PART I: Novgorod prior 1917
1. Introduction, history and naval development in Novgorod
2. Ships in service prior 1917 Revolution
3. Ships under construction
1. Introduction, history and naval development in Novgorod
1.1 Novgorod introduction
Novgorod or Novgorod Soviet Sosialist Republic (Novgorodian: Новгородская
Советская Социалистическая Республика) is a country in Northern Eurasia. Expanding from the Baltic Sea into Pacific Ocean it is at 17 516 219 sq km the largest country in the world. It covers 10 timezones and borders Finland and Poland in the west, Russia in the south and Mongolia, China and North Korea in the east. With 144 million people, it's the tenth most populous country in the world.
Novgorods history begun with the eastern slavic people emergin into eastern europe between 3rd and
8th century BC. After the disintegration of the medieval Kievan Rus, Merchant Republic of Novgorod emerged as dominant slavic state into the northern east europe, area that was not under the Mongol rule. After the mongol yoke started to weaken, Novgorod and Principality of Muscovy begun to rival over the control of the former Kievan Rus lands. Eventually the northern parts and the upper reaches of Volga were included into Novgorod realm and the southern and south-western areas were incorporated into Muscovy wich later became Russia. Novgorod expanded into east and west and eventually reached the shores of Pacific Ocean and became an empire under the rule of Petr Velikiy in the start of the 18th century.
After the October revolution in 1917, Novgorod became the worlds first sosialistic state and together with the Soviet Union, emergin from the Russian empire became the nucleous of Socialistic world trough the better part of the 20th century. Novgorod played a major part in the allied victory in World War II and eventually took place as the leading socialistic state after the stagnation and eventual dissolution of Soviet Union.
Novgorod is the sole major pure socialistic economy in the world today. The current economical policy orginates mainly from the reformations made during the 1970's with the gradual withdrawal from purely centralized planned economy into the so-called ”market-socialism”. Novgorod posses massive energy and mineral resources and is one of the the leading natural gas and oil producers of the world. The country is one of the recognized nuclear weapon powers and generally recognized today as the seccond most powerfull military powers in the world after United States. Novgorod holds permanent seat in the UN's security council.
1.2 Etymology:
The name Novgorod comes from the city of Novgorod, the centre of the merchant republic from which the current state orginated. It literaly means New city. The land of the old republic and later princedom were usually refered as a Novgorodskaja Zemlya.
1.3 History
[In this AU scenario, the history of Novgorod is mostly unaltered and same as in our timeline (OTL) up until 1240's when the ”magic hand” first sweeps in. From there after it follows the main events of the history from the perspective that Novgorod is acting the part of Russia in the norther hemishprere. However there are some occasions where the history takes another a different course. I will post the main events that are either different from the OTL or that are othervice signifigant to explain the very fundamentals of Novgorods history. I also try to include some bits of the evolution of Russia in this AU as it is bit different to the OTL. For those not that familiar with the history of Russia/Northern Europe, I urge you to study it as it is rather facinating and will help you to understand some of the events that are not descriped in this history section.]
1.3.1 Alexander Nevsky and consolidation of the powers of Prince of Novgorod:
Ever since 1136, the city of Novgorod had invited and sometimes dismissed Princes from neighboring slavic princedoms to serve as Prince of Novgorod. However the title was not heritable and the powers of the prince were somewhat limited while the true political power lied in the hands of the powerfull boyars and merchantmens trough the Veche, a public asembly in which all the important issues were ruled. In 1240, a young Knyaz Alexander from the Principalty of Vladimir was holding the seat of Prince of Novgorod when Swedish forces attacked east. In the following battle of Neva, Novgorodians led by Alexander defeated the swedish incursion and Alexander is given the title Nevsky. After the victory Alexander Nevsky enjoyed a huge popularity among the novgorodians and this led some of the powerfull boyars fear that he might grown too powerfull wich led to an uprising against him. The uprising failed however due a lack of support from the majority of the boyars and Alexander uses this event as a means to strenghten the position of the Prince.
With another triuph in against foreign incursors in the Lake Peipus where Alexander Nevsky led the Novgrodians into victory against the Livonian Order in 1242, the status of Alexander is now firmly established as the savior of Novgorodian people. As a skillful politican and with his ties towards the Mongol rules, Alexander manages to keep good relations to the Horde and keep Novgorod as a independent from the mongol rule.
