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Objectives:6.2 I A & C; 6.2 IV B (3 rd , 4 th , and 5 th bullets);6.2 V B

Objectives:6.2 I A & C; 6.2 IV B (3 rd , 4 th , and 5 th bullets);6.2 V B AGENDA: Do Now, Russian Bolshevik Revolution PowerPoint and Guided Notes; Comparing Marxist Communism and Leninist Communism. DO NOW: Define communism Hmwk: Middle East Partition Map; Read 745-748 & 749-757.

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Objectives:6.2 I A & C; 6.2 IV B (3 rd , 4 th , and 5 th bullets);6.2 V B

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  1. Objectives:6.2 I A & C; 6.2 IV B (3rd, 4th, and 5th bullets);6.2 V B AGENDA: Do Now, Russian Bolshevik Revolution PowerPoint and Guided Notes; Comparing Marxist Communism and Leninist Communism. DO NOW: Define communism Hmwk: Middle East Partition Map; Read 745-748 & 749-757

  2. The Russian Revolution 1917

  3. Tsar Nicholas II – last Romanov ruler of Russia Pre-Revolutionary Russia • Autocracy (means rule by one person) • Secret Police used against enemies of the Tsar • Russo-Japanese War (1905) – defeat led to political instability

  4. SOCIAL • Although there was no more serfdom, life for peasants was difficult • Russia was not very industrialized, compared with the rest of Europe

  5. Role of Rasputin • A mystic who “healed” the czar’s son who had hemophilia • Huge influence over royal family, bad reputation rubs off on royals

  6. WWI: The Last Straw • Russia suffered heavy casualties on the Eastern Front. • Peasants were angry about being conscripted into the army. • The army was badly equipped (shared rifles). • What little food, goods and raw materials were available were sent to the front so there were HUGE shortages in the cities (Total War) • Chaos meant people locally to tried take control and restore some order. Cities formed “soviets” – small revolutionary councils that tried to bring change and improvements

  7. WWI: The Last Straw • Urban workers were unemployed by the thousands as factories shut down. • Socialists and Liberals started calling for an end to the war but Tsar Nicholas refused. • The Tsar even took over control of the army in 1915—he was then blamed for the heavy casualties. • The war led many to turn against the Tsar.

  8. The Two Revolutions of 1917 Peace, Land And Bread! Lenin’s April Thesis • February Revolution – Food riots lead Tsar to abdicate • October Revolution – Communists (known as Bolsheviks) take control w/ military coup. Exit War. (Treaty of Brest-Litovsk)

  9. Lenin • New Ruler of Russia • Lenin = Bolshevik (a Russian Communist) Wanted a “vanguard” to lead the revolution • Communism could be forced by the vanguard, even without urban factory workers

  10. Results • Civil War in Russia until early 1920s – Commies versus everyone • New secret police: CHEKA (NKVD/KGB) • Communist rule in Russia (U.S.S.R.) from 1917-1991

  11. Lenin’s Rule • NEP – New Economic Policy • some capitalistic components (example: farmers could sell their crops) • Big, important industries were nationalized (owned by gov’t) (examples: trains, steel production) • Goal: Industrialize Russia • Lenin’s death – power struggle. Stalin wins.

  12. Think of it as, “two steps forward, one step back,” Karl. I’m not speaking to you, comrade traitor…

  13. Russia officially became the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Stalin Trotsky was tricked into not going to the funeral by the other man who would try to assume power in Russia…

  14. Marxist Communism vs. Leninist Communism • Lenin and the Russian Revolution • How did the ideas of Marx and Engels influence Lenin? • Why do you think revolution took hold in Russia first instead of a more industrialized nation as Marx expected? • Do you think Lenin faithfully enacted Marx’s philosophy or was it something different? • What are the possible negative human consequences of a command economy vs. a free market economy? • What was the importance of World War I in the timing of the Russian revolution? • How did the history of events in Europe during the 19th century lead up to Lenin’s actions? • Why do you think Lenin’s actions were inspirational for socialist movements of the time? • Were the negative consequences of Lenin’s policies due to the ideas of socialism or the way that Lenin enacted them?

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