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Alexander Kerensky

Alexander Fyodorovich Kerensky[b] (4 May [O.S. 22 April] 1881 – 11 June 1970) was a Russian lawyer and revolutionary who led the Russian Provisional Government and the short-lived Russian Republic for three months from late July to early November 1917 (N.S.)

Alexander Kerensky
Александр Керенский
Kerensky in 1917
Minister-Chairman of the Russian Provisional Government
In office
21 July 1917 – 7 November 1917
Succeeded byPosition abolished; Vladimir Lenin is the next head of state, but the formal position is different due the dissolution of the Provisional Government.
Preceded byGeorgy Lvov
Minister of War and Navy
In office
18 May 1917 – 14 September 1917
[5 May – 1 September 1917 Old Style]
Minister-ChairmanGeorgy Lvov
Himself
Preceded byAlexander Guchkov
Minister of Justice
In office
16 March 1917 – 1 May 1917
[3 March – 18 April 1917 Old Style]
Minister-ChairmanGeorgy Lvov
Preceded byPosition established[a]
Succeeded byPavel Pereverzev
The Vice-Chairman of the Petrograd Soviet[1]
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byMatvey Skobelev
Personal details
Born
Alexander Fyodorovich Kerensky

(1881-05-04)4 May 1881
Simbirsk, Simbirsk Governorate, Russian Empire
Died11 June 1970(1970-06-11) (aged 89)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placePutney Vale Cemetery, London
NationalityRussian
Political partyTrudoviks
Children
Alma materSaint Petersburg State University
Profession
Signature

After the February Revolution of 1917, he joined the newly formed provisional government, first as Minister of Justice, then as Minister of War, and after July as the government's second Minister-Chairman. He was the leader of the social-democratic Trudovik faction of the Socialist Revolutionary Party. Kerensky was also a vice-chairman of the Petrograd Soviet, a position that held a sizable amount of power. Kerensky became the prime minister of the Provisional Government, and his tenure was consumed with World War I. Despite mass opposition to the war, Kerensky chose to continue Russia's participation. His government cracked down on anti-war sentiment and dissent in 1917, which made his administration even more unpopular.

Kerensky remained in power until the October Revolution. This revolution saw the Bolsheviks create a Leninist government, led by Vladimir Lenin, to replace his government. Kerensky fled Russia and lived the remainder of his life in exile. He divided his time between Paris and New York City. Kerensky worked for the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

Biography edit

Early life and activism edit

Alexander Kerensky was born in Simbirsk (now Ulyanovsk) on the Volga river on 4 May 1881 and was the eldest son in the family.[2] His father, Fyodor Mikhailovich Kerensky, was a teacher[2] and director of the local gymnasium and was later promoted to be an inspector of public schools. His paternal grandfather Mikhail Ivanovich served as a priest in the village of Kerenka in the Gorodishchensky district of the Penza Governorate from 1830. The surname Kerensky comes from the name of this village.[3] His maternal grandfather was head of the Topographical Bureau of the Kazan Military District. His mother, Nadezhda Aleksandrovna (née Adler),[4] was the granddaughter of a former serf who had managed to purchase his freedom before serfdom was abolished in 1861. He subsequently embarked upon a mercantile career, in which he prospered. This allowed him to move his business to Moscow, where he continued his success and became a wealthy Moscow merchant.[3][5]

Members of the Kerensky and Ulyanov families were friends; Kerensky's father was the teacher of Vladimir Ulyanov (Lenin) and had even secured him acceptance into the University of Kazan. [6] In 1889, when Kerensky was eight, the family moved to Tashkent, where his father had been appointed the main inspector of public schools (superintendent). Alexander graduated with honours in 1899. The same year he entered St. Petersburg University, where he studied history and philology. The next year he switched to law. He earned his law degree in 1904 and married Olga Lvovna Baranovskaya, the daughter of a Russian general, the same year.[7] Kerensky joined the Narodnik movement and worked as a legal counsel to victims of the Revolution of 1905. At the end of 1904, he was jailed on suspicion of belonging to a militant group. Afterwards, he gained a reputation for his work as a defence lawyer in a number of political trials of revolutionaries.[8]

In 1912, Kerensky became widely known when he visited the goldfields at the Lena River and published material about the Lena massacre.[9] In the same year, Kerensky was elected to the Fourth Duma as a member of the Trudoviks, a socialist, non-Marxist labour party founded by Alexis Aladin that was associated with the Socialist-Revolutionary Party, and joined a Freemason society uniting the anti-monarchy forces that strived for democratic renewal of Russia.[10][11] In fact, the Socialist Revolutionary Party bought Kerensky a house, as he otherwise would not be eligible for election to the Duma, according to the Russian property-laws. He soon became a significant member of the Progressive Bloc, which included several socialist parties, Mensheviks, and Liberals – but not Bolsheviks.[12] He was a brilliant orator and skilled parliamentary leader of the socialist opposition to the government of Tsar Nicholas II.

During the 4th Session of the Fourth Duma in spring 1915, Kerensky appealed to Mikhail Rodzianko with a request from the Council of elders to inform the tsar that to succeed in the war he must: 1) change his domestic policy, 2) proclaim a General Amnesty for political prisoners, 3) restore the Constitution of Finland, 4) declare autonomy of Poland, 5) provide national minorities autonomy in the field of culture, 6) abolish restrictions against Jews, 7) end religious intolerance, 8) stop the harassment of legal trade union organizations.

Kerensky was an active member of the irregular Freemasonic lodge, the Grand Orient of Russia's Peoples,[13] which derived from the Grand Orient of France. Kerensky was Secretary-General of the Grand Orient of Russia's Peoples and stood down following his ascent to the government in July 1917. He was succeeded by a Menshevik, Alexander Halpern.

