Military Bureaucracy and Military Bureaucrats: From Russian Empire to Soviet Republic
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article focuses on the role and history of military bureaucratic institutions in Imperial Russia during
the revolutionary events of 1917. The author scrutinizes the military bureaucracy as a part of state military elite in
tsarist Russia resulting from modernization at the beginning of the twentieth century. Positions in various structures
and levels of military management during February 1917 are analyzed. The ambiguous and contradictory
role of the main military administration was a reflection of the general crisis in the imperial state management in
early 1917. The Provisional Government inherited the old military management apparatus and its staff. A relevant
feature of the Military Ministry apparatus functioning under new conditions was its interaction with the political
leadership. An analysis of the evolution of the state military bureaucratic structures in 1917 and various trends in
their reformation reveals that in even revolutionary circumstances, the Military Ministry continued to perform its
technical functions, although it lost control over the army. During the October coup, military management institutions
did not become centers of counter-revolutionary resistance, and later came under control of the Soviet
government in a relatively peaceful way.
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Grebenkin I. N. ‘Military Bureaucracy and Military Bureaucrats: From Russian Empire to Soviet Republic’, Modern History of Russia, vol. 10, no. 2, 2020, pp. 297–314.