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Quicknation Alexander Kerensky
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Alexander Kerensky (Russian: Алекса́ндр Фёдорович Ке́ренский) (April 22, 1881 (May 2, New Style) - June 11, 1970) was a Russian revolutionary leader, who was instrumental in toppling the Russian Monarchy. He served as the second Prime Minister of the Russian Provisional Government, immediately before Lenin seized power in the October Revolution.table
Early life and activism Kerensky was born in Simbirsk (now Ulyanovsk) the son of a headmaster. This was also Lenin's birthplace, and at one point Kerensky's father Fyodor taught the young Vladimir Ulyanov at Kazan University. Kerensky graduated in law from Saint Petersburg University in 1904. He showed his political sympathies early on with his frequent defence of anti-Tsarist revolutionaries. He was elected to the Fourth Duma in 1912 as a member of the Trudoviks (a moderate labour party). A brilliant orator and skilled parliamentary leader, he became a member of the Provisional Committee of the Duma as a Socialist Revolutionary and a leader of the socialist opposition to the regime of the ruling tsar, Nicholas II. February Revolution of 1917 When the February Revolution broke out in 1917 Kerensky was one of the revolution's most prominent leaders, and was elected vice-chairman of the Petrograd Soviet (workers' council). When the Provisional Government was formed he was initially Minister of Justice, but he became Minister of War in May and Prime Minister in July 1917. Following the failed coup of General Lavr Kornilov in August and the resignation of the ministers, he appointed himself Supreme Commander-in-Chief as well. Kerensky's essential problem in office was that Russia was exhausted after three years of warfare and the Russian people wanted nothing but peace. Lenin and his Bolshevik party were promising "peace, land, and bread" under a communist system, and the army was disintegrating as the peasant and worker soldiers deserted. But Kerensky and the other political leaders felt obliged by their commitments to Russia's allies to continue the war, and also correctly feared that Germany would demand enormous territorial concessions as the price for peace. Kerensky's refusal to withdraw Russia from the war proved his undoing. October Revolution of 1917 During the Kornilov Coup Kerensky had distributed arms to the Petrograd workers, and by October most of these armed workers had gone over to the Bolsheviks. Lenin was determined to overthrow Kerensky's government before it could be legitimised by the planned elections for a Russian Constituent Assembly, and on October 25 (November 7 New Style), the Bolsheviks took power in what became known as the October Revolution. Kerensky escaped the Bolsheviks and went to Pskov, where he rallied loyal troops for an attempt to retake the capital. His troops captured Tsarskoe Selo but were defeated the next day at Pulkovo. Kerensky narrowly escaped this defeat, and for the next few weeks he lived in hiding until he could leave the country, eventually arriving in France. During the Russian Civil War he supported neither side - he opposed both the Bolshevik regime and the reactionary White Movement generals trying to restore the monarchy. Life in exile Kerensky lived in Paris until 1940, engaged in the endless splits and quarrels of the exiled Russian democratic leaders. When the Germans overran France, he escaped to the United States in 1940. In 1939 he had married former Australian journalist Lydia ‘Nell' Tritton. In 1945 his wife became terminally ill. He travelled with her to Brisbane, Australia and lived there with her family until her death in February 1946. Thereafter he returned to the United States where he lived until his death. When Adolf Hitler's forces invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, Kerensky offered his support to Stalin, but received no reply. Instead he made broadcasts in Russian in support of the war effort. After the war he organised a group called the Union for the Liberation of Russia, but this achieved little. Kerensky eventually settled in New York City, but he spent much of his time at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in California, where he both used and contributed to the Institution's huge archive on Russian history, and where he taught graduate courses. He wrote and broadcast extensively on Russian politics and history. Kerensky's major works of writing include (1966). Kerensky died at his home in New York in 1970, one of the last surviving major participants in the turbulent events of 1917. The local Russian Orthodox Churches in New York refused to grant Kerensky burial, seeing him as being largely responsible for Russia falling to the Bolsheviks. A Serbian Orthodox church also refused. Kerensky's References R. Abraham; "Kerensky - First Love of the Revolution" - Columbia University Press 1987 |
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