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The First Russian Revolution
The first major disaster happened on January 9, 1905.
A crowd of workers led by the Orthodox priest Father
Gapon marched to Palace Square with a peaceful
petition asking for better working conditions. Troops
opened fire on the marchers and in the ensuing panic
about one hundred died and thousands were wounded in
what came to be known as "Bloody Sunday." Even
without U2 around to sing about it the country rose
up in protest and there were mutinies, murders of
landowners and industrialists, strikes, and enough
general hubbub to force Nicholas to make some
concessions in order to avert total disaster. The
tsar issued the so-called "October Manifesto" which
established a constitutional body (called the Duma)
and promised civil rights and liberties to all,
though Nicholas eventually went back on most of these
promises and political tension continued to build
until 1914 when an external threat gave him a
temporary reprieve.
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