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Murder of the Royal Family

After the execution of the Royal family, Martin Sixsmith tells how close the bloody conflict between Bolshevik Reds and Tsarist Whites came to ending the Bolshevik hopes for Russia.

In the second programme of Part 2 of 'Russia- the Wild East' Martin Sixsmith outlines the growing menace facing the Bolsheviks at home.

The tsarist regime may have toppled, but supporters of the old order wanted revenge. Even before the war with Germany ended, a violent civil war was threatening to erupt. The conflict between Bolshevik Reds and Tsarist Whites was immensely bloody, the atrocities committed by both sides appalling and its consequences terrible. Sixsmith stands at the spot in Yekaterinburg where the last tsar of Russia met his fate and draws on an eyewitness account of the execution by an ad hoc firing squad. Recent research suggests the decision was taken personally by Lenin to prevent Nicholas II being rescued and used as a rallying point for the White cause.

The Red's were surrounded and outnumbered but Lenin stirred up his forces with passionate speeches and Trotsky pulled off an incredible volte face when he routed the White Army stationed at Gatchina 30 miles North of Petrograd. The defence of Petrograd made Trotsky an iconic, terrifying figure, but his own memoirs quoted by Sixsmith, suggest it was a close run thing. Petrograd was renamed in his honour and was called Trotsk until he fell from grace in 1929. Germany's defeat in the World War allowed the Bolsheviks to recoup much of the territory they'd ceded when they withdrew from the war, although the Bolsheviks had to appeal to old fashioned Russian nationalism to defeat the advancing Poles. After peace with Poland Trotsky was able to annihilate the remains of the White Army in the Crimea, immortalised in Bulgakov's play Flight in which two departing White officers discuss the destruction of the old Russia, and the utter failure of the struggle to save her from the Bolshevik yoke.

Producers: Anna Scott-Brown & Adam Fowler
A Ladbroke Production for Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4.

15 minutes

Last on

Tue 12 Jul 2011 15:45

Broadcast

  • Tue 12 Jul 2011 15:45