Lenin, Vladimir Ilich (1870-1924)
I. INTRODUCTION
Lenin, Vladimir Ilich (1870-1924), Russian
revolutionary leader and theorist, who presided over the
first government of Soviet Russia and then that of the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Lenin was the
leader of the radical socialist Bolshevik Party (later
renamed the Communist Party), which seized power in the
October phase of the Russian Revolution of 1917. After the
revolution, Lenin headed the new Soviet government that
formed in Russia. He became the leader of the USSR upon
its founding in 1922. Lenin held the highest post in the
Soviet government until his death in 1924, when Joseph
Stalin assumed power.
II. EARLY YEARS
Lenin was born Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov in
the city of Simbirsk in central European Russia. (He
adopted the pseudonym Lenin, probably derived from the
river Lena in Siberia, while doing secret work as a
revolutionary.) He was the third of six children born to
Ilya Nikolayevich Ulyanov and Maria Alexandrovna Blank.
Ilya Ulyanov was the director of public education for the
province of Simbirsk during Lenin's childhood, and his
service to the state earned him the title of hereditary
nobleman. While Lenin was finishing school in Simbirsk in
1887, his older brother, Aleksandr, was arrested and
executed in Saint Petersburg (then the capital of Russia)
for his involvement in a conspiracy to assassinate Russian
emperor Alexander III. Later that year Lenin entered
Kazan' University (now Kazan' State University), where he
intended to study law. Before completing his first term at
the university, however, Lenin was expelled for his
involvement in a student demonstration. He settled on his
mother's estate in the village of Kokushkino and pursued
his study of law as an external student of Saint
Petersburg University (now Saint Petersburg State
University).
While living on the estate, Lenin began to immerse himself
in the radical political literature of the time. A
particular favorite was the novel What Is To Be Done?
(1863), by Russian writer Nikolay Chernyshevsky. One of
the novel's main characters, a man named Rakhmetev, lived
a life of extreme self-discipline and single-minded focus
on revolutionary politics. Rakhmetev served as a model for
Lenin, and it was largely these ideals of the Russian
revolutionary tradition-which glorified political action
and a life fully committed to the cause of revolutionary
political change-that shaped Lenin's political
personality. Also about this time, Lenin became acquainted
with the revolutionary ideas of German philosopher Karl
Marx through Marx's greatest work, Das Kapital (published
in three volumes from 1867 to 1895). Marx's ideas had a
profound impact on Lenin, and he soon came to consider
himself a Marxist.
Lenin received his law degree in 1892. He moved to the
city of Samara and took a position as a lawyer's
assistant. Lenin's earlier brush with the authorities
limited his prospects as a lawyer, however, and he soon
began channeling his ambitions into revolutionary
politics. In the mid-1890s Lenin quit his law practice in
Samara and settled in Saint Petersburg. There he became
associated with a group of radicals who were similarly
impressed by the ideas of Marx and the influential Russian
Marxist Georgy Plekhanov.
III. ORGANIZER
The Marxist activists of Saint Petersburg,
with Lenin prominent among them, began working with the
industrial workers of the city to increase the workers'
awareness of their political and economic power. Although
labor unions were outlawed in Russia at the time, the
Marxists agitated and distributed political literature in
the industrial districts of the city. They also attempted
to help organize strikes to improve working conditions in
the factories. In 1895 the Saint Petersburg Marxists
formed an organization called the Union of Struggle for
the Emancipation of the Working Class to continue these
efforts. The union's central organizers included Lenin and
Yuly Martov, a young Marxist who would later become one of
Lenin's great rivals. The small group of intellectuals
that formed the union also included Nadezhda Krupskaya,
Lenin's future wife and lifelong companion. Lenin and
Krupskaya did not have any children.
