October Coup (Garindina)

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The October Coup
October Coup.jpg
Mutinied Solders storming Dimitri's Palace
Date17 October 1933
Time10:20 AM - 3:05 PM
Duration4 hours 45 minutes
LocationParsa, Kingdom of Garindina
Also known asBloody Tuesday
CauseRapid Inflation and the dissolution of the Garindinan Senate
MotiveAbdication of Dimitri II and the dissolution of the Garindinan Monarchy
First reporterAleksey Nepomniaschiy
ParticipantsGarindinan Mutineers/The Fortunate Men
Palace Guard
Free Peoples of Garindina
OutcomeSuccessful Coup
  • End of the Garindinan Monarchy
  • Collapse of the Kingdom of Garindina
  • Establishment of the Federal Republic of Garindina
  • Reinstatement of the Garindinan Senate
Casualties
Dimitri II
Catherine Romanov
Deaths23
Inquiries47


The October Coup, was a succsessful coup against the Kingdom of Garindina that ended the centuries-old Garindinan Monarchy. The coup took place in the heart of Parsa on October 17, 1933. The coup lasted four hours and forty-five minutes. The following riots after Dimtiri II's execution resulted in the deaths of many, giving the event the nickname "Bloody Tuesday."

Background

After the Constitution War, there was the end of the Garindinan Empire and the rise of the Kingdom of Garindina. The Constitution War instated the 1871 Constitution of Garindina, the first Garindinan Constitution. which limited the monarchy's power along with establishing the Garindinan Senate. Most of the monarchy's power is now laid at the feet of the Garindinan Senate. But the monarchy had the power to dissolve the Senate temporarily in times of crisis. After the death of Queen Nadia IV on March 15, 1930, her son, Dimitri II, rose to the throne. With poor decision-making by Dimitri II and the Senate, the nation experienced rapid inflation.

King Dimitri II

Dimitri II blamed the Senate and abolished it; he then claimed all government power. His attempts to fix the problem only worsened it and brought the Garindinan economy to the brink of economic collapse. This anti-monarchist sentiment among multiple groups challenged Dimitri II's power, with many groups even threatening rebellion. Raids on armories and sabotage of railways became common and only increased the political turmoil.

On the 17th of October 1933, on this cold October morning, an armed group of soldiers mutinied and, led by Aleksei Brusilob, stormed Dimitri II's Palace at 10:20 AM. Fed-up with his policies and the growing inflation, the people had enough. The soldiers stormed the north side of the palace, while an armed group of civilians rushed the palace and were caught in a gunfight with the Palace Guards. The soldiers quickly captured the palace and forced Dimitri to abdicate the throne. The gunfight ended when the soldiers informed the guards of Dimitri's abdication and held them at gunpoint. The gunfight left 13 dead and seven injured. The armed group was identified as the Free Peoples of Garindina (SNG, "Svobodnyye narody Garindiny"); the group was heavily anti-monarchist and pro-democracy.

Aleksei Brusilob, Leader of the Mutineers

News of this spread through Parsa like wildfire, and the celebrations began. Dimitri II and his wife, Catherine Romanov, were imprisoned in a small cell in the basement of the Palace. An hour after the breach, Dimitri II and Catherine were taken outside to the palace square and publicly executed. This infuriated the monarchists, and clashes between the monarchists and the anti-monarchists began to spring up across the city. The city was in a state of anarchy, with the police and the Army split. Former senators heard of the event and began making their way to the Senate House, where they were attacked repeatedly by monarchists. But when they arrived, former Senate President Vyacheslav Molotov broadcast the news to the whole nation on the National Radio Network and proclaimed the Federal Republic of Garindina at 3:05 PM.

Preparation

The Free Peoples of Garindina were founded on August 9, 1933, and the group was founded Ivan Godunov. They contacted other groups against the monarchy and made alliances. Their numbers were relatively small, as many were joining the more radical groups, like the Nationalists. Despite this, the SNG continued to gain members. The SNG began raiding weapon stockpiles on September 9, 1933. That is when Ivan got the plan to overthrow the monarchy and instate a republic.

The group started drafting plans for a coup d'état on the twelfth of September. Soon, the SNG began sabotaging railroads into the city, as they hoped that it would slow the military. But the plan was delayed due to fears of a spy. The day came again, and it was delayed again as most of the members backed out to form larger groups. It was later delayed a third time due to another group being caught.

It wasn't until the start of October that things finally went into motion. Rumors of a socialist uprising in Novokamensk and a nationalist rebellion in Batagrad pushed Ivan's plans forward. They raided another armory and lifted train rails. Then the day finally came—October 17, 1933.

Aleksei Brusilob got the idea of mutinying at a bar. He was with seven of his closest military friends, who all hated the monarchy. When Aleksei informed them of his plan, they were all in. On October 12, 1933, three different left-wing groups started an armed uprising in Novokamensk. Alesksei's whole battalion didn't want to fight. So they stayed in Parsa despite orders to leave for Novokamensk. This is when Aleksei convinced his battalion of sixty men to storm the palace. They drew up plans and threw out ideas on how to do it. Eventually they decided to walk in on the pretense of being ordered to defend the palace.

Aftermath

After the October coup, a democratic transitional government was put in place. The Transitional Government lasted only 5 years (one term) until the National Democratic Party took control of the Senate on Wednesday, November 8, 1938. Garindina then went from a Democratic Republic to an Authoritarian Democracy. The palace was reused for the second president and renamed the Presidential Palace. The nation soon declared neutrality on January 20, 1939, and later went into a period of isolationism only a week later on Sunday, January 27. Monarchist groups like the extremist early National Royalist Party were banned the next day, and the inflation problem was fixed. Garindina would then go through a period of economic prosperity for fifteen years.

The Garindinan State Duma, 15 January 1934

More information

The SNG's plan was to raid the Parsa Armory and go into hiding for two weeks while sabotaging railroads into the city. Then they were to storm Dimitri II's palace. This plan would be delayed three times until it was set into motion, due to the fear of spies and not having enough members.   The Mutineers, on the other hand, had no plan; they just stormed the palace under the false pretense of being ordered in. This only worked because SNG was already storming the palace. There is little to no proof that the Mutineers had any contact with SNG. The Mutineers would later gain the nickname "Fortunate Men," as if the SNG hadn't started a gun fight, the coup would've failed. leading many historians to call the coup a fluke.   Many leftist groups like the Garindinan United Workers Front, the Socialist Party of Garindina, and the Proples Liberation Army of Garindina]] made small contributions to the coup. Days before the October Coup was the Novokamensk Uprising, which these three left-wing groups also took part in. This armed uprising lasted six days (October 12-October 18) and distracted the Garindinan Army while the coup was still in its planning phase. Other groups, like the extremist Garindnian National Society (GNS), also shifted Dimitri II's focus elsewhere. The GNS were in open rebellion against the government in the Batagrad Oblast, giving the Mutineers and SNG enough breathing room to storm the palace in the first place.

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