Knowledge

Factions of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party

Source 📝

33: 309:(1907–1909) were a radical faction of Bolsheviks which demanded that an ultimatum must be sent to Bolshevik deputies of the 3rd State Duma (elected in 1907) demanding that they be uncompromisingly radical. While Lenin sided with them twice (according to Julius Martov's 224:
were the faction who opposed involvement of Russian socialists in the war effort; they split from the Mensheviks in 1914 under that faction's founder, Martov. The Menshevik-Internationalists eventually merged with Mezhraiontsy, which merged with the Bolsheviks in
215:(1917–1919), the programme of the group was largely similar to that of the Menshevik-Internationalists, and politically it positioned itself between the Menshevik-Internationalists and the Bolsheviks. The faction merged with the Bolsheviks in 1919. 207:) were a faction of the Mensheviks who left in 1905 (plus their ideological compatriots who remained), maintaining that with the availability of legal participation in political life, the underground revolutionary party must be liquidated. 259:; 1907–1909) were a group of radical Bolsheviks who demanded to cease all participation of the RSDLP in legal state establishments, in particular, to recall the RSDLP representatives from the 287:
known as the Third Duma started after the defeat of the revolution in mid-1907 and the adoption of a new, highly restrictive election law. This faction subsequently organised itself in the
453: 137:. With the formal severing of ties in 1912, the Mensheviks used the name Russian Social Democratic Party (Mensheviks), or sometimes without the qualifier. At the outbreak of 211: 187: 175: 167: 117:, and organised a separate party, the Russian Social Democratic Workers Party, aka Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Bolsheviks), in 1912. After the 359:; Was a non-partisan group of party members who were opposed to factionalism in the party and this group was led by Leon Trotsky for some time. 301: 247: 54: 355: 84: 237:
to attempt to bridge the divide between the Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks, but eventually merged in 1917 with the Bolsheviks.
17: 122: 47: 381: 113:, formed in 1903 from the major split in the RSDLP which also produced the Mensheviks. The Bolshevik faction followed 431: 415: 435: 260: 220: 458: 162: 313:), he eventually denounced them, dubbing them "liquidators inside out". Ultimatists controlled the 62: 43: 141:
in 1914, the majority supporting the war ("Defencists") maintained control of the RSDLP(M) under
380:, "Nationalism, labour and ethnicity 1870-1939", Manchester University Press ND, 1999, pg. 150, 145:
and others, while those opposed to the war left as the Menshevik Internationalists under Martov.
284: 8: 395: 276: 268: 234: 118: 427: 411: 272: 326: 314: 333: 199: 114: 283:. The debates among Bolsheviks whether to boycott the new constituency of the 447: 377: 280: 149: 134: 58: 229: 133:, formed from the 1903 split with the Bolsheviks; the Mensheviks followed 296: 138: 142: 129: 109: 101: 97: 394:
James D. White, "The First Pravda and the Russian Marxist Tradition",
321: 242: 191: 179: 426:
Boris Souvarine, "Stalin: A Critical Survey of Bolshevism", 2005,
302: 248: 347: 288: 183: 339: 212:
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (of Internationalists)
171: 325:("Unity", 1914–1918) comprised associates and followers of 410:
Tony Cliff, "Building the Party: Lenin 1893-1914", 2002,
157:), an expatriate group based in Paris from 1901 to 1903. 166:
had an autonomous statute inside the RSDLP between the
454:
Factions of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
