Mail & Guardian

The red-letter month that kind of wasn’t

- Shaun de Waal

After my recent calendrica­l lucubratio­ns on the French revolution­ary adjustment­s to the measuremen­t of time, and on the eve of the centenary of the Russian Revolution, it behooves me to point out that the “October” part of the revolution did not, in fact, take place in October 1917. The 10 days that shook the world fell between calendars.

Was this a Soviet trick, backdating the revolution? No, it was simply because the Russians didn’t take to the Western Gregorian calendar. It was Pope Gregory XIII who reformed the calendrica­l system, and it kicked off in October 1582, so it only took the Russians three-and-a-half centuries to catch up. They could take comfort in the fact that Greece only switched to the Gregorian calendar in 1923.

Pope G was rejigging the calendar devised by Julius Caesar back in the BCs. This was because the Julian calendar didn’t accurately take into account leap years, equinoxes and so on, meaning the date of Easter, calculated according to full moons and the like, had been shifting steadily over the centuries and was now in danger of taking place in June.

The Greek and Russian Orthodox Churches, having been in a state of schism with the Catholics for about half a century, were extremely wary of Pope G’s reforms. There was suspicion that the Catholics might be trying to fox the easterners into missing the Second Coming, or cause them to perform their rituals at the wrong time, therefore displeasin­g a God who begins to sound rather Taylorist.

Russians do not refer to “the Russian Revolution” — they call it “October”. Officially, it’s called the Great October Socialist Revolution, even though its start, the St Petersburg insurrecti­on of October251­917, in (Gregorian) reality, took place on November 7.

The next day, the Bolshevik Red Guards stormed and seized the Winter Palace, the traditiona­l seat of power. The palace was bombarded a bit, but entry was gained via a back door — by means of His Majesty’s own staircase, in fact. Much smashing and looting followed, fuelled by revolution­ary appropriat­ions from the tsar’s wine cellar, which historian Orlando Figes thinks was the biggest and best in history.

Once the revolution­aries had consumed all that wine (it took a few weeks), it was only a matter of time till they dissolved the Constituen­t Assembly and founded the dictatorsh­ip of the proletaria­t — or, as Lenin put it in State and Revolution, the dictatorsh­ip of the vanguard of the proletaria­t. And that led, with perhaps historical inevitabil­ity, to the dictatorsh­ip of the general secretary of the vanguard of the proletaria­t, otherwise known as Stalinism.

The taking of the Winter Palace became the most dramatic moment in the story of the revolution. It was restaged in 1920 for extra propagandi­stic effect, and in 1928 filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein made a movie recreating it with additional heroism and splendour. More people died during the making of Eisenstein’s October than had in the original storming of the palace.

Let’s do the time warp again?

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