During the reign of Alexander Nevsky, the political system of Novgorod was changed so that the Prince now promoted and appointed military leaders and boyars and the nobles were now forced to cede troops to the standing army of the republic. With the annexation of land and estates from those boyars that had took part of the rebel in 1240, Alexander used those lands to grant them for service gentry to a able leaders and servicemens.
Alexander reigns as a Prince of Novgorod until his death in 1263. Despite the tittle not beign heritable, his son Vasili succees the tittle with the backing of the boyars. During Vasilis reign the power of the Prince is further consolitated and a new law is issued that the elected prince must come from the noble families inside the Novgorod realm. Troughout the 14th and 15th century, Novgorod emerged from merchant republic into into de facto monarcial state.
1.3.2 Rise of Muscovy and the separation of the two eastern slavic realms:
With improved military strenght Novgorod managed to emphasis its influence among the eastern slavic principalities. With the weakening of the Vladimir-Suzdal in to various smaller princedoms after the Mongol invasion, Novgorod seized the control of Pereslav in 1302 and Ustug in 1328. Meanwhile a new princedom of Muscovy emerged as rivaling slavic power to cede the remains of the former Kievan Rus and with Mongols backing them up, Muscovy annexed the remains of the Vladimir-Suzdal in 1320's.
By the mid 14th century, Novgorod and Muscovy are the two dominating and rivaling Slavic states with complicated vassal-alliance system with the Golden Horde mixing the situation. With the weakening of the Horde troughout the end of the century, Muskovy's power increases in the south. First major war between the two were fought over Nizhi-Novgorod 1392 which ended up in Novgorods victory and set the borders between the two principalities which have remained somewhat the same ever since.
Altough Novgorod emerged in the initial part of the rivaly between the two slavic princedoms as winner, it was not able to gain control of Muscovy and the lands agin to it first due the Horde's backing up their nominal vassal and later on with Muscovy grewing too powerfull themselves as the Horde declined. A war between Novgorod and Muscovy was fought in 1471 ultimately over control of Tver and that war also ended into Novgorodian victory. Treaty of Yazhelbitsy wich followed the fight not only did set the fate of Tver, but it also made Muscovy to renounce all ther claims to the prince title of Novgorod. Tver was annexed by Novgorod in 1485.
1.3.3 Expansion into the east:
With the downfall of the Golden Horde, several smaller mongol Khanates emerged to the east for which eventually were annexed by Novgorod and Muscovy. With the partitioning of Kazan
Khanate in 1552, the route to the Southern Ural mountains were now open. There had been exlporers into the vast eastern lands from Novgorod in the past and the northern parts of the Urals were already under the Novgorod rule. With the colonisation of these lands brought Novgorod into the proximity of Sibir Khanate. With the lead of Yermak Timofeyevich, Novgorodians started an invasion into the Sibir Khanate lands in 1581. During his voyages, Yermak and his troops mapped out the waterways of the Western Siperia. Altough Yermak was killed in 1584 and the initial incursion rebeled by the Sibir Khanate, Novgorod managed to defeat the Sibir Khanate by the end of the 16th century.
During the 17th century, more and more explores entered into the vast east, now known as Siperia. Cossack explorers such as Poyarkov and Khabarov reached all the way into the Amur River and shores of Pacific Ocean. Novgorodians set up series of forts along the newly searched areas and many of these forts eventually expanded into cities as more and more settlers started to move into Siperia. The new land lured landless people from the western parts of Novgorod as well as hunters, fur-traders and such. Also a notable portion of the new settlers came from Russian (former Muscovy) lands expspecially during the times of trouples.
After the defeat of the Sibir Khanate, Novgorodians faced little resitance from the native people living in the area. These were mostly sparsely lived nomands which were unable to the resist the often rather brutal Novgorodian explorers. However once Novgorodians reached the shores of River Amur, tension rose with the Empire of Ming in China. [In this AU TL, there is no Qing dynasty nor Manchu rule in China.] After several skirhmishes, Novgorodians gained decisive victory over the Ming troops in 1689 in the battle of Achansk and in the following treaty of Nerchinsk the border between Ming and Novgorod was settled. The whole Amur river basin with its fertile land and all land above it were now part of Novgorod.
