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RUSSIAN REVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism
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Page 1: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

RUSSIAN REVOLUTIONThe Rise of Modern Communism

Page 2: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

BACKGROUND

Russia had rich tradition in absolutism; Czars ruling with unlimited power

Feudalism still existed up until 1918 industrialization begins in 1880’s Russian people were mostly isolated from

European culture Two distinct classes- peasants and gentry Russia has been a sleeping giant…but will

soon be awakened…

Page 3: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

CZARS

Alexander III “autocracy,

orthodoxy & nationality”

Harsh ruler; ruled with an iron fist

Avenged his father’s murder in peasant uprising

Issued pogroms against the Jews

Page 4: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

CZARS Nicholas II

Son of Alex III & carries on his legacy

Goal: Industrialize Russia; be competitive with Europe; Steel Industry

Massive Industrialization raises taxes and creates harsh working conditions Social unrest and talk of

revolution Fuels acceptance of

communism

Page 5: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

NAME THE PARTY??

Constitutional Democrats

Social Revolutionarie

s

Social Democrats

Page 6: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRATS

Active in provincial zemstovs Business and professional class and

supported by enterprising landowners Focused on need for a nationally elected

Parliament to control policies of state Favored by czarist police; less

dangerous Liberals, progressives, or

constitutionalists in the western sense, not concerned about workers or peasants

Page 7: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

SOCIAL DEMOCRATS Internationalists Believed revolution would begin in Western

Europe Abhorred Social Revolutionaries Suspicious of peasants Urban proletariat was true revolutionary class Believed capitalism was necessary to develop

class struggle to perpetuate a revolution Ridiculed Mirs Disproved of sporadic terrorism/assassination Split into Bolsheviks and Mensheviks Marxists Leninism

Page 8: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

SOCIAL REVOLUTIONARIES

Nationalists Populists Mystical faith in the inchoate might of the

Russian people Interested in peasant problems and

welfare Native revolutionary tradition Admired the Mir- socialist “commune” Did not believe the urban proletariat was

the only revolutionary class Capitalism was not necessary for

proletarian revolution; peasants would revolt given their situation

Page 9: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

SOCIAL DEMOCRATS(RUSSIAN MARXISTS)

Mensheviks Means “minority” Wanted to implement

communism in Russia Believed in educating

the population about communism

Input and influence from membership

Slow process to gain popular support

Willing to compromise time for effectiveness

Grass roots movement

Bolsheviks Means “majority” Wanted to implement

communism in Russia Believed in radical quick

implementation w/out popular consent

WAR COMMUNISM Dictatorship of the

Proletariat Leader:

Vladimir Lenin

EMERGED AS DOMINANT SOCIAL REVOLUTIONARY GROUP

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VLADIMIR LENIN

1870-1924 Leader of the

Bolsheviks First to implement

communism to any nation

Leninism: Marxism reworked to fit Russian culture

Father of Russian Communism

Page 11: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

LENINISM

Goal: to orchestrate the overthrow of the existing government by force and seize power on behalf of the proletariat and then implement a dictatorship of the proletariat Strongly centralized authority determining

the “party line” and control personnel at all levels

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CZAR NICHOLAS’S THREE MISTAKES

1. Russo-Japanese War- 1904 Meant to boost Russian morale, but Russia lost

badly Anti-czar underground movements

2.Bloody Sunday-1905 Unarmed rioters killed @ Czar’s Palace singing

“God Save the Czar” 8 hour work day, minimum wage, democracy

October Manifesto: Deceptive- really only to divide up the opposition Creation of the DUMA- dissolved in 10 weeks FAILURE: Conservatives afraid of Duma and Radicals

skeptical of it

Page 13: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

3. World War I Russians unclear of Russian support of Serbia Devastated the economy; millions killed Misguided leadership of Rasputin in Czar’s

absence

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MARCH REVOLUTION-1917

Workers rioted in Petrograd; eventually gained support from soldiers

Forces Czar Nicholas II to abdicate the throne

Creation of Provisional GovernmentLead by KerenskyLeader of Petrograd SovietDecides to continue Russia’s involvement

in WWI (mistake)Workers’ SOVIETS grow in numbers…

eventually more powerful that Provisional Government; this is due to the Bolsheviks

Page 15: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

MARCH REVOLUTION-1917

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LENIN GAINS CONTROL

October 24, 1917 Lenin seized power and dissolved Provisional Government

NEW SOCIALIST ORDER (NSO) “PEACE, LAND, BREAD” Peace with Germany All farmland divided among peasants Soviet-run gov’t (Dictatorship of the Proletariat) Recognition of soviet power supreme over

Provisional Government

Lenin’s policies not widely accepted by upper class – leads to civil war

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RUSSIAN CIVIL WAR: 1918-1920

White Army (loyalists)

Fighting to stop rise of Lenin and NSO

Received $$ aid from US and other European nations

Red Army (Bolsheviks)

Fighting to implement Lenin’s communism

Under the command of Leon Trotsky

Executed the Romanov FamilyOUTCOME: Red Army wins; Russian

economy in ruins15 million more Russians DEAD!!