The Saint Petersburg union was short-lived. Lenin and
Martov were arrested by the state police shortly after the
union's formation, and further arrests eventually drew in
more than 50 of the Saint Petersburg Marxists. After
serving 15 months in prison, Lenin was sentenced in 1897
to three years of exile, which he spent in the southern
Siberian region of Minusinsk, in the village of
Shushenskoye. Krupskaya was sentenced to exile for a later
incident; in order to be together the couple decided to
marry, which they did in 1898. The period of exile was not
a difficult one for Lenin and Krupskaya. Much of their
time was spent reading and writing, and they were also
able to earn some money by translating English and German
works into Russian. It was during this period in Siberia
that Lenin produced his first major work, The Development
of Capitalism in Russia (1899), in which he attempted to
apply the lessons of Marx to the circumstances
characterizing Russian society. In the book, Lenin argued
that despite its economic backwardness relative to many
Western European nations, Russia fit the Marxist model of
a capitalist society. While Marx saw the basis for
revolution in the struggle between industrial capitalists
and workers, Lenin saw a parallel struggle within the
Russian peasantry, which he saw as divided into a small
wealthy class and a larger impoverished class. For this
reason, Lenin believed that Russia was ready for a
revolution led by the lower classes-a revolution that
would result in the overthrow of the imperial regime and
the establishment of a socialist economy and state.
Lenin's term of exile ended in 1900 and he made his way
abroad, first going to Switzerland and then settling in
Munich, Germany, where he was joined one year later by
Krupskaya. Together with other like-minded Marxists,
including Martov and Plekhanov, Lenin became one of the
principal editors of the newspaper Iskra (The Spark),
first published in Munich in December 1900. The
newspaper's aim was to bring together the Marxist groups
scattered throughout Europe, particularly Russia, and to
focus them on preparing for the overthrow of the imperial
government rather than spending most of their time working
for incremental reforms.
While many Marxists in Western Europe-primarily in
Germany-had come to favor the strategy of pursuing
socialist goals as a legal political party, the Iskra
editors considered such an approach a betrayal of the
ultimate commitment to socialist revolution. In his Iskra
articles, Lenin repeatedly emphasized the need for radical
thinking and political activism. He also developed strong
views about how an underground Russian revolutionary party
should be organized. In 1902 Lenin published a pamphlet in
which he argued that the revolution should be led by a
party of professional revolutionaries, organized in a
disciplined, military-style fashion, who would lead the
working masses to an inevitable victory over imperial
rule. Lenin titled his pamphlet
What Is To Be Done?,
echoing the title of Chernyshevsky's influential novel.
The implications of Lenin's vision for the Russian
Marxists became evident at the Second Congress of the
Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (RSDLP), held in
1903. (The First Congress, held in 1898, ended shortly
after it convened when most of the delegates were
arrested). At this meeting, Lenin and his colleagues
debated the issue of party organization and membership.
Lenin argued for a tightly organized party, limited in
number, with its members actively engaged in
organizational work. Other party members, including
Martov, opposed this view, arguing that the party should
be organized more loosely and should extend membership to
anyone who accepted its program. A vote was held on the
issue, and Lenin's side narrowly won. As a result, two
factions emerged within the RSDLP: the Bolsheviks (from
the Russian word for "majority"), led by Lenin, and the
Mensheviks (from the word for "minority"), led by Martov.
Lenin would spend much of the next few years attacking the
Mensheviks and defining his vision of the modern
revolutionary party.
IV. REVOLUTIONARY LEADER
During the period of his work on
Iskra (1900-1903) and a second newspaper, Vperyod
(Forward), begun in 1904, Lenin established himself as the
unofficial leader of the RSDLP. However, he was still
living abroad and thus was dependent upon intermediaries
for information about developments in Russia. In 1904
Russia went to war with Japan. A
string of military defeats and the strains placed on
society by the war made for a tense atmosphere in Saint
Petersburg, and by the beginning of 1905 various segments
of Russian society, including students and liberal members
of the nobility, were calling for political reform. When
an unarmed crowd of workers marched to the city's Winter
Palace on January 9 (or January 22, in the Western, or New
Style, calendar) to submit a petition to Emperor Nicholas
II, security forces fired on the crowd, killing or
wounding several hundred marchers. The
crackdown resulted in further strikes and demonstrations
throughout the country, beginning the crisis that would
become known as the Russian Revolution of 1905.
