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Summary Bricks vwo 3 history chapter 2 “Between the wars”

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Summary Bricks vwo 3 history chapter 2 “Between the wars”

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  • March 13, 2023
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Summary History between the wars
2.1 the Russian Revolution

Key words:
Duma = Russian parliament
Soviet = revolutionary council of labourers or peasants in Russia before 1917; also: citizen of
the Soviet Union (Soviet)
Communism = system of social organisation in which all property is owned by the
community and each person contributes and receives according to his ability and needs
Bolshevik = member of the political party of Lenin
Dictator = ruler with total power over a country, mostly one who had obtained control by
force

Russia before 1917
 Around 1900 Russia was the largest, greatest grain production, most inhabitants, big army
country
 But there was a huge gap between rich and poor, 90% were still slaves (poverty and hunger)
 In cities industrialisation advances as quickly as in the western countries
 Labourers worked long days with low wages and there was only a small middle class
 Tsar Nicholas II ruled this empire with absolute power until 1905 when he used violence at a
demonstration and lost support of his people
 This had led to a revolution, one of these was the founding of the Duma but it didn’t bring
big change and the Duma lacked real power

The February revolution
 After 1905 the situation didn’t improve and during World War I it became even worse
 The soldiers were poorly trained and the army lacked weapons
 Millions of soldiers were killed and German even conquered Russian territory
 This increased people’s resistance to the government even more and Tsar decided to lead
the army himself but he was a terrible war leader
 In February 1917 woman led a demonstration demanding bread, end to the war and Tsarist’s
rule, poor labourers joined them
 Tsar told the soldiers to shoot the demonstrators but they resisted which turned into a
revolution
 Labourers and soldiers united to govern themselves in committees called soviets, Russia was
given to a socialist government

Lenin
 The country was still at war and Germany used advantage of the unrest in Russia
 They contacted a Russian revolutionary called Lenin, who was banished from Russia because
he was against Tsar
 A German Philosopher Karl Marx predicted a revolution: poor against the rich and take
power to form a society based on equality where there were no individual possessions
 This was called communism
 Lenin wanted to make Russia a communist country and formed his own party (the
Bolsheviks)
 Germany paid for his trip and plans in secret and in exchange Lenin would make peace with
the Central powers

,  On 16th April 1917, Lenin was welcomed in Petrograd by many supporters

The October revolution
 Lenin immediately began to organise his followers to prepare for a attack
 The country was still at war and Lenin promised the Russians bread, peace & land
 He would take wealth food and land of rich and gave it to the poor and to end the war
 The power would be given to workers who were organised in soviets
 On October 25th the Bolsheviks attacked the government and gained control over the city
 Lenin became the leader of the government and he called for elections, but he didn’t get
most votes
 He disagreed and took all power and became a dictator (he thought it was necessary for a
communist state)

Civil war
 Lenin kept his promise to Germany and signed the peace treaty of Brest-Litovsk
 The war ended for Russia but a civil war broke out between the white and red army
 Red army -> founded by Lenin’s right hand man Leon Trotsky (because of resistance to
Lenin’s take over)
 White army -> pro-Tsarists Russians and people against the peace treaty United
 A bloody civil war broke out that led to destruction and famine
 Britain and France supported the white army in hopes to restore their ally
 The red army was more organised and won and in 1922 a new country was founded: The
USSR of the Soviet Union

2.2 the Soviet Union under Stalin

Key words:
New economic policy: program instituted by Lenin for a temporarily more capitalism-
oriented economic policy
Superpower: very powerful and influential nation in the world
Totalitarian state: state with a centralised government that is dictatorial and controls every
part of people’s lives
Five-year plan: Stalin’s plan to industrialise the Soviet Union over 5 years
Collectivisation: forceful joining of agriculture into huge state farms
Kulak: peasant in Russia wealthy enough to own a farm and hire labour
Great Purge: period of repression and persecution in the Soviet Union during the late 1930s
Gulag forced Labour camps: system of forced Labour camps in which opponents of the
Soviet Union were imprisoned and many people died
Cult of personality: excessive public admiration for or devotion to a famous person

Lenin’s new economic policy
 The revolution, World War I and civil war led to a destruction of agriculture which caused
famine
 Lenin also forcefully confiscated food from the peasants to feed his red army
 The Soviet-Union was even more backwards then in 1914
 To make things better Lenin brought in the New economic policy: peasants were allowed to
produce food themselves, sell on markets and people could own small industries
 With this he thought the damage of the civil war could be restored but communists didn’t
agree

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