It is perhaps significant that Lenin’s biggest contribution to modern Russian life is a monument to death. It was, after all, his characteristic answer to most problems. Lenin’s period of control over Russia (1917-1924) was dominated by war, conflict and the “Red Terror”. It is the thesis of this essay that he considered that conflict [...]
Archive for the ‘1917’ Category
Lenin as Social Architect
Posted: June 8, 2010 in 1917, A Level History, Communism, History, Lenin, Russian revolution, Stalin, USSRTags: 1917, A Level History, Communism, History, Lenin, Red Terror, Russia, Russian Revolution
Assessing the Character of Nicholas II
Posted: June 8, 2010 in 1917, Communism, Historical Interpretation, History, Russian revolution, USSRTags: GCSE Coursework, History, Nicholas II, Russia, Russian Revolution, Twentieth Century, USSR
“The daily work of a monarch he found intolerably boring. He could not stand listening long or seriously to ministers’ reports, or reading them.” Written by Kerensky, the leader of the government which took over from the Tsar in 1917, in his memoirs in 1934. “His ancestors did not pass on to him one quality [...]
Stalin’s Five Year Plans: Conversation with Szpakowski
Posted: June 2, 2010 in 1917, A Level History, Communism, Economic History, History, Russian revolution, Stalin, USSRTags: Communism, History of Communism, Russian History, Stalin, Szpakowski, USSR
Professor Michal Spakowski (Jastrӗbie Droj, Poland) was speaking to Rev Dr Kenneth Baker (Roscommon, Republic of Ireland)
Stalin and the Salvation of the USSR
Posted: May 28, 2010 in 1917, A Level History, Communism, Russian revolution, Stalin, USSRTags: 20th Century, A Level History, Communism, Five Year Plan, History, Lenin, Russia, Russian History, Stalin, USSR
Reinventing Stalin: Modern Historical Trends
Posted: May 27, 2010 in 1917, A Level History, Cold War, Uncategorized, USSRTags: A Level History, Communism, Five Year Plan, Historical Revisionism, History, Rewriting history, Stalin, USSR
Reflecting on a recent post, High Heeled Historian commented that though Stalin may have been responsible for 35 million deaths (which someone computed at about 18% of the entire population) at least he saved the USSR from Nazi Germany. There seems quite a trend about modern historians to reinvent Stalin; to move him from “Monsters [...]
Nicholas II v Stalin?
Posted: May 20, 2010 in 1917, A Level History, History, Russian revolutionTags: A Level History, Greatest Russian, History, House of Romanov, Joseph Stalin, Nicholas II, Nicholas II of Russia, Russia, Russian Orthodox Church, Russian Revolution, Soviet Union, Stalin, USSR
As we approach the centennial anniversary of the murder of Tsar Nicholas II and his family, it was interesting –a little while back- to notice that Nicholas II was leading in an internet poll, in which millions voted, for the title Greatest Russian of All Time, narrowly ahead of Stalin! What does that tell us [...]
How did the Bolsheviks gain power in October 1917?
Posted: January 9, 2009 in 1917, A Level History, History, Russian revolutionTags: 1917, A Level History, History, Russia Revolution
The Bolshevik victory was by no means a foregone conclusion, and in some ways just as unexpected as the Tsar’s abdication earlier in the year. There were many inter-connected factors in their path to success.

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