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AQA A Level Depth Study Notes - Russia: Introduction to Russia & Marxism $3.85   Add to cart

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AQA A Level Depth Study Notes - Russia: Introduction to Russia & Marxism

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Extremely high quality and detailed notes covering the introduction to the Russia course including: - Introduction to Marxism - What was Russia Like? - The Tsar & Political Authority - The Russian War Effort - October 1904 Revolution

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  • March 16, 2022
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  • 2018/2019
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History Paper 2: Russia 1917-1953

1. What is the course:
o Study major change in Russia during 20 th century – includes revolution, Civil war +
dictatorship under Lenin and Stalin

2. Communism:
What:
o Communism is the ideology that wealth is shared equally between all members of the
country. Government therefore own all of industry and business
Problems:
o The difference in the difficulty of jobs is not rewarded with a difference in pay, a surgeon
could earn the same amount of money as a barman.
o The rich would most likely not be willing to give up their wealth
o Its hard to gain control of industry as many will be reluctant
o Unrealistic to make everyone happy

What Is Marxism, Why is it Relevant To Russia 1917-53:

Lenin:
o Remove capitalist democracy through bloody revolution
o Anti-democracy because it only benefits the rich
o Pro violence & pro revolution
Karl Marx:
o German philosopher economist, sociologist + historian
o Radical ideas lead to him being forced out of Germany -> spent much of life in London
o 2 most famous works: The Communist Manifesto (1848) & Das Kapital
o Writing encourage radicals all over Europe to set up Marxist political groups
o property + make it government owned (share), Free education (communist indoctrination)
o Human history = history of class struggle -> at each stage there is a ruling class + oppressed
class resulting in revolution resulting in a classless society -> communism
o Different stages of human history:

FEUDALISM -> CAPITALISM -> SOCIALISM -> COMMUNISM

, THE CONDITION OF RUSSIA BEFORE THE REVOLUTION

What was Russia like; Physical

THE GEOGRAPHY:
 LARGE  crosses 2 continents (Europe + Asia)  covers around 1/6 of world’s land mass
 North Russia is frozen most of the year
 Sparsely populated

COMMUNICATIONS:
 POOR  large area to cover with difficult terrain
 Few paved roads (countryside), would turn to impassable mud in winter
 Main forms of transport = rail + boat, major cities built alongside important river routes
 Rail = underdeveloped (equivalent amount of track as Britain), most important rout =e
Trans-Siberian rail which crossed from Moscow to Vladivostok (far east)

INDUSTRIALISATION:
 LATE  ½ C after west
 BUT growing fast -> 1914 Russia = 4th largest producer of coal, pig iron + steel
 Late development = factories had modern tech + efficient methods of mass production
 Workers: young & male, mostly ex-peasants but 1900 1/3’s fathers worked in industry too
o 1914 -> 2/5 workers in factories of 1000+ workers (easier to organize strikes)
o Worker literacy rate = 2x national average, many receptive to revolutionary ideas

AGRICULTURE:
 METHODS INSUFFICIENT (e.g. wooden ploughs) + most farmers subsistence farmers
 Debts: due to land repayments  cancelled 1905 + peasants prospered better
 Stolypin land reforms encouraged production (record harvests 1913)
o Most village fields split, individual households worked strips
 Many still worked ex-master’s land + made ‘redemption’ payments to state  village bound

SOCIAL DIFFERENCE/STRUCTURE:
 Russian + a Russian identity not shared by majority of Pop (40% speak Russian as 1st lang)
 Nobles = 1% of pop, owned 25% of all land  most lived in St Petersburg/Moscow
 Jobs in gov/army largely given based on position in society
 Middle classes:
o Growing, more merchants + bankers as industry developed
o Lifestyle = good, large houses, range of foods + extensive cultural life
 Professional class also growing, lawyers started to be active in politics

Peasants (1900):
 4/5 = peasants (170m) (80% peasants)
 Until the emancipation reform in 1861, around 50% of the Empire’s peasants had been serfs
labouring under a feudal type of personal bondage
 By 1912, 15% of the pop was urban, many were originally peasants but occasionally would
go back to work on the land
 Peasants only freed from legal bondage 1860s
o Late compared to others
o lived + worked on small patches of land they owned or on the land of nobles
o Some = more well off than others, but most suffered long hours + poor quality of life
 Industrial proletariat with strong peasantry links = v revolutionary -> contradicted Marx

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