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Essay On Why Did Stalin Win In Russia
My paper will be about Soviet Russia, primarily during the time of when Stalin
pretty much murdered most of his whole country. There were many people
involved in this mass killing, both with the killing and the killed. A lot of them were
soldiers who starved or just normal people who weren't provided with the means
in order to survive because of this dictator. I believe that Stalin and his
successors were the reason for this.
The Soviet Union's reign lasted around 70 years, from the early 1920's
through 1991 when it fell. The soviet union was the first communistic
country in the world. This is where the government is in control of
everything, from what they produce, to what they sell. In the late 1910's
Russia/ Soviet Union, were in 2 wars. One of...show more content...
Such
tactics were employed even within the Communist party, as periodic
"purges" were carried out to rid the party of dissident members. The
denigration of rural peasants in favor of soldiers and urban dwellers was
another tendency of the Soviet regime. Millions of peasants in the Don
region starved to death from 1918 to 1920 as the army confiscated grain
for its own needs and the needs of the urbanites". Think about that last
sentence, millions died within 2 years all because of the armies needing
food. Why this is a problem is because Stalin knew he was doing this to
his people, but didnt change the way he governed. Everyone was in war at
the time, but atleast in America we didnt have our people starving to
death.
The second thing I will talk about in this paper will be during the cold war. The
cold war was between the U.S. and the Soviets, from around the 1950's through
the fall of the U.S.S.R. This quote is from boundless.com and i think it sums
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Research Paper On Joseph Stalin
The vast majority of people regard Adolf Hitler as the worst human being of all time. This title is
well deserved, as Hitler himself was responsible for starting a world war and killing over eleven
million people. However, there was a dictator much more ruthless than Hitler. He ruled with an iron
fist, and had an unquenchable thirst for power. He was responsible for almost double the amount of
fatalities than even Hitler himself. This man was Joseph Stalin. The actions of Stalin during his
early life, rise to power, and reign of terror are what molded him into one of the most despicable
human beings in the history of civilization.
Stalin was born in Gorgi, Georgia on December 18th, 1878 under the birth name of Loseb
Dzhugashvili (Joseph Stalin)....show more content...
He implemented a series of 5 year plans to help transform the nation (History.com staff). His plan
hinged on the government taking the lands of the wealthy, peasant farmers, called the kulaks. When
the kulaks protested and would not give in to Stalin's demands, Stalin had thousands of kulaks
executed and exiled (Joseph Stalin Britannica Library). The collectivization of farms led to
widespread famine during 1932. It is alleged that over 10 million people died from starvation
because of this (Joseph Stalin). Throughout his rule Stalin continued to intervene in the
industrialization of the Soviet Union. To try to keep up with his lofty industrialization plans, Stalin
proclaimed that time was limited and the Soviets needed to be able to protect themselves from
outsiders. This launched a feverish push to industrialize as quickly as possible. Although
industrialization was achieved, the strain it put on the countries resources was immense (Joseph
Stalin Britannica Library). Aside from the mass starvations going on in the Soviet Union, Stalin
also enacted a reign of terror on his own people. Stalin and his secret police, the KGB, concocted a
plan to dispose of all people who were viewed as "Anti Soviet"(Joseph Stalin). The beginning of the
Great Purge took place on July 3rd, 1937. Stalin ordered millions to be placed in work camps, and
such
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Essay about Joseph Stalin
Joseph Stalin was the leader of the Soviet Union from 1922–1953, when he died. He was responsible
for one of the most notable and devastating genocides, the Great Purge. His vicious reign took the
lives of around 20–60 million people by his rigid and cruel treatment. Through his exploitation of
the lower class and his manipulative abuse of power, Stalin created one of the worst examples of
leadership in history. It takes an interesting character to be able to execute the cruelties displayed in
his regime and the traits that Stalin developed into his cult of personality were likely acquired as a
child and adolescent.
This paper will discuss how Stalin's background helped build the qualities of a ruthless leader and
how he displayed them...show more content...
Stalin had two wives; Ekaterina Svanidze (m. 1906–1907) and Nadezhda Alliluyeva (m. 1919–1932).
He had three children with his first wife; Vasily Dzhugashvili, Svetlana Alliluyeva, and Yakov
Dzhugashvili. He adopted a fourth son, Artem Sergeev.
