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WWI Steps Towards The Russian Revolution

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 7.71
  Total Words: 1927
  Total Characters: 11222
  Number of Sentences: 109


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 17.68
  Characters per Words: 5.82


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 42.87
  Fog Scale Level: 14.67
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 11.67  

WWI Steps Towards the Russian Revolution

Russia, History, WWI Steps Towards the Russian
Revolution The quotation, "‘I shall maintain the principle of
autocracy just as firmly and unflinchingly as it was preserved
by my unforgettable dead father.' (Nicholas II) In spite of the
Czar's decrees and declarations, Russia, by the beginning of
the 20th century, was overripe for revolution," is supported
by political and socioeconomic conditions late monarchial
Russia. Nicholas II was the Czar of Russia from
1896-1917, and his rule was the brute of political disarray.
An autocrat, Nicholas II had continued the divine-right
monarchy held by the Romanovs for many generations.
From the day Russia coronated Nicholas II as Emperor,
problems arose with the people. As was tradition at
coronations, the Emperor would leave presents for the
peasants outside Moscow. The people madly rushed to grab
the gifts, and they trampled thousands in the bedlam. As an
autocrat, no other monarch in Europe claimed such large
powers or stood so high above his subjects as Nicholas II.
Autocracy was traditionally impatient and short- tempered.
He wielded his power through his bureaucracy, which
contained the most knowledgeable and skilled members of
Russian high society. Like the Czar, the bureaucracy, or
chinovniki, stood above the people and were always in
danger of being poisoned by their own power. When Sergei
Witte acted as Russia's Minister of Finance from 1892 to
1903, attempted to solve Russia's "riddle of backwardness"
in its governmental system. He is considered more of a
forerunner of Stalin rather than a contemporary of Nicholas
II. In 1900, Witte wrote a memorandum to Nicholas II,
underscoring the necessity of industrialization in Russia. After
the government implemented Witte's plan, Russia had an
industrial upsurge. All of Russia, however, shared a
deep-seated resentment of the sudden jump into an
uncongenial way of lif...

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