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Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic

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Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic
Latvijas Sociālistiskā Padomju Republika
1918–1920
Coat of arms of Latvian SSR
Coat of arms
Motto: "Visu zemju proletārieši, savienojieties!"
Workers of the world, unite!
Anthem: Internacionāle
CapitalRiga (to 22 May 1919)
Dvinsk (Daugavpils)
Rezhitsa (Rezekne)
Common languagesLatvian · Russian
Latgaliana
GovernmentSocialist state
Chairman 
• 1918–1920
Pēteris Stučka
LegislatureAll-Latvian Congress of Workers' Soviet Deputies
History 
• Established
17 December 1918
• Recognized by Russian SFSR
22 December 1918
• Riga captured by German Freikorps
22 May 1919
• Disestablished
13 January 1920
CurrencyRuble
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Latvia
United Baltic Duchy
Iskolat
Latvia
  1. Local languages included German, Yiddish, Lithuanian and Estonian.[1]

The Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic (Latvian: Latvijas Sociālistiskā Padomju Republika, LSPR) was a short-lived socialist republic formed during the Latvian War of Independence. It was proclaimed on 17 December 1918 with the political, economic, and military backing of Vladimir Lenin and his Bolshevik government in the Russian SFSR. The head of government was Pēteris Stučka.

History

The LSPR armed forces, which consisted of the Red Latvian Riflemen and other units of the Red Army, quickly captured most of the territory of present-day Latvia, forcing Kārlis Ulmanis's provisional government into a small pocket of territory around the city of Liepāja.

Stučka's government introduced sweeping communist reforms, resuming the radical policy direction from the abortive Iskolat regime. Some reforms were initially popular, such as the expropriation of property from the bourgeoisie. The decision to unilaterally nationalise all agrarian land, however, had dire economic consequences for the cities, as rural support for the regime declined drastically.

The peasants no longer agreed to supply the townsfolk with foodstuffs on the government's terms, and shortages became critical. When the people in Riga and other cities began to starve, contributing to widespread discontent among the proletariat as well, a wave of terror swept both rural and urban areas, seeking out alleged counter-revolutionaries supposedly responsible for the failures of the regime. Arbitrary Revolutionary Tribunals and the so-called Flintenweiber ("Gun-Women") were memorable components of this wave of terror.

When the Entente-backed Ulmanis government counter-attacked with the backing of German Freikorps units in the spring of 1919, they quickly regained the lost territory. The capital, Riga, was recaptured on 22 May 1919, and the territory of the LSPR was reduced to a part of Latgale in eastern Latvia, until the final defeat in the Battle of Daugavpils by combined Latvian and Polish forces in early 1920.

Historians in the USSR viewed the Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1940 as reestablishing of power, and the 1920 - 1940 period of Independence was viewed just as a temporary break in Soviet-Latvian history.

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Stuchka, P. (1919–21). Piat’ mesiatsev Sotsialisticheskoi sovetskoi Latvii: Sbornik statei i dokumentov (in Russian). Pskov: Izd-vo TsK KP Latvii. pp. 2 v. OCLC 38770737.
  • Popoff, George (1932). The City of the Red Plague: Soviet Rule in a Baltic Town. London; New York: George Allen & Unwin; E.P. Dutton & Co. OCLC 413467.
  • Krastyn', IA. P. (Krastiņš, J.) (ed.) (1959–60). Sotsialisticheskaia Sovetskaia Respublika Latvii v 1919 g. i inostrannaia interventsiia: Dokumenty i materialy (in Russian and Latvian). Riga: Izd-vo Akademii Nauk Latviiskoi SSR. pp. 2 v. OCLC 18861284. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Zile, Zigurds L. (1977). "Legal Thought and the Formation of Law and Legal Institutions in the Socialist Soviet Republic of Latvia, 1917–1920" (PDF). Journal of Baltic Studies. 8 (3): 195–204. doi:10.1080/01629777700000191. Retrieved 2007-07-10.