Stalin had an incredibly similar attitude to Vissorian as a child. He had a very cold personality
and lacked a sense of empathy, especially towards his peers. One of his classmates reported that he
had never seen him cry and that he greeted his peers with a snide chuckle instead of showing
sympathy or compassion when he saw they were suffering. He was top and center in his school
portrait. (This bared an unusual similarity to Adolf Hitler who took the same position in his school
portrait). Stalin was born into poverty and suffered a series of health complications growing up. He
suffered from small pox at a young age and his face was left permanently marked, resulting in
nicknames like 'pocky' and 'pock–marked–joe'. He was born with his second and third toe conjoined
and due to blood poisoning; his right arm was made shortened and stiff. Stalin was abused by both
his parents, his father in particular, although his mother claimed he had a wonderful childhood and
home life.
Stalin and Marxism
Stalin learned about Marxism at a young age. He even studied and wrote about it prior to the
revolution. However, once he was tasked with preserving it as a power in the USSR, he quickly
demonstrated that
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Essay Joseph Stalin
Joseph Stalin
Joseph Stalin was one of the biggest mass murderers of the twentieth century. From the purges in
the Red Army to forced relocations, Stalin had the blood of millions on his hands. This essay is not
going to debate the fact that this was indeed a brutal and power hungry individual, because he was
indeed just that. I will on the other hand show you that through his way of governing the Soviet
Union, he actually saved mother Russia from the German invasion in World War Two through his
cunning and ruthlessness.
Joseph Stalin was a very industrious person and used every means possible to better prepare his
country for the coming war that he believed was inevitable. Wether it was diplomatic plotting,
economic maneuvering, or...show more content...
E. Zinoviev and L. B. Kamenev. From this point on Stalin simply concentrated more and more power
into his own hands. In 1925 Stalin made a turn to the right, got rid of his two companions and
established a coalition with moderate leaders Burkharin, Rykov, and Tomsky, which lasted until
1928, when collectivization of agriculture and the forced industrialization came about.
Stalin now followed a simple pattern, he simply systematically replaced all those who were not
his absolute followers. By 1930 his rule was absolute. Stalin was now free to go ahead and pursue
his plans to industrialize and arm the Soviet Union. The only other obstacle in his path was the
army leadership. Stalin viewed the army as a threat to his power and took steps to remove that
threat. He organized all of his followers to delve into the lives of the military leadership and find
out if they were traitors. Many of Stalin's followers used this as a way of getting back at old rivals
and enemies. All kinds of false evidence was manufactured. Stalin took all of this at face value
and a great number of the army leadership was either killed or exiled. There were also several
show trials put on to demonstrate to the Soviet people that all of the killing was being done for a
reason and that there really were conspirators and spies among them. Several accused openly
confessed to active membership of a plot to murder the Soviet leadership. With the Army purges
done, Stalin
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Joseph Stalin Research Paper
On December eighteenth 1879 in Gori, Georgia, Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili (Joseph Stalin)
was born into a large family. Stalin had two brothers, Georgy Jughashvili, born one year before
Stalin, and Mikhail Jughashvili, born three years before Stalin. Stalin's father, Besarion Jughashvili
was a cobbler though later became an alcoholic later becoming a vagrant. Stalin's mother, Ketevan
Geladze worked as a washerwoman.
Stalin's childhood seems to be what formed him into the person he became. When Stalin was only
five, his father left him and his mother. At the age of seven Stalin contracted smallpox, leaving his
face scarred. With the scars on Stalin's face the other children often teased him. Stalin and his family
experienced poverty that was widespread throughout Russia during the nineteenth century....show
more content...
Stalin's mother being a devout Russian Orthodox Christian wanted Stalin to become a priest.
Stalin's mother enrolled him into the Gori Church School in 1888, when Stalin was only eight
years old. At the school, Stalin excelled, receiving excellent grades and joining the school's choir.
Stalin graduated six years later in July 1894 almost at the top of his class.
