Chris Troutman English 12 February 2, 2003 russian revolution reseach The Russian Revolution of 1917 was a major turning point in history. It marked the end of a czar rule of the Romanovs, as well as the beginning of a communist rule. The Revolution didn’t just consist of one event. It consisted of many. Some of these events were the Czarist wartime incompetence, the March Revolution, the Czar abdicating his throne, the provisional government failing, and the communists taking control. However probably, the most famous was the Communist revolution of 1917 which was set in motion by non other than Karl Marx.
He was responsible for planting the seed of economic revolution. He was a communist and founded the main ways of communism. He believed and set forth certain ideas that he strongly believed in and which contributed to make the economy what it was at that time. It would have been unlikely that the revolution would have occurred without the Manifesto. The Communist Manifesto reflects an attempt to explain the goals of Communism. The theory in which Marx created is now known as Marxism.
Marxism is a philosophy that faces the problem of class conflict. Marx thought that it was inevitable, and class struggle would continue. However, if at that time, the current “working class developed a sense of ‘class consciousness’ and realized that it is being oppressed, a revolution will occur.” The first event was the Czarist wartime incompetence. Russia was not prepared for war, economically and militarily.
The Essay on Ruling Class Bourgeois Marx Communist
Abstract on the Communist Manifesto Karl Marx wrote the Communist Manifesto between December 1847 and February 1848 at the request of the Central Committee of the Communist League in London. This theoretical pamphlet containing merely thirty pages may be responsible for influencing more people between the late nineteenth and mid twentieth centuries than any other printed work of its time. Not only ...
They didn’t have the money for a war, they had little food, and their military skills weren’t good. This was shown when the Czar entered Russia into a war with Japan. It was also shown when Russia was sent into World War I. The war with Japan caused the people of Russia to revolt because they lost repeated battles. Defeat followed defeat in World War I.
This resulted in less food and fuel for the Russian people as well as higher prices. People begged for money and an end to the war. This was one major event of the Russian Revolution. Another event was the March Revolution.
It started when women textile workers led a citywide strike. Then riots arose due to the shortage of bread and fuel. More and more people joined the riot. Soldiers were ordered to shoot the people but they then decided to join the people.
The soldiers fired at their commanding officers. This local protest erupted into the uprising of the March Revolution Leon Trotsky, the president of the Saint Petersburg soviet (and at this time a left-wing Menshevik) put forward a theory of “permanent revolution.” According to this theory, the democratic revolution could only be won if the workers took political power, with support of the peasants; the working-class government would then begin Russia’s transition to socialism; and this transition would spark both attacks against Russia by capitalist countries and also revolutionary upsurges that could overturn capitalism throughout the world. In 1919 this theory would become an influential outlook among Russia’s revolutionaries. The rule of the Czar soon came to an end. All the people of Russia hated him. He had little control over his country.
In addition, the Czar didn’t listen to others. This, as well as the March Revolution, forced Czar Nicholas II to abdicate his throne. A year later, revolutionaries killed him along with his family. A provisional government was then set up.
The provisional government decided to continue fighting in World War I. This was a very bad choice, because the government lost the support of the people. As the war dragged on, conditions in Russia worsened. The provisional government was not strong, and no one supported them.
The Term Paper on Russian System Russia War Government
"Nothing short of war could have any impact of the Russian system of government." How accurate is this of the Tsarist system of government from 1800-1917. The Russian Tsarist system under the Romanov's was extremely resistant to change in all forms. Reforms were brought in only to preserve and little improvement resulted from these reforms. In this essay I will attempt to examine whether or not ...
Eventually, Lenin, the leader of the Bolsheviks, snuck back into Russia. The Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government. The provisional government failing was yet another event of the Revolution. The final event of the Russian Revolution was when Communists took over. The Communists were the Bolsheviks. They took over government offices and arrested the leaders of the provisional government.
The Communists had supporters unlike the provisional government. They were organized as well. The Communists ended Russia’s involvement in World War I. Also, they restored order to Russia, or the USSR as it was renamed to in 1922. The story of modern Russian history is indeed one of the most bizarre and twisted tales of deceit, lies, and politics. No one could have predicted in 1914 the wily and insane story of the Russian Revolution, the rise of the Communists, and especially the rise of Stalin.
Here was a man from humble beginnings in the Slavic republic of Georgia who made his way into party politics through an almost unheard of path. Through his subversive and brazen actions, he cemented a firm foothold in the Bolshevik regime, establishing a reputation for himself as coarse, stubborn, and steadfast. Upon the death of Vladimir Ilynich Lenin, Stalin could almost have carved out his place in history with the very hammer and sickle upon which Marx based his ideas. And yet, for all the strategy, all the bold moves, and all the outright lies, “Stalin was saved, in fact, by luck alone.” The Russian Revolution of 1917 changed Russia forever. The czar rule of the Romanovs finally came to an end after three centuries. The Czar got Russia involved in a great war.
The Communists came to the rescue and saved Russia from this war. They restored order to Russia and renamed it the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, or USSR.