:32,267
who looked after the nation.
775
00:45:32,667 --> 00:45:36,667
[Beer] There is always gonna bethis tendency towards the abuse of power,
776
00:45:36,733 --> 00:45:40,467
because the party acknowledges
no checks at all on its own behavior.
777
00:45:40,533 --> 00:45:43,167
There's no independent judiciary,
no independent press,
778
00:45:43,233 --> 00:45:45,233
there's certainly no political opposition.
779
00:45:45,300 --> 00:45:48,300
So, there is always goingto be this kind of tendency
780
00:45:48,367 --> 00:45:52,533
towards a sort of degenerationinto ever more absolute power.
781
00:45:55,367 --> 00:45:59,200
[narrator] But Lenin would not hold ontothis new position for long.
782
00:45:59,500 --> 00:46:02,467
He suffered a debilitatingseries of strokes,
783
00:46:02,533 --> 00:46:06,100
and died on the 21st of January, 1924.
784
00:46:07,200 --> 00:46:10,200
Ioseb Dzhugashvili,now known as Joseph Stalin,
785
00:46:10,267 --> 00:46:13,467
saw an opportunity laid out before him.
786
00:46:14,400 --> 00:46:19,067
The Russian Revolution of 1917changed the world forever.
787
00:46:19,233 --> 00:46:20,800
The Romanovs had been usurped,
788
00:46:21,033 --> 00:46:24,433
and the largest country on earthwas a communist state.
789
00:46:24,500 --> 00:46:28,100
The man who would becomethe most powerful dictator in history
790
00:46:28,167 --> 00:46:30,600
was now cementing his position.
78738
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