In 1894, Stalin received a scholarship to the Tiflis Theological Seminary. During stalin's time at the
Seminary he didn't dedicate his time to studying rather revolutionary activities. Stalin became
associated with Messame Dassy, a secret organization that supported Georgian independence from
Russia. Through the people at Messame Dassy he was introduced to the ideas of Karl Marx and
Engels (the theory and practice of communism). When the Seminary found out about Stalin's
revolutionary involvement Stalin was
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Essay on Stalin
Stalin Stalin, whose original name was Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, was born on Dec. 21,
1879, in the Caucasian town of Gori, Georgia. He was the only one of four children to survive
infancy. His father, Vissarion Dzhugashvili, an unsuccessful cobbler, entered a factory in Tiflis, took
to drink, and died in 1890 from wounds received in a brawl. However, his mother, Yekaterina, kept
the family together by taking in washing and sewing, hiring out for housework, and nursing young
Joseph through various sicknesses including smallpox and septicemia, which left his left arm slightly
crippled for life. An illiterate peasant girl herself, Yekaterina was deeply religious, puritanical,
ambitious, and intent on securing for her son...show more content...
Thus began a life of dedicated privation. He lived and wrote under a succession of pseudonyms, of
which his favorites were Koba (the name of a legendary Georgian folk hero meaning "The
Indomitable) and, after 1913, Stalin ("The Man of Steel). In 1901 his first articles appeared in the
clandestine periodical Brdzola (The Struggle), published in Baku. He was arrested for the first time
in Batum on April 18, 1902, and exiled to Siberia in 1903, only to escape and reappear in Tiflis in
1904––a pattern that he experienced many times prior to 1917. Dzhugashvili––unlike many of his
fellow conspirators, who particularly valued intellectual brilliance and mastery of the written and
spoken word––began to show a special interest in practical problems and party organization. This
predilection led him to join the handful of Georgian Socialists who backed Bolshevism, as Lenin's
conception of a highly disciplined, centralized conspiratorial Socialist party came to be called, and
he helped propagate Lenin's views in the local clandestine press. He was not yet sufficiently
prominent, however, to attend the founding meeting of the Georgian Bolshevik organization in 1904
or the third national congress of the Social Democratic party in April 1905. In June 1904 he married
Yekaterina Svanidze, a simple, devout peasant girl who was devoted to him. The marriage, evidently
a happy one, was typical of the more conventional unions that Georgian radicals, unlike their Russian
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Stalin 's Impact On The Soviet Union
Joseph Stalin was a callous dictator who governed the Soviet Union for nearly thirty years. He rose
to power as the General Secretary of the Communist Party and became the dictator of Russia after
Vladimir Lenin's death in 1924. Stalin was known for his Marxist–Leninist ideology, but his policies
soon became known as Stalinism. He rose through the ranks and became one of the most powerful
leaders and communist revolutionaries that Russia had ever seen. A few of Stalin's policies did in
fact benefit the social, political and economic prosperity of the country, but overall, his leadership
was detrimental to the Soviet Union and its people. While the Soviet Union was under Stalin's rule,
he developed a crude political system centralized on...show more content...
Ultimately, Stalin propaganda was unavoidable. "Every shop window displayed his bust... Towns
and cities, rivers and canals, schools and hospitals, mountains and lakes, were named after him...
Films, plays, poems, stories and novels celebrated every detail of his life" (Life under Stalin's
rule). Marxism and Leninism ideologies endorsed the Communist propaganda that was plastered
across all of Russia. During the time period of Stalin's rule, Russian society was full of chaos and
citizens were constantly living in fear. Education, where you live, medical care, and other basic
social goods were completely controlled by state departments. The quality of life in the Soviet
Union greatly decreased due to the fact that citizens were forced to live in overcrowded areas and
had very little to eat, often leading to starvation. Aside from the harsh living conditions, they also
had very restricted civil rights. The Soviet people had no political freedoms and were allowed very
limited economic freedom, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion. "Worship of Stalin was
encouraged but religious worship was strongly discouraged. – In Muslim areas, women were
forbidden to wear the veil and pilgrimages to Mecca were banned. Church leaders were arrested
and imprisoned. Those who escaped arrest were forbidden to organise any religious activity in
public" (Life under
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Short Essay On Joseph Stalin
Joseph Stalin was born Josef Vissarionovich Djugashvili, which he later took the name Stalin,
meaning "man of steel." Stalin was an only child and had grown up poor. This lead to him being
kicked out of school and becoming more and more interested in Russian politics. Joseph Stalin later
became an important person in the future of the Soviet Union as the future dictator. Though Stalin
did some great and possibly wonderful things during his years as dictator of the Soviet Union, he
still did many and more horrible things to out way the good that he did. Although some perceived
Joseph Stalin as a good leader of the Soviet Union during the mid–1920s to 1953 when he died, he
did more harmful acts than good acts. Joseph Stalin had been a charming person, a fatherly figure
to some and his dictatorship had not been seen as one in the eyes of many that had been under his
rule. Some of the people that Stalin had ruled liked him and did not see him as a bad person or
leader, "He (Stalin) was a great popular leader. No revelation about what he did will change my
mind" (Oleg Koprbalev). This perception of his greatness is still...show more content...
