The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.
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Transcript of The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.
![Page 1: The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062300/56649f535503460f94c770fb/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
The Russian Revolution
History of the Modern World, pages 697-707
![Page 2: The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062300/56649f535503460f94c770fb/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
We have already learned
that Marx published
his Communist Manifesto
in 1848.
![Page 3: The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062300/56649f535503460f94c770fb/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Marx watched the events in Paris 1871 and the commune with
interest. The commune in Paris did not succeed.
![Page 4: The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062300/56649f535503460f94c770fb/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
But the idea that revolution was needed to overthrow governments
remained a key point of Marxist doctrine.
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Marxism should have been just another ‘ism
of the 1800’s.
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But Marxism found fertile ground in the Russian state.
A country plagued by deep rooted
societal, social and political difficulties.
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Russia was ripe for revolution:
• A previous history of oppression• A rising sense of Pan-Slavism:
Russia has a unique destiny• Local conflicts across the vast
Russian empire.
![Page 8: The Russian Revolution History of the Modern World, pages 697-707.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062300/56649f535503460f94c770fb/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
A brief review:
• Alexander II freed the serfs.
• Alexander was assassinated by the “Peoples Will”
• His son, Alexander III is reactionary: drives revolutionaries and terrorists into exile.
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Much of the intelligentsia that is kicked out of Russia will come back with revolutionary ideas.
Many “underground” groups will form.
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Russia began to pass through the industrial revolution during this agitated time…but most of the
money came from Europe.
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Most of the intelligentsia yearned for an over throw of the
government, so they could skip the problems of Capitalist
Industrial Europe.
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They wanted industrializatio
n—but industries
owned by the state, and not by some rich smug factory owner who
exploited his workers.
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One of the Intelligentsia was Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924)
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Lenin’s brother had
been executed as an auxiliary member of the plot to assassinate
Alexander III.
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Because of this, Lenin was
unable to attend law school. He
eventually engaged in
revolutionary activities and was sent to
Europe. He did not return until 1917—the year of the Russian
Revolution
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So what did Lenin believe in?
•that the rich abused the poor •that anybody making a profit was abusing everybody else •that everybody was equal •wanted a government that truly represented the people •wanted the overthrow of the Russian government that kept the huge majority of Russian people in misery