NO he wasnt even there
Yes he was there he didn't want to listen to what the people of Russia had to say so he order his troops to release fire on the citizens trying to restore order but obviously he did not and communism took control.
The tsar wasn't in the winter palace on the day the peasants protested. The soldiers guarding the palace open fired on the crowds. The Tsar had not been at the place at the time and therefore had no influence on what happened to the crowds. He was not responsible really but the bittterness went towards him. However you may want to research Father Gapon who led the procession and was working for the Tsars secret police. Therefore the Tsar could have known they were coming. It is a debatable subject so research Father Gapon and then make up your mind. Hope this helps.
Bloody Sunday is the name commonly given to the January 9, 1905 incident that is sometines referred to as a revolution.
There have been many days which have been called Bloody Sunday. In Russia, there was one on the 22nd of January 1905. In Ireland there was one on the 21st of November 1920 and another on the 30th of January 1972.
Father capon led the protestors on the 22nd January in 1905 when they approached the gates to give the petition that was signed by over 150,000 people they were fired at and killed and this day was called bloody Sunday.
Bloody Sunday was on the 22nd of January, 1905.
On Bloody Sunday, January 22nd, 1905 in St. Petersburg, it is not certain how many died. A wide range of figures are given, from as little as 96 to as much as 4000.
Sunday bloody Sunday happened on January 30th 1972
The killings on Bloody Sunday
Bloody Sunday is the name commonly given to the January 9, 1905 incident that is sometines referred to as a revolution.
"Bloody Sunday"
Tsar Nicholas II Romanov was the reigning Tsar on "Bloody Sunday" in Russia in 1905 in St. Petersburg.
There have been many days which have been called Bloody Sunday. In Russia, there was one on the 22nd of January 1905. In Ireland there was one on the 21st of November 1920 and another on the 30th of January 1972.
It was also known as the Bolshevik Revolution.
the Russian Revolution 12 years later
It led to the events of the Revolution of 1905.
It led to the events of the Revolution of 1905.
There was no revolution in Russia in 1905. There was the Russian Bloody Sunday,but that was just a tragic event, not a war.
you'd have to stretch to an extreme to say yes