1.3.4 Time of Troubles:
Novgorodian southern neighbour Muscovy had centralized into Tsardom of Russia during the reign of Ivan IV in 1547. However with the decline of the Russian dynasty orginating from the Rurik dynasty of Kievan Rus days in 1600-5 the country fell into chaotical civil war called times of troubles which involved its neighbouring countries including Novgorod. One of the roots to the time of troubles was withspreading famine in northern europe during 1601-03.
As the Rurikovich dynasty was without a legimate follower after the death of Tsar Feodor, many of the Novgorodian noble families started to rival over the throne of Moscow as well which led neighbouring Poland and Sweden deeply worried of possible unification of the two slavic realms. Both countries also had their own pretenders to support to the throne of the Tsar and Poland attacked into Russia ceding Smolensk and reaching eventually into Moscow in 1610. Novgorod fought against the poles but lost the war. Sweden exploited the weakness of the war weary Novgorod and attacked in the same year which started the Ingrian wars raging until 1617. The war was devastating to Novgorod as it lose the shores of Baltic sea and free and easy access to the sea.
After the peace with Sweden, little comfort for Novgorod came from conquest of Smolensk in 1618 from Poles, which had occupied it from Russia few years before. Russia was still weak despite a new Tsar emerging from the Romanov family in 1617 and Novgorod used the temporare weakness of war-weary Poland in order to cede the town over which Novgorod and Muscovy had rivaled in the previous centuries. It was also ment that Poland had more difficoult to attack Russia and Novgorod thus wanted to prevent Moscow to fall into the hands of the poles.
1.3.5 Petr Veliky and Novgorod Empire:
In 1696 Peter I was elected as a new Grand Prince of Novgorod. Peter was determined of restoring the Novgorodian access into the Baltic sea and transforming Novgorod into martime power.
Peter made his move against Sweden in 1700 when he attacked together with Russia, Denmark and Polish-Lithuania commonwealth. Thus begun the Great Northern War. Initially Sweden was victorious and defeated Peter's troops at the battle of Narva in 1702. Sweden however instead of invading Novgorod focused on fighting against the Polish-Lithuania and this gave Peter the opportunity to cede Ingria and access to the Batic Sea. Sweden continued fighting in Poland and after Polish defeat focused again against Novgorod in 1708. However the strong Novgorodian resistance in the Baltic area made Sweden concentrate their forces against Russia and trying to recapture the Ukrainian provinces. This allowed Peter to attack Swedish army from the behind and decicive battle was fought in Poltava ending complete disaster to the Swedish army.
After Poltava Novgorod continued to occupy Swedish territory as it refused to yield. Novgorod advanced into Finland in 1713 and crushed the swedish fleet in the battle of Gangut in 1714. Eventualy a peace was signed in 1721 with Novgorod gaining Ingria and part of Karelia as well as Estonia and Latvia. Peter I had emerged as victorious and the success in the war paved the route for Peters reforms which had definite effects on Novgorod.
Peter I was a stern leader and consolidated his power over the Veche and the Orthodox church. Together his dream of reclaming the access to the sea, he also had a plan to build a new capital to the shores of the Baltic sea. He chosed the spot at the head of the Neva River in the end of the Gulf of Finland. Building of the new city started as early as 1703, at time when the area was altough occupied by Novgorodians still Swedish sovreign territory.
After the Great northern War Peter I claimed himself as the Emperor of Novgorod to the great dissters of the Veche. Peter used the Veche's refusal to move from the city of Novgorod into the new capital Saint Petersburg as an excuse to abolish it in 1723, ending formaly the remains of the Novgorodian merchat republic. After Peters death in 1725, the Veche was reformed but its powers greatly reduced. Peter I was posthumously tittled as Petr Velikiy or Peter the Great.
1.3.6 Dekambrist revolution and Constitutional Monarchy:
At the end of the 18th century Novgorod had succesfully expanded into west to Belarus and remains of the eastern Baltic shores after partitionings of Poland together with Russia, Prussia and Austria. In 1809 Novgorod gained Finland from Sweden while rest of the Europe was in turmoil over the Napoleonic wars. In 1812 Napoleon launched his attack on Russia while Novgorod remained neutral at the begining. Altough French troops reached into Moscow, Russia didn't capitulate and the over-extented french army was forced to retreat. Novgorod under Emperor Aleksander I, joined the coalition against Napoleon and started to chase the retreating French army all the way to Europe. In the aftermath, Novgorod gained remains of Poland core lands.
