He Ordered The Guards To Open Fire!(:
He Ordered The Guards To Open Fire!(:
The workers believed that only the czar could help them.
They believed only he could help them.
Factory workers were shot by soldiers at the czar palace in 1905.
Workers carried their requests for better working conditions to the czar's palace as a desperate plea for relief from harsh labor conditions and low wages. They hoped to appeal directly to the czar, believing he could enact change and improve their lives. This action was part of a broader context of social unrest and dissatisfaction with the autocratic regime, as workers sought to voice their grievances and demand rights. Their march ultimately contributed to the revolutionary sentiments that swept through Russia.
Czar Nicholas II and his wife and children
The workers believed that only the czar could help them.
The workers believed that only the czar could help them.
Sound waves (Vibrations) are carried by a medium (matter). This can be either a solid, liquid, gas, or plasma. *******Contributed by Czar Acumen***********************
Workers marched on Czar Nicholas II in January 1905. The day is now referred to as "Bloody Sunday" because the police killed so many people. Here is where I got my info: http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+last+Czar+Nicholas+II:+the+heir+of+Russia's+once+powerful+Romanov...-a0130281342
he ordered the guards to open fire. On January 22, 1905, many thousands of Russian workers, peasants and soldiers proceeded under the leadership of Fr. Gapon to the Winter Palace of Tsar Nicholas II. It was a peaceful march intending only to present the Tsar with grievances they had with their conditions and requests for reforms. As the crowd neared the Winter Palace a cavalry troop of Cossacks rode into and then out of the people slashing many with their swords. The Tsar's Palace Guard then fired their rifles into the crowd also killing and wounding many more. The crowd had been singing patriotic songs and only sought to present their requests peacefully to their "little father" as the Tsars were sometimes referred to. The incident became known as "Bloody Sunday" and changed the peoples' view of the Tsar so much that in 1917 they were not afraid to revolt against him and force him off the throne.
On January 22, 1905, about 200,000 workers and their families approached the czar's Winter Palace with a petition.