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| | infhistrmscw1f.htm |
 | | Moscow was one of the centers of the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat in all three early 20-the century revolutions in Russia: in the first Russian revolution of 1905-1907, the February Revolution of 1917 and the Great October Socialist Revolution of 1917. |  | | In regards to the third Russian revolution on October 25 (November 7, new style) 1917 the Moscow Bolsheviks, on receiving information from Petrograd (now is St. Petersburg) that the revolution had begun, immediately formed a revolutionary center for controlling the transfer of power to the Soviets. |  | | The highest stage in the development of the 1905-1907 revolution in Russia was the armed uprising of the Moscow proletariat in December 1905. |
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http://www.destinationrussia.com/htm/infhistrmscw1f.htm
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| | The Russian Revolution |
 | | The Russian Revolution of 1917 played a very important role in world history and also a major role in the history of the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. |  | | This book gives some historical background leading up to the Russian Revolution and then looks at the short lived period of independence for Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. |  | | Earlier, during the 1905 Revolution in Russia, the peasants in the Baltic took this as their cue to revolt against their rulers. |
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http://depts.washington.edu/baltic/papers/russianrevolution.htm
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| | The Russian Revolution |
 | | Russia was left, in the aftermath of the Revolution of 1905, with the same inept, authoritarian government that it had had before. |  | | This represented the end of the moderate phase of the revolution. |  | | The successful challenge to authority led to efforts by members of the Duma, the Russian legislature, to form a government. |
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http://www2.sunysuffolk.edu/westn/russrev.html
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| | Search Tuna Report for Russian Revolution |
 | | Russian Revolution in Dates A brief chronology of the revolution, from Bloody Sunday in 1905 to Lenin's death in 1924.... |  | | The Russian Revolution of 1917: Election Results The Russian Revolution of 1917: A Guide to Electoral Behavior in Revolutionary Russia This site accesses graphic representations of the electoral results of some constituencies in revolutionary Russia, illustrating the relative appeal to Russian voters in 1917 of Bolsheviks and other leading parties.... |  | | The Russian Revolution of 1917 was a period of political activity in Russia between the following two revolutionary events: February Revolution, which resulted in the abdication of Nicholas II of Russia.... |
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http://www.searchtuna.com/ftlive2/877.html
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| | Russian Revolution of 1905 -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | This period coincided with the social and political upheaval surrounding the Russian Revolution of 1905. |  | | The roots of the Russian Revolution of 1917 were deep. |  | | The Boston Tea Party was the first openly rebellious act of the American Revolution. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9064487
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| | Lecture 5: The Russian Revolution (1) |
 | | N.B. Lectures 5 and 6 serve as a narrative history of the Russian Revolution and are not replacements for a more in-depth treatment of such an important event. |  | | Georgy Lvov, a prince and a landowner, became the first Prime Minister of revolutionary Russia. |  | | During the 1905 revolution, he founded a socialist newspaper and served four months in the Kresty prison after a friend's revolver was found in his apartment. |
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http://www.historyguide.org/europe/lecture5.html
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| | First Russian revolution and Vladimir Lenin. February, 1917. |
 | | In January 1917, in a speech before young workers at the People's House in Zurich, Lenin spoke of the 1905 Russian revolution: "We must not be deceived by the present grave-like stillness in Europe. |  | | Leader of the October Russian Revolution (March-October 1917) |  | | On March 27 (April 9), 1917, overcoming great complications with customs, V. Lenin and a group of Russian emigres returned to Russia via Germany, Sweden and Finland. |
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http://www.stel.ru/museum/february_russian_revolution.htm
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| | David Brandenberger [Russian Revolution] |
 | | To understand 1917, it is necessary to examine the origins of the Russian revolutionary movement, 1905 and its consequences, and the catastrophic effect that the Great War had on Imperial Russian society. |  | | K. Pobedonostsev, “The Great Falsehood of Our Time,” in Reflections of a Russian Statesman, 32-58 (e) |  | | Excerpts from Tseritelli, Lenin and Kerensky at the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets (June 1917), in The Russian Provisional Government, 1917, ed. |