He had been appointed to serve on the first Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, which
began his rise to power. He gained his first foothold on the political ladder as secretary general of
the Central Committee of the Communist party in 1922. Through this position that he held Stalin
was able to appoint his allies to the government jobs that he saw available to begin to build his base
of political support ("Joseph Stalin" History.com). He was handed numerous unimportant jobs that
no one else at the time had wanted, but they gave Stalin the perfect insight into who he could trust
to support him and who he could not and had to get rid of during his rise to position of
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Essay on Joseph Stalin
"The man who turned the Soviet Union from a backward country into a world superpower at
unimaginable human cost (Joseph Stalin)." "Stalin was born into a dysfunctional family in a poor
village in Georgia (Joseph Stalin)." Permanently scarred from a childhood bout with smallpox and
having a mildly deformed arm, Stalin always felt unfairly treated by life, and thus developed a
strong, romanticized desire for greatness and respect, combined with a shrewd streak of calculating
cold–heartedness towards those who had maligned him. "He always felt a sense of inferiority before
educated intellectuals, and particularly distrusted them (Joseph Stalin)."
Sent by his mother to the seminary in Tiflis (now Tbilisi), the capital of Georgia, to...show more
content...
At first, these people were removed from their posts and exiled abroad. "Later, when he realized that
their sharp tongues and pens were still capable of inveighing against him even from far away, Stalin
switched tactics, culminating in a vast reign of terror and spectacular show trials. In the 1930s
during which the founding fathers of the Soviet Union were one by one unmasked as "enemies of
the people" who had supposedly always been in the employ of Capitalist intelligence services and
summarily shot (Stalin Internet Library)." The particularly pesky Leon Trotsky, who continued
to badger Stalin from Mexico City after his exile in 1929, had to be silenced once and for all with
an ice pick in 1940. "The purges, or "repressions" as they are known in Russia, extended far
beyond the Party elite, reaching down into every local Party cell and nearly all of the intellectual
professions, since anyone with a higher education was suspected of being a potential
counterrevolutionary (Stalin Internet Library)." "This depleted the Soviet Union of its brainpower,
and left Stalin as the sole force in the country. "He was an expert on virtually every human endeavor
(Stalin Internet Library)."
Driven by his own sense of inferiority, which he projected onto his country as a whole,
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Essay on Hitler vs. Stalin
Stalin vs. Hitler
If two men were to be tagged with having the most impact, good or bad, on twentieth century
Europe the names Joseph Stalin and Adolph Hitler would ring loud and clear. Adolf Hitler and
Joseph Stalin were the most recognizable and known totalitarian leaders in Europe. They both had a
great impact on the world's history. Adolf Hitler was the Fuhrer of the III Reich and a leader of the
Nazi Party. He is to blame for the break out of the II World War and for the creation of an ideology
which caused the holocaust and suffering of many nations. Stalin was a leader of the Soviet Union
until 1953.
He was the initiator of the Great Purges in 1937 and the collectivization which caused a huge amount
of victims in his own...show more content...
Stalin's scheme looked differently because it started in a state which has already been
authoritarian and had already been involved in it. He didn't have to win support of masses as
Hitler did but had to eliminate his contenders and strengthen his position inside the party. The
biggest difference in the two's method on becoming the central figure in their countries
government was Hitler's was very short, and acted more on instinct to win over the respect of his
country in a little over a year. While Stalin's was more of a very strategic chess match, so he had
to build his positions slowly and had to remove many contenders that would enable him in his
goal. Then very carefully set up his last opposition for his crucial, checkmate. Both men were very
influential people, both men were skilled users of propaganda, they could use their words to twist
and manipulate the minds of people into believing that what they were saying was the absolute
truth. Using this power, they would use people as their individual puppets and wouldn't think
twice as if it was morally right or wrong. Since their countries were still recovering from World
War I it was easier for both men to gain support of the people, with their lies of a better life and the
prosperity that was just ahead over the horizon. Restoring the power back into their countries was of
great importance to both men. After World War I, Russia had 9,150,000 casualties and Germany had
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Mussolini And Stalin Comparison Essay
There were many revolutions around the globe leading up to World War II. Though spread out
were the actions, many of the ideas that were fought for were very similar. For example, two very
similar revolutions were that of Italy and Russia. In both cases the revolution occurred between the
socialist people, believing in social organization as a whole, and the fascist dictators in power,
Stalin and Mussolini. Each side in both situations had their reasons as to why they were correct, all
in accordance with Augustine's Just War Theory. Mussolini based righteousness in his cruel acts
simply because he knew he could win. He knew that the Italian government was weak and there
would be no challenge in his takeover. Stalin gained power through his...show more content...
