100 likes | 219 Views
Chapter 30 Sections 1 & 2. Revolution in Russia. Starts on Page 867. Section 1 Revolutions in Russia. Czars Resist Change Alexander III (1881-1894), Nicholas II (1894-1917) Censorship Secret Police Suppression of non-Russian nationalities Russia Industrializes
E N D
Chapter 30 Sections 1 & 2 Revolution in Russia Starts on Page 867
Section 1Revolutions in Russia • Czars Resist Change • Alexander III (1881-1894), Nicholas II (1894-1917) • Censorship • Secret Police • Suppression of non-Russian nationalities • Russia Industrializes • Number of factories double between 1863-1900 • In the 1890s, government ministers seek foreign investment for growth. By 1900, Russia is the 4th largest steel producer • Trans-Siberian Railway: world’s largest continuous rail line
Section 1Revolutions in Russia • The Growth of the Revolutionary Movement • Rapid industrialization stirred up discontent just as it had in other European nations • Views of Karl Marx catch on • Believed that industrial working class would overthrow the Czar, and establish a “dictatorship of the proletariat.” • Proletariat: the working class • Russian Marxists split • Mensheviks: Moderates • Bolsheviks: Radicals, led by Vladimir Lenin • Lenin forced to leave Russia to avoid arrest.
Section 1Revolutions in Russia • Crises at Home and Abroad • The Russo-Japanese War, 1904 • Japanese and Russians competing for Korea and Manchuria. Russia looses • Bloody Sunday: the Revolution of 1905 • 200,000 workers protest at Czars palace, troops open fire • nation wide strikes. Czar sets up a weak legislature called the Duma • World War I: The Final Blow • Czar Nicholas II went to the front • Wife, Czarina Alexandra, runs government, with help of the mysterious holy man, Rasputin
Section 1Revolutions in Russia • The March Revolution, 1917 • Workers riot against government, Czar abdicates. • Duma sets up the “provisional government” (means temporary government) • Lenin Returns to Russia, with help from the Germans • The Bolshevik Revolution • Lenin’s slogan: “Peace, Land and Bread!” • Provisional government overthrown by Bolshevik supporters in November. • Bolsheviks take power: land to be redistributed, truce signed with Germany. • Civil War in Russia, 1918-1920 • The Red Army (Bolsheviks) • The White Army (Czarists, Democrats, and Mensheviks)
Section 1Revolutions in Russia • Lenin Restores Order • New Economic Policy, 1921 • Small-scale capitalism • Banks, communication, and major industries remain government controlled • Political Reforms • Organizes the country as a series of self-governing republics under the Central Government • Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) • Bolshevik Party becomes the Communist Party • Stalin becomes Dictator • Joseph Stalin, general secretary of the Communist Party • Lenin Dies in 1924 • Leon Trotsky, Stalin’s rival, is exiled to Mexico • Stalin in total control by 1928.
Section 2Totalitarianism: Stalinist Russia • A Government of Total Control • Totalitarianism: a government that takes total, centralized control over every aspect of public and private life. • Police State: use of terror and violence, police used to enforce government’s policies • Indoctrination: instruction in the government’s beliefs to mold people’s minds. (Education) • Propaganda and Censorship: total control of all mass-media to spread the government’s message • Religious or Ethnic Persecution: “enemies of the state”, someone to blame.
Section 2Totalitarianism: Stalinist Russia • Stalin Builds a Totalitarian State • Police State: monitoring telephone lines, reading mail, spying on citicents • Great Purge, 1934-1938, 8-13 million killed • Russian Propaganda and Censorship • Education and Indoctrination • Schools taught the virtues of the Communist Party • Government youth groups trained children to be good communists • Religious Persecution: Atheism, attacked the Russian Orthodox Church • Stalin Seizes Control of the Economy • Command Economy: government made all economic decisions • Industry: the Five-Year Plans • Focus on steel, coal, oil • Led to shortages of consumer goods (clothes, shoes, food) • Agriculture: collective farms • Private farms seized by government, worked by hundreds of families
Section 2Totalitarianism: Stalinist Russia • Stalin Seizes Control of the Economy • Command Economy: government made all economic decisions • Industry: the Five-Year Plans • Focus on steel, coal, oil • Led to shortages of consumer goods (clothes, shoes, food) • Agriculture: collective farms • Private farms seized by government, worked by hundreds of families
Sections 1 & 2 Review • Who were the last Czars? • Who were the Mensheviks? Bolsheviks? • What revolutions occurred in 1917? • Who took over Russia in 1917? Who was their leader? • Who turned Russia into a totalitarian state? • What is Totalitarianism? • What is a command economy? • What are collective farms?