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http://www.richmond.edu/~dbranden/semRevRus.html
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| | Russian Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | When the year is not indicated in the reference, the term "Russian Revolution", if used as a time mark, usually refers to the October Revolution of 1917, whereas references to the revolution of 1905 always mention the year and references to the February Revolution always mention the month. |  | | The Russian Revolution of 1905 was a series of strikes and anti-government violence against Tsar Nicholas II The Russian Revolution of 1917, which included: |  | | Russian Revolution can refer to the following events in the history of Russia: |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Revolution
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| | Russian Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The term Russian Revolution can also refer to the Russian Revolution of 1905, a series of riots, strikes and anti-government violence against the Tsar, which led to concessions to popular opinion, principally the establishment of an elected Duma. |  | | The term Russian Revolution most often refers to the Russian Revolution of 1917, which included the February Revolution resulting in the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II and the subsequent Bolshevik revolt, the October Revolution, which led to the creation of Soviet Russia, the world's first Communist state, and later the Soviet Union. |  | | The Third Russian Revolution was the failed anarchist revolution against the Bolsheviks and the White Army from 1918 to 1922, in which the anarchists tried to drive both of these forces from power. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Revolution
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| | Weston Middle School |
 | | The dates comprising the Russian Revolution are 1905-1924. |  | | The Russian Orphan Opportunity Fund (ROOF) is a pioneer in providing resources to facilitate quality educational programs (teachers, methods and teaching aids) and related opportunities to raise the employment prospects for orphaned children and young adults. |  | | This story is actually about how one group of children was affected by the war within their own country. |
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http://myschoolonline.com/page/0,1871,2957-31834-2-56079,00.html
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| | The First Russian revolution 1905 - 1907 years |
 | | The armed uprising in Moscow in December 1905 became the culmination of the Russian revolution. |  | | In April 1905 the Third Congress of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party took place in London defining the strategy and tactics of the Party in the bourgeois-democratic revolution and development of it Into a socialist revolution. |  | | And the time had arrived in November 1905 he returned from emigration to St. Petersburg and started his tireless revolutionary activities. |
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http://www.stel.ru/museum/first_russian_revolution_1905.htm
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| | Japan Russia War 1904-1905 |
 | | Within two months of the treaty's signing, a revolution compelled the Russian tsar Nicholas II to issue the October Manifesto, which was the equivalent of a constitutional charter. |  | | The garrison's military leadership proved divided, however, and on Jan. 2, 1905, in a gross act of incompetence and corruption, Port Arthur's Russian commander surrendered the port to the Japanese without consulting his officers and with three months' provisions and adequate supplies of ammunition still in the fortress. |  | | Battle of Tsushima (May 27-29, 1905), naval engagement of the Russo-Japanese War, the final, crushing defeat of the Russian navy in that conflict. |
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http://www.onwar.com/aced/data/romeo/russojapanese1904.htm
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| | MSN Encarta - Communism |
 | | The defeat of Russia in the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) was followed by the widespread disorder of the Russian Revolution of 1905, which nearly toppled the government. |  | | This seizure of power became known as the October Revolution or the Bolshevik Revolution. |  | | The first organization of Russian Marxists, the League for the Emancipation of Labor, was established in 1883 by a group headed by Russian political theorist Georgy Plekhanov. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761572241_2/Communism.html
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| | Timeline Russia 1911-1944 |
 | | As governor of the Saratov province, Stolypin ruthlessly suppressed local peasant uprisings, and helped to squelch the revolutionary upheavals of 1905. |  | | The "February Revolution" (according to the Old Style calendar that Russians used) began with rioting and strikes in the Russian army garrison at Petrograd. |  | | 1911 Sep 18, Russian Premier Piotr Stolypin died four days after being shot at the Kiev opera house by socialist lawyer Dimitri Bogroff. |