He and his fascist followers rebelled against the government fighting for control, with support
from both Italian and German forces. In the end Fransico won and took power. Francisco was a
brutally ruler who started "The White Terror" campaign, aiming to eradicate all Republicans.
After World War II Francisco was the only dictator to remain in power, continuing his reign for 15
years. In a different world a revolution like that of Italy and Russia was taking place. The
Egyptian people had long been ruled by pharaohs and gods, until the arrival of the British. During
their explorations Britain had chanced upon a frugal desert in eastern Africa we now know as
Egypt. They proceeded to take control of the county leaving the people inhabiting it little say. The
Egyptian people, like the citizens of Russia and Italy did not appreciate the change and fought
against it. The difference however was a major one. They did so with no violence. No guns, no fists,
nothing. To this day it is recognized as one of the world's largest peaceful movements in history.
Many revolutions happen for many different reasons, but the all share one thing in the
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Joseph Stalin Essay example
Joseph Stalin, whose real name is Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, was born on December 21,
1879 in the small town of Gori, Georgia. His family was poor and he was the only child of four to
survive. His father was a shoemaker. He was a heavy drinker and died from wounds in a brawl
when Stalin was 11 years old. His mother was a pious and hardworking woman. She wanted her
son to have a good life so she entered him into priesthood. He attended elementary school run by the
Orthodox Church and went on to the Orthodox theological seminary in Tiflis. There he joined a
secret study group that opposed the Russian tsarist government. They discussed the radical ideas of
Karl Marx and Stalin became a devout Marxist. Eventually, Stalin was expelled...show more
content...
Weakened by four long years of war the tsarist regime collapsed and a Provisional Government was
set up to maintain control. In October of 1917 the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government
and took over Moscow. Then in 1918 the Treaty of Brest–Litovsk made Russia give up large tracts of
land to lots of countries. Then a civil war erupted between Bolsheviks, Reds, and anti–Bolsheviks,
Whites. In northern Russia, British, French, and U.S troops are capturing cities, as well as in the
Russian Far East. Then Russia declares a policy of war communism with the state taking control of
the whole economy causing millions of peasants to starve to death because the army confiscates
grain for it own needs. Lenin proposes New Economic Policy which partially returns the market
economy and provides a period of stability. A union treaty joins Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and the
Transcaucasia into the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union adopts a constitution based on dictatorship of
the working class and the public ownership of land and the means of production. When Lenin dies,
Joseph Stalin takes over. Stalin takes the situation of the Soviet Union and uses it to make himself in
absolute control of the country. Joseph Stalin becomes a Totalitarian dictator by maneuvering to
establish a powerful place in the party. By 1901, Stalin was a member in the Social Democratic
Party. Then it split into two separate parties. Stalin supported the more
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Stalinist Revolution Essay
In the Soviet Union during the 1920s and 1930s a second revolution occurred within the government,
economy, and culture. This second revolution is known as the Stalinist Revolution. The Stalinist
Revolution brought with it many reforms that continued to change the state from the Tsarist Regime.
The new communist government also caused many political changes. Within the Stalinist Revolution
there were many political changes. Along with the political changes there was also another revamp
of the economic policy of the USSR. Potentially one of the largest changes to the USSR was the
Stalinist Revolution also revamped the economic policy of the USSR. The Stalinist Revolution
began in 1928 when Stalin took power in the Soviet Union. After...show more content...
The Purges allowed Stalin even further control of the party. Under the guise of unmasking enemies,
Stalin selected government and party members who would be tried as counter–revolutionaries and
sentenced to death or sent to Gulags that were set up all across Russia. This idea itself is a major
addition to the idea that Stalin started a second revolution in the USSR .
