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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 20 page paper which discusses and examines the immediate causes and the effects of the Russian Revolution.
The bibliography has 5 sources.
Page Count:
20 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JHRevo.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
place in 1917 are referred to together as the Russian Revolution. Through the natural course of history, individuals have decided that the Russian Revolution should be viewed with distain.
However, the Russian Revolution did at the time, inspire hope, command sacrifices and did contain moral capital. As the years have passed, its initial appeal has been destroyed.
Vladimir Illych Lenin was a serious political leader who had original concept of ideology and organization. His party transformed Marxism and also influenced many other movements that had different
ideologies and class constituencies. Lenins political party was a revolutionary agent of history and became the appropriate means of justifying and implementing state terror. This vanguard party made modern
revolution possible. CAUSES THAT LED TO THE REVOLUTION Rooted deep in Russias history are the underlying causes of the Russian Revolution. For hundreds of years prior to the Russian
Revolution, autocratic and repressive czars ruled the country and nearly all of the general population lived under severe social and economic conditions (Mosley, 2006). During the last of the 19th
century and the early part of the 20th century, there were several movements that took place in Russia which were aimed at overthrowing the oppressive government (Mosley, 2006). These
movements had been staged at different times by students, workers, peasants and even members of the nobility (Mosley, 2006). Two notable, but unsuccessful movements which occurred during this time were
the revolt against Nicholas I in 1825 and the revolution of 1905 (Mosley, 2006). Both of these movements were attempts by the people to establish a constitutional monarchy for Russia
(Mosley, 2006). During World War I (1914-1918), it was evident that Russia was poorly organized and as a result was unsuccessful in that conflict (Mosley, 2006). This was another
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