All About #8 Russian History in A Nutshell: Lesson Notes
All About #8 Russian History in A Nutshell: Lesson Notes
All About #8 Russian History in A Nutshell: Lesson Notes
All About #8
Russian History In A Nutshell
CONTENTS
2 Grammar
# 8
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GRAMMAR
The ancestors of the Russians were the Slavic tribes. In the mid ninth century, the Vikings
founded the first East Slavic dynasty. The first East Slavic state, Kievan Rus' (Киевская русь),
adopted Christianity from the Byzantine Empire in 988.
Kievan Rus' consisted of a number of small states, each of which a "prince" (князь) ruled.
The princes were all involved in a power struggle, and civil wars were very common. As a
result, Kievan Rus' succumbed to Mongol invaders in the 1230s and didn't manage to
overthrow the Mongol control until the late fifteenth century.
In the fifteenth century, the grand princes of Moscow went on gathering Russian lands to
increase the population and wealth under their rule. The most successful of these was Ivan III,
who laid the foundations for a Russian national state.
The development of the Tsar's autocratic powers reached a peak during the reign of Ivan IV
("Ivan the Terrible"). He strengthened the position of the monarch to unprecedented levels
as he ruthlessly subordinated the nobles to his will, exiling or even executing many at the
slightest provocation. Built on his orders was the famous St. Basil's Cathedral that adorns Red
Square in Moscow. Legend says that after the cathedral had been constructed, Ivan the
Terrible ordered to have the project's author to be made blind so that he could never build
anything as beautiful as St. Basil's Cathedral again.
Another important figure in Russian history was Peter the Great who ruled at the beginning
of the eighteenth century. Peter played a major role in bringing his country into the European
State System. He reorganized his government on the latest Western models. He also insisted
that noble people should wear European-style clothes and shave off their beards, or reform,
which most nobles disapproved of. In 1703, Peter the Great founded Sankt-Petersburg, which
was to become Russia's new capital.
Nearly forty years were to pass before a comparably ambitious ruler appeared on the
Russian throne. Catherine II (the Great) was a German princess who married the German
heir to the Russian crown. Finding him incompetent, Catherine tacitly consented to his murder
and thus ascended to the throne. After a number of successful wars, Catherine managed to
expand Russian borders. Mainly directed at oppressing lord's serfs, her internal politics
triggered a major rebellion (ruthlessly suppressed). We also knew Catherine for her countless
love affairs.
In 1861, Russia abolished serfdom, but the terms of abolition were so unfavorable to
peasants that its revolutionary tensions actually increased.
The last Russian tsar, Nicholas II, came to power at the very end of the nineteenth century.
His reign saw Imperial Russia go from being one of the foremost great powers of the world to
an economic and military disaster. Under his reign, Russia entered the First World War, which
contributed to general discontent and resulted in his abdication in 1917. Shortly after that, the
Bolsheviks executed Nicholas II and all his family, including his thirteen-year-old son Aleksey.
A provisional government formed after Nicholas II abdicated, but it was unable to solve the
deepening economic crisis, which led to the events that we know as the October Revolution.
The Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin (real name: Ulyanov), seized the power and civil war
broke out.
Lenin's death in 1924 resulted in a power struggle. Eventually, Joseph Stalin (real name:
Djougachvili) managed to get rid of all his political rivals and came to power. Incidentally, his
assumed name (Stalin) comes from the Russian word сталь ("steel"): strong as steel. Stalin's
time saw tens of thousands of Soviet citizens face arrest, deportation, and execution.
Denunciation was very common, and because they would be arrested for no reason at all,
people lived in constant fear. At the same time, Stalin managed to create a personality similar
to a cult leader both for himself and Lenin, and so people who grieved his death likened it to
the death of a family member.
In many ways, even though this period of Russian history can be considered as tragic, Stalin's
economic policy based on heavy industrialization had remarkable results that revived the
Soviet economy.
In June 1941, German troops swept across the Soviet border. The German army seized
Ukraine, laid a siege of Leningrad (now Sankt Petersburg), and threatened to capture
Moscow but were thrown off in a successful counterattack. In 1942-1943, the Soviet Union
managed to reverse the situation by defeating Germany in Stalingrad and Kursk. By the end
of 1944, the front had moved beyond the Soviet frontiers into Eastern Europe, and Soviet
forces drove into eastern Germany capturing Berlin in May 1945.
After Stalin's death in 1953, Nikita Khrushchev came to power. At a speech to the closed
session of the Twentieth Communist Party Congress, Khrushchev shocked his listeners by
denouncing Stalin's dictatorial rule and attacked the crimes committed by Stalin's closest
associates and thus initiated "The Thaw" (Оттепель): a complex shift in political, cultural, and