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Jan 6 • 1. Turn in a syllabus. Let me know if you have supplies for bonus • 2. Review map • 3. review physical features • 4. define vocabulary Section I The Land A. Mountains 1. Ural Mts. -form border between Europe and Asia 2. Caucacus Mts.-between Black Sea & Caspian Sea B Rivers 1. Danube River-begins in Germany and flows east through 9 countries to the Black Sea 2. Volga River- flows 2,193 miles to the Caspian Sea. Important for trade in Russia C. Other Waters Black Sea White Sea Bering Sea Lake Baikal Caspian Sea Gulf of Finland Sea of Okhotsk D Other land features • Kamchatka Peninsula- E. Russia • Balkan Peninsula • Crimean Peninsula-Black Sea • Siberia Define E. Europe vocab • • • • • • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Eurasia icebreakers taiga Slavs Rus Bolsheviks czars serfs abdicate • • • • • • • • • 10.Soviets 11.shatter belt 12.gulag 13.light industry 14.heavy industry 15.smelters 16.caravans 17.nomads 18.yurts Jan. 11 1. Turn in syllabus for late credit. Get out atlas q’s and vocab 2. Turn in atlas map q’s in the bin 3. Make sure vocab are numbered & out on desk 4. Group map exercise 5. Go over atlas questions 6. Notes if time. The Northern European Plain --> An Invasion Route into Asia (& Vice Versa?) Transylvania in the Carpathian Mountains Home of Vlad Tepeš, the Drakul (“Count Dracula”) Aka Vlad the Impaler Section II History & Govt. A Early People 1. farmers 2. hunters and gatherers & nomads Flag of Kyrgyzastan Emblem of Kazahkstan Yurt inspired rooms B Christianity split into 2 branches 1 Eastern Orthodox Church (in Constantinople) – Missionaries introduced the Cyrillic alphabet to the Russians, Serbs and other Slav peoples – Stressed obedience & helped feudalism continue 2 Roman Catholic Church (in Rome) 1. Obeyed Pope 2. Introduced Roman alphabet to the Poles and Czechs 3. Claimed authority over monarchs. This contributed to decline of feudal system C Mongol & Turkish Influence 1. In the early 1200s the Mongols invaded the steppes of Russia. They conquered Kiev and much of the rest of Russia. They opened trade routes. Jan 14 • • • • World Map Test Review Map for quiz Tomorrow Circle graph Notes • Study for quiz tomorrow 2 The Ottomans, a group of nomadic Turkish tribes, captured Constantinople in 1453. Since the ottomans were Muslims, when they conquered central and southern Europe, they spread Islam throughout the region (decline in the mid 1600s). D. Growth of Russia and Revolution 1. Under Mongol rule, the city of Moscow became the financial center of Russia 2. In time, Moscow’s rulers, czars, were accepted as the rulers of all of Russia. 3. Czars consolidated their power by making all nobles perform govt. service and taxing peasants 4. Revolutionary stirrings began in Russia in the late 19th Century. The writing of Karl Marx, a German philosopher were circulated in Russia in the 1880s 5. A program of Russianification, which required all people to speak Russian & become Christians, was instituted. This angered peasants. 6. During WWI food shortages caused riots among Russian people (soldiers refused to act against the strikers) 7. The unrest forced Czar Nicholas II to abdicate in March 1917. A provisional govt. led by Aleksandr Kerensky was set up Communist takeover • Kerensky’s govt. couldn’t solve the country's problems. Bolsheviks or Communists stormed the palace in Petrograd. They set up a new govt. with Vladimir Lenin as its leader • A civil war resulted with the Bolshevik forces ( the Reds) & anti-Bolshevik ( white army). Red army won. • 3. Lenin built a new nation, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) of 15 separate republics. • 4 Communist govt. took control of the country’s industrial, farming and transportation system • 5. After WWII the Sov. Union took control of E. European countries liberated from Germ. Control. And created Soviet Bloc Iron Curtain Churchill’s Iron Curtain Speech • From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an “iron curtain” has descended across the Continent. Behind that line lie all the capitals of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe. Warsaw, Berlin, Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Belgrade, Bucharest and Sofia; all these famous cities and the populations around them lie in what I must call the Soviet sphere, and all are subject, in one form or another, not only to Soviet influence but to a very high and in some cases increasing measure of control from Moscow. F. Governments Today 1. Until 1989, all E. European countries and USSR had Communist governments. In communist systems the communist party is the only party with any power. Only party members can hold important jobs in govt., education and the military. 2. In 1989, communist govts. in most Eastern European countries fell and were replaced with more democratic forms of govt. ( German reunification, end of the cold war) • 3. Mikhail Gorbachev began programs to reform the Soviet govt. He began Perestroika or the “reorganization” of the govt. to: – rebuild the economy – Give more freedoms like speech – Keep 15 republics under soviet control • 4. In Aug. 1991 Boris Yeltsin became the democratically elected leader of Russia He established a capitalist economic system • 5 The current president of Russia Vladimir Putin. Russia’s 10 Time Zones Trans-Siberian Railroad Completed in 1905. Trans-Siberian Railroad The main line runs 5,785 miles. Siberia --> Permafrost A former “gulag” Soviet prison camp. Lake Baikal, Siberia The oldest and deepest lake in the world. 20% of the world’s fresh water Caspian Sea-largest inland lake