Germany helped the Bolsheviks come to power by
Returning their leader Vladimir Lenin and other top Bolsheviks into Russia.
Giving the Bolsheviks money to use to carry on their revolutionary activities and buy weapons to create a small army.
Not only did Germany fun the Bolsheviks propaganda, but they continued to support them when they came into power in order to push forward their own agenda. This served the German purpose since the Bolsheviks were against the war and could be used as a demoralizing weapon against the Russian Army. .
The Revolution Of 1917 overthrew the regime of the Russian monarchy. The power vacuum allowed for the Bolsheviks to take power.
The Revolution Of 1917 overthrew the regime of the Russian monarchy. The power vacuum allowed for the Bolsheviks to take power.
The Revolution Of 1917 overthrew the regime of the Russian monarchy. The power vacuum allowed for the Bolsheviks to take power.
The November Revolution did not secure their power. It put them into power.
Lenin was not a German spy in the sense that he was employed by Germany and acting solely on its instructions or reporting secrets of state back to it. Nevertheless, Germany did give money to Lenin and the Bolsheviks to help them stir up trouble and be disruptive to the Russian war effort if not touch off an outright revolution.Lenin and the Bolsheviks were accused of being German agents once word got out that he and the Bolsheviks were receiving money from Germany.
how did world war 1 help the Bolsheviks seize power in russia in 1917 Russia did not do well in World War 1. Losses were so high that Russia withdrew from the war in 1917, increasing the Russian people's dissatisfaction with Czarist rule.
The Germans knew perfectly well that Lenin was opposed to Russian involvement in WW I, and sure enough, the first thing the Bolsheviks did when they gained power was to pull Russia out of the war, which of course made things easier for their former enemy, Germany (and the Central Powers to which Germany belonged). Although Germany lost the war anyway.
Hitler promised a better economy and he said he would help all the people in Germany just as FDR said he would fix the depression.
The Germans knew perfectly well that Lenin was opposed to Russian involvement in WW I, and sure enough, the first thing the Bolsheviks did when they gained power was to pull Russia out of the war, which of course made things easier for their former enemy, Germany (and the Central Powers to which Germany belonged). Although Germany lost the war anyway.
Eggy farts
If you mean during WW1, while the Provisional Government was in control of Russia, Lenin returned to Petrograd on the 16th April with the help of theGerman government (because the Germans figured that if the Bolsheviks were in power of Russia, they'd withdraw from the war and even if they failed to seize power, the turmoil in Russia could only help Germany's war aims).