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The Russian Revolution- -Causes

The Russian Revolution- -Causes. Nationalism, Imperialism, and World War I. The Roots of the Revolution. The Russian Tsars (emperors) ruled as autocrats (absolute rulers). New ideas were repressed through a network of secret police and strict censorship. Most Russians were illiterate serfs.

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The Russian Revolution- -Causes

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  1. The Russian Revolution--Causes Nationalism, Imperialism, and World War I

  2. The Roots of the Revolution • The Russian Tsars (emperors) ruled as autocrats (absolute rulers). • New ideas were repressed through a network of secret police and strict censorship. • Most Russians were illiterate serfs. • A small group of nobles owned thousands of serfs and enjoyed vast wealth. • Although there had been attempts to westernize, social conditions kept the country economically under-developed.

  3. Emancipation of the Serfs • Russia waged a series of wars with the Ottoman Empire in the 19th Century, trying to protect Orthodox Christians. • 1854-1856 Russia was engaged in the Crimean War, in which England and France supported Turkey against Russia. • Tsar Alexander II decided to listen to reformers and emancipated (liberated) the serfs in 1861. • The Tsar was assassinated and all attempts at reform were stopped.

  4. “Autocracy, Nationality, and Orthodoxy” • The Russian government acted as a protector of new Slav states in the Balkans. • It also adopted a policy of Russification, forcing non-Russian people such as the Finns, Poles, and the peoples of Central Asia to adopt the Russian language and culture. • Jews were persecuted in anti-Semitic pogroms (officially encouraged persecutions against Jews).

  5. Prelude to the Revolution • By 1900, the Russian Empire stretched from Eastern Europe to the Pacific Ocean. • Peasants and factory workers lived in terrible poverty, while the landowning nobles enjoyed lives of wealth and leisure. • The autocratic Tsars opposed democratic reform, and secret revolutionary societies had formed among members of the educated elite.

  6. The Revolution of 1905 • Russia was ripe for a revolution. • The crisis came to a head after Russia was defeated in the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905). • When troops of the Tsar trampled on unarmed demonstrators in St. Petersburg on “Bloody Sunday” in 1905, revolutions broke out across the country. • Tsar Nicholas II finally granted limited reforms, creating an elected legislature known as the Duma. • Only the very wealthy could vote.

  7. Russia Enters WWI • After the improvements of the 1905 Revolution, Russia was not prepared for war. • In 1914, Nicholas II brought Russia into the war against Austria-Hungary and Germany. • Russian troops were poorly trained and badly equipped, sometimes sent into battle without ammunition. • Numerous defeats led to widespread discontent in the army.

  8. Russia Enters WWI • Russian industries were incapable of producing needed weapons and supplies. • On the home front, food supplies were dangerously low.

  9. The “February Revolution” (March 1917) • Worker-led food riots broke out all across Russia. • When soldiers refused to fire on striking workers in March 1917, Nicholas realized he could not govern the nation. • Nicholas gave up his throne and the Duma declared Russia a republic. • The provisional government did not win the support of the people because it refused to withdraw from WWI.

  10. The “October Revolution” (November 1917) • Vladimir Lenin was a follower of Karl Marx. • Germans sent him back to Russia hoping he would cause unrest. • Lenin’s supporters, known as the Bolsheviks, promised “Peace, Bread, and Land”: peace to soldiers, bread to workers, and land to peasants. • The Bolsheviks seized power by force in November 1917.

  11. The October Revolution • The Bolsheviks changed the name of their political party to the Communists. • They also changed the name of their country to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) or Soviet Union. • Russia had become the world’s first Communist country.

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