1 / 46

Russia…Past, Present, Future

Russia…Past, Present, Future. Learning Targets. Trace and analyze the historical changes that have occurred in Russia… Politically? Socially? Economically? Geographically? Identify key leaders in Russian history? What contributions did they make to the country overall?.

maree
Télécharger la présentation

Russia…Past, Present, Future

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Russia…Past, Present, Future

  2. Learning Targets • Trace and analyze the historical changes that have occurred in Russia… • Politically? • Socially? • Economically? • Geographically? • Identify key leaders in Russian history? • What contributions did they make to the country overall?

  3. Key Facts about Russia • There are 14 former Soviet co-republics • Even without by far the world’s largest political entity • Gulf of Finland to Alaska = 11 time zones • Twice as large as United States or China • Population - 150,000,000 - much of land empty • China - 1.2 billion, India - 900,000,000, US 300,000,000 • Population concentrated in European Russia • Both the tsars and the communists tried to populate Siberia unsuccessfully

  4. Population Density

  5. A Short History of Russia • Russian history effectively began in 862, which was a loose federation of cities (Slavs, Veps, Votes) • For most of Russia’s history it was ruled by a tsar (known as “Imperial Russia”) • 1917 the October Revolution occurred and the Soviets began to seize power • Soviet Empire emerges with Russia at center • 14 Soviet Republics along with Russia made up the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) • Breakdown of Soviet Union - 1991

  6. Former Soviet Republics • Armenia • Azerbaijan • Belarus • Estonia • Georgia • Kazakhstan • Kyrgyzstan • Latvia • Lithuania • Moldova • Russia (duh!) • Tajikistan • Turkmenistan • Ukraine • Uzbekistan

  7. Historical Geography • Russia has always been a country of remoteness far from mainstreams of change and progress • Self-imposed isolation • Mistrust of the outside

  8. Rulers of Russia

  9. Ivan IV (the Terrible) Good stuff… Bad stuff… Fought a 22 year war that bankrupt the empire Established serfdom Created a secret police that was estimated to kill upwards of 30-40,000 people In a fit of rage killed his own son, the heir to his thrown! Zoinks! • Came to the throne at age 3 and crowned tsar at age 16 (1547) • Revised the law code • Created a standing army • Established a council of nobles • First printing press in Russia • He had St. Basil's Cathedral constructed in Moscow • Barma and PostnikYakovlev

  10. Ivan the Terrible

  11. Expansion of Russia Under Ivan

  12. St. Basil’s Cathedral in Red Square

  13. Aerial View of St. Basil’s

  14. The Death of Ivan Ivanovich

  15. Peter I (the Great) • Tsar of Russia from 1682 to 1696 • Modernized Russia • Ordered men of the upper classes to shave their beards, don western attire, send their sons abroad for schooling • Refashioned the army and created a navy • Moved capital from Moscow to St. Petersburg • Expanded Russia’s empire in every way (geographically, economically & socially)

  16. Catherine II (the Great) • 1762-1796; longest-ruling female leader of Russia • Actually German and seized power from her husband Peter III • Great admirer of Peter the Great • Culture was very important; Hermitage Museum • Influence by the Enlightenment and proposed reformed legal code = equal protection for all

  17. The State Hermitage • Contains over 3 million items in 6 buildings • One of the buildings, the Winter Palace, was home to many Tsars and Tsarinas • Largest painting collection in the world

  18. Tsar Nicholas II (the Last Tsar) • Russia's last emperor • Resist ever-growing calls for increased democracy within Russia • Supported the Boyars (wealthy nobles) • Loses war with Japan in 1904-5 • Becomes very unpopular • Workers of the world…UNITED! • Result: the communist workers overthrew the government and assassinated the tsar and his entire family (Anastasia?!?)

  19. Worker demonstrations outside the Winter Palace in Petrograd, January 1917

  20. Bolsheviks speaking at a meeting of workers and soldiers in Petrograd in 1917

  21. Quick Review • What is a tsar? • List one good thing and one bad thing about Ivan the Terrible • What was Peter the Great known for? • What was Catherine the Great’s “passion”? • What did she build to commemorate this passion? • What is notable about Tsar Nicholas II? • Who was his daughter?

  22. Vocabulary • Proletariat - a term used to describe the class of workers in a capitalist society whose only possession of significant material value is their ability to work; in Marxist theory they would overthrow the bourgeoisie • Bourgeoisie - describes a social class characterized by their ownership of capital; a member of the wealthiest social class of a society • Bolshevik - a member of the political party that started to rule Russia in 1917; they eventually become the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

  23. Vladimir Iliach Lenin • Led the Bolshevik Revolution. • He believed that it was up to the peasants and farmers to unite and overthrow a government of the wealthy.

  24. Lenin’s Tomb in Red Square Immediately after his death in 1924, a wooden mausoleum was erected on the square.

  25. Lenin’s Body Entombed

  26. Joseph Stalin, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, 1919.

  27. Josef Stalin • After Lenin's death in 1924, Stalin promoted himself as his political heir and gradually maneuvered his rivals to become dictator. • Forced collectivization of agriculture • Great Terror of the 1930s • Execution of thousands and the exile of millions to the gulags (Siberia)

  28. "Agriculture is developing slowly, comrades. This is because we have about 25 million individually owned farms. They are the most primitive and undeveloped form of economy We must do our utmost to develop large farms and to convert them into grain factories for the country organized on a modem scientific basis.”

  29. Soviet Gulags

  30. Russia • What happened in 1991? • Soviet Union collapsed • Separated into 15 new countries • Started new Russian Federation 44

  31. Why Did the USSR Collapse? • Different ethnic groups (>50%) resisted assimilation to a “Russianized” state • USSR couldn’t meet the needs of the State (poverty, starvation) • Dictatorship – extremely harsh conditions; no personal freedoms

  32. Why Did the USSR Collapse? • Mikhail Gorbachevinstitutes new policies that change the USSR • “Glasnost” – a policy that called for increased transparency in government institutions and activities. Literally means “openness” • “Perestroika” - The literal meaning is "restructuring", referring to the restructuring of the Soviet political and economic system. • Uprisings begin in Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania and spread to the other regions…the rest is history!

More Related