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THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION. Watch this video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZbho6AsBOc. Russian Empire. How did World War I Impact Russia?. WWI strained Russian resources Factories could not manufacture enough war supplies

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THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

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  1. THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

  2. Watch this video • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZbho6AsBOc

  3. Russian Empire

  4. How did World War I Impact Russia? • WWI strained Russian resources • Factories could not manufacture enough war supplies • Poor transportation system meant insufficient supplies arrived at the war front • Not enough weapons, rifles, and ammunition • Poor equipped soldiers and badly trained • 1915: 2 million Russian casualties

  5. The Czar’s Response • Czar Nicholas II went to the war front to take command of his armies • Nicholas II was equally incompetent to lead as were his Russian generals

  6. Who was running the Russian government in the czar’s absence?

  7. Rasputin • Nicholas II went to Eastern Front to rally his troops • Left his wife, Czarina Alexandra in charge of Russian government • Alexandra fell under the influence of the mysterious Rasputin who claimed to have magical healing powers • Alexandra believed Rasputin cured her son Alexis of hemophilia (uncontrolled bleeding when blood does not clot effectively)

  8. Rasputin’s Influence • To reward Rasputin, Alexandra allowed Rasputin to make key political decisions • Rasputin put his friends in high government positions and was corrupt • Opponents assassinated Rasputin for his excessive involvement in government affairs

  9. Crisis Worsens in Russia • Increased military disasters and battlefield deaths • Food and fuel shortages; prices increased • Striking workers marched in the streets demanding bread • Government military troops refused to open fire on the protestors • With no more military support to support his leadership, the Tsar abdicated and fled

  10. Temporary Government • Politicians in the Duma (legislature) established a provisional government after the czar abdicated (surrendered his throne) • Alexander Kerensky was the leader of the Provisional Government • Provisional government continued fighting against Germany in WWI • Revolutionaries secretly were plotting to overthrow the provisional government • Revolutionaries established soviets (council of soldiers and workers) and, at first, worked with the provisional government • Radical revolutionaries called Bolsheviks were intent on overthrowing the Provisional (democratic) government • The Bolsheviks were led by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

  11. Lenin and the Bolsheviks • V.I. Lenin (1870-1924) • Lenin hated the tsarist governments • Lenin became a revolutionary at a young age when the tsar executed his older brother for planning to kill the czar • Lenin planned a revolution based on the writings of German Karl Marx • Lenin believed the proletariat (working class) would revolt, overthrow the government, and establish a socialist state

  12. Bolsheviks vs. Mensheviks • Bolsheviks (“majority”) believed that socialism could be achieved through swift, violent, and radical changes to society • Mensheviks (“minority”) believed socialism could be achieved through gradual and moderate reforms such as higher wages, increases suffrage, and social welfare programs

  13. Marxists Bolsheviks (majority) Mensheviks (minority)

  14. Lenin Returned from Exile • Lenin had been exiled in Switzerland • Germany knew that Lenin was a Russian revolutionary • Germany wanted Lenin to return to Russia and spark the Russian Revolution • Germany felt that Russia would be unable to continue fighting the war IF Russia was also involved in a revolution

  15. Lenin’s Promise to the Russian People • Lenin and the Bolsheviks promised to the Russian people “peace, land, and bread” • Peace = withdrawal from WWI • Land = poor peasants would own the land • Bread = starving Russians would receive sufficient food to avoid starvation

  16. Lenin addressing a crowd in 1920

  17. Continued Mistakes of the Provisional Government • Continued fighting World War I • Russians tired of war • Thousands of soldiers deserted • Kerensky launched a disastrous military offensive in July, 1917 • Failed to deal with land reform • Peasants demanded land • City workers wanted food and fuel

  18. Bolsheviks Attacked • November, 1917 • Armed factory workers (Red Guards) and rebelling sailors attacked the provisional government • Lenin’s Bolsheviks seized power in just a few days without a struggle • Kerensky’s Provisional Government collapsed • Moscow became the Bolshevik’s capital • Kremlin became the Bolshevik HQ

  19. Moscow

  20. Kremlin – Bolshevik HQ (Moscow)

  21. What actions did the Bolsheviks take after seizing power? • Ended private ownership of land • Distributed land to peasants • Workers given control of factories and mines • New red flag symbolizing workers and peasants created • Bolsheviks renamed themselves Communists

  22. End of World War I • Lenin sought peace with Germany • Soviet Union (USSR) signed Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany (March, 1918) • USSR surrendered much territory and population • Terms of treaty angered and humiliated Russians • Lenin wanted peace with Germany to concentrate Russian resources to defeat the communist enemies • Germany transferred the troops on the Eastern Front to fight the Allies on the Western Front