In October 1905 the emperor issued his October Manifesto,
in which he made a number of political concessions,
including a commitment to establish a popularly elected
legislative assembly called the Duma. Lenin did not return
to Russia until November-when the emperor proclaimed an
amnesty for all political exiles living abroad-and did not
play a significant role in the events of the revolution.
By the end of 1905 the imperial government had restored
order in Saint Petersburg, and by mid-1906 the government
had reasserted complete control over the country. In April
1906 the numerous factions of the RSDLP (not only the
Bolsheviks and Mensheviks but various ethnic and national
affiliates as well) met in Stockholm, Sweden, for the
Fourth Party Congress (the so-called Unity Congress). At
the meeting, the RSDLP resolved to support elections to
the new Duma, despite the party's commitment to the
objective of revolution. Lenin opposed this resolution,
demanding no less than the complete overthrow of the
monarchy.
In December 1907 Lenin began his second extended stay in
Western Europe, settling first in Geneva, Switzerland, and
then in Paris. While the disagreements that divided his
Bolsheviks from the Menshevik faction continued, both
sides were also experiencing internal turmoil resulting
from a decline in membership. In 1912 Lenin and his
supporters organized a party conference in Prague. At this
conference, Lenin formally broke from his Menshevik
opponents and the rest of the RSDLP to form an independent
Bolshevik Party.
Lenin settled again in Switzerland, where he spent the
initial years of World War I (1914-1918). The war inspired
one of Lenin's most influential works, titled Imperialism,
The Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916). In this book,
Lenin argued that the world war was an inevitable outcome
of Western capitalism and imperialism, whereby the
capitalist states of Europe had come to rely upon
aggressive foreign expansion in order to maintain economic
profits. Lenin was convinced that the war signaled the
final decline of the worldwide capitalist economy and thus
was bringing nearer the socialist revolution. He declared
himself a "defeatist," arguing that imperial Russia's
defeat in the war would be the surest means of bringing
about revolution in Russia. In advocating Russia's defeat
in World War I, Lenin found himself very much alone among
his fellow Russian Marxists, for whom the war had aroused
a fair measure of patriotism.
The pressures that the war inflicted on the Russian state
eventually produced a second crisis for the imperial
government. In late February 1917 (March, New Style),
riots broke out in Saint Petersburg (which had been
renamed Petrograd in 1914). The riots intensified rapidly,
prompting the formation of an emergency committee of the
Duma. The committee, composed of liberal politicians,
assumed formal governmental powers and declared itself the
Provisional Government of Russia on March 1. The other
important political body that surfaced at this time was
the Petrograd Soviet (Council) of Workers' and Soldiers'
Deputies, an organization composed of elected deputies
representing the city's workers and soldiers. (The soviet
had formed during the 1905 revolution but then had been
outlawed by the imperial government.) On March 2 the
emperor abdicated and the Russian monarchy effectively
collapsed. Meanwhile, the revolution spread throughout
Russia, resulting in the formation of numerous other
soviets.
At this time, Lenin was in Zurich, Switzerland, separated
from Russia by the front lines of the war. Lenin was
convinced that the revolution must not stop with the
assumption of power by the liberal Provisional Government.
Instead, he believed it must proceed directly to the final
stage of revolution according to Marxist theory: the
creation of a "dictatorship of the proletariat"-that is, a
government ruling on behalf of Russia's industrial workers
and peasants. Lenin was determined to return to Russia to
incite further developments in the revolutionary movement
and his own Bolshevik Party. His efforts to return home
were thwarted by the French and Italian governments, which
refused to let him pass through their countries because
they feared that his presence in Russia would threaten the
Allied war effort. However, Lenin received assistance from
the German authorities, who hoped that his return would
promote further political unrest in Russia and thereby
help Germany win the war. The Germans sent Lenin to
Petrograd in a famous sealed train that ensured his safety
as he crossed through Germany, Sweden, and Finland. He
arrived in his country's capital in early April.
