Petrograd Soviet Order No. 1
Order No. 1 (Russian: Prikaz nomer odin) was the first official decree of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, issued on March 1, 1917 (March 14, New Style). It followed the February Revolution and was a response to actions taken the day before by the Provisional Committee of the State Duma, headed by Mikhail Rodzianko. On February 28, the Provisional Committee, acting as a government in Petrograd after the disintegration of the Tsarist authority and fearing that soldiers who had joined the revolution on February 26–27 (O.S.) without their officers (who had generally fled) might become an uncontrollable mob threatening the Duma, issued an order through the Duma's Military Commission. This order called on soldiers to return to their barracks and obey their officers.
The soldiers were skeptical of this order, partly because they viewed Rodzianko as too close to the Tsar (he had been Chairman of the Fourth Duma, which was seen as supportive of the Tsar). Some soldiers feared that sending them back to the barracks was an attempt to quash the Revolution, while most worried that they would be placed under their old, heavy-handed commanders, whose actions had led them to mutiny on the 26th, leaving their grievances unaddressed. In response, the Petrograd Soviet issued Order Number 1.
The order directed soldiers and sailors to obey their officers and the Provisional Government only if their orders did not contradict the Petrograd Soviet's decrees. It also called for units to elect representatives to the Soviet and for each unit to elect a committee to manage the unit. All weapons were to be handed over to these committees "and shall by no means be issued to the officers, not even at their insistence." The order also permitted soldiers to dispense with standing at attention and saluting when off duty, while maintaining strict military discipline while on duty. Officers were no longer to be addressed as "Your Excellency" but as "Sir" ("Gospodin" in Russian), and they were forbidden from executing, corporally punishing, or even verbally abusing their soldiers. Soldiers of all ranks were to be addressed formally (with "vy" instead of "ty").
Despite a widespread belief that Order Number 1 infamously allowed for the election of officers, thereby undermining military discipline, the order makes no such provision. The elections mentioned in the order pertain to representatives to the Petrograd Soviet. This discrepancy arises from a proclamation issued around the same time by the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP – essentially the Communists, divided between the Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks) and the Petrograd Committee of Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs), calling on "Comrade Soldiers" to "elect for yourself platoon, company, and regimental commanders." The debate leading up to Order Number 1 included discussions of "sorting out" unfriendly (pro-Tsarist or anti-revolutionary) officers and excluding them from units, which may have been interpreted as a call for the election of officers. While unsympathetic, untrustworthy, or undesirable officers were blacklisted and forced out of their units, the actual election of officers did not occur.