Vladimir Lenin and his Rise to Power-
Vladimir Lenin and his Rise to Power- Eventually, empires and nations all collapse. The end can be brought about by many causes. Whether through becoming too large for their own good, being ruled by a series of out of touch men, falling behind technologically, having too many enemies, succumbing to civil war, or a combination: no country is safe. The Russia of 1910 was in a tremendously horrible situation. She had all of these problems. Russia would not have existed by 1920 were it not for Vladimir Ilich Lenin, the only man capable of saving the failing nation. Russia in 1910 was a very backwards country. Peasants who lived in absolute poverty made up the vast majority of Russia’s population (Haney 19). Russia’s version of the feudal system had ended a mere 49 years earlier, but in effect it meant that peasants now owned the meager parcels of land upon which their survival rested. Their ruler, Czar Nicholas II, ruled aloof of his disorganized nation. His government of appointed officials and men in inherited positions did not represent the people (The Tyranny of Stupidity 120). Even though all of Europe had experienced the Industrial Revolution, Russia had precious little machinery. To obtain more advance
. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
Red Army, Nicholas II, World War, Ilich Lenin, Stalin Lenin, Lenin Trotsky, Power- Eventually, Economic Policy, Marxists Unlike, Germany Russia, world war, lenin vi, czar nicholas ii, russia 1910, nicholas ii, world book, vladimir ilich, civil war, czar nicholas, world book encyclopedia, book encyclopedia, public sentiment,
Approximate Word count = 1256
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
|