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http://timelines.ws/countries/RUS_B_1911_1944.HTML
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| | Russian Revolution |
 | | Russian Revolution: The Revolution of 1905 - The Revolution of 1905 The Russian Revolution of 1905 began in St. Petersburg on Jan. 22 (Jan. 9,...... |  | | Russian Revolution: The Civil War of 1918–20 - The Civil War of 1918–20 The civil war between the Bolsheviks (Reds) and the anti-Bolsheviks...... |  | | Russian Revolution: Causes - Causes The revolution was the culmination of a long period of repression and unrest. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ce5/CE045119.html
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| | The 1905 Revolution – marking the centenary |
 | | The 1905 Revolution was no surprise to the Russian Marxists, who had long predicted the revolutionary movement of the Russian masses. |  | | The stormy events of 1905 formed the majestic prologue to the revolutionary drama of 1917, and were described famously by Lenin, as the “dress rehearsal” for the October revolution. |  | | The events of 1905 grew directly out of the Russo-Japanese war, just as the revolution of 1917 was the direct outcome of the First World War. |
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http://www.marxist.com/History/centenary_1905_revolution.htm
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| | The Russian Revolution |
 | | The Russian Revolution of 1917 played a very important role in world history and also a major role in the history of the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. |  | | When the October Revolution in 1917 finally came to pass, the Latvian Strelki (or Latvian Rifleman) were instrumental in protecting the newly formed Bolshevik government (Council of Peoples Commissars) from counterrevolutionaries. |  | | The Russians were engrossed in a revolution and then immediately afterwards a civil war. |
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http://depts.washington.edu/baltic/papers/russianrevolution.htm
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| | Russia: Revolution, Counter-Revolution |
 | | Present human behavior is also based on private property, markets and imperialism yet that did not prevent Lenin from calling for the revolution to abolish them “overnight.” The workers and peasants in the Russian revolution were already beginning to abolish subordination and managers, creating alternative non-hierarchical forms of organization. |  | | After the revolution was defeated most of the concessions the Tsar made were undone and the Duma lost most of its power. |  | | The 1917 revolution was preceded by the 1905 revolution, the “dress rehearsal” for the 1917 revolution. |
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http://question-everything.mahost.org/History/Russian_Revolution.html
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| | Russian Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The term Russian Revolution can also refer to the Russian Revolution of 1905, which was an unsuccessful series of riots and anti-government violence against the czar. |  | | The term Russian Revolution principally refers to the Russian Revolution of 1917, which included the February Revolution resulting in the abdication of Czar Nicholas II and the subsequent Bolshevik revolt, the October Revolution, that eventually saw the czar and his family shot by a communist firing squad. |  | | The Third Russian Revolution was the failed anarchist revolution against the Bolsheviks and the White Army from 1918 to 1922, in which the anarchists tried to drive both of these forces from power. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Revolution
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| | Russian Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | When the year is not indicated in the reference, the term "Russian Revolution", if used as a time mark, usually refers to the October Revolution of 1917, whereas references to the revolution of 1905 always mention the year and references to the February Revolution always mention the month. |  | | The Russian Revolution of 1905 was a series of riots and anti-government violence against Tsar Nicholas II The Russian Revolution of 1917, which included: |  | | Russian Revolution can refer to the following events in the history of Russia: |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Revolution
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| | The Communist Revolution in Russia |
 | | The 1917 revolutions were not however the first attempts to overthrow the Tsar: the 1825 revolt against Tsar Nicholas 1 and the 1905 revolution, which ended in the Bloody Sunday Massacres in St. Petersburg, were evidence of a dissatisfaction with the Russian state going back decades. |  | | Vladimir Illyich Ulynaov, who later adopted the name of Lenin, was born in 1870 and had become a convinced revolutionary by the age of 17, when his brother had been executed for his part in a plot to assassinate the Tsar. |  | | After this revolution, the super power known as the Soviet Union was to be created: it would play a major role in world politics for just over 70 years before collapsing into itself, racked not only by Communism's inherent economic contradictions, but also destroyed by ethnic and racial conflict. |