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EXECUTION OF ROMANOV FAMILY

During the early hours of July 17, 1918 Czar Nicholas II, his wife, children and servants were herded into the cellar of their prison house and executed

Liberation by the White Army was imminent and the Reds needed to get rid of the Czar and his family

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EXECUTION OF ROMANOV FAMILY

In addition to the royal family, the executed included: their doctor, cook, valet, maid and dog.

8 days after the executions, the town of Ekaterinburg was captured by the White Army.

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LENIN RESTORED ORDER

New Socialist Order (NSO) failed Due to Civil War and “war communism” Equality in economics was not working—no

competition

Lenin implements CHEKA (secret police) to restore order and combat resisters

NEW ECONOMIC POLICY (NEP) Created to fix the economic problems of NSO Brought in small amount of capitalism Successful and boosted economy

Page 21: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

LENIN RESTORED ORDER

1922-Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Lenin creates self-governing republics in response to

vast amount of nationalities Soviets govern each Republic

Capital moved back to Moscow Changed party name from Bolsheviks to COMMUNIST

PARTY

Lenin’s new policies were improving and by 1928, production was where it was before 1914.

1924: Lenin dies after series of strokes…no successor named until 1928

Page 22: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS

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JOSEF STALIN 1928-1953 Eventually wins support

from Communist Party to succeed Lenin in 1928

Was Secretary of the Communist Party

Leon Trotsky was his rival and Lenin’s choice Stalin has him exiled and

later murdered Personality:

Paranoid Quiet Ruthless ambitious

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STALIN’S GOALS

“Socialism (Communism) in one country” Secure and centralize Soviet economy

Command Economy Industrialized Power Extreme discipline

“Russia was ceaselessly beaten for her backwardness…because to beat her was

profitable and went unpunished.” ~Stalin

Page 25: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

POLITICAL IDEOLOGY

Totalitarianism: a political system in which government has total control over lives of individual citizens Stalin usurps total power to motivate and

promote his goals (not Marxist) Need to create incentive to meet industrial goals

and to motivate his workers Totalitarianism along with Marxism is what

becomes known as “STALINISM”

Page 26: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

CHARACTERISTICS OF TOTALITARIANISM

Read over pages 654-57 in green text and identify examples that support Stalin’s implementation of each of the following characteristics.

1. One leader becomes symbol of government and state.

2. All opposition is suppressed.

3. Informers & secret police help ensure power of party.

4. Propaganda glorifies party’s leadership.

5. Party leaders appeal to nationalism to preserve party’s power.

Page 27: R USSIAN R EVOLUTION The Rise of Modern Communism.

ECONOMIC POLICIES

FIVE YEAR PLAN (1928-1932) Increase industry Limited production of consumer goods Increased production of military and industrial goods Increase agricultural production

Collective Farming

Problems?: 2nd FIVE YEAR PLAN (1933-1938)

Increased production of consumer goods Specialization of workers

Trained workers to become better skilled in specific areas More efficient and better quality

More successful; USSR up to par with Europe 2 more 5 Year Plans continued through and after

WWII

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PURGES

to purify; to rid of a specific group Stalin’s paranoia becomes obsessive

Paranoid old Bolsheviks want to seize power so…

Stalin holds extensive trials and executes old Bolsheviks to weed out “conspirators”

1936-38: THE GREAT TERROR archive data in 1934-38: the number of death

sentences was 786,098; unknown #’s died in prison camps Communist Party members, Red Army leaders,

“saboteurs”

1930-53: 3,778,334 executed as “counterrevolutionaries”

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GULAG PRISON SYSTEM

GULAG is the Russian acronym for The Chief Administration of Corrective Labor Camps and Colonies ( in Russian, of course)

Penal labor camp system of the USSR Forced labor camps under direction of State Security

476 separate camps all over USSR Most notorious in Arctic and Sub-Arctic regions

“SIBERIA” Estimated 20-40 million passed through camps 1928-

1953 Estimated 2 million died in camps from 1934-1953

Camps existed up through 1980’s Siberian Labor Camps house up to 1 million

prisoners

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GULAG

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GULAG

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GULAG SYSTEM

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STALIN: UNCENSORED