Rasputin edit

In response to bitter resentments held against the imperial favourite Grigori Rasputin in the midst of Russia's failing effort in World War I, Kerensky, at the opening of the Duma on 2 November 1916, called the imperial ministers "hired assassins" and "cowards", and alleged that they were "guided by the contemptible Grishka Rasputin!"[14] Grand Duke Nicholas Mikhailovich, Prince Georgy Lvov, and General Mikhail Alekseyev attempted to persuade the Emperor Nicholas II to send away the Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, Rasputin's steadfast patron, either to the Livadia Palace in Yalta or to Britain.[15] Mikhail Rodzianko, Zinaida Yusupova (the mother of Felix Yusupov), Alexandra's sister Elisabeth, Grand Duchess Victoria and the empress's mother-in-law Maria Feodorovna also tried to influence and pressure the imperial couple[16] to remove Rasputin from his position of influence within the imperial household, but without success.[17] According to Kerensky, Rasputin had terrorised the empress by threatening to return to his native village.[18]

Members of the nobility murdered Rasputin in December 1916, and he was buried near the imperial residence in Tsarskoye Selo. Shortly after the February Revolution of 1917, Kerensky ordered soldiers to re-bury the corpse at an unmarked spot in the countryside. However, the truck broke down or was forced to stop because of the snow on Lesnoe Road outside of St. Petersburg. It is likely the corpse was incinerated (between 3 and 7 in the morning) in the cauldrons of the nearby boiler shop[19][20][21] of the Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University, including the coffin, without leaving a single trace.[22]

Russian Provisional Government of 1917 edit

 
Kerensky as Minister of War (sitting second from the right)

When the February Revolution broke out in 1917, Kerensky – together with Pavel Milyukov – was one of its most prominent leaders. As one of the Duma's most well-known speakers against the monarchy and as a lawyer and defender of many revolutionaries, Kerensky became a member of the Provisional Committee of the State Duma and was elected vice-chairman of the newly formed Petrograd Soviet. These two bodies, the Duma and the Petrograd Soviet, or – rather – their respective executive committees, soon became each other's antagonists on most matters except regarding the end of the tsar's autocracy.

The Petrograd Soviet grew to include 3000 to 4000 members, and their meetings could drown in a blur of everlasting orations. At the meeting of 12 March [O.S. 27 February] 1917 to 13 March [O.S. 28 February] 1917 the Executive Committee of the Petrograd Soviet, or Ispolkom, formed a self-appointed committee, with (eventually) three members from each of the parties represented in the Soviet. Kerensky became one of the members representing the Socialist Revolutionary Party (the SRs).[23]

On 14 March [O.S. 1 March] 1917, without any consultation with the government, the Ispolkom of the Soviet issued the infamous Order No. 1, intended only for the 160,000-strong Petrograd garrison, but soon interpreted as applicable to all soldiers at the front. The order stipulated that all military units should form committees like the Petrograd Soviet. This led to confusion and "stripping of officers' authority"; further, "Order No. 3" stipulated that the military was subordinate to Ispolkom in the political hierarchy. The ideas came from a group of socialists and aimed to limit the officers' power to military affairs. The socialist intellectuals believed the officers to be the most likely counterrevolutionary elements. Kerensky's role in these orders is unclear, but he participated in the decisions. But just as before the revolution he had defended many who disliked the tsar, he now saved the lives of many[quantify] of the tsar's civil servants about to be lynched by mobs.[24]

Additionally, the Duma formed an executive committee which eventually became the Russian Provisional Government. As there was little trust between Ispolkom and this government (and as he was about to accept the office of Attorney General in the Provisional Government), Kerensky gave a most passionate speech, not just to the Ispolkom, but to the entire Petrograd Soviet. He then swore, as minister, never to violate democratic values, and ended his speech with the words "I cannot live without the people. In the moment you begin to doubt me, then kill me."[25] The huge majority (workers and soldiers) gave him great applause, and Kerensky now became the first and the only one[26] who participated in both the Provisional Government and the Ispolkom. As a link between Ispolkom and the Provisional Government, the quite ambitious Kerensky stood to benefit from this position.[24][27]

After the first government crisis over Pavel Milyukov's secret note re-committing Russia to its original war-aims on 2–4 May, Kerensky became the Minister of War and the dominant figure in the newly formed socialist-liberal coalition government. On 10 May (Julian calendar), Kerensky started for the front and visited one division after another, urging the men to do their duty. His speeches were impressive and convincing for the moment, but had little lasting effect.[28][29] Under Allied pressure to continue the war, he launched what became known as the Kerensky Offensive against the Austro-Hungarian/German South Army on 1 July [O.S. 18 June] 1917.[30] At first successful, the offensive soon met strong resistance and the Central Powers riposted with a strong counter-attack. The Russian army retreated and suffered heavy losses, and it became clear from many incidents of desertion, sabotage, and mutiny that the army was no longer willing to attack.

 
Kerensky in May 1917

The military heavily criticised Kerensky for his liberal policies, which included stripping officers of their mandates and handing over control to revolutionary-inclined "soldier committees" (Russian: солдатские комитеты, romanizedsoldatskie komitety) instead; abolition of the death penalty; and allowing revolutionary agitators to be present at the front. Many officers jokingly referred to commander-in-chief Kerensky as the "persuader-in-chief".

On 2 July 1917 the Provisional Government's first coalition collapsed over the question of Ukraine's autonomy. Following the July Days unrest in Petrograd (3–7 July [16–20 July, N.S.] 1917) and the official suppression of the Bolsheviks, Kerensky succeeded Prince Georgy Lvov as Russia's prime minister on 21 July [O.S. 8 July] 1917. Following the Kornilov Affair, an attempted military coup d'état at the end of August, and the resignation of the other ministers, he appointed himself Supreme Commander-in-Chief, as well.