By removing anyone who stood in the way of his policies, Stalin was free to rule the way he saw
fit. In essence Stalin had created a government where anything he said, went. The Purges also
changed the face of the government. Offices that had long been held by a single man were now
occupied by new faces. This is comparable to the personnel changes that occurred during the October
Revolution.
Another component of the Stalinist Revolution was the idea of Socialism in One Country. After the
fall of all other socialist regimes in Europe, Stalin came to the conclusion that the Soviet Union must
strengthen itself internally and must push towards communism alone until other countries were
ready for the Socialist Revolution. This idea that Stalin supported so vehemently was a large
contributor to Stalin's ability to further exercise his control over the nation and influence the
economic policy of the Soviet Union, with such measures as the Five Year Plans and the removal of
the New Economic Policy .
During the Tsarist Reign the citizens underwent a conditioning that has become known as
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Joseph Stalin Essays
Joseph Stalin ruled the Soviet Union from 1922 until his death in 1954. He is widely recognized as
a dictator, an oppressor, and a ruthless ruler who took the Soviet Union from economic shambles to
a superpower, but with the high cost of human sacrifice and his paranoia of opposition. Stalin saw
himself as the natural successor of Leninism–Marxism, but in actuality he created a system of his
own which did not go according to the philosophy of Karl Marx and Engels. Stalin's early political
career began just like everyone else who gained prominence in the Bolshevik takeover of the Russian
Empire. Lenin had successfully launched his revolution in October, 1917 and became the leader of
the Russian Communist Party until his death in January...show more content...
Stalin's form of Marxism was based on a totalitarian system of power in the hands of one leader,
Stalin and the Communist Party which was run by him. The economic policies of Stalinism forced
industrialization and collectivization as the two main tools for boosting the Soviet Union onto the
world stage. Also, the population of the Soviet Union was controlled by the party and Stalin with
the use of propaganda, and Stalin's cult of personality. Any opposition would be repressed,
including deportation to gulags which were labor camps in Siberia and other republics of the
Soviet Union and most of the time, the opposition would face death by Stalin's purges and the
NKVD, the secret police organization lead by Lavrentiy Beria. An example of Stalin's economic
policies was the five year plans that were bestowed upon the large peasantry class of the Soviet
Union. Unlike Stalinism, Karl Marx and Engels explained in their works such as the Communist
Manifesto that popular revolution would be key to economic, social, and political reform. There
was no mention ever of a single person who would lead the revolution and proclaim him to be the
most powerful and rule a communist state as a dictator. Eventually,Communism would turn itself
into Socialism, and the proletariat class would rule themselves in favor of national interest for all.
Karl Marx held the notion that class struggle
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Essay on The life of Joseph Stalin
The life of Joseph Stalin
Joseph Stalin. One of the Russias most supreme leaders. But one of its most horrid as well. He
brought them up while also letting them down. Some could say where would we be without him.
But others wish they never were led by him. He went from nothing to the most powerful man in the
now most powerful country.
In the early years.
He was first born Josef Vissarionovich Djugashvili to a poor shoemaker of a father on December 21
1879. It was a small village called Gori Georgia. He was a only child, whose father was a drunk and
would beat him from time–to–time was a poor man. And a mother who did luandre just to earn more
money. As a child he contracted smallpox which left him with life–long facial...show more content...
Which was were the government would support the money flow from the small tenant farmers
would bring in from there crop. Many farmers wouldn't cooperate with Stalin which led to him
killing them and taking over their farm. The forced collectivization caused a mass famine that killed
millions. Stalin ruled with a iron fist. He soon began to build a personality around himself. There
was art work, rewritten history books to make him seem more heroic in the revolution. Oh by the
way, the government controlled the media as well.
WWII
In 1939 Stalin and Hitler signed a nonagression pact. He annex parts of Poland and Romania and
even invaded Finland. Then Germany broke that pact by invading Russia. The Soviets were not
prepared for war. So the Germans almost reached the Russian capital of Moscow. But Stalin and
the Red Army drove the Nazis out of Russia about 2 years later. But his son, died in a German war
camp before the war was over. Then in 1945 the Red Army took Berlin and dividing it half
communist, half democratic.
In his final years
After WWII his reign did not recede but to only harden. Western influence was a thing of the past in
Russia. He turned easter governments into communist states. He led them all to the nuclear age.