  23. Russian Civil War • Russian Civil War erupted between the Reds (communists) and the White (counter-revolutionaries, Mensheviks, democrats, etc.) • Civil War lasted three bloody years • “White” armies wanted to defeat the communists • Allies supported the White army • Allies hoped that White army would defeat the communists and support fight against Germany • Britain, France, and USA sent soldiers to fight in the Russian civil war • The Communists (Reds) defeated the Whites (Mensheviks)

  24. White Army • Enemies of the Bolsheviks • Bolsheviks had the responsibility to eliminate all enemies • Leon Trotsky commanded the Bolshevik army and fought a three year civil war to secure absolute control of Russia • 15 million Russians died in civil war • Civil war caused famine, hunger, and flu epidemic • Russia was left economically in ruins Leon Trotsky

  25. What happened to Czar Nicholas II and his family? • Communists executed Czar Nicholas II, Czarina Alexandra, and their five children in July, 1918 • Communists felt that Czar would serve as rallying symbol for the White army

  26. Cheka • Secret Soviet police force • Used terror tactics to control the people • Executed many citizens suspected of being against the revolution

  27. Gulag • Forced labor camps • Political prisoners and counter revolutionaries sent to the gulag to work in hard (bitterly cold and scorching hot) labor conditions

  28. “War Communism” • Policy of taking over banks, mines, factories, and railroads • Rural peasants were forced to deliver their crops to feed urban dwellers and the military • Peasants were drafted into the army • Peasants forced to work in urban factories

  29. Commissars • Trotsky turned the Bolsheviks into a superior fighting force • Commissars – communist party officials – were assigned to monitor the army officers • Commissars taught communist party principles and demanded absolute loyalty – or risk imprisonment or execution

  30. Building the Communist Soviet Union • Russia was in chaos • Millions of Russians died in WWI and the Russian Civil War • Thousands died from starvation, illness, and disease • The communists under Lenin faced enormous challenges to repair a destroyed economy Girl starving during Russian famine (1921)

  31. New Government • Russia united into the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) (Soviet Union) • Constitution established • Elected legislature (Supreme Soviet) • Right to vote over age 18 • All means of production belonged to workers and peasants • The Communist party, however, was supreme over the people – hardly a social democracy! • USSR used the army and secret police to enforce its will

  32. End of war communism • War communism damaged the Soviet economy • Mine and factory production decreased • Peasants stopped planting and harvesting crops knowing the communist party would seize the crops • Lenin elected to halt the policy of war communism

  33. New Economic Policy • Lenin launched his New Economic Policy (NEP) to replace war communism • Peasants allowed to sell crops instead of giving crops to government • People could buy and sell goods for profit • Government controlled banks, major industries, and communication • Small factories, businesses, and farms operated under private ownership • Foreign investment encouraged

  34. Advantages of the New Economic Policy (NEP) • NEP restored some confidence in the Soviet economy • Ended armed resistance to the new communist government • Food and industrial production climb back to pre-war levels by 1928 • Standard of living improved • Lenin believed NEP would only be a temporary flirtation with capitalism • Lenin’s goal was to bring the USSR to a pure communist state

  35. Death of Lenin • Lenin died of a stroke in 1924 at age 54 • Power struggle – who would take control of the Communist Party? • Top two contenders: Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin Lenin’s embalmed corpse is on display in Moscow.

  36. Leon Trotsky Brilliant Marxist thinker Leader of Bolshevik Revolution Urged support for a worldwide revolution against capitalism Fled to Mexico Continued to criticize Stalin Stalin’s secret agent murdered Trotsky in Mexico in 1940 Joseph Stalin Clever political operator Behind-the-scenes organizer Desired to build socialism (communism) at home before exporting it globally Isolated and stripped Trotsky of membership in communist party Stalin became ruthless dictator of USSR Stalin vs. Trotsky

  37. Powerpoint Questions • 1. What was the slogan the Communists promised to the people? • 2. What treaty ended WWI between Russia and Germany? • 3. The last czar of Russia was ____. • 4. Who was the mysterious man who promised to cure Alexis of hemophilia, the son of the czars? • 5. The leader of the Provisional Government was __. • 6. The Communists who were the majority were known as the __________.

  38. Powerpoint Questions • 7. The working class people who were to stage the revolution were known as the _________. • 8. The Russian secret police were called the _____. • 9. If you disagreed with the communists, you could be arrested and sent to a _______. • 10. Whose job was to teach communist party principles and ensure loyalty to the party? • 11. What was “war communism”?

  39. Powerpoint Questions • 12. The Russian civil war was fought between the ___ and the ___ armies. • 13. Who succeeded Lenin as the leader of Russia following Lenin’s death? • 14. What economic policy replaced “war communism”?

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