On 15 September Kerensky proclaimed Russia a republic, which was contrary to the non-socialists' understanding that the Provisional Government should hold power only until a Constituent Assembly should meet to decide Russia's form of government, but which was in line with the long-proclaimed aim of the Socialist Revolutionary Party.[31] He formed a five-member Directory, which consisted of himself, Minister of Foreign Affairs Mikhail Tereshchenko, Minister of War General Aleksandr Verkhovsky, Minister of the Navy Admiral Dmitry Verderevsky and Minister of Posts and Telegraphs Aleksei Nikitin [ru]. He retained his post in the final coalition government in October 1917 until the Bolsheviks overthrew it on 7 November [O.S. 26 October] 1917.

 
Kerensky in office

Kerensky faced a major challenge: three years of participation in World War had exhausted Russia, while the provisional government offered little motivation for a victory outside of continuing Russia's obligations towards its allies. Russia's continued involvement in the war was not popular among the lower and middle classes, and especially not popular among the soldiers. They had all believed that Russia would stop fighting when the Provisional Government took power,[citation needed] and subsequently felt deceived. Furthermore, Vladimir Lenin and his Bolshevik party were promising "peace, land, and bread" under a communist system. The Russian army, war-weary, ill-equipped, dispirited and ill-disciplined, was disintegrating, with soldiers deserting in large numbers. By autumn 1917, an estimated two million men had unofficially left the army.

Kerensky and other political leaders continued Russia's involvement in World War I, thinking that a glorious victory was the only road forward,[32] and fearing that the economy, already under huge stress from the war effort, might become increasingly unstable if vital supplies from France and from the United Kingdom ceased flowing. The dilemma of whether to withdraw was a great one, and Kerensky's inconsistent and impractical policies further destabilised the army and the country at large.

Furthermore, Kerensky adopted a policy that isolated the right-wing conservatives, both democratic and monarchist-oriented. His philosophy of "no enemies to the left" greatly empowered the Bolsheviks and gave them a free hand, allowing them to take over the military arm or "voyenka" (Russian: Военка) of the Petrograd and Moscow Soviets.[33] His arrest of Lavr Kornilov and other officers left him without strong allies against the Bolsheviks, who ended up being Kerensky's strongest and most determined adversaries, as opposed to the right wing, which evolved into the White movement.

 
Autochrome portrait by Georges Chevalier, 1921

October Revolution of 1917 edit

During the Kornilov Affair, Kerensky had distributed arms to the Petrograd workers, and by November most of these armed workers had gone over to the Bolsheviks.[34] On 6–7 November [O.S. 25–26 October] 1917, the Bolsheviks launched the second Russian revolution of the year. Kerensky's government in Petrograd had almost no support in the city. Only one small force, a subdivision of the 2nd company of the First Petrograd Women's Battalion, also known as The Women's Death Battalion, was willing to fight for the government against the Bolsheviks, but this force was overwhelmed by the numerically superior pro-Bolshevik forces, defeated, and captured.[35] The Bolsheviks overthrew the government rapidly by seizing governmental buildings and the Winter Palace.[36]

Kerensky escaped the Bolsheviks and fled to Pskov, where he rallied some loyal troops for an attempt to re-take the city. His troops managed to capture Tsarskoye Selo but were beaten the next day at Pulkovo. Kerensky narrowly escaped, and he spent the next few weeks in hiding before fleeing the country, eventually arriving in France. During the Russian Civil War, he supported neither side, as he opposed both the Bolshevik regime and the White Movement.[37]

Personal life edit

 
Kerensky at the National Press Club in 1938

Kerensky was married to Olga Lvovna Baranovskaya and they had two sons, Oleg (1905–1984) and Gleb (1907–1990), who both went on to become engineers. Kerensky's grandson (also named Oleg), according to the Internet Movie Database, played his grandfather's role in the 1981 film Reds. Kerensky and Olga were divorced in 1939 soon after he settled in Paris, and, in 1939, while visiting the United States he met and married Lydia Ellen "Nell" Tritton (1899–1946), the Australian former journalist who had become his press secretary and translator.[38] The marriage took place in Martins Creek, Pennsylvania.

When Germany invaded France in 1940, they emigrated to the United States.[39] After the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Kerensky offered his support to Joseph Stalin.[40]

When his wife Nell became terminally ill in 1945, Kerensky travelled with her to Brisbane, Australia, and lived there with her family. She suffered a stroke in February 1946, and he remained there until her death on 10 April 1946. Kerensky then returned to the United States, where he spent the rest of his life.[41]

Kerensky eventually settled in New York City, living on the Upper East Side on 91st Street near Central Park[42] but 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. His last public lecture was delivered at Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Michigan, in October 1967.[43]

Death edit

 
The graves of Alexander Kerensky (left), and of his first wife, Olga, and his son Gleb and Gleb's wife, Mary, at Putney Vale Cemetery, London, 2014

Kerensky died of arteriosclerotic heart disease at St. Luke's Hospital in New York City on 11 June 1970 after being initially admitted from injuries sustained in a fall.[42] At 89, he was one of the last surviving major participants in the turbulent events of 1917. The local Russian Orthodox Churches in New York City refused to grant Kerensky burial rites because of his association with Freemasonry, and because they saw him as largely responsible for the Bolsheviks seizing power. A Serbian Orthodox Church also refused burial rites. Kerensky's body was flown to London, where he was buried at the non-denominational Putney Vale Cemetery.[citation needed]

Works edit

  • The Prelude to Bolshevism (1919). ISBN 0-8383-1422-8.
  • The Catastrophe (1927)
  • The Crucifixion of Liberty (1934)
  • Russia and History's Turning Point (1965)
  • Memoirs (1966)

Archives edit

Papers of the Kerensky family are held at the Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.[44]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Nikolai Dobrovolsky as Minister of Justice of the Russian Empire.
  2. ^ /ˈkɛrənski, kəˈrɛnski/ KERR-ən-skee, kə-REN-skee; Russian: Алекса́ндр Фёдорович Ке́ренский, IPA: [ɐlʲɪkˈsandr ˈkʲerʲɪnskʲɪj]; original spelling: Александръ Ѳедоровичь Керенскій