Then in 1950 he gave North Koreas
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Stalin 's Influence On The Soviet Union
This quote, in my opinion, does hold truth and historical context to it. Joseph Stalin indeed was a
despot; a man who held complete control of the Soviet Union after Vladimir Lenin's death in
1924. While I would have to agree that his paranoid, tyrannical, and cruel demeanor of ruling the
country played a large role in the rise of a term named for him, Stalinism, I do not think that was
the only reason of why he managed to keep such an iron grip on the USSR for a period of almost
thirty years. Another major of reason of why terror, violence, and oppression became so widespread
and prevalent in Russia was because Stalin was so gifted in using the "cult of personality." While
Stalin may have truly been as this quote described; angry, vengeful, and power–hungry, that was not
the image that many people in the Soviet Union had in their heads at the time. Stalin had totalitarian
control of mass–media, propaganda, and news outlets, he established himself to appear in a certain
way to the people, as a means to keep control of them. The State presented Stalin as the "father" or
"uncle" of the USSR, who was devoted to the working class and to the Communist Party. Kind,
benevolent and powerful, propaganda was a powerful weapon that represented him as their ideal
and perfect leader, which people began to believe wholeheartedly, even with the events that would
transpire later on in his leadership; such as the Great Terror. While Stalin's actual personality may
have been oppressive and
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Stalin's Life In Russia
Life in the USSR is not always as it seems. The country of Russia is under the rule of the communist
Stalin. There are many things he wants you to believe, and many things the public has exposed. We
plan on exposing the truth about the Soviet Union.
The communist country under the rule of Stalin has many great things or what he wants you to
think. In Russia you can get free healthcare for everyone. There are doctors and hospitals in every
city, and now in rural areas too! Another amazing thing is cities and factories are being built
everywhere. This can offer new jobs to people who need it. All of these cities will help Russia
become denominate in resources and import and exports. This helped modernize Russia. Speaking
of jobs women get the same pay as men and equal rights. Women can now get important jobs like
doctors and government officials, they can also vote now. One of the best things is everyone is
educated, more then 85% of people were educated. Education is free and...show more content...
An example of this is how the communist said they would give everyone equal rights but if you
went against them you could be killed, over 600,000 people were executed under Stalin's rule.
They also moved the minority's into cities made them learn Russian, and said Russians were the
only real working class. Another thing that was an unfinished promise was religious freedom. He
promised all religions were free, but he took money from the church, he also tried to get rid of all
religions. An example is with women rights. They said they can vote, but really they don't have that
right. There's also a wage gap between men and women, women get lower pay. I got all of this
information from anonymous sources.
As you can see now the USSR isn't so glamorous as it seems. Russia often lies about what really
happens in the country. And for many reasons they need a new leader it's a matter of time. The only
question is
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Stalin
3. Assess the impact that Stalin had on Russia and the Russian people During his rule of Russia
from 1928 until 1953, Joseph Stalin made decisions and had characteristics that left both long term
and short term impact on the country and its people. One of the biggest impacts made by Stalin on
Russia was the Industrialisation of the country; Stalin's reasons for doing this were mainly down to
the fact that Russia was still a backwards, poor, impoverished country when he came to power in
1928. Stalin wanted to change this, and make Russia into a modern, industrial and high power
nation. In order to fulfil his aims, Stalin introduced new industrial areas in places such as Kusbass
and the Fergana Valley, which were previously not industrial...show more content...
This left an impact on peasants, as it was different to the more independent lives they had
previously leaded. However, collective farms also provided peasants with hospitals and
crГЁches, which meant that workers could quickly be made healthy if injured or ill, and women
could also work as their children were being looked after. While this may have just been to enable
more workers provide more food for the cities, it also meant that what peasants would have
previously maybe struggled to have was given to them. Schools were part of collective farms, and
during this period of collectivisation many peasants were educated and literate, leaving an impact
on those peasants as they now had a proper education. However, while some of these short term
impacts benefitted peasants, for the Kulaks, slightly more wealthy and affluent famers that had
previously thrived in Lenin's government, life was made much harder due to Stalin's
"dekulakisation" policy. Stalin used the Kulaks as a scapegoat for anything and everything that
went wrong, becoming a class enemy of everyone. This meant that during Stalin's rule many
Kulaks faced the impact of being shot or deported or taken to labour camps. Children of Kulaks
would often be bullied by the children of other peasants, and often became outcasts of communities,
leaving a lasting impact on their lives. Stalin's use of terror by setting up the NKVD, a secret police
organisation, and also the
Get more content on HelpWriting.net
hitler /stalin Essay
Hitler and Stalin will probably go down in history as two of the greatest known evil leaders of the
20th Century. You might ask what could bring two men to become the menaces they were. What
kind of upbringing would cause someone to turnout the way they did?