Almost immediately after arriving in Petrograd, Lenin
issued his famous "April Theses," in which he argued that
the Bolshevik Party must struggle relentlessly to subvert
the Provisional Government and must make preparations for
an eventual assumption of power by the soviets. In July
Lenin was implicated in an abortive armed uprising in
Petrograd and was forced to leave the Russian capital for
Finland. The objective of seizing power by force remained
primary in Lenin's mind, however, and from his exiled post
he agitated ceaselessly for an armed uprising. During his
exile in Finland, Lenin also formulated his ideas about
socialist government in the famous pamphlet State and
Revolution (1918).
Lenin returned to Petrograd in October and continued his
demands for an armed uprising. By the end of the month, he
finally succeeded in convincing a majority of the
Bolshevik Party to favor a seizure of power in the name
of-but not by-the soviets. In late October (November, New
Style), armed workers, soldiers, and sailors stormed
Petrograd's Winter Palace, the headquarters of the
Provisional Government, and arrested members of the
government. The second Congress of Soviets, which convened
the same day, proclaimed Soviet power.
V. SOVIET LEADER
With the support of another radical party,
the Left Socialist Revolutionaries (Left SRs; a splinter
group of the more moderate Socialist Revolutionaries),
Lenin's Bolsheviks formed a coalition government headed by
the Council of People's Commissars, of which Lenin was the
chairman. The first act of the new government was to issue
two decrees: The first decree called for an immediate end
to the war in Europe, and the second called for the
nationalization of Russian land and authorized the Russian
peasantry to forcibly confiscate privately owned lands.
The new Soviet government had little popular authority,
and few observers believed that it would last, especially
given the chaotic atmosphere created by the ongoing world
war. Desperate to make conditions more favorable for the
new government, Lenin began pushing for peace negotiations
with the Germans. On March 3, 1918, the German and Soviet
governments signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, in which
the Soviet government ceded to Germany a vast amount of
Russian territory, containing about one-third of Russia's
population, one-third of its cultivated land, and one-half
of its industry. Although Lenin was convinced that these
harsh terms must be accepted in order to end Russia's
involvement in the war, the treaty was widely unpopular,
even within the Soviet government. It contributed to a
split between the Bolsheviks and the Left SRs in 1918,
which left Lenin and the Bolsheviks in sole control of the
Soviet government. World War I continued until November of
that year.
In March 1918 the Bolsheviks renamed themselves the
Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik). That summer, former
officers of the imperial military, as well as political
figures who had been deposed in the Bolshevik seizure of
power, began to form anti-Bolshevik armies in southern
Russia and Siberia. Called the White armies, these groups
strongly opposed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and the
antidemocratic seizure of power by the Bolshevik Party.
The Whites were supported by the
World War I Allies, who believed that their victory over
Germany depended on Russia rejoining the Allied cause.
Meanwhile, the Soviet government began to organize its own
military force, the Red Army, under the direction of
Lenin's longtime associate Leon Trotsky. In August 1918
Lenin was seriously wounded by two bullets in an
assassination attempt carried out by a political opponent.
His strong recovery from the wounds, and his quick return
to work, did much to contribute to the "cult" of Lenin as
a Christlike figure who could perform miracles.
From 1918 to 1921 Russia was torn by a civil war between
the White armies and the Red Army of the Soviet government
. In the summer of 1918 the Soviet
government, under Lenin's leadership, launched the Red
Terror, a brutal campaign aimed at eliminating political
opponents among the civilian population. The government
also introduced a series of economic policies in an effort
to put socialist principles into practice and to respond
to Russia's pressing economic needs. As part of this
program, which came to be known as War Communism, the
government began forcibly seizing grain and other food
products from the peasantry in order to increase the
supply of food to army troops and workers in the cities.