References edit

  1. ^ Сванидзе М. С.: Исторические хроники с Николаем Сванидзе. 1917 год. Александр Керенский. Retrieved 18 July 2023. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  2. ^ a b "Alexander Kerenski". First World War. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 25 July 2014.
  4. ^ N. Magill, Frank (5 March 2014). The 20th Century Go-N: Dictionary of World Biography, Volume 8. Routledge. p. 1941. ISBN 978-1-317-74060-5.
  5. ^ Encyclopedia of Cyril and Method[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Sebestyen, Victor (9 October 2018). LENIN The Man, The Dictator, The Master of Terror. Vintage. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-101-97430-8.
  7. ^ A Doomed Democracy 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Bernard Butcher, Stanford Magazine, January/February 2001
  8. ^ Political Figures of Russia, 1917, Biographical Dictionary, Large Russian Encyclopedia, 1993, p. 143.
  9. ^ The Lena Goldfields Massacre and the Crisis of the Late Tsarist State by Michael Melancon [1]
  10. ^ Medlin, Virgil D. (1971). (PDF). Proceedings of the Oklahoma Academy of Science. 51: 128. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016.
  11. ^ "Grigori Rasputin: Belied Life – Belied Death". www.omolenko.com. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  12. ^ TV-documentary "Russian Revolution seen from Russia" aired at Danish DR K 11.June.2018
  13. ^ "Noteworthy members of the Grand Orient of France in Russia and the Supreme Council of the Grand Orient of Russia's People". Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon. 15 October 2017.
  14. ^ The Russian Provisional Government, 1917: Documents, Volume 1, p. 16 by Robert Paul Browder, Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky [2]
  15. ^ A. Kerensky (1965) Russia and History's turning point, p. 150.
  16. ^ "Alexandra Feodorovna and Romanov Russia, The Real Tsaritsa witten by Lili Dehn – Part One – Old Russia – Chapter V". www.alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  17. ^ The Russian Provisional Government, 1917: Documents, Volume 1, p. 18 by Robert Paul Browder, Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky [3]
  18. ^ A. Kerensky (1965) Russia and History's turning point, p. 163.
  19. ^ Rasputin G. E. (1869–1916) 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. A.G. Kalmykov in the Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia.
  20. ^ Nelipa, pp. 454–455, 457–459.
  21. ^ Moe, p. 627.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 September 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  23. ^ Richard Pipes (1995). "The Russian Revolution", pp. 104–06 Swedish ISBN 91-27-09935-0
  24. ^ a b Pipes, p. 110
  25. ^ Loscher, John D. (2009). The Bolsheviks Volume II: How the Soviets Seize Power, Volume 2. AuthorHouse. p. 362. ISBN 978-1449023317.
  26. ^ "What was Russia's last leader before the Bolshevik revolution like?". The Independent. 6 November 2017. from the original on 12 November 2017. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  27. ^ Whitman, Alden (12 June 1970). "Alexander Kerensky Dies Here at 89". The New York Times.
  28. ^ . The British Library. Archived from the original on 28 February 2020. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  29. ^ Woods, Alan (7 November 2016). "The Russian Revolution: the meaning of October". Socialist Appeal. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  30. ^ Preclík, Vratislav. Masaryk a legie (Masaryk and legions), váz. kniha, 219 pages, first issue vydalo nakladatelství Paris Karviná, Žižkova 2379 (734 01 Karvina, Czech Republic) ve spolupráci s Masarykovým demokratickým hnutím (Masaryk Democratic Movement, Prague), 2019, ISBN 978-8087173473, pp. 36–39, 41–42, 111–12, 124–25, 128, 129, 132, 140–48, 184–99.
  31. ^ Party manifesto listed in McCauley, M Octobrists to Bolsheviks: Imperial Russia 1905–1917 (1984)
  32. ^ Pipes p. 121
  33. ^ Pearson, Raymond (1977). The Russian Moderates and the Crisis of Tsarism 1914–1917. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 126–27. ISBN 978-1-349-03385-0.
  34. ^ Faure and Mensing, Gunter and Teresa (2012). The Estonians; The long road to independence. Lulu. p. 161. ISBN 978-1105530036.
  35. ^ "Women Soldiers in Russia's Great War". Great War. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  36. ^ The History Book: Big Ideas Simply Explained. DK. 2016. p. 278. ISBN 978-1465445100.
  37. ^ . British Library. Archived from the original on 28 February 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  38. ^ The extraordinary life of Nell Tritton, an Australian heiress who saved her husband from assassins Late Night Live, ABC Radio National. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  39. ^ Armstrong, Judith. . National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019 – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  40. ^ Soviet's Chances. By Alexander Kerensky. Life, 14 July 1941, pp. 76–78, 81.
  41. ^ . www.abc.net.au. Archived from the original on 31 July 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  42. ^ a b Whitman, Alden (12 June 1970). "Alexander Kerensky Dies Here at 89". New York Times.
  43. ^ "Alexander Kerensky". Kalamazoo College Archives. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  44. ^ "UoB Calmview5: Search results". calmview.bham.ac.uk. Retrieved 26 February 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Abraham, Richard (1987). Kerensky: First Love of the Revolution. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-06108-0.
  • Lipatova, Nadezhda V. "On the Verge of the Collapse of Empire: Images of Alexander Kerensky and Mikhail Gorbachev." Europe-Asia Studies 65.2 (2013): 264–289.
  • Thatcher, Ian D. "Post-Soviet Russian Historians and the Russian Provisional Government of 1917." Slavonic & East European Review 93.2 (2015): 315–337. online[dead link]
  • Thatcher, Ian D. "Memoirs of the Russian Provisional Government 1917" (subscription required). Revolutionary Russia 27.1 (2014): 1–21. doi:10.1080/09546545.2014.902839.
  • "Aleksandr Kerenskij". Biografiskt lexikon för Finland (in Swedish). Helsingfors: Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland. urn:NBN:fi:sls-4931-1416928957537.

