9.2.1 The Russian Revolution - GROUP TASK -

9. The Time of World Wars
9.2: the INTERBELLUM
9.2.1 The Russian Revolution

You are allowed to use any source, but you need to write the answer in your own words...
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Slide 1: Slide
HistoryMiddelbare schoolhavo, vwoLeerjaar 3

This lesson contains 32 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 120 min

Items in this lesson

9. The Time of World Wars
9.2: the INTERBELLUM
9.2.1 The Russian Revolution

You are allowed to use any source, but you need to write the answer in your own words...

Slide 1 - Slide

Fill in the group members' names
(first + last name)

Slide 2 - Open question

1a. Around 1900, many Russian farmers were serfs
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 3 - Quiz

1b. Serf farmers owned their own farm and land
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 4 - Quiz

1c. Serf farmers were completely dependent of their landlords
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 5 - Quiz

1d. Landlords owned the land the serfs lived and worked on.
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 6 - Quiz

1e. To which class did the landlords belong?
A
working class
B
middle class
C
clergy
D
aristocracy / nobility

Slide 7 - Quiz

3a. Fill in the blanks.
The big person represents
(a)________________. The two small people represent
(b)________________ (left) and (c)______________ (right) .

Slide 8 - Open question

3b. What message did the cartoonist want to convey
by this cartoon?




Slide 9 - Open question

AGREE
DISAGREE
3c. Would the following people have probably agreed or disagreed with this message?
czar Nicolas II
Alexei
Count Sheremetyev, a powerful nobleman

Slide 10 - Drag question

4b. Read the source. Under the source, the numbers (1 - 5) correspond to the numbers in the source. Drag 4 of these numbers to the corresponding answers of the previous question.
The soldiers were poorly trained.
The czar was an incompetent military commander
The army lacked weapons
Millions of Russian soldiers were killed
The German army was superior the Russian army
The German army conquered Russian territory
General Brusilov, ‘A Soldier’s Notebook 1914-1918’. Westport, 1930.

1
2
3
4
5

Slide 11 - Drag question

4a. Which four arguments does the text (the February Revolution) bring in to support the statement that World War I did not go well for Russia? 
Drag them to the yellow block.
The soldiers were poorly trained.
The czar was an incompetent military commander
The army lacked weapons
Millions of Russian soldiers were killed
The German army was superior the Russian army
The German army conquered Russian territory

Slide 12 - Drag question

5. Which of these was NOT specifically a reason for the February demonstration in St. Petersburg?
A
food
B
end the war
C
end absolute rule tsar
D
end serfdom

Slide 13 - Quiz

7a. During the February Revolution, Lenin was in St. Petersburg
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 14 - Quiz

7b. Karl Marx was inspired by Lenin's ideas.
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 15 - Quiz

7c. Karl Marx was predicted a revolution in which the poor would rise against the rich.
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 16 - Quiz

8a. Explain the ultimate goal of communists, regarding society.


Slide 17 - Open question

8b. By what means did Marxists want to achieve a society based on equality?
A
By means of elections.
B
By means of a revolution.
C
By means of winning World War 1.
D
By means of losing World War 1.

Slide 18 - Quiz

8c. So, what is the key word in communism?
A
equality
B
liberty
C
power
D
wealth

Slide 19 - Quiz

8d. The Bolsheviks were a communist party, led by Lenin.
A
TRUE
B
FALSE

Slide 20 - Quiz

9a. Explain why the Germans supported Lenin.


Slide 21 - Open question

9b. Lenin's Bolsheviks took over the power relatively easily.
Still, Lenin decided to hold elections. Why would he do that if he already had the power?


Slide 22 - Open question

9c. What did Karl Marx mean by "dictatorship of the proletariat"?
A
Proletariat was a dictator in Marx' time
B
state power by the working class
C
rule by the bourgeoisie
D
freedom for the poor people

Slide 23 - Quiz

10a. Who were the pro-czarists?
A
people who were family members of the czarist family
B
people who longed back to a Russia in which the czar still ruled
C
soldiers of the Red Army who had always supported the czar
D
everybody who hated the absolute rule of czar Nicholas II

Slide 24 - Quiz

10b. Who were most likely to be pro-czarist?
A
aristocrats
B
serf farmers
C
factory workers
D
Russian soldiers

Slide 25 - Quiz

11a. Which is the odd one out?
A
the Red Army
B
czar Nicholas II
C
communists
D
Lenin

Slide 26 - Quiz

11b. Which is the odd one out?
A
the White Army
B
czar Nicholas II
C
Lenin
D
Britain and France

Slide 27 - Quiz

12a. Why did France and Britain NOT support Lenin and the Red army?


Slide 28 - Open question

12b. What did France and Britain hope to achieve if they helped the White Army win the Russian civil war in 1918?


Slide 29 - Open question

13. The timeline and the table below is divided in three parts. Drag the sentences underneath the right part:

Lenin arrives in Petrograd
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Founding Soviet Union
World War I is going badly for Russia (1)
World War I is going badly for Russia (2)
April theses
civil war
Tsar Nicholas is in power
Bolsheviks are in power

Slide 30 - Drag question

capitalist economy
communist economy
Divide the characteristics between the two blocks. 

government controls the economy
minimal government interfere in economy
private ownership of businesses
state-owned businesses
planned economy
 free market economy
production targets set by the state
production determined by need or demand
you work for profit
you work for the good of the nation
companies compete with each other
no competition between companies
prices of products determined by the state
prices determined by supply and demand
commercials and adverts
no commercials and adverts needed

Slide 31 - Drag question

congratulations
congratulations

Slide 32 - Slide