GCSE Russian History Coursework
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GCSE: History: Russian Coursework and Essays

Document Question: The Russian Revolution and the New Soviet State 1917-1929
(User Rating: 10.00 | Length: 6.4 Pages)
Document Question: The Russian Revolution and the New Soviet State 1917-1929 1)a) Document A refers to the grain seizures of 1918. The term 'revolutionary enthusiasm and discipline' refers to the way in which Lenin and his Bolsheviks wish the actions to be carried out. He expects his fellow ...

Explain how long and short-term causes contributed to the March 1917 Revolution
(Length: 7.4 Pages)
Explain how long and short-term causes contributed to the March 1917 Revolution 2) Explain how long and short-term causes contributed to the Bolshevik Revolution. (10) In March 1917, the situation for the Russians had become desperate and the workers wanted political changes as well as food and fue ...

Factors in the Bolshevik Revolution
(User Rating: 10.00 | Length: 9.4 Pages)
Factors in the Bolshevik Revolution Each and every one of these reasons are important. However, none is important enough to cause a revolution by itself. When these causes are combined together they can and did quite easily cause a revolution. Russia's population in 1900 was about 120 million; ...

How did the Bolsheviks gain power - Sources
(User Rating: 2.50 | Length: 0.6 Pages)
How did the Bolsheviks gain power - Sources 1. The artist could have made sure his picture was accurate by witnessing and taking notes of what was happening at the loots. The artist could have taken a photograph. This would be a way of making sure he wasn't being biased. 2. The three words &quo ...

Rasputin
(Length: 3.7 Pages)
Rasputin Gregory Efimovich was born on January 10, 1869, in Prokovskoe, a small village in Siberia on the banks of the Tura River. Even before he first went to St. Petersburg, because of his habits of drunkenness and womanising; he had already gained the nickname of 'Rasputin´, disreputable one ...

Russian Revolution
(Length: 4.6 Pages)
Russian Revolution Problems in Russia in the early nineteenth century were growing, many factors contributed to them. The first was in 1904 when Russia went to war with Japan over control of Korea and Manchuria. Nicholas II thought that winning a war would win him popularity and stop criticism of h ...

Stalin and Russia - Sources Question
(User Rating: 9.13 | Length: 14.7 Pages)
Stalin and Russia - Sources Question 1. To answer this question we have to look at all the sources and interpret what they are trying to tell us about Stalin himself. There are positive sources and also negative sources. I will now try to explain the impression each source gives of me. If we take s ...

Stalin's Russia Source Coursework
(User Rating: 8.83 | Length: 11.4 Pages)
Stalin's Russia Source Coursework Depth Study B: Russia 1905 - 1941 Assignment B: Objective 3 Stalin: Man or Monster? 1) Study Sources A, B and C. Do these sources give similar or different impressions of Stalin? Explain your answer. (6) These sources give different impressions of Stalin, howev ...

The Bolshevik Revolution
(Length: 6.7 Pages)
The Bolshevik Revolution The painting was done in the 1920's some time after the actual event making it secondary evidence. To a certain extent it is historically accurate because the storming of the Winter Palace did take place but it is inaccurate as there was not a great struggle between the ...

The Fall of Tsarism
(Length: 4.4 Pages)
The Fall of Tsarism It was clear by this stage, that it needed a revolution in order to reform the Russian autocratic Tsarist system. I would therefore conclude that it is extremely clear that the autocratic system of government would not change despite any amount of pressure from the middle classe ...

The March 1917 Revolution in Russia
(User Rating: 8.09 | Length: 7.1 Pages)
The March 1917 Revolution in Russia Explain how long and short-term causes contributed to the March 1917 Revolution In March 1917, the situation for the Russians had become desperate and the workers wanted political changes as well as food and fuel. In Petrograd (as St.Petersburg had been renamed t ...

The Provisional Government
(Length: 2.1 Pages)
The Provisional Government ` 1) a) The provisional government was devised from revolutionary duma members who refused to disband at the Tsar' request. It was not an elected body, and therefore did not necessarily have the support of the people. The provisional government would be judged purely ...

The Russian Civil war
(User Rating: 6.67 | Length: 2.1 Pages)
The Russian Civil war The problem for the Bolsheviks was that they were engaged in a crippling war with the rest of the country, the patriotic presence that the Bolsheviks wanted to return to Russia had been abolished by the civil war. The Bolsheviks found it difficult to rule the country when they ...

The war & Revolution of March 1917
(User Rating: 1.00 | Length: 2.0 Pages)
The war & Revolution of March 1917 The war was extremely important in bringing about the revolution of 1917 and the abdication of the Tsar. It led to the detonation of peoples for everybody. You have to look at how significant its disastrous effects were in bringing about the March Revolution. ...

What Happened on Bloody Sunday 22nd January 1905?
(User Rating: 8.50 | Length: 3.4 Pages)
What Happened on Bloody Sunday 22nd January 1905? Bloody Sunday was the day when all the tensions that led to and began the 1905 revolution came together. By 1903 the activities of the parties that were opposing the government combined with the appalling conditions in which the working class people ...

Why did Lenin consider it necessary to introduce the NEP in 1921
(User Rating: 7.00 | Length: 2.0 Pages)
Why did Lenin consider it necessary to introduce the NEP in 1921 The October revolution had overthrown the old order, ruthlessly suppressed and purged the Tsarist state; but in conditions of chronic economic and cultural backwardness, the elements of the old order were everywhere creeping back into ...

Why did the Tsarist Regime Collapse In 1917?
(User Rating: 3.43 | Length: 1.7 Pages)
Why did the Tsarist Regime Collapse In 1917? The revolution in 1917 was the accumulation of a series of factors associated with Tsarist Russian society. All workers, middle classes, aristocrats and even some of the Tsars most die-hard supporters were starting to feel real resentment and empathy for ...

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