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A Capital Shake-up
Elections to the constituent assembly were held as
scheduled, but when the results did not suit the
Bolsheviks (they received only 25% of the vote
whereas their rivals, the rural-based Socialist
Revolutionaries, received over 55%), the Red Army
dissolved the assembly and arrested its members. What
followed was three years of violent bloodshed as
Russia withdrew from World War I and fell into civil
war. Despite fierce resistance across the
countryside, the Bolsheviks prevailed and by the end
of 1920 most of the country had been pacified.
Victims of the Civil War and the subsequent Red
Terror proclaimed by Lenin to suppress counter-
revolution and consolidate power numbered in the
millions.*
Fearing foreign intervention and wanting to make a
break from the tsarist past, the Bolsheviks moved the
capital from St. Petersburg to Moscow in 1918. A
depleted Petersburg took a back seat as Moscow re-
emerged as Russia's political and economic center.
The privations of the World War, Revolution, and
Civil War drove many of Petersburg's inhabitants out
into the countryside, and by 1920 less than one third
of Petersburg's 1916 population remained in the city.
Stalin, who emerged victorious from the power
struggle following Lenin's death in 1924, despised
Petersburg and its ties with both tsarism and the old
revolutionaries who overthrew it. Throughout his
career as party leader he viewed Leningrad (as they
renamed Petrograd after Lenin's death) as a threat
and a potential rival to his power. In 1934 the
charismatic and popular Leningrad Party Leader,
Sergei Kirov, rumored to be a potential replacement
for Stalin, was assassinated in his office by a
secret agent under Stalin's orders. This marked the
beginning of the Great Purges which lasted until
1938, during which millions of people were killed or
sent to labor camps (gulags) on little or no
foundation. Almost all of the Old Bolsheviks were
arrested, tortured, publicly tried, and summarily
shot after confessing to absurd fabricated crimes.
The labor camps' population in 1938 reached eight
million, and most inmates did not survive. As a
result of this reign of terror a generation of
bureaucrats rose that was absolutely loyal to Stalin.
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