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Don Cossacks and the February Revolution
Canadian Slavonic Papers, 1968In the great Russian empire, by the twentieth century, the Cossacks had formed a well-to-do agrarian community whose privileged position as an independent state gradually evolved into a strictly military society of limited political status and autonomy.
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The Revolution of February 1917
1980Modern war imposes a terrible burden on society. If victory is feasible then a nation may hold together. Faced with almost certain defeat a society is more likely than not to disintegrate. Two great empires, one in Russia, the other in Austria-Hungary, found the demands of modern war too much for them.
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Machine Guns, Hysteria, and the February Revolution
Russian History, 2009AbstractCountless eyewitnesses to the February Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd claimed to have heard or seen machine guns firing from bell towers and rooftops at demonstrators below. Rumors of vile government officials orchestrating these attacks circulated widely within the population and fed upon, and into, hostility toward the Old Regime.
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February 1917: Revolution, Power, and the Bourgeoisie
Russian Studies in History, 2003Even though the revolution of February 1917 is among the crucial phases in this country's political history, much about it is to this day hotly disputed and misunderstood. Regrettably, the evaluation of this historical phenomenon has been overly influenced by the ideological tenets of those living at the time and those who followed.
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The February revolution: Was the collapse inevitable?
Soviet Studies, 1967(1967). The February revolution: Was the collapse inevitable? Soviet Studies: Vol. 18, No. 4, pp. 435-457.
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The February Revolution: Petrograd, 1917
Russian Review, 1982John Bushnell, Tsuyoshi Hasegawa
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1917: The Revolutions of February and October
2001Abstract In February 1917, the autocracy collapsed in the face of popular demonstrations and the withdrawal of elite support for the regime. In the euphoria of revolution, political solutions seemed easy. Russia’s future form of government would, of course, be democratic.
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Russia 1917: The February Revolution
Russian Review, 1967Donald W. Treadgold, George Katkov
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