Download SSWH 17B

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Maria Nikiforova wikipedia , lookup

Azerbaijan Democratic Republic wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian War of Independence wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian–Soviet War wikipedia , lookup

Bolsheviks wikipedia , lookup

Russian Provisional Government wikipedia , lookup

October Revolution wikipedia , lookup

February Revolution wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
SSWH16.D, SSWH17.B
Czar Nicholas II



Became ruler of Russia
in 1894.
Believed in absolute
rule
Made efforts to bring
industrialization to
Russia
The Problems of Russian
Industrialization

Factories were built quickly and poorly

Wages were extremely low

Working conditions were terrible

Child labor was tragically common
The Seeds of Revolution


The ideas of Karl Marx found there way to Russia,
and the workers began to think that they could run
their own lives…and their own country.
The idea of a society ruled by the Proletariat “the
workers” began to grow.
The Seeds of Revolution

Bloody Sunday (1905)

200,000 workers went to the summer palace in St. Petersburg to
request individual rights, better working conditions, and a
national legislature. Troops were ordered to open fire on the
crowd. More than 1,000 were killed or injured.
The Seeds of Revolution

World War One (1914-1917)
4
million casualties in the first year of fighting
 Severe lack of food and fuel both at home and on the
front lines

Trouble for Nicholas II
 Czar
not able to handle the problems created by
World War I effectively.
March, 1917



Striking workers call for the Czar to step down from
power.
Troops were called out, and the protestors were
fired on. These troops soon turned on their officers
and joined the revolutionaries
Czar Nicholas Abdicates – March 17, 1917
“Down with the 10 Capitalist ministers. All power to the Soviets of workers, soldiers,
and peasant deputies. To the socialist ministers, we demand that Nicholas II be
transferred to the Peter-Paul Fortress.”
Protesters Fired on by Troops
Revolutionaries Split Into Groups
Bolsheviks



Mensheviks
Small core group

Professional
revolutionaries

Strict control of the
movement

Broad base of
revolutionaries
Popular support
A common man’s
movement
Provisional Government



The Duma (Russian Parliament) formed a provisional
government
They intended to continue fighting the Germans
Revolutionaries don’t like this government either, so
they began to form Soviets (local councils)
Enter Vladimir Ilyich Lenin


Charismatic, gifted,
Bolshevik administrator
Exiled in Germany
 Sent
back in a sealed
railroad car

Begins to gain a lot of
support with his
rallying cry for “Peace,
Land, and Bread”
Bolsheviks Come To Power



Bolshevik forces storm the Winter Palace in
November, 1917. The provisional government is
removed.
Lenin orders the redistribution of land to the
peasants of Russia.
In order to establish peace with Germany, the
Bolsheviks give up a huge amount of Russian
territory. This earns them many enemies.
Russian Civil War

The Bolsheviks formed
the Red Army
 Led

by Leon Trotsky
Everyone else grouped
together as the White
Army:
 Mensheviks
 Capitalists
 Czarists
 Non-Lenin
Socialists
Results of the Russian Civil War


14,000,000 Russians dead because of fighting and
famine
Bolsheviks Remained in power
 Renamed
 Karl

themselves the Communists
Marx’s name for a classless society
1922 – Russia is divided into self governing districts
and renamed: Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Joseph Stalin Comes to Power



Lenin has a stroke
Trotsky forced into
exile
Stalin “Man of Steel”
comes to power. His
authority becomes
absolute.