9-15 July 1917

The city rose in tears and blood, in hunger and cold, in the
forced labour of myriads of the starved and beaten. Their bones lie buried deep
in the mud below. But their outraged spirits seem to live again in the
Petrograd workingmen of today – spirits powerful and avenging. The serfs of
Peter built the city; presently their descendants will be coming into their
own. It does not appear thus in midsummer 1917. The black shadow of reaction
hovers over them. But the Bolsheviks bide their time. History, they feel, is on
their side. Their ideas are working out in the villages, in the fleet and at
the front. To these places I now make my way.
(Albert Rhys Williams, Through the Russian Revolution
, New York 1921)
9 July
It seemed as if the disaster of the July days had set the
Bolsheviks back years. Steklov was arrested. The authorities ransacked the
house of Anna Elizarova, Lenin’s sister [Lenin was in hiding in Finland]. They
took Kamenev on the 9th. By the late days of the month, Lunacharsky and Trotsky
had joined many of the Bolshevik leaders, and other activists, in Kresty
prison, where the guards stoked up the criminals against the ‘German spies’.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
10 July
Tutor Piotr Petrov to Grand Duchess Olga, Nicholas II’s daughter
The good Lord has allowed me to live until Your name-day, my
dear unforgettable pupil, dearest Olga Nicolaevna! If the good fairies of the
stories really existed on this earth, I would ask them to bestow all the good
wishes , which only those fantastical creatures are able to grant! I, as You
are very well aware, am not a fairy, nevertheless from the depths of my heart
and affection for you, I want to wish you the one thing, which is more precious
than anything else on this earth: physical health and mental balance!
Everything else will follow. Goodbye until the next time! Please send my
respectful greetings to Mama, Papa, Alexei Nicolaevich and your sisters. May
God keep You! Your old P.V.P.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
11 July
Diary of Nicholas II
In the morning I went for a walk with Alexei. On our return,
I learnt of Kerensky’s arrival.
Memoir of Count Benckendorff
On the 11th July, at 11 o’clock in the morning, Kerensky
came to the Emperor to report that the situation in the town had become
alarming and he thought it would be more prudent for His Majesty and his family
to leave, and to settle in the interior of the country. He said that he himself
and the Emperor were in great danger. The Bolsheviks ‘are after me, and then
will be after you’.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
12 July
Report in The Times
of an interview given to the press by
Kerensky on his return from the front
The Provisional Government has no other object but the
defence of the State against disruption and anarchy, and the safety of the
Army. Relying upon the confidence of the masses and the Army, the Government
will save Russia and weld her unity by blood and iron if argument and reasons
of honour and conscience are not sufficient … The situation at the front is
very serious and demands heroic measures, but I am convinced that the
organization of the State is sufficiently vigorous to be cured without partial
amputation. In any case, the Provisional Government will do its duty, and by
enlarging and strengthening the gains of the Revolution will resolutely put an
end to the criminal activity of mad traitors.
(‘M. Kerensky Resolved on Heroic Measuress’, The
Times
)
13 July
Memoir of Fedor Raskolnikov, naval cadet at Kronstadt
During the night of July 13, when I was already asleep on my
ship, Comrade Pokrovsky, a Left SR member of the Kronstadt Executive Committee,
summoned me urgently to the Soviet. When I arrived he showed me a telegram …
[that] required him immediately to arrest Roshal, Remnev and me and send us to
Petrograd … True, it would not be difficult to organise a flight to Finland.
But we were the object not only of political accusations – the entre press and
so-called ‘public opinion’ were openly making monstrous insinuations about our
having collaborated with the Germans, acting as their agents … I realised, of
course, that a Party leader like Comrade Lenin had to stay out of prison by all
possible means … The Party had waited too long for Lenin, and wandered long
enough in the darkness for lack of his clear firm tactics, to let itself be
deprived of his leadership, even for a single day.
(F.F. Raskolnikov, Kronstadt and Petrograd in 1917
, New York 1982, first published 1925)
15 July
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
The funeral
of the Cossacks killed in the rioting took place today in Saint Isaac’s. …
Troops marched past, with the Cossacks in perfect order but with the other
troops far from brilliant … The parents walked behind each hearse, accompanied
by the friends of the victims, and it was touching to see these worthy
peasants, who had come from the Urals or the Caucasus to follow their sons’
coffins, being comforted by other Cossacks … Then followed the dead Cossacks’
horses, in their harness; one of them had been seriously injured and was
limping pitifully behind its master’s coffin. On another horse the dead man’s
son, a little Cossack of about ten years old, had been put up into the saddle.
At present, the Cossacks are the only element of order. It is said that they
have received large rewards for keeping order, from various banks. Whatever the
truth may be, one can count on them for the moment. But although this may be
sufficient for Petrograd, I doubt if they will be able to stop the landslide in
the country districts and at the front.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
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15 July 2017
The role of the Cossacks in the revolution is an interesting
one. In an article by Gregory Tschebotarioff in 1961 the author looks back on a
conference in July 1917 in Berdichev, Ukraine, attended by about 200 delegates
of Cossack units from the front. He describes the support shown to the Cossacks
by the (primarily Jewish) population, particularly in the context of the recent
funerals in Petrograd, described above. His explanation for this reception lies
in the ‘Order No. 1’ issued shortly after the tsar’s abdication, which removed
the disciplinary powers of Russian army officers and led (in the author’s
opinion) to the collapse of the Russian army. The infantry, which far
outnumbered the Cossack troops, ‘had little or no inner discipline, which led
to their rapid adherence to Bolshevik slogans for immediate separate peace’.
The Cossacks, on the other hand, described by Tschebotarioff as mostly
‘well-to-do and hence conservative farmers’, were united by a mistrust of
anarchy and a deep-rooted conservatism that led them to actively support
Kerensky’s Provisional Government. This in itself was something of a shift in
allegiance, as another witness, describing the February revolution fifty years
later, describes: ‘Most remarkably, Cossacks on their big horses rode around
with banter or curious-questioning looks at the people. “No, we won’t fire”,
they soon assured those who asked. Finally, when a mounted police inspector
attacked a demonstration leader, a Cossack charged at him with a flashing
saber, severing the inspector’s hand with one swift flash. The news spread all
over the capital, giving the rebels great courage. It was a thing of wonder,
truly: the Cossacks, these watchdogs of the throne, these sworn foes of plain
people for centuries, were coming over to the people’s side.’ October and civil war, of course, still lay ahead.