351:(1909–1912), left-communist faction of ex-Bolsheviks. 96:developed, as well as the major split between the 445: 267:in Russian). Among the prominent Otzovists were 317:Bolshevik organization until September 1909. 398:, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Apr., 1974), pp. 181-204. 337:("Southern Worker"; 1899-1903) opposed the 343:programme of building a centralised party. 92:between 1898 and 1918), several political 406: 404: 390: 388: 14: 446: 85:Russian Social Democratic Labour Party 401: 385: 370: 123:Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) 82:In the course of the history of the 26: 186:in August 1903, and again from the 24: 25: 470: 263:, hence the name ("to recall" is 31: 121:of November 1917 it became the 420: 13: 1: 363: 188:Fourth (Unification) Congress 7: 221:Menshevik-Internationalists 46:format to meet Knowledge's 42:may be better presented in 10: 475: 57:by converting it into a 174:in March 1898 and the 18:Factions of the RSDLP 233:, formed in 1913 by 55:improve this article 277:Anatoly Lunacharsky 285:Russian parliament 269:Alexander Bogdanov 235:Konstantin Yurenev 163:Jewish Labour Bund 119:October Revolution 459:Political schisms 273:Mikhail Pokrovsky 80: 79: 48:quality standards 16:(Redirected from 466: 438: 424: 418: 408: 399: 392: 383: 374: 327:Georgi Plekhanov 307: 304: 291:group from 1909. 253: 250: 75: 72: 66: 35: 34: 27: 21: 474: 473: 469: 468: 467: 465: 464: 463: 444: 443: 442: 441: 425: 421: 409: 402: 393: 386: 375: 371: 366: 299: 245: 205:Liquidationists 176:second congress 76: 70: 67: 52: 36: 32: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 472: 462: 461: 456: 440: 439: 419: 400: 396:Soviet Studies 384: 368: 367: 365: 362: 361: 360: 352: 344: 334:Yuzhny Rabochy 330: 318: 315:St. Petersburg 292: 238: 226: 216: 208: 195: 194:in April 1906. 168:first congress 158: 146: 126: 115:Vladimir Lenin 78: 77: 39: 37: 30: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 471: 460: 457: 455: 452: 451: 449: 437: 433: 432:1-4191-1307-0 429: 423: 417: 416:1-931859-01-9 413: 407: 405: 397: 391: 389: 382: 379: 378:Stefan Berger 376:Angel Smith, 373: 369: 358: 357: 353: 350: 349: 345: 342: 341: 336: 335: 331: 328: 324: 323: 319: 316: 312: 308: 305: 298: 293: 290: 286: 282: 281:Andrei Bubnov 278: 274: 270: 266: 262: 258: 254: 251: 244: 239: 236: 232: 231: 227: 223: 222: 217: 214: 213: 209: 206: 202: 201: 196: 193: 189: 185: 181: 177: 173: 169: 165: 164: 159: 156: 152: 151: 147: 144: 140: 136: 135:Julius Martov 132: 131: 127: 124: 120: 116: 112: 111: 107: 106: 105: 103: 99: 95: 91: 87: 86: 74: 64: 60: 56: 50: 49: 45: 40:This article 38: 29: 28: 19: 422: 372: 354: 346: 338: 332: 320: 310: 295: 264: 256: 241: 230:Mezhraiontsy 228: 219: 210: 204: 198: 161: 154: 148: 128: 108: 93: 89: 83: 81: 68: 53:Please help 41: 300: [ 297:Ultimatists 246: [ 200:Liquidators 139:World War I 59:stand-alone 448:Categories 364:References 261:State Duma 257:Recallists 143:Fyodor Dan 130:Mensheviks 110:Bolsheviks 102:Mensheviks 98:Bolsheviks 356:Unityists 322:Yedinstvo 243:Otzovists 192:Stockholm 71:June 2023 303:Wikidata 249:Wikidata 180:Brussels 155:Struggle 100:and the 94:factions 63:embedded 311:History 265:otozvat 436:p. 119 430:  414:  348:Vpered 289:Vpered 279:, and 184:London 340:Iskra 306:] 252:] 225:1917. 172:Minsk 153:(the 150:Borba 90:RSDLP 65:list. 428:ISBN 412:ISBN 294:The 255:(or 240:The 218:The 197:The 182:and 160:The 44:list 190:in 178:in 170:in 61:or 450:: 434:, 403:^ 387:^ 275:, 271:, 104:. 329:. 203:( 125:. 88:( 73:) 69:( 51:. 20:)

Index

Factions of the RSDLP
list
quality standards
improve this article
stand-alone
embedded
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
Bolsheviks
Mensheviks
Bolsheviks
Vladimir Lenin
October Revolution
Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks)
Mensheviks
Julius Martov
World War I
Fyodor Dan
Borba
Jewish Labour Bund
first congress
Minsk
second congress
Brussels
London
Fourth (Unification) Congress
Stockholm
Liquidators
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (of Internationalists)
Menshevik-Internationalists
Mezhraiontsy

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.