External links edit

[1]

  1. ^ Fontenot, Michael James. "Alexander F. Kerensky; The Political Career of a Russian Nationalist". Louisiana State University. Retrieved 11 October 2022.

alexander, kerensky, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, fyodorovich, family, name, kerensky, alexander, fyodorovich, kerensky, april, 1881, june, 1970, russian, lawyer, revolutionary, russian, provisional, government, . In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Fyodorovich and the family name is Kerensky Alexander Fyodorovich Kerensky b 4 May O S 22 April 1881 11 June 1970 was a Russian lawyer and revolutionary who led the Russian Provisional Government and the short lived Russian Republic for three months from late July to early November 1917 N S Alexander KerenskyAleksandr KerenskijKerensky in 1917Minister Chairman of the Russian Provisional GovernmentIn office 21 July 1917 7 November 1917Succeeded byPosition abolished Vladimir Lenin is the next head of state but the formal position is different due the dissolution of the Provisional Government Preceded byGeorgy LvovMinister of War and NavyIn office 18 May 1917 14 September 1917 5 May 1 September 1917 Old Style Minister ChairmanGeorgy Lvov HimselfPreceded byAlexander GuchkovMinister of JusticeIn office 16 March 1917 1 May 1917 3 March 18 April 1917 Old Style Minister ChairmanGeorgy LvovPreceded byPosition established a Succeeded byPavel PereverzevThe Vice Chairman of the Petrograd Soviet 1 Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byMatvey SkobelevPersonal detailsBornAlexander Fyodorovich Kerensky 1881 05 04 4 May 1881Simbirsk Simbirsk Governorate Russian EmpireDied11 June 1970 1970 06 11 aged 89 New York City U S Resting placePutney Vale Cemetery LondonNationalityRussianPolitical partyTrudoviksChildrenOlegGlebAlma materSaint Petersburg State UniversityProfessionLawyerPoliticianSignatureAfter the February Revolution of 1917 he joined the newly formed provisional government first as Minister of Justice then as Minister of War and after July as the government s second Minister Chairman He was the leader of the social democratic Trudovik faction of the Socialist Revolutionary Party Kerensky was also a vice chairman of the Petrograd Soviet a position that held a sizable amount of power Kerensky became the prime minister of the Provisional Government and his tenure was consumed with World War I Despite mass opposition to the war Kerensky chose to continue Russia s participation His government cracked down on anti war sentiment and dissent in 1917 which made his administration even more unpopular Kerensky remained in power until the October Revolution This revolution saw the Bolsheviks create a Leninist government led by Vladimir Lenin to replace his government Kerensky fled Russia and lived the remainder of his life in exile He divided his time between Paris and New York City Kerensky worked for the Hoover Institution at Stanford University Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and activism 1 2 Rasputin 1 3 Russian Provisional Government of 1917 1 4 October Revolution of 1917 1 5 Personal life 2 Death 3 Works 4 Archives 5 See also 6 Explanatory notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander Kerensky news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early life and activism edit Alexander Kerensky was born in Simbirsk now Ulyanovsk on the Volga river on 4 May 1881 and was the eldest son in the family 2 His father Fyodor Mikhailovich Kerensky was a teacher 2 and director of the local gymnasium and was later promoted to be an inspector of public schools His paternal grandfather Mikhail Ivanovich served as a priest in the village of Kerenka in the Gorodishchensky district of the Penza Governorate from 1830 The surname Kerensky comes from the name of this village 3 His maternal grandfather was head of the Topographical Bureau of the Kazan Military District His mother Nadezhda Aleksandrovna nee Adler 4 was the granddaughter of a former serf who had managed to purchase his freedom before serfdom was abolished in 1861 He subsequently embarked upon a mercantile career in which he prospered This allowed him to move his business to Moscow where he continued his success and became a wealthy Moscow merchant 3 5 Members of the Kerensky and Ulyanov families were friends Kerensky s father was the teacher of Vladimir Ulyanov Lenin and had even secured him acceptance into the University of Kazan 6 In 1889 when Kerensky was eight the family moved to Tashkent where his father had been appointed the main inspector of public schools superintendent Alexander graduated with honours in 1899 The same year he entered St Petersburg University where he studied history and philology The next year he switched to law He earned his law degree in 1904 and married Olga Lvovna Baranovskaya the daughter of a Russian general the same year 7 Kerensky joined the Narodnik movement and worked as a legal counsel to victims of the Revolution of 1905 At the end of 1904 he was jailed on suspicion of belonging to a militant group Afterwards he gained a reputation for his work as a defence lawyer in a number of political trials of revolutionaries 8 In 1912 Kerensky became widely known when he visited the goldfields at the Lena River and published material about the Lena massacre 9 In the same year Kerensky was elected to the Fourth Duma as a member of the Trudoviks a socialist non Marxist labour party founded by Alexis Aladin that was associated with the Socialist Revolutionary Party and joined a Freemason society uniting the anti monarchy forces that strived for democratic renewal of Russia 10 11 In fact the Socialist Revolutionary Party bought Kerensky a house as he otherwise would not be eligible for election to the Duma according to the Russian property laws He soon became a significant member of the Progressive Bloc which included several socialist parties Mensheviks and Liberals but not Bolsheviks 12 He was a brilliant orator and skilled parliamentary leader of the socialist opposition to the government of Tsar Nicholas II During the 4th Session of the Fourth Duma in spring 1915 Kerensky appealed to Mikhail Rodzianko with a request from the Council of elders to inform the tsar that to succeed in the war he must 1 change his domestic policy 2 proclaim a General Amnesty for political prisoners 3 restore the Constitution of Finland 4 declare autonomy of Poland 5 provide national minorities autonomy in the field of culture 6 abolish restrictions against Jews 7 end religious intolerance 8 stop the harassment of legal trade union organizations Kerensky was an active member of the irregular Freemasonic lodge the Grand Orient of