It is no accident that the name that is attributed to the heroine in a number of Russian novels of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries is named after some derivation of the name Elizabeth. Karamzin is the first to revere this name in his work Poor Liza and it is this work that sets off a chain reaction that causes the occurrence of subsequent characters in Russian literature. This character can particularly be found in works such as Pushkin’s Queen of Spades‚ Griboyedov’s Woe from Wit‚ and
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not‚ but you are not the only one. Most people have heard of Alexander’s brother‚ Vladimir‚ more commonly known as the great Russian revolutionary Lenin. Vladimir is credited as the man responsible for the Russian Revolution‚ but his revolutionary cause may have been sparked because of his older brother’s death. Therefore Alexander may be just as responsible for the Russian Revolution as Vladimir. Alexander was born in 1866. His father‚ Iyla Nikolaeyich Ulyanov‚ was an inspector of public schools
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revolutionaries; succeeded by Alexander III. | |1883 |First Russian Marxist group formed. | |1894 |Start of reign of Nicholas II. | |1898 |First Congress of Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP). | |1900
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revolution had little impact but it is important to know that the Bloody Sunday which sparked 1905 revolution was starting point where the bond between the tsar and the people was heavily severed. This caused loss of popular support for Nicholas II. The Russian Revolution of 1905 was not a sudden event‚ but rather the culmination of years of discontent caused by several factors which were the poor economic condition of the peasantry‚ who had seen little improvement in their lives following emancipation‚
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The tsarist regime‚ also referred to as the Russian political system‚ involved the repression of civil liberties‚ intellectual freedom and human rights in general. The regime was against any change in the country and frequently displayed their attitude in violent demonstrations and brutal massacres. The tsarist government faced opposition from many different social classes and occupational groupings‚ however it wasn ’t until1917 that it was overthrown. The regime survived until then due to the relative
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book‚ which explores the corruption of socialist ideals in the Soviet Union and the negative impact on the uneducated working class people. Animal farm introducers the abuse of language to gain power‚ in order to satisfy personal greed as well. This book is allegorical as it represents the historical time era of the Russian revolution through the use of animal‚ which symbolise different people and incidents in this time period revealing the impact of power on individuals. The hypocritical corruption
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this was the cause of a constant source of political conflict. There were also 5 million Jews and around 23 million Muslims living in the Russian Empire. The government’s policy of russification (forbidding the use of local languages and the suppression of religious customs) created a great deal of resentment. St. Petersburg was the largest city in the Russian Empire with a population of 1‚260‚000. Other large cities included Moscow (1‚040‚000)‚ Warsaw (680‚000)‚
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in the formation of 15 sovereign states‚ bringing about an end to the Cold War. The Russian Federation was the most developed of the formed nations. However‚ its internal state has deteriorated‚ causing tremendous socio-economic change in the new nation. The focus of this investigation is to inquire about the extent to which the collapse of the Soviet Union impacted the socio-economic disintegration of the Russian Federation during its formation in the early 1990’s. Both aspects are closely intertwined
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shortages had inevitably led to inflation. By the war time‚ the price of meat had risen 300% while flour prices risen by 200%. The people had no way and no money to buy those expensive raw materials. In such bad condition‚ they weren’t helped by the Russian ‘scorched earth’ policy whereby large areas of farmland were set alight to prevent food resources falling into the hands of the Germans. The people were
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Alexander reforms in transforming Russian Society by 1881? 24 marks Alexander came to power in 1855‚ but before he became Tsar Alexander witnessed the shameful defeat against Britain‚ France and Turkey in the Crimean War in 1854 This had given him the opportunity to observe some of the problems which Russia faced; Alexander believed that changes had to be made towards modernisation. The population of the Russian Empire was 74 million and 22.5 million
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