THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION PART ONE: Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks Transform Russia.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917?
Advertisements

Revolutions in Russia The Russian Revolution officially happened in 1917 in the middle of WWI, but had been boiling over for nearly a century under the.
Chapter 14 Revolution and Nationalism
The Russian Revolution Causes of the Russian Revolution.
The Russian revolution: Introduction
The Russian Revolution How do the Bolsheviks (Communists) come to power in Russia?
Revolution and Nationalism Revolutions in Russia C. 30 S.1 In 1881 revolutionaries frustrated by slow change in Russia, assassinated czar Alexander.
The Russian Revolution. What was Russia like Pre-WWI? Monarchy controlled by a Czar (King) Monarchy controlled by a Czar (King) Czar practices strict.
Russian Revolution Causes and Effects.
quiz 1. T or F – The Schlieffen Plan was successful 2. Germany was concerned about a two-front war with what two countries? 3. List the members.
World War I RUSSIAN REVOLUTION The Russian Revolution occurred during the first World War.
Main Idea: Long-term social unrest in Russia erupted in revolution, ushering in the first Communist government.
RUSSIAN REVOLTS AND REVOLUTIONS. Revolts & Revolutions 1800s: Russia was full of tension Society had become more educated & wanted radical change –Serfs.
1 The Russian Revolution. Introduction The Russian Revolution was like a firecracker with a very long fuse. The explosion came in 1917, yet the fuse had.
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION 1 1.Why did the Czarist regime fail? 2.How did the Bolsheviks eventually come to power?
*Nicholas II – (Last Czar of Russia) Alexandra – Tsarina Four Daughters – Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia Tsarevich Alexei – Born with hemophilia.
■ Essential Question: – How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? ■ CPWH Agenda for Unit 11.4: –
Russia From Czars to Communism. Long history of czars centralizing power Taking power from nobles by force Trading power over Russia in exchange for nobles’
The Russian Revolution 1917
The revolution in the Russian empire in 1917, in which the Russian monarchy (Czarist regime) was overthrown resulting in the formation of the world’s.
Russian Revolution. Czars = cruel, oppressive rule (19 th cent)  Social unrest (revolutions)
Chapter 14 – Revolution and Nationalism (1900 – 1939) Section 1 – Revolutions in Russia Main Idea: Long-term social unrest in Russia exploded in revolution,
The Russian Revolution. The Problems of the Czar Events between show the Czar’s weakness: – Bloody Sunday (creation of the Duma) – Marxism’s.
Revolutions in Russia Section 14-1 Long-term social unrest in Russia explodes in revolution, and ushers in the first Communist government.
Revolution and Civil War in Russia. The March Revolution End Tsarism Russia was slow to Industrialize. Russia was slow to Industrialize. For hundreds.
Influences on Early Russia Byzantine Mongols Orthodox Christianity Autocratic rulers Art & Architecture Close relationship between Church and State.
Revolutions in Russia Chapter 14 Section 1. I. Resisting Change A. Nicholas II –1. An autocracy –2. Encouraged progroms or organized violence against.
Russian Revolution And the Communist Manifesto. Russian Revolution  Begins in 1917 and peaks during WWI. This forces Russia to leave the war.  Started.
The Russian Revolution By Me and Him. ●The cruel, oppressive rule of most of the 19th-century czars caused widespread social disruption for many years.
Russian Revolution. Russian Revolution In the 1700s, Czar Peter the Great expanded & modernized Russia Peter introduced into Russia Western style navy,
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? WWI Overview (John Green)
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917?
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
The Russian Revolution 1917
Russian Imperialism and Communism
In the 1700s, Czar Peter the Great expanded & modernized Russia
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917?
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION FLOW CHART
The Russian Revolution
Russian Revolution.
Russian Revolution. Russian Revolution In the 1700s, Czar Peter the Great expanded & modernized Russia Peter introduced into Russia Western style navy,
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question: Based on what you.
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
The Russian Revolution
Russian Imperialism and Communism
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Russian Imperialism and Communism
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION.
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
In the 1700s, Czar Peter the Great expanded & modernized Russia
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
In the 1700s, Czar Peter the Great expanded & modernized Russia
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Russian Revolution.
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question:
Revolutions!.
Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? ECHS Agenda for Unit 3: “Russian Revolution”
The Russian Revolution
The Russian Revolution
The Russian Revolutions
Notes for Russian & Nazi Ideology
The Russian Revolution
The Russian Revolution
Presentation transcript:

THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION PART ONE: Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks Transform Russia

Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917?

