Title: Russia
1Russia Eastern Europe
2Map 30.1Eastern Europe the Soviet Union, 1919
1939 (page 733)
- 1. 1914
- a. What 3 empires dominated Eastern Europe in
1914? - b. By 1919, what empire had collapsed?
- 2. 1919 (see map on 736 too)
- a. What new states arose in 1919?
- b. How might these new states affect
international politics? - c. How did WWI affect the geography of Russia?
3Map 30.2Soviet Union Eastern European
Boundaries by 1948 (page 736)
- 1. 1945
- a. What lands did the Soviet Union annex?
- b. What happened to the borders of Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Romania? - c. What happened to Germany?
- 2. Post-1945
- a. What Eastern European countries belonged to
the Warsaw Pact? - b. What was Yugoslavias Albanias relationship
to the Soviet Union? - c. Why was Finland not annexes to the Soviet
Union or included in the Warsaw Pact?
4Map 30.3The Breakup of the Soviet Union (page
748)
- 1. Europe
- a. What new states arose following the breakup of
the Soviet Union? - b. How did the breakup affect Russian access to
water? - 2. Central Asia the Caucasus
- a. What new states arose?
- b. If the ending-istan means land in Arabic,
what conclusions might you reach regarding the
Central Asian states? - c. Why might Russias relationship with these
states be troubling?
5Russian Revolution - 1917
Bolsheviks take over - peace with Germany
Lenin Congress of Soviets
internal dissatisfaction
Trotsky Red Army
New Economic Policy
Stalin socialism in one country
USSR 1923 - strong central state
6Soviet society workers women gain education
literacy spread
Centralized Economic Policies - collectivization
industrial - heavy industry -
centralized resources production quotas
industrialization much like in west
totalitarian rule
WWII agreement w/ Hitler over Poland - Germany
invade Russia 1941
7superpower heavy industry weapons
development - nuclear power - worldwide
influence
Eastern Europe
extension of Soviet sphere
agricultural depression German control
end WWII - Soviet offensive Soviet control
internal protests - East Germany, Hungary,
Czechoslovakia
70s a little lessening of control - Poland
8USSR isolated - Cold War fear led to
acceptance of state authority
Culture - secular - art literature within
party line
traditional classical music ballet
jazz rock in 80s
freedom of expression depended on current
leadership
science emphasis
Economy - state control - heavy industry
over consumer goods
9similarity to West
- leisure habits - better organization
incentives to work better
division between workers managers
- urbanization - birthrate declines - working
women
De-Stalinization
Khrushchev attacks Stalinism
after Khrushchev patterns remain constant
stagnant
competition w/ West switches to space arms race
10rift with China
invasion of Afghanistan
mid 80s economic crisis brings political
change - industrial production slows - 1/3 of
national income to military
- high alcoholism - infant mortality
Gorbachev reforms - slow arms race - end war
in Afghanistan - glasnost freedom to
criticize - economic changes
still have limits on political freedoms
minority nationalities want independence
11Dismantling Empire
Eastern Europe take advantage of reforms
most install non-communist governments
Yugoslavia falls apart ethnic clashes
1991 end of Soviet Union - Baltic republics
declare independence
change not all good
communist party dissolved