When Aleksander I died in 1825, his successor was to be his brother Konstantine but initially his younger brother Nikolai claimed the throne as Konstantine refused the throne. This sparked a rebelion among the enlightened group of young officers and nobles which were empraised the ideas of the French revolution. The group was called Dekambrists after the rebel which took place in December 1825. Nikolas was inprisoned and forced to lay of the crown. The group persuaded Konstantine, known for his liberal stands to assume the throne as a constitutional monarch.
New constitution was written and made official in 1827 and the Veche was reformed as a bicameral parliament. Emperor still held significant executive powers.
1.3.7 Industrialization and the ”Eastern Call”:
After the Dekambrist revolution, the industrialisation begun in full steam in Novgorod. Not only did the factories started to grown in the older cities in the west, but also around the new areas in the Ural mountains and beyond were the vast resources of minerals and ore laid. As the old means of trasportation became inadequate, a network of new railways were build starting from 1837. These railways originally were merely seperate connections between cities but a plan for railroad network from Saint Petersburg to the shores of the Pacific was started.
During 19th century the imigration into Siperia grew rapidly. This was augumented by the population growth thanks to the industrial revolution which made the living standards and conditions better. The vast lands of the Siperia lured new settlers as the old cities grew too tight and crowded. Settlement of the east was engouraged by the Government and the expanding railroad network allowed people to move to the remote areas faster than before.
Siperia lured people not only from Novgorod but from other parts of Europe as well and it was the seccond largest imigration destination after American continent. Largest single event that boosted the population stream was the emancipation of Russian serfs in 1861 to wich many moved into the new ”promised land”.
Novgorod had reached the opposite shores of Pacific Ocean in the previous century and established tradeposts as far as in Indonesian ilands and in the chinese coast. By the mid 19th Century Novgorod hold several colonial posts in Alaska, California and Hawajian lands. These colonies were however becun to decline as the competition against United States and British Northern America was increased and the remotenes of these colonies from Novgorod prevented adequate support towards them. Novgorodian expansionism and control over the Northern Pacific Ocean together with its close ties to Russians put it into conflict against Great Britain, another major colonial power in the East which feared that Novgorodians would be entering their sphere's of influences.
This conflict sparked into flames in 1853 when Great Britan and France allied with the Ottomans against Russia and Novgorod and the following Crimean war put halt on the Russian expansion into Balkans. Novgorod fought against the British in Baltic and in the Pacific shores but were unable to help Russians who were forced to peace in 1856. Despite British plans to destroy Novgorodian naval precense in the Pacific failed, the superiority of of the Anglo-French forces forced Novgorod to eventually yield together with Russia. Novgorod was forced to cede its colonial possessions in American continent. However Novgorod sold the lands to United States instead to Great Britan and by this strenghtened the ties between them against British domination. In Indonesia, Novgorod was forced to cede all its tradeports but one to the Dutch East Indian company.
In the continent Novgorod had slowly begun to colonizate Manchuria during the 18th century and in 1860 in the Treaty of Beijing China was forced to recognize Novgorodian rule over whole Manchuria aside the Liaoning Penisula in the south. With the steady expansion of the railroad network in Novgorod ever since the first railroad St.Petersburg-Novgord Velikiy build 1837 plans were to build a trans-siperian railroad wich would connect the fareast areas into the mainlands. Altough the plan of cohesive railway all the way from Yaroslav to Vladivostok emerged from the begining, the building of the railway started as seperate projects connecting the various siperian cities. First conncetion was the Nizhi-Novgorod -Perm build in 1851-58. Eventually the Trans-siperian railway was administrated as a whole and the railroad reached Vladivostok trough Manchuria in 1881.
As the fareast areas begun to developt, Novgorod soon assumed its colonial interss in the Pacific area packed by the latest technolocial achivements such as steam powered ships. In 1855 Novgorod persuaded Japan to open its markets for trade and in 1863 Novgorodian ships visited Californian ports to give support to the United States government in their fight against the Confederates in the American civil war.
Revanche for the humiliation of the Crimean war became in 1877-78 when Russia again backed up by Novgorod attacked against the Ottomans and its allies. Altough the main fighting took place in Europe, Novgorodians with new expanded naval forces fought of the Dutch in Indonesia and landed on Sumatra. With unified Germany supporting Novgorod and Russia, France and Britan were reluctant to involve in the war. The treaty of Pennang gave Sumatra into Novgorod sphere of influence and ilands east of Java into the Netherlands SOI. Novgorod begun to colonize Sumatra but parts of the iland were still refusing Novgorodian rule in the turn of the century.
1.3.8 War against Japan 1904-5:
After 1854 Japan was forced to open its doors to western traders and influences and by the end of the century it had gone trough rapid modernisation and became rivaling power in the Pacific region over the colonial spoils of Korea and China. Meanwhile Novgorod was keen to obtain warm-water port in Pacific to have better naval access and support means to its oversea colony in Sumatra. Korea and the Liaoning Penisula in southern Mancuria were the most obvious targets but Japan had eyed these lands as well.
In 1895 Japan fought the First sino-japanese war against China over the control of Korea to which ended in complete Japanese victory. Japan occupied Korea as well as Liaoning Penisula but was forced to withdraw from the later due pressure from Novgorod, Germany and France. The events of the war caused some worry in Novgorod over the rising power of Japan and Novgorod decided to make their move. As Novgorod wanted to avoid open conflict with Japan at this point, only option for warm-water port was the Liaoning Penisula. Novgorod made a leasing agreement of Port Artur, a natural port in the peninsula with chinese government. In 1897 the Pacific Fleet arrived the port and Novgordians begun inmidatly fortify the area.
In 1900 a so-called Boxer rebelion broke out in China against the foreign incursions and Novgorod as well as Japan took part on quelling it. Novgorod used the rebelion as an excuse to invade the whole Liaoning Penisula and annexed it officially in 1903. This further upsetted Japan which started to see a military conflict against Novgorod inevitable. As Novgorod refused to aknowlidge Japanese claims on Korea, Japan started to plan a pre-emptive war against Novgorod.
Japan was confident under the fact that the Anglo-Japan pact from 1902 would bring Great Britan into the war on Japanese side if any other nation would join Novgorod in case of war. Japan attacked in 8 February 1904 without formal declaration of war. The attack took Novgorod completely by suprise as they were convinced that Japan would not dare to attack.
Japan launched its attack with naval units against the Port Artur and the Novgorodian Pacific fleet. The initial attack caused some damage to Novgorodians but japanese were unable to destroy the fleet into the port. However japanese fleet started to blockade the port and eventually tied the Pacific fleet out of any offensive actions. Meanwhile as the searoute was clear, Japanese troops landed in Korea and after occupation of Korean penisula, they started to move towards Manchuria.
Troughout the 1904 Japanese troops advanced along the coast and eventually encircled the Port Artur. Together with the sea blockade the port was completely cut out and the sieging army with land based artillery started pounding the fortifications and the ships of the Pacific fleet in the harbour. Novgorodians made several attepts to break out from the port but were unsuccesfull. From 7 battleships of the Pacific fleet, 5 were sunk in the harbour mostly from land artillery fire.
Novgorodian attempts to relieve the siege from land also proved unsuccesfull and japanese troops had the intiative. Novgorodians faced cruisal defeat in the Battle of Yalu river in May 1904. This was followed by the battle of Mukden in February 1905 which nearly anhilated the Novgorodian army in Manchuria. The catasthropical events in the war sparked an uprising in Saint Petersburg and other major citites in early 1905 which was crushed in harsh manners.
Ever since it became obvious that the Pacific fleet was unable to break out the siege and blockade of Port Artur, Novgorod decided to send the main bulk of the Baltic fleet into Pacific. The Seccond Pacific squardon as the fleet was now called took of in October 1904 under the command of Admiral Rozhestvensky. Becouse of British refusal of using the Suez canal, it had to cross the Cape of Good Hope and go around Africa to reach the Pacific ocean. Also a large reinforce army was munstered from the western part of the realm and sended via railroads to Manchuria.
The Seccond Pacific squardon entered Sumatra in March 1905 where it remained for overhouling and repairs little over a month after the long and strainfull voyage. While Port Artur still stood stubbornly refusing to surrender, the Pacific fleet was put out of action and only small japanese attachment remained blockading it. Japanese main battlefleet was stationed in Korea as Japan expected the Seccond Pacific squardon to pass trough Tsushima strait to reach Vladivostok instead of going to Port Artur.
Rozhestvensky's plan was however not sail into Vladivostok but to lure out the japanese fleet into action and use the numerical superiority to gain as much damage to japanese fleet. Japan had 4 battleships against 6 of the Novgorodians in the Seccond Pacific squardon. Knowing that japanese war effort relyed mostly on the supplies and troops sended from mainland Japan into Korea, gaining superiority in the seas would made japanese unable to continue the war.
Rozhestvensky sended a decoy fleet of auxiliaries to lure the japanese out from the port. The plan worked when japanese cruiser spotted Novgorodian hospital ship which falsely indicated the japanese thinking them beign another Novgorodian ship and informing that there were other Novgorodian ships near by. This worked as the Japanese main fleet sailed to the sea.
The two fleets engaged each others in afternoon 27 May 1905. Admiral Togo, leading the Japanese Combined Fleet tried to perform the “crossing T” manuvre which had worked well against the Pacific fleet in the Battle of Yellow sea earlier in the war. However Rozhestvensky battlefleet was faster than the older battleships of the Pacific fleet and managed outmanuvre the Togo's trap. Japanese ships were now facing themselves head on against the Novgorodian battleline. With suprisingly concentrated and accurate gunnery, Novgorodian shells spear havoc in the Japanese flagship Mikasa and its forced to fall away from the japanese battleline facing forward the Novgorodians. As the japanese can only awnser with their forward guns agains the full broadside of the Novgorodian line, one by one the japanese battleships are mauled and eventually sunk.
The remaining japanese ships are dispersed and some fleeing back to Masambo port in Korea while some attempts to reach the mainland islands. Novgorodian ships conducts attacks trough out the day and night against the dispersed japanese units.
Without a fleet Japan have no other option than to ask peace terms. Meditaded by US President Theodore Roosevelt, Japan was forced to rather lenienth peace. Japan had to renounce its claims on controling Korea and respect its sovreignity but was not forced to pay indemnities as Britan and US didn't want to cripple Japan too much in favour of Novgorod gaining total control of the Pacific.
In Novgorod the catastrophical war was turned into victory overnight and hindered the apparent weaknesses of the military. As the war was won, the critical analyze of the shortcomings were minimal and this had huge effect on Novgorodian performance in the First world war. The imperial regime saved its face among the nobles in Novgorod and among foreign powers. However the huge strain that the war had put on the population together with the harhs actions to supress the january 1905 uprisings made the monarchy more and more unpopular among the masses.
The battle of Tsushima created overhelming prestige for the navy which consolitaded its power against army inside the empire's military circles. The triumphical navy have ever since been a national symbol of power which have remained apparent into modern days.
1.3.9 World War 1:
Orgins of the First world war were in the unification of Germany and Russian expansion into the Balkans while the Ottoman empire fell. Russia had forced Ottoman Empire to release Romania and Bulgaria as a vassal states in 1878 of which it annexed in 1893 and 1902. As Germany had risen into leading power in Europe, France and Great Britain were no longer able to resist Russian ambitions on Ottoman's behalf. However with Russia entering into the Balkans, it soon was in conflict with Austro-Hungarian empire as their sphere of interes collided. This drove Germany, allied to Austro-Hungary away from Russia and the power-blocks of Central Powers (initially Germany, Austro-Hungary and Italy) and Entente (UK, France, Novgorod and Russia) were formed.
The diplomatic tensions was fueled by extensive armsrace and military build-up and the war was seen unavoidable.
In June 28 1914 serbian nationalist shot the crown-prince of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo which sparked a diplomatic crisis between the two power-blocks. As Austria-Hungary accused Serbia of the incidence, it provoked a casus belli against Serbia by giving it an ultimatum which was impossible for Serbia to accept. Austria-Hungary decleared war to which Russia awnsered and one by one the eurpean powers were pulled to the war due complicated alliance system.
Novgorod was ill-prepeared for the war. It's military build up was mainly focused on naval rivalry against Germany and Japan and the shorcomings of the Japanese war decade earlier were not fully adressed. These became painfully evident in the first months of the war when after initial success, Novgorodian army was crushed in the battle of Tanneberg. Novgorod managed to halt the german counter offensive to Poland in which the frontline remained until mid 1915 after which Germans drove Novgorod out of Poland and the frontline going trough the Riga-Baranovich line. The frontline stagnated into trenchwarfare as it did in the western front.
In the south, Russia was initially succesfull against Austria-Hungary and managed to invade Galicia in 1914. However the Ottoman Empire joining the war forces Russia to fight on two new fronts, Soutehrn balkans and the Caucasus and is driven out of Bulgaria by 1915. Central powers joint effort drives Russia out of Romania in 1916 but Russian counter-offensive is succesfull in Galicia.
It was however the internal issues in both Novgorod and Russia that ceded the fate of the war. The war had devastating effects on both nations. In Novgorod the ill-prepaired and poor performance of the army soon changed the popular athmosphere from pro-war nationalism into tired anti-war dispear. Germany occupying most of the fertile agricultural areas of western Novgorod soon resulted in food shortages. The Imperial regime, which had transformed more and more autocratian ever since the 1905 uprisings awnsered demostrating people and striking workers with hars and violent supression.
Situation in Russia was not much different and in 10 March 1917 series of revolts and demostrations spread in Moscow and other Russian cities and in just few days the Tsar Nikolai II abdicated the throne and Russian monarchy was ended. The intermediate government of the new Republic of Russia however remained in the war at the side of the Entente.
1917 went on relatively stable but the ever increasing anti-war setiment in Novgorod and the weakening of the morale and fighting spirit made any offensive actions ineffective. Germany begun to exploid the weakening internal situation in autumn 1917 by launching an operation to take over the Estonian archipelago. In the following battle of Moon Sound, German and Novgorodian fleets finaly encountered each others. Altough loosing only 1 battlecruiser and one old battleship, the Baltic fleet was however forced to withdraw and Germany occupied the ilands. It had now open road to attack behind the frontline and St. Petersburg was now facing perill.
1.3.10 Road to the Revolution:
By the end of the 19th century the civil liberties and constitutionalism was comning to an end. Emperor Pavel IV who succeed the throne from Konstantin I in 1849 had far more reactional views towards the ideas of the Dekambrist revolution. During his reign, the power of the Veche was again reduced slowly and by the time of his death in 1902, the Emperor was once again fully autocratic ruler and Veche merely a de jure politcal institution. As stout orthodoxian, the power and influence of the church was also increased druing Pavel IV reign.
Pavel IV was followed by Michael I who had spend his early youth in Manchuria and was deeply devoted to Novgorod's colonial ventures in the Pacific. Soon after his coronation the war broke out against Japan and the war was going badly for the Novgorod. Michael I was inexperienced ruler and the war took him offguard. He had continued the harsh autocratic policies of his father but lacked the cunningness and experience of Pavel IV to keep the various factions of Novgorod society in check. Together with the displeasement for the ongoing war and to the autocratic rule of the Emperor, series of strikes and demostrations spread agross the nation in january 1905. These were crushed ruthlesly and the wave of counter-revolutionary meassures swept the whole country. With the war ending in suprise victory, the situation relieved as the nobles and other upper class was again seeing the young Emperor in favour.
The rapid industrialization of the nation troughout the 19th century had created a whole new society class, the working class. As the population growth brought more and more people into the fast growing citites, more and more dissent to the living and working conditions rose. In the late 19th century radical new ideas spread among the working class and the Marxist Social democratic party was formed in 1898. The sosialistic movement was however working underground as it was imidiately banned after its formation. The party had splitted into two factions in 1903, to Bolsheviks and Mensheviks (majority and minority) formally due dispute of a party member definition but the two factions begun share different obinion of the very princibles of achiving their coals. Bolsheviks who were led by Vladimir Lenin sought a direct revolution of the working class to bring the country into sosialism where as the mensheviks rallied for co-operative bourgerous revolution together with other anti-authoritan parties and factions.
By the time of Russian revolution in February 1917, the political situation in Novgorod begun to detoriate. Large scale demostrations broke out and many major factories were inoperable due strikes among the working class. The initial awnser from the Imperial regime was violent supression, as it had done previously but as Emperor Michael became more and more disillusioned about ruling the country and instead focusing more and and more on rahter annoying scale to the work of the military leaders, the weak government promised universal elections for the Veche to be organised in the summer. This pacified the revolting factions to the extent that at least nominal orders was restored in the realm.
However soon after the Russian revolution, a counsil of workers and soldiers were formed in St. Petersburg, known as the Soviet. It was intended to represent the working class of the city (initially) instead the weak and unfunctional Veche. It's nucleous was formed by the Social Democratic Party but it had representatives from various other parties and factions. It power increased troughout the spring and summer and the Government was de facto froced get legimacy to their decisions from the Soviet as well as from the Veche.
Initially the Soviet was ruled by the Menshevik majority but troughout the summer and autumn Bolsheviks became more and more powerfull inside the Soviet and eventually had the majority and in the end full control of it by the dawn of the October 1917.