Russia s Peoples 13 which derived from the Grand Orient of France Kerensky was Secretary General of the Grand Orient of Russia s Peoples and stood down following his ascent to the government in July 1917 He was succeeded by a Menshevik Alexander Halpern Rasputin edit In response to bitter resentments held against the imperial favourite Grigori Rasputin in the midst of Russia s failing effort in World War I Kerensky at the opening of the Duma on 2 November 1916 called the imperial ministers hired assassins and cowards and alleged that they were guided by the contemptible Grishka Rasputin 14 Grand Duke Nicholas Mikhailovich Prince Georgy Lvov and General Mikhail Alekseyev attempted to persuade the Emperor Nicholas II to send away the Empress Alexandra Feodorovna Rasputin s steadfast patron either to the Livadia Palace in Yalta or to Britain 15 Mikhail Rodzianko Zinaida Yusupova the mother of Felix Yusupov Alexandra s sister Elisabeth Grand Duchess Victoria and the empress s mother in law Maria Feodorovna also tried to influence and pressure the imperial couple 16 to remove Rasputin from his position of influence within the imperial household but without success 17 According to Kerensky Rasputin had terrorised the empress by threatening to return to his native village 18 Members of the nobility murdered Rasputin in December 1916 and he was buried near the imperial residence in Tsarskoye Selo Shortly after the February Revolution of 1917 Kerensky ordered soldiers to re bury the corpse at an unmarked spot in the countryside However the truck broke down or was forced to stop because of the snow on Lesnoe Road outside of St Petersburg It is likely the corpse was incinerated between 3 and 7 in the morning in the cauldrons of the nearby boiler shop 19 20 21 of the Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University including the coffin without leaving a single trace 22 Russian Provisional Government of 1917 edit Further information Russian Provisional Government nbsp Kerensky as Minister of War sitting second from the right When the February Revolution broke out in 1917 Kerensky together with Pavel Milyukov was one of its most prominent leaders As one of the Duma s most well known speakers against the monarchy and as a lawyer and defender of many revolutionaries Kerensky became a member of the Provisional Committee of the State Duma and was elected vice chairman of the newly formed Petrograd Soviet These two bodies the Duma and the Petrograd Soviet or rather their respective executive committees soon became each other s antagonists on most matters except regarding the end of the tsar s autocracy The Petrograd Soviet grew to include 3000 to 4000 members and their meetings could drown in a blur of everlasting orations At the meeting of 12 March O S 27 February 1917 to 13 March O S 28 February 1917 the Executive Committee of the Petrograd Soviet or Ispolkom formed a self appointed committee with eventually three members from each of the parties represented in the Soviet Kerensky became one of the members representing the Socialist Revolutionary Party the SRs 23 On 14 March O S 1 March 1917 without any consultation with the government the Ispolkom of the Soviet issued the infamous Order No 1 intended only for the 160 000 strong Petrograd garrison but soon interpreted as applicable to all soldiers at the front The order stipulated that all military units should form committees like the Petrograd Soviet This led to confusion and stripping of officers authority further Order No 3 stipulated that the military was subordinate to Ispolkom in the political hierarchy The ideas came from a group of socialists and aimed to limit the officers power to military affairs The socialist intellectuals believed the officers to be the most likely counterrevolutionary elements Kerensky s role in these orders is unclear but he participated in the decisions But just as before the revolution he had defended many who disliked the tsar he now saved the lives of many quantify of the tsar s civil servants about to be lynched by mobs 24 Additionally the Duma formed an executive committee which eventually became the Russian Provisional Government As there was little trust between Ispolkom and this government and as he was about to accept the office of Attorney General in the Provisional Government Kerensky gave a most passionate speech not just to the Ispolkom but to the entire Petrograd Soviet He then swore as minister never to violate democratic values and ended his speech with the words I cannot live without the people In the moment you begin to doubt me then kill me 25 The huge majority workers and soldiers gave him great applause and Kerensky now became the first and the only one 26 who participated in both the Provisional Government and the Ispolkom As a link between Ispolkom and the Provisional Government the quite ambitious Kerensky stood to benefit from this position 24 27 After the first government crisis over Pavel Milyukov s secret note re committing Russia to its original war aims on 2 4 May Kerensky became the Minister of War and the dominant figure in the newly formed socialist liberal coalition government On 10 May Julian calendar Kerensky started for the front and visited one division after another urging the men to do their duty His speeches were impressive and convincing for the moment but had little lasting effect 28 29 Under Allied pressure to continue the war he launched what became known as the Kerensky Offensive against the Austro Hungarian German South Army on 1 July O S 18 June 1917 30 At first successful the offensive soon met strong resistance and the Central Powers riposted with a strong counter attack The Russian army retreated and suffered heavy losses and it became clear from many incidents of desertion sabotage and mutiny that the army was no longer willing to attack nbsp Kerensky in May 1917The military heavily criticised Kerensky for his liberal policies which included stripping officers of their mandates and handing over control to revolutionary inclined soldier committees Russian soldatskie komitety romanized soldatskie komitety instead abolition of the death penalty and allowing revolutionary agitators to be present at the front Many officers jokingly referred to commander in chief Kerensky as the persuader in chief On 2 July 1917 the Provisional Government s first coalition collapsed over the question of Ukraine s autonomy Following the July Days unrest in Petrograd 3 7 July 16 20 July N S 1917 and the official suppression of the Bolsheviks Kerensky succeeded Prince Georgy Lvov as Russia s prime minister on 21 July O S 8 July 1917 Following the Kornilov Affair an attempted military