Kornilov Redivivus New Data On The Prelude To Bolshevism
Kornilov Redivivus New Data On The Prelude To Bolshevism
Kornilov Redivivus New Data On The Prelude To Bolshevism
Reviewed Work(s): Russia 1917: The Kornilov Affair by George Katkov; Russia and the
Allies 1917-1920. Vol. I: The Allies and the Russian Collapse, March 1917-March 1918 by
Michael Kettle
Review by: JOHN W. LONG
Source: Russian History, Vol. 11, No. 1 (1984), pp. 101-110
Published by: Brill
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/24652646
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RUSSIAN HISTORY/HISTOIRE RUSSE, 11, No. 1 (Spring 1984), 101-10.
Of all the events of the Russian Revolution, few have engendered more
scholarly controversy than the alleged counterrevolutionary revolt of General
L. G. Komilov in September 1917. Thus, over the past sixty-five years, his
torians have advanced a multitude of interpretations of the Komilov move
ment characterizing the event as everything from an unfortunate misunder
standing to a full-fledged effort at counterrevolution. In general, in this welter
of conflicting opinion, unanimity has prevailed on only one point: namely,
on the great significance of the Kornilov episode in determining the ensuing
course of the Revolution. Thus, in virtually every case, historians of 1917 are
agreed that the events of early September were decisive in hastening the down
fall of the Provisional Government and assuring the success of the Bolsheviks.
According to its many chroniclers, the Kornilov affair was truly, in the apt
phrase of its apparent chief target, "the prelude to Bolshevism."
For the most part, the earliest accounts of the Kornilovshchina did little to
dispel the confusion surrounding the event. Produced by various direct or in
direct participants in the affair, these initial accounts were above^11 attempts
to provide self-justification, either personal or political, for their authors' own
involvement in the movement. Foremost among these personal treatments of.
the affair was that of the Prime Minister of the Provisional Government, Alex
ander F. Kerensky, who early on published a heavily edited version of his
own testimony before the Extraordinary Commission of Investigation which
he himself had appointed to look into the Kornilov affair.1 This account,
which argued that the movement was basically a counterrevolutionary plot
on the part of a small clique of reactionary officers and civilian conservatives
1. Delo Kornilpva (Moscow: Zadruga, 1918), 194 pp. English translation: The Prel
ude to Bolshevism (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1919), 312 pp.
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102 RUSSIAN HISTORY/HISTOIRE RUSSE
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NEW DATA ON THE PRELUDE TO BOLSHEVISM 103
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104 RUSSIAN HISTORY/HISTOIRE RUSSE
13. See, e.g., B. Volin, "Opasnost' ot kotoroi bol'sheviki izbavili narody Rossii letom
1917 goda (Kornilovshchina)," Istoricheskii zhurnal, No. 8 (1942), pp. 3-19 and N. Ia.
Ivanov, "Iz istorii razgroma kornilovshchinyIstoricheskie zapiski, 28 (1949), 3-38.
14. Abraham Ascher, 'The Kornilov Affair," Russian Review, 12 (Oct. 1953), 235
52. A similar argument was shortly advanced by Robert D. Warth, The Allies and the
Russian Revolution (Durham, N.C.: Duke Univ. Press, 1954), pp. 116-57.
15. Leonid I. Strakhovsky, "Was There a Kornilov Rebellion?" Slavonic and East
European Review, 33 (June 1955), 372-95. In his introduction, Strakhovsky states spe
cifically that his work was prompted by the studies of Ascher and Warth.
16. Of particular importance in the revival of Kornilov scholarship was the publica
tion by the Academy of Sciences of a multivolume documentary collection on the Revo
lution which included a volume wholly devoted to the Kornilovshchina. See Revoliu
tsionnoe dvizhenie v Rossii v avguste 1917g.: Razgrom kornilovskogo miatezha, D. A.
Chugaev et ai, eds. (Moscow: AN SSSR, 1959), 695 pp. A few years later an equally im
portant collection appeared in the West. See The Russian Provisional Government, 1917:
Documents, 3 vols. R. P. Browder and A. F. Kerensky, eds. (Stanford: Stanford Univ.
Press, 1961), III, 1527-1613.
17. See, e.g., A. E. Ioffe, "Otnoshenie Frantsii, Anglii i SShA k zagovoru Kornilova,"
Doklady i soobshcheniia Instituta istorii AN SSSR, vyp. 10 (1956), pp. 60-77; L. Brem
berg and I. Iakushev, Bol'sheviki-organizatory razgroma kornilovshchiny (Moscow:
Gospolitizdat, 1957), 110 pp.; V. M. Mironenko, 'Taktika bol'shevikov v period razgroma
kornilovshchiny (Iiul'-avgüst 1917 g.)," Voprosy istorii KPSS, No. 2 (1957), pp. 49-64;
A. M. Sovokin, "Rukovodiashchaia roi' bol'shevistskoi partii v razgrome kornilovskogo
miatezha," in Velikii Oktiabr': Sbornik statei, L. M. Spirin et al., eds. (Moscow: Gospo
litizdat, 1958), pp. 156-79; and F. I. Vidiasov, "Kontrrevoliutsionnye zamysly inostran
nykh imperialistov i kornilovshchina," Voprosy istorii, No. 5 (1963), pp. 51-66. For a
useful summary of the new themes, see A. Ia. Grunt, Zagovor obrechennykh (razgrom
kornilovshchiny) (Moscow: Gosizdat, 1962), 76 pp.
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NEW DATA ON THE PRELUDE TO BOLSHEVISM 105
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106 RUSSIAN HISTORY/HISTOIRE RUSSE
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NEW DATA ON THE PRELUDE TO BOLSHEVISM 107
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108 RUSSIAN HISTORY/HISTOIRE RUSSE
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NEW DATA ON THE PRELUDE TO BOLSHEVISM 109
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110 RUSSIAN HISTORY/HISTOIRE RUSSE
Rider College
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