After the
February Revolution, the
Petrograd Soviet decided to create an honorary communal burial ground for those who had been killed in the unrest. The option of interment in an existing cemetery was rejected, with the argument that the burial site had to be "important, eloquent, a place of pilgrimage within the city centre." The Soviet initially selected Palace Square as the location for the graves but changed this to the Field of Mars after representations from prominent artists, including
Maxim Gorky. Ultimately only 184 victims were buried on the Field of Mars, comprising 86 soldiers, 9 sailors, 2 officers, 32 workers, 6 women, 23 people for whom social status could not be determined, and 26 unknown dead. The graves had been prepared by blasting trenches in the frozen ground, with the lowering of each coffin marked by a cannon shot from the
Peter and Paul Fortress. By one estimate some 800,000 people attended the funerals. No clergy were allowed to officiate or participate in the ceremonies. Historian
Richard Stites remarks that the funerals were the "first secular outdoor ceremony in Russian history, the first major non-oppositional and all-class ceremony in the lifetime of the Provisional Government, and the only one also without a central charismatic figure as a focus." Nevertheless, when some of the coffins, which had been draped in red material, were uncovered for burial, they found to be inlaid with
Orthodox crosses. Following the funerals the
Bolshevik newspaper
Pravda carried pieces by leading party members
Lev Kamenev and
Alexandra Kollontai calling for the response to the deaths to be the securing and building of new freedoms in a democratic Russia. ==Creation of the memorial==