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Chapter 24 section 4 UNREST IN RUSSIA. Autocracy Serfs Alexander I Pogroms Trans-Siberian Railroad Russo-Japanese War Socialist Republic Vladimir Lenin.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 24 section 4 UNREST IN RUSSIA. Autocracy Serfs Alexander I Pogroms Trans-Siberian Railroad Russo-Japanese War Socialist Republic Vladimir Lenin."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 24 section 4 UNREST IN RUSSIA

2 Autocracy Serfs Alexander I Pogroms Trans-Siberian Railroad Russo-Japanese War Socialist Republic Vladimir Lenin Bloody Sunday Duma KEY TERMS

3 1800’s Russia was one of the great powers of Europe Russian Troops defeated Napoleon Russian leaders helped to reorganize Europe Russia Empire was huge Included many ethnic groups GOVERNMENT AND SOCIETY

4  Russian rulers were absolute monarchs  Autocracy- government by one ruler with absolute power  Russian rulers called czar  Society mostly agricultural GOVERNMENT AND SOCIETY

5  Most of population were peasants  Serfs-agricultural workers who were considered part of the land they worked  Serfs were controlled by the lords  Were not slaves GOVERNMENT AND SOCIETY

6  Serfs not allowed to leave the ground they were born on  Serfdom was a major problem for Russian society GOVERNMENT AND SOCIETY

7  Czar alexander I died in 1825  Decembrists were a group of revolutionaries  Included many military officers  3,000 soldiers gathered at the winter palace  Publicly refusing to declare their allegiance to Czar Nicholas I THE DECEMBRIST REVOLT

8  Nicholas crushed the rebellion  Decembrists were captured and sent to Siberia  Isolated portion of eastern Russia  Five were executed  Began revolutionary movement DECEMBRIST REVOLT

9  Came to power in 1855  Russia loses the Crimean War  Showed how far behind Russia was from Europe  Did not have modern technology or industry to build an army REFORMS OF ALEXANDER II

10  1861 he frees the serfs  Right to own land ad part of a commune  Believed serfs would revolt if living condition did not change  Hoped land owning would build market economy REFORMS OF ALEXANDER II

11  Serfs bought the land they worked with government help  Alexander set up a judicial system  Allowed some local self government  Reorganized the army and the navy  1881 Alexander II assassinated by People’s will REFORMS OF ALEXANDER II

12  Was a reactionary  Ended the reforms of his father  Went after revolutionaries  People started to attacking Jews  Killing them and destroying their property UNREST UNDER ALEXANDER III

13  Pogroms-widespread violent attacks  Several waves of them in Russia  Began after Alexander II was assassinated  Jews were wrongly blamed for the assassination UNREST UNDER ALEXANDER II

14  1890’s Trans- Siberian Railroad  Link western Russia with Siberia  Russia expanded in the East  1900’s Japan was building an empire  Russia viewed it as a threat INDUSTRIALIZATION UNDER NICHOLAS II

15  1904 Japanese forces attacked and defeated Russia  Russo-Japanese War  Shocked Russians and called for more change WAR WITH JAPAN

16  A group who followed Karl Marx  Socialist republic-a society in which there is no private property and the state would collectively own and distribute goods  1902 Vladimir Lenin worked to overthrow the czar  Rise against “the shame and the curse of Russia.” MARXIST IDEAS

17  January 1905 Father Gapon planned too bring a petition to the czar  Petition listed demands  As protesters neared the Winter Palace they were fired upon  Known as Bloody Sunday THE REVOLUTION OF 1905

18  Bloody Sunday inspired many to rise up  Workers went on strike  University students protested in the streets  Peasants rebelled against landlords  People everywhere disobeyed the Czar’s rules THE REVOLUTION OF 1905

19  Czar supported autocracy  Promised reform but did not follow through  October 2 million workers strike and protest in the street  Railroads stopped THE REVOLUTION OF 1905

20  New Constitution  Freedom of speech  Freedom of assembly  Many Russians gained the right to vote OCTOBER MANIFESTO

21  Voters could elect representatives to the Duma  Duma-an assembly that would approve laws  Czar would continue to rule  Promised not to pass laws without permission from Duma OCTOBER MANIFESTO

22  1906 first Duma met  Czar ended the meeting when the Duma made too many demands  Nicholas II advisors did make many reforms  Czar had not reached a balance between his own power and support for democracy OCTOBER MANIFESTO


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