i dont ffrickin know, thats what im asking. A hole.
There is no evidence that the economic past was ever successful under the Russian socialist hegemony.
The "Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic" was the new name for Russia and its incorporated countries after the Revolution. It was not until 1923-1924 that it adopted the name "Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" (USSR) after it joined with Belorussia, Georgia and the Transcaucasus Federation.
because a revolution, led be V.I. Lenin, was starting. it was called the Bolshevic/Russian Revolution. russia withdrew from the war to take care of the problems within the country.
Although the revolution was unorganized and often targeted innocent people, it did lead to political reform. However, the Revolution of 1905 became the roots for Soviet Russia. Whether or not the revolution was successful depends on your interpretation.
After the October Revolution, Russia became the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic. In December 1922, it joined with Ukraine, Belorussia and the Transcaucasus Federation (Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan) to form the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
United Socialist Party of Russia was created in 2003.
Although the revolution was unorganized and often targeted innocent people, it did lead to political reform. However, the Revolution of 1905 became the roots for Soviet Russia. Whether or not the revolution was successful depends on your interpretation.
No, Karl Marx did not predict that Russia would be the first socialist nation. Marx believed that a socialist revolution would likely happen in advanced industrialized nations with a strong working class, such as Germany or the United Kingdom. Russia's path to socialism through the Bolshevik Revolution led by Lenin was not in line with Marx's predictions.
Right after the October Revolution, in 1918 Russia was renamed the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. In 1922 it joined with the republics of Ukraine, Belorussia and the Transcaucasus Federation (Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan) to form the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the Soviet Union. "Russia" was not simply renamed the Soviet Union.
Soviets had always been a fixture in Russia that settled neighborly disputes and other things too small for the government to bother with. They gained real power when the czar was dethroned in the March Revolution. The soviets only became socialist in the 1800s and even then, not all soviets were made up of communists and not all the ones that had socialists were entirely socialist.
The idea or theory of permanent revolution was the work of two Marxists, A.L. Parvus and A.D. Trotsky. These men placed this theory as an important one working towards a successful Marxist or Bolshevik revolution in Russia. Lenin rejected the concept and believed as late as 1918, the theory had no merit and was not relevant to the situation in the new Russia.
Russia. After the october revolution and the fall of the Czar.