Timeline of The Spread of Soviet Power (Gregorian Calendar Dates)
- 7 November 1917: Petrograd, Minsk, Novgorod and Ivanovo-Voznesensk
- 8 November 1917: Ufa, Kazan, Revel and Yekaterinburg (failed in Kiev)
- 9 November 1917: Vitebsk, Yaroslavl, Saratov, Samara and Izhevsk
- 10 November 1917: Rostov, Tver and Nizhny Novgorod
- 12 November 1917: Voronezh, Smolensk and Gomel
- 13 November 1917: Tambov
- 14 November 1917: Orel and Perm
- 15 November 1917: Pskov, Moscow and Baku
- 27 November 1917: Tsaritsyn
- 1 December 1917: Mogilev
- 8 December 1917: Vyatka
- 10 December 1917: Kishinev
- 11 December 1917: Kaluga
- 14 December 1917: Novorossisk
- 15 December 1917: Kostroma
- 20 December 1917: Tula
- 24 December 1917: Kharkov (invasion of Ukraine by the Muravyov Red Guard forces, establishment of the Soviet Ukraine and hostilities in the region)
- 29 December 1917: Sevastopol (invasion of Crimea by the Red Guard forces, establishment of the Taurida Soviet republic)
- 4 January 1918: Penza
- 11 January 1918: Yekaterinoslav
- 17 January 1918: Petrozavodsk
- 19 January 1918: Poltava
- 22 January 1918: Zhitomir
- 26 January 1918: Simferopol
- 27 January 1918: Nikolayev
- 28 January 1918: Helsinki (the Reds overthrow the White Senate, the Finnish Civil War begins)
- 29 January 1918: (failed again in Kiev)
- 31 January 1918: Odessa and Orenburg (establishment of the Odessa Soviet Republic)
- 7 February 1918: Astrakhan
- 8 February 1918: Kiev and Vologda (defeat of the Ukrainian government)
- 17 February 1918: Arkhangelsk
- 25 February 1918: Novocherkassk
Read more about this topic: October Revolution
Famous quotes containing the words spread, soviet, power and/or calendar:
“none
Thought of the others they would never meet
Or how their lives would all contain this hour.
I thought of London spread out in the sun,
Its postal districts packed like squares of wheat:”
—Philip Larkin (19221985)
“One difference between Nazi and Soviet camps was that in the latter dying was a slower process.”
—Terrence Des Pres (19391987)
“To the excessively fearful the chief characteristic of power is its arbitrariness. Man had to gain enormously in confidence before he could conceive an all-powerful God who obeys his own laws.”
—Eric Hoffer (19021983)
“To divide ones life by years is of course to tumble into a trap set by our own arithmetic. The calendar consents to carry on its dull wall-existence by the arbitrary timetables we have drawn up in consultation with those permanent commuters, Earth and Sun. But we, unlike trees, need grow no annual rings.”
—Clifton Fadiman (b. 1904)