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http://www.white-history.com/hwr60.htm
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| | Russian Revolution of 1917, series of events in imperial Russia that culminated in 1917 with the establishment of the Soviet state that became known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) |
 | | and the revolution of 1905, both of which were attempts to establish a constitutional monarchy (see |  | | The second revolution, which opened with the armed insurrection of October 24 and 25, organized by the Bolshevik Party against the Provisional Government, effected a change in all economic, political, and social relationships in Russian society; it is often designated the Bolshevik, or October, Revolution. |  | | Russian Revolution of 1917, series of events in imperial Russia that culminated in 1917 with the establishment of the Soviet state that became known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) |
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http://www.emayzine.com/lectures/russianrev.html
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| | The Communist Revolution in Russia |
 | | The 1917 revolutions were not however the first attempts to overthrow the Tsar: the 1825 revolt against Tsar Nicholas 1 and the 1905 revolution, which ended in the Bloody Sunday Massacres in St. Petersburg, were evidence of a dissatisfaction with the Russian state going back decades. |  | | Then, Lenin's greatest organizer, and the man who can quite rightly be called the brains behind the Bolshevik revolution, Leon Trotsky, arrived back in Russia from America where he had been in exile since escaping from a Tsarist prison following his arrest during the abortive 1905 revolution. |  | | The Tsar then dissolved the pro-reform Duma: this body obeyed but informally reassembled and elected a provisional cabinet to run the state: by 27 February, there was virtually nothing left of the Tsar's administration and the informal Duma was the de facto government. |
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http://www.stormfront.org/whitehistory/hwr60.htm
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| | First Russian revolution and Vladimir Lenin. February, 1917. |
 | | In January 1917, in a speech before young workers at the People's House in Zurich, Lenin spoke of the 1905 Russian revolution: "We must not be deceived by the present grave-like stillness in Europe. |  | | On March 27 (April 9), 1917, overcoming great complications with customs, V. Lenin and a group of Russian emigres returned to Russia via Germany, Sweden and Finland. |  | | Lenin learned of the revolution in Russia from Swiss newspapers in the beginning of March. |
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http://www.stel.ru/museum/february_russian_revolution.htm
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| | news and letters archives column--November 97 |
 | | ["The transition to a democratically organized workers' party, proclaimed by the Bolsheviks in Novaya Zhizn in November 1905, i.e., as soon as the conditions appeared for legal activity--this transition was virtually an irrevocable break with the old circle ways that had outlived their day." (p. |  | | The November 1917 Revolution remains the highest point of proletarian revolution and is magnificently retold in The History of the Russian Revolution.(7)This book is a landmark of historical writing by one who was both a leader of a revolution and an historian of it. |  | | The real point at issue by the time of the writing of The History of the Russian Revolution in the early `30s was whether one has a theory to meet the challenge of the new stage of world capitalism--the Great Depression which brought on state-capitalism as a world phenomenon. |
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http://www.newsandletters.org/Issues/1997/Nov/11-97arch.html
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| | Russian Revolution of 1917, series of events in imperial Russia that culminated in 1917 with the establishment of the Soviet state that became known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) |
 | | and the revolution of 1905, both of which were attempts to establish a constitutional monarchy (see |  | | The second revolution, which opened with the armed insurrection of October 24 and 25, organized by the Bolshevik Party against the Provisional Government, effected a change in all economic, political, and social relationships in Russian society; it is often designated the Bolshevik, or October, Revolution. |  | | The immediate cause of the February Revolution of 1917 was the collapse of the czarist regime under the gigantic strain of World War I. The underlying cause was the backward economic condition of the country, which made it unable to sustain the war effort against powerful, industrialized Germany. |
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http://www.emayzine.com/lectures/russianrev.html
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