coup d etat at the end of August and the resignation of the other ministers he appointed himself Supreme Commander in Chief as well On 15 September Kerensky proclaimed Russia a republic which was contrary to the non socialists understanding that the Provisional Government should hold power only until a Constituent Assembly should meet to decide Russia s form of government but which was in line with the long proclaimed aim of the Socialist Revolutionary Party 31 He formed a five member Directory which consisted of himself Minister of Foreign Affairs Mikhail Tereshchenko Minister of War General Aleksandr Verkhovsky Minister of the Navy Admiral Dmitry Verderevsky and Minister of Posts and Telegraphs Aleksei Nikitin ru He retained his post in the final coalition government in October 1917 until the Bolsheviks overthrew it on 7 November O S 26 October 1917 nbsp Kerensky in officeKerensky faced a major challenge three years of participation in World War had exhausted Russia while the provisional government offered little motivation for a victory outside of continuing Russia s obligations towards its allies Russia s continued involvement in the war was not popular among the lower and middle classes and especially not popular among the soldiers They had all believed that Russia would stop fighting when the Provisional Government took power citation needed and subsequently felt deceived Furthermore Vladimir Lenin and his Bolshevik party were promising peace land and bread under a communist system The Russian army war weary ill equipped dispirited and ill disciplined was disintegrating with soldiers deserting in large numbers By autumn 1917 an estimated two million men had unofficially left the army Kerensky and other political leaders continued Russia s involvement in World War I thinking that a glorious victory was the only road forward 32 and fearing that the economy already under huge stress from the war effort might become increasingly unstable if vital supplies from France and from the United Kingdom ceased flowing The dilemma of whether to withdraw was a great one and Kerensky s inconsistent and impractical policies further destabilised the army and the country at large Furthermore Kerensky adopted a policy that isolated the right wing conservatives both democratic and monarchist oriented His philosophy of no enemies to the left greatly empowered the Bolsheviks and gave them a free hand allowing them to take over the military arm or voyenka Russian Voenka of the Petrograd and Moscow Soviets 33 His arrest of Lavr Kornilov and other officers left him without strong allies against the Bolsheviks who ended up being Kerensky s strongest and most determined adversaries as opposed to the right wing which evolved into the White movement nbsp Autochrome portrait by Georges Chevalier 1921October Revolution of 1917 edit Further information October Revolution During the Kornilov Affair Kerensky had distributed arms to the Petrograd workers and by November most of these armed workers had gone over to the Bolsheviks 34 On 6 7 November O S 25 26 October 1917 the Bolsheviks launched the second Russian revolution of the year Kerensky s government in Petrograd had almost no support in the city Only one small force a subdivision of the 2nd company of the First Petrograd Women s Battalion also known as The Women s Death Battalion was willing to fight for the government against the Bolsheviks but this force was overwhelmed by the numerically superior pro Bolshevik forces defeated and captured 35 The Bolsheviks overthrew the government rapidly by seizing governmental buildings and the Winter Palace 36 Kerensky escaped the Bolsheviks and fled to Pskov where he rallied some loyal troops for an attempt to re take the city His troops managed to capture Tsarskoye Selo but were beaten the next day at Pulkovo Kerensky narrowly escaped and he spent the next few weeks in hiding before fleeing the country eventually arriving in France During the Russian Civil War he supported neither side as he opposed both the Bolshevik regime and the White Movement 37 Personal life edit nbsp Kerensky at the National Press Club in 1938Kerensky was married to Olga Lvovna Baranovskaya and they had two sons Oleg 1905 1984 and Gleb 1907 1990 who both went on to become engineers Kerensky s grandson also named Oleg according to the Internet Movie Database played his grandfather s role in the 1981 film Reds Kerensky and Olga were divorced in 1939 soon after he settled in Paris and in 1939 while visiting the United States he met and married Lydia Ellen Nell Tritton 1899 1946 the Australian former journalist who had become his press secretary and translator 38 The marriage took place in Martins Creek Pennsylvania When Germany invaded France in 1940 they emigrated to the United States 39 After the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 Kerensky offered his support to Joseph Stalin 40 When his wife Nell became terminally ill in 1945 Kerensky travelled with her to Brisbane Australia and lived there with her family She suffered a stroke in February 1946 and he remained there until her death on 10 April 1946 Kerensky then returned to the United States where he spent the rest of his life 41 Kerensky eventually settled in New York City living on the Upper East Side on 91st Street near Central Park 42 but 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 His last public lecture was delivered at Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo Michigan in October 1967 43 Death edit nbsp The graves of Alexander Kerensky left and of his first wife Olga and his son Gleb and Gleb s wife Mary at Putney Vale Cemetery London 2014Kerensky died of arteriosclerotic heart disease at St Luke s Hospital in New York City on 11 June 1970 after being initially admitted from injuries sustained in a fall 42 At 89 he was one of the last surviving major participants in the turbulent events of 1917 The local Russian Orthodox Churches in New York City refused to grant Kerensky burial rites because of his association with Freemasonry and because they saw him as largely responsible for the Bolsheviks seizing power A Serbian Orthodox Church also refused burial rites Kerensky s body was flown to London where he was buried at the non denominational Putney Vale Cemetery citation needed Works editThe Prelude to Bolshevism 1919 ISBN 0 8383 1422 8 The Catastrophe 1927 The Crucifixion of Liberty 1934 Russia and History s Turning Point 1965 Memoirs 1966 Archives editPapers of the Kerensky family are held at the Cadbury Research Library University of Birmingham 44 See also editJailbirds of KerenskyExplanatory notes edit Nikolai Dobrovolsky as Minister of Justice of the