In urban areas, factories were nationalized and workers
were subject to strict discipline.
While contending with civil war and economic upheaval at
home, Lenin also turned his attention to the international
arena. In March 1919 he organized the Third International,
popularly known as the Communist International, or
Comintern, to promote world revolution according to the
Russian Communist model. The Comintern initially focused
on Europe as the center for the future revolution.
However, when a European upheaval failed to materialize,
the Comintern shifted its attention to Asia, where it
supported the cause of colonial peoples struggling against
European imperialism.
The policies of War Communism led to significant declines
in Russia's agricultural and industrial output. Widespread
strikes and uprisings broke out in cities and rural areas,
and by early 1921 mass unrest was threatening the
stability of the Soviet government. At the Tenth Congress
of the Russian Communist Party, held in March, Lenin
introduced a policy of economic liberalization known as
the New Economic Policy (NEP). The policy signified a
temporary retreat from Lenin's goal of transforming the
Soviet economy into a fully Communist one.
In May 1922 Lenin suffered a stroke. He recovered and
resumed work three months later, but then in December he
suffered a second stroke and it became apparent that his
health was in serious decline. That month the Soviet
government declared the establishment of the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), a federal union
consisting of Soviet Russia and neighboring areas that
were under Russian military occupation or ruled by
branches of the Communist movement. Lenin became
preoccupied with how the new USSR would be governed after
his death. He favored a collective leadership to succeed
him and was particularly concerned about the political
infighting that had come to divide the party leadership
and the Soviet government. In late 1922 and early 1923
Lenin dictated what became known as his "testament," in
which he expressed regret at the direction the Soviet
government had taken, with particular emphasis on its
dictatorial manner and its complex bureaucracy. He singled
out Joseph Stalin, then general secretary of the Communist
Party, as the main culprit in many of these trends.
Stalin's aggressive behavior had brought him into conflict
with the ailing Lenin.
In March 1923 Lenin suffered a third stroke that deprived
him of his ability to speak. A fourth and fatal stroke
occurred in January 1924, while Lenin was attempting to
recuperate at his villa outside Moscow. Lenin's death
occasioned a bitter struggle for power among members of
the Soviet leadership, principally between Stalin and
Trotsky. Ultimately, Stalin emerged as the supreme leader
of the Communist Party and the USSR.
Although Lenin had wished to be buried alongside his
mother in Petrograd, Stalin insisted that Lenin's body be
preserved in a mausoleum for public display. Lenin's body
was embalmed, and in August 1924 the V. I. Lenin Mausoleum
opened in Moscow's Red Square (it was subsequently rebuilt
in 1930). After Lenin's death, Petrograd was renamed
Leningrad in his honor. It kept that name until 1991, when
the Soviet Communist government collapsed and the city was
renamed Saint Petersburg.
VI. EVALUATION
Lenin was one of the foremost revolutionary
leaders of the 20th century. As a politician, he was
characterized by remarkable determination, ruthlessness,
and sometimes cruelty. Although it was Lenin's clarity of
vision that ultimately guided the Bolsheviks to power, his
vision for the future of Russia and the USSR was less
clear. Lenin was more successful as a revolutionary leader
than as a statesman, and his legacy would contribute to
the political and ideological divisions that characterized
the Soviet leadership in the 1920s. Lenin's greatest
achievements were those attained in struggle-such as in
the Bolsheviks' bid for power in 1917 and their effort to
preserve their authority during the civil war. His
leadership, and his conception of the revolutionary party
as a disciplined, military-style organization, served as
an important model for later revolutionary leaders of the
20th century, such as Mao Zedong of China and Fidel Castro
of Cuba. Lenin was also one of the leading Russian writers
and thinkers of the period, and his works made important
contributions to the development of revolutionary
socialist theory.
Last updated 14.5.2004