ABSTRACT

Concentrating on the turbulent months from February 1917 to November 1918, Geoffrey Swain explores the origins of the Civil War against the wider background of revolutionary Russia. He examines the aims of the anti-Bolshevik insurgents themselves; but he also shows how far the fear of civil war governed the action of the Provisional Government, and even the plans of the Bolsheviks. If the war itself can seem a fairly straightforward line-up of revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, this study reveals how complex were the motives of the people who precipitated it.


chapter |13 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|27 pages

The Failed White Counter-revolution

chapter Chapter Two|33 pages

Lenin Risks a Red–Green Civil War

chapter Chapter Three|28 pages

Peace for Renewed Civil War

chapter Chapter Four|25 pages

The British and the Patriotic Socialists

chapter Chapter Five|28 pages

Defending the Socialist Fatherland

chapter Chapter Six|31 pages

The Start of the Red–Green Civil War

chapter Chapter Seven|33 pages

Disunity in the Green Camp

chapter Chapter Eight|31 pages

Green Directory, White Counter-revolution

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion