Bloody Sunday Massacre Sparks 1905 Russian Revolution
By 1905, Russia faced severe strains from the ongoing Russo-Japanese War, economic hardship, and widespread labor discontent among industrial workers in major cities. Father Georgy Gapon organized a peaceful march of thousands of petitioners seeking reforms, better wages, and an end to the war, intending to present their demands directly to Tsar Nicholas II at the Winter Palace. On January 22, 1905, troops opened fire on the unarmed demonstrators in St. Petersburg, resulting in over 100 deaths and hundreds wounded according to contemporary accounts. The tsar was not present in the city at the time. The shootings immediately triggered strikes, protests, and unrest across the empire.