In the 1700s, Czar Peter the Great expanded and modernized Russia

Peter introduced into Russia Western-style navy, fashions, and city-planning

But in the 1800s, Russia failed to keep pace with the rapid changes taking place in Western Europe

The Enlightenment led to new democratic reforms throughout Europe

Czar Alexander III In Russia, the Romanov czars continued to rule as absolute monarchs

Czars like Alexander III used secret police to monitor citizens, censored the media, and sent political prisoners to labor camps in Siberia

Czars organized pogroms (violent attacks) against ethnic minorities like Jews and Poles in Russia

But in the 1800s, Russia failed to keep pace with the rapid changes taking place in Western Europe The Industrial Revolution made European militaries and economies the strongest in the world

But in the 1800s, Russia failed to keep pace with the rapid changes taking place in Western Europe The Industrial Revolution made European militaries and economies the strongest in the world

Russian industry lagged behind Europe, had few railroads, and most citizens were poor farmers

Russia committed to industrialization, but it led to poor wages, long hours, and discontent among the Russian people

Russia used its industry and built a respectable navy, but had problems mass-producing weapons

In 1894, Czar Nicholas II came to power but failed to address major problems from 1904 to 1917 When Russian liberals called for democratic reforms, Nicholas II ordered his secret police to persecute those calling for reform

In 1904, Russia and Japan went to war over Manchuria and Korea

Russia’s humiliating loss to Japan exposed weaknesses in the nation’s military and government

Losing the Russo-Japanese War set off a series of riots among commoners who were unhappy with Nicholas’ government

In 1905, Russian commoners met outside the czar’s Winter Palace to demand better working conditions, right to form unions, and a democratic constitution

The protest became known as “Bloody Sunday” when the czar’s guards fired into the crowd; riots broke out across Russia

In 1905, Nicholas II agreed to new constitution that created a Duma (parliament) and limited monarchy, but Nicholas ignored the Duma

The czar’s unpopularity and failure of the government to respond to problems increased calls for socialism Socialists demanded that the government control all means of production to create an equal society

Karl Marx developed a radical form of socialism in called communism in which the working class led a revolution, seized property, and shared all wealth without a government

Radical workers, peasants, and soldiers began to form councils called soviets that held meetings and assumed control over local governments Image of one of Russia’s first soviet councils

In 1903, a radical socialist named Vladimir Lenin formed the Bolsheviks, a group that supported a revolutionary overthrow of the Russian government

But, Lenin fled Russia to avoid arrest by the czar’s secret police and waited for an opportunity to return and lead his revolution

Russia’s involvement in World War I proved to be the fatal blow to Czar Nicholas’ support in Russia Russian soldiers running from German army, 1917 The Russian military was no match for the German army

Russia had difficulty producing weapons for soldiers on the front, food shortages were common for troops and civilians; lack of trains slowed supplies and communication

Russia drafted 15 million soldiers and nearly 7 million were killed or wounded; 1.5 million civilians died

Czar Nicholas refused to pull Russia out of the war and went to the Eastern Front to personally take command of the army

Nicholas left his wife, Alexandra, in charge of the day-to-day operations of the Russian government

To help cure her hemophiliac son Alexi, she relied on a mystic named Rasputin

Russian nobles feared that Rasputin was controlling the royal family and murdered him

Rasputin Grigori Rasputin was an Orthodox monk who lived anything but a “holy” life (womanizer, heavy drinker); he claimed to have healing powers

Rasputin After healing Alexi Romanov, Rasputin was then brought into the czar’s inner circle and helped make political decisions; this made the czar even more unpopular Russian nobles hated Rasputin and plotted to kill him

Rasputin Luring Rasputin to a “party”, five Russian nobles poisoned him, shot him three times, beat him, tied him up, and threw him in an icy river, where he finally died from drowning

By early 1917, citizens were rioting across Russia, demanding an end the monarchy and an end to Russia’s involvement in World War I

In March, Czar Nicholas II abdicated the throne and the Duma created a Provisional (temporary) government

Vladimir Lenin returned to Russia; he led the Bolsheviks in the Russian Revolution in November 1917

Lenin’s message of “peace, land, and bread” helped him gain popularity among the Russian people Bolshevik Red Guards seized control of the provisional government and declared themselves the new government leaders of Russia

The Bolsheviks arrested and executed the Romanovs, which ended 300 years of rule by czars in Russia

After the success of the Bolshevik Revolution, Lenin announced major reforms for Russia Lenin ordered all farmland to be distributed among the peasants Lenin gave control of the factories to the workers

Lenin signed a truce with Germany and gave up huge territories in order to get Russia out of the war

The Russian Revolution led to a civil war between the Bolshevik Red Army and the White Army (various people who wanted a either a new czar or democracy or land returned to them)

Britain, France, and the USA supported the White Army to stop the spread of Bolshevism Tens of millions of people were killed in the bloody Russian Civil War

After three years of fighting, the Red Army won and Lenin became the unquestioned leader of Russia

In 1922, Lenin renamed Russia the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) Lenin created the Communist Party, which ruled the Soviet Union as a dictatorship

Lenin and his followers never forgot the interference by the USA, which helped set the stage for the Cold War years later