Russian Empire ˈ k ɛ r e n s k i k e ˈ r ɛ n s k i KERR en skee ke REN skee Russian Aleksa ndr Fyodorovich Ke renskij IPA ɐlʲɪkˈsandr ˈkʲerʲɪnskʲɪj original spelling Aleksandr Ѳedorovich KerenskijReferences edit Svanidze M S Istoricheskie hroniki s Nikolaem Svanidze 1917 god Aleksandr Kerenskij Retrieved 18 July 2023 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help a b Alexander Kerenski First World War Retrieved 1 April 2013 a b Aleksandr Fedorovich Kerenskij Archived from the original on 25 July 2014 N Magill Frank 5 March 2014 The 20th Century Go N Dictionary of World Biography Volume 8 Routledge p 1941 ISBN 978 1 317 74060 5 Encyclopedia of Cyril and Method permanent dead link Sebestyen Victor 9 October 2018 LENIN The Man The Dictator The Master of Terror Vintage p 58 ISBN 978 1 101 97430 8 A Doomed Democracy Archived 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Bernard Butcher Stanford Magazine January February 2001 Political Figures of Russia 1917 Biographical Dictionary Large Russian Encyclopedia 1993 p 143 The Lena Goldfields Massacre and the Crisis of the Late Tsarist State by Michael Melancon 1 Medlin Virgil D 1971 Alexander Fedorovich Kerensky PDF Proceedings of the Oklahoma Academy of Science 51 128 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Grigori Rasputin Belied Life Belied Death www omolenko com Retrieved 20 January 2019 TV documentary Russian Revolution seen from Russia aired at Danish DR K 11 June 2018 Noteworthy members of the Grand Orient of France in Russia and the Supreme Council of the Grand Orient of Russia s People Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon 15 October 2017 The Russian Provisional Government 1917 Documents Volume 1 p 16 by Robert Paul Browder Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky 2 A Kerensky 1965 Russia and History s turning point p 150 Alexandra Feodorovna and Romanov Russia The Real Tsaritsa witten by Lili Dehn Part One Old Russia Chapter V www alexanderpalace org Retrieved 20 January 2019 The Russian Provisional Government 1917 Documents Volume 1 p 18 by Robert Paul Browder Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky 3 A Kerensky 1965 Russia and History s turning point p 163 Rasputin G E 1869 1916 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine A G Kalmykov in the Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia Nelipa pp 454 455 457 459 Moe p 627 The boiler building Images of St Petersburg National Library of Russia Archived from the original on 29 September 2018 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Richard Pipes 1995 The Russian Revolution pp 104 06 Swedish ISBN 91 27 09935 0 a b Pipes p 110 Loscher John D 2009 The Bolsheviks Volume II How the Soviets Seize Power Volume 2 AuthorHouse p 362 ISBN 978 1449023317 What was Russia s last leader before the Bolshevik revolution like The Independent 6 November 2017 Archived from the original on 12 November 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Whitman Alden 12 June 1970 Alexander Kerensky Dies Here at 89 The New York Times Alexander Kerensky The British Library Archived from the original on 28 February 2020 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Woods Alan 7 November 2016 The Russian Revolution the meaning of October Socialist Appeal Retrieved 16 October 2020 Preclik Vratislav Masaryk a legie Masaryk and legions vaz kniha 219 pages first issue vydalo nakladatelstvi Paris Karvina Zizkova 2379 734 01 Karvina Czech Republic ve spolupraci s Masarykovym demokratickym hnutim Masaryk Democratic Movement Prague 2019 ISBN 978 8087173473 pp 36 39 41 42 111 12 124 25 128 129 132 140 48 184 99 Party manifesto listed in McCauley M Octobrists to Bolsheviks Imperial Russia 1905 1917 1984 Pipes p 121 Pearson Raymond 1977 The Russian Moderates and the Crisis of Tsarism 1914 1917 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 126 27 ISBN 978 1 349 03385 0 Faure and Mensing Gunter and Teresa 2012 The Estonians The long road to independence Lulu p 161 ISBN 978 1105530036 Women Soldiers in Russia s Great War Great War Retrieved 1 April 2013 The History Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK 2016 p 278 ISBN 978 1465445100 Alexander Kerensky British Library Archived from the original on 28 February 2020 Retrieved 24 July 2017 The extraordinary life of Nell Tritton an Australian heiress who saved her husband from assassins Late Night Live ABC Radio National Retrieved 22 July 2020 Armstrong Judith Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 via Australian Dictionary of Biography Soviet s Chances By Alexander Kerensky Life 14 July 1941 pp 76 78 81 Lateline 22 09 2003 The Half Hearted Revolutionary In Paradise Australian Broadcasting Corp www abc net au Archived from the original on 31 July 2016 Retrieved 20 March 2017 a b Whitman Alden 12 June 1970 Alexander Kerensky Dies Here at 89 New York Times Alexander Kerensky Kalamazoo College Archives Retrieved 16 June 2021 UoB Calmview5 Search results calmview bham ac uk Retrieved 26 February 2021 Further reading editAbraham Richard 1987 Kerensky First Love of the Revolution Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 06108 0 Lipatova Nadezhda V On the Verge of the Collapse of Empire Images of Alexander Kerensky and Mikhail Gorbachev Europe Asia Studies 65 2 2013 264 289 Thatcher Ian D Post Soviet Russian Historians and the Russian Provisional Government of 1917 Slavonic amp East European Review 93 2 2015 315 337 online dead link Thatcher Ian D Memoirs of the Russian Provisional Government 1917 subscription required Revolutionary Russia 27 1 2014 1 21 doi 10 1080 09546545 2014 902839 Aleksandr Kerenskij Biografiskt lexikon for Finland in Swedish Helsingfors Svenska litteratursallskapet i Finland urn NBN fi sls 4931 1416928957537 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander Kerensky Works by or about Alexander Kerensky at Internet Archive Alexander Kerensky Archive at marxists org An account of Kerensky at Stanford in the 1950s Alexander Kerensky at IMDb Newspaper clippings about Alexander Kerensky in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byGeorgy Lvov Minister Chairman of the Russian Provisional Government21 July 1917 8 November 1917 Succeeded byVladimir Lenin Chairman of the Council of People s Commissars Lev Kamenev Chairman of the All Russian Central Executive Committee 1 Fontenot Michael James Alexander F Kerensky The Political Career of a Russian Nationalist Louisiana State University Retrieved 11 October 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Kerensky amp oldid 1188399302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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