Russia's capital is shifted from St Petersburg to Moscow

On 12 March 1918, Vladimir Lenin relocated Russia’s capital from Petrograd to Moscow to mitigate the risk of foreign invasion and reinforce Bolshevik control.

Desk Report

Publisted at 9:12 AM, Wed Mar 12th, 2025

As the spectre of foreign invasion loomed over revolutionary Russia, Vladimir Lenin made the momentous decision on 12 March 1918 to shift the capital from Petrograd (St. Petersburg) to Moscow, a move driven by both strategic and symbolic imperatives.

Petrograd, perilously close to the western front and vulnerable to potential incursions from German forces amid World War I, was deemed untenable as the nerve centre of Bolshevik power.

Moscow, with its more defensible inland position and historical gravitas, became the new seat of government, solidifying its status as the heart of Soviet rule.

This relocation marked a crucial step in Lenin’s consolidation of power, as he sought to safeguard the revolution from external threats while fortifying the Bolsheviks’ grip over the fractured nation.

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