Russia: Retreat, Revolution, and the New Empire
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About this listen
Hello and welcome back. This is WAR 1870–1949: How Empires Rise and Fall. Episode Three of our buildup arc is Russia: Retreat, Revolution, and the New Empire.
If Germany is the story of a crown falling and a republic trying to stand upright in a storm, Russia is something else entirely. Russia is what happens when an empire doesn’t merely lose a war, but loses the right to command reality. It is the moment a state’s voice stops sounding like fate and starts sounding like a weak man pleading. And once that happens, the world changes shape fast.
The Russian Empire goes into the Great War carrying old weight—peasants and priests, palaces and poverty, a vast distance between the rulers and the ruled, a tradition of obedience held together by habit, fear, and the aura of the Tsar. But modern war is not polite. It doesn’t care about aura. It doesn’t care about prayers. It doesn’t care about dynastic myths. It cares about shells, supply lines, factories, railroads, and whether your soldiers believe the people sending them to die have any idea what they’re doing.
Russia bleeds early, bleeds often, and bleeds in ways that don’t produce “meaning.” That’s crucial. A society can endure suffering if it feels the suffering is purposeful and competent. But when suffering feels pointless and incompetent, it becomes political acid. And in Russia, the war becomes acid.