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19 May 2011. Make sure you have completed the 32.1 and 32.2 Test. Present your organizer explaining peasant life in traditional Russia / Eastern Europe. Parameters. Each group will present their organizer (3-5 minutes total)
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19 May 2011 • Make sure you have completed the 32.1 and 32.2 Test. • Present your organizer explaining peasant life in traditional Russia / Eastern Europe.
Parameters • Each group will present their organizer (3-5 minutes total) • Non-presenting groups will evaluate the presenters on 4 areas: (1 = very poor 5= very well done) 3/5= 60%; 3.5/5 = 70%; 4/5 = 80% • Creativity (1 to 5) • Neatness (1 to 5) • Content / Knowledge (1 to 5) • Presentation (1 to 5)
Create your own organizer explaining peasant life in traditional Russia/Eastern Europe: Don’t Copy my weak example • Judged on Creativity, Neatness, and Content PeasantLife
Russian expansion created • A multinational empire • Conflict among nationalities • Fear of European powers
Decembrist Revolt • Goal- Overthrow czar and set up a constitutional monarchy • Outcome- Nicholas I crushed revolt • Result- Nicholas I became very brutal. • Czar Alexander II emancipated serfs
Jewish Communities • Large numbers since 1500s • Legal discrimination • Nicholas I encouraged brutality against Jews • Pogroms- Organized acts of violence against Jews.
Industrialization • Long hours • Dangerous work conditions • No worker protection laws
Karl Marx- German philosopher. Idea- factory workers, not peasants, should lead the socialist revolution. Karl Marx- German Philosopher Factory workers should rise up and take control. Revolutionary Movements
20 May 2011 • Identify “Bloody Sunday.” • Who, What, When, and Why? • If you were part of “Bloody Sunday” how would you have reacted (Solider / Protester)?
Father Gapon leads factory workers on peaceful march to St. Petersburg to give a petition to Nicholas II. 100 + ended up dead because of actions of soldiers. Bloody Sunday
Revolution of 1905 • Sparked by Bloody Sunday • Riots and strikes broke out • Peasants looted and burned homes of landowners • Nicholas II set up an elected assembly called the Duma to resolve conflict, but it had very little real power. • Inequality and oppression remained.