Summary: From Tsarism To Communism
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1 Historical Interpretation of the Russian Revolution
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What does Edward Acton put forward in his exploration of the Russian Revolution?
Emphasises the importance of 'ordinary people' in the overthrow of Tsarism; Bolshevik Revolution and establishment of a communist dictatorship -
What was the historical interpretation of the Russian Revolution under communism?
Tsars were vilified whist an almost religious cult was built around Lenin -
How did historical interpretation of the Russian Revolution change after the collapse in communism?
- growing sympathy for Nicholas II; Stolypin and the old regime; a growing idea that without revolution there would have been a gradual move to liberalism in Russia
- Lenin is held responsible for all calamites that have befallen modern Russia
- growing sympathy for Nicholas II; Stolypin and the old regime; a growing idea that without revolution there would have been a gradual move to liberalism in Russia
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What is Edward Acton's argument against focusing on the individual in the Russian Revolution?
"The genius or villainy of those figures [Nicholas II and Lenin] is unlikely on its own to explain why, of all the states of early twentieth-century Europe it was in the Russian Empire alone that a highly centralised, one-party communist dictatorship was established" - Edward Acton, 1993 (writing just after the fall of communism; could the focus of Edward Acton's on the 'ordinary man' be reactionary to focus on Lenin during Soviet Union?) -
2 Why Liberalism Failed
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What aspects of Russian society marked as different to the West and potentially therefore caused the rise of Communism which didn't evolve in any other European State?
marked social tension -
What are two examples which could imply that in the last years of Tsarism liberalism was growing?
- Rapid expansion in a middle-class of doctors, lawyers, teachers and other professionals
- increase in independent, liberally-minded commercial press
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What is a counter-argument to the idea that the growing liberal middle-class in Russia could have liberalised Russia peacefully without a revolution?
- Middle class was deeply divided among regional and cultural lines
- Unable to win support for liberal reform from economically powerful upper classes or numerically powerful masses (peasants and workers were being given no encouragement to see radual, reformist ways forward)
- Middle class was deeply divided among regional and cultural lines
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2.1.1 Rural
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What is an example of social tension in the agricultural areas of Russia?
- Small minority of noble landlords owned the majority of the best land
- Whereas the peasantry (80% of the Russian population) never accepted the Landlord's right to that land, instead they believed that the land belonged to those who worked it
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How did peasants demonstrate their determination that private land should be distributed among them without compensation for the landowners?
- popular protest
- mass petitions
- first two elections to the State Duma (parliament established in wake of revolution of 1905)
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What did the Landowners urge the Tsar's government to do in reaction to peasant demands for land?
- reject peasant demands
- crus rural disorder
- drastically reduce popular representation in the Duma
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Topics related to Summary: From Tsarism To Communism
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From Populist Revolution to Communist Dictatorship