December 21, 1879 in Georgia, Joseph Stalin is born. Around the time of Stalin's birth Georgia was
not the best place to be. They were at a miserable level of poverty, there was no industry, and they
had a 75% illiteracy rate and an increasing crime rate. Stalin was born to peasants. Both of his
parents were illiterate and were born as serfs. His father was a rough, violent drunk who beat his
wife and child, and found it hard to make a living. He...show more content...
Hitler's attitudes led to his becoming a rabid German nationalist. His ancestors too were peasants,
but not serfs. Unlike Stalin, Hitler's early years were not of hardship and poverty. He was never
poor or harshly treated. His father moved up in the ranks in the service and retired with the
highest rank open to a civil servant with his education. He had a secure income and a very high
social standing and when he passed away he left his widow and children well provided for.
Hitler came to power in 1935. His basis of hatred was director towards the Jews. One reason for
the hatred towards the Jews was because his mother was sick with cancer, and it was a Jewish
doctor that could not save her. Hitler had no real friends when he came to power, and he killed all
of the ones he did have. Stalin came to power in 1924. They called him, "The man of Many
Faces". The people that really knew him as a person were terrified of him. All of Stalin's generals
were in fear of him, but stayed faithful to him. When Hitler attacked, he moved in with precision
accuracy and moved quickly through the town of village he was destroying. Stalin on the other
hand took a four to five year period of time to strike all of the villages and towns. Even in death
Stalin was a killer. Stalin was paranoid by an assassination on him. To prevent assassination, Stalin
would never sleep in the same
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Essay about Stalin's Russia
To what extent was a totalitarian state established in the USSR in the 1930's? From the start of
Stalins self–imposed reign of control he always had the makings as a leader to create a totalitarian
government, for example his ideology. Stalin wanted 'his' people to believe that he cared for them.
It's interesting to say 'his' because it refers to the sense that Stalin himself believed he owned the
Russian people which completely contradicts a lot of what he did and the reasons for which he did
it. For example Stalin always told the people that he was doing things for 'the greater good of the
Russian people'. This contradiction could alter the disposition of things when considering the
totalitarianism in the USSR in the 1930s....show more content...
It was not only fear that Stalin used to put people on his side, Stalin also appeased a lot of what
people wanted. Women were given more rights and responsibilities in everyday life in Russia.
For example, in World War One women didn't have a lot to do with it whereas in the the Second
World War hundreds of women fought on the front line and many women achieved the highest
award possible for serving in the armed forces. This was because Stalin believed that women
were at the centre point of Russian society and therefore appeased them because he knew how
important they were. Stalin also put himself at the point of every family and made it known how
he felt about the importance of family life, it was made a rule that every family had to have a
picture of him in the house so that he could be at the centre point of everything. To create a
totalitarian state there has to be acceptance from everyone, this was not fully achieved in the
USSR, but because of Stalin's Great Terror acceptance was not needed by everyone, the fear he
inflicted left a great wound in the Russian people, through his 'reign' Stalin was responsible for over
20 million deaths. This would've meant that people feared for their lives which led to people being
submissive to the State, therefore creating a totalitarian state because of the total
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Essay On Stalin

  • 1. Essay On Why Did Stalin Win In Russia My paper will be about Soviet Russia, primarily during the time of when Stalin pretty much murdered most of his whole country. There were many people involved in this mass killing, both with the killing and the killed. A lot of them were soldiers who starved or just normal people who weren't provided with the means in order to survive because of this dictator. I believe that Stalin and his successors were the reason for this. The Soviet Union's reign lasted around 70 years, from the early 1920's through 1991 when it fell. The soviet union was the first communistic country in the world. This is where the government is in control of everything, from what they produce, to what they sell. In the late 1910's Russia/ Soviet Union, were in 2 wars. One of...show more content... Such tactics were employed even within the Communist party, as periodic "purges" were carried out to rid the party of dissident members. The denigration of rural peasants in favor of soldiers and urban dwellers was another tendency of the Soviet regime. Millions of peasants in the Don region starved to death from 1918 to 1920 as the army confiscated grain for its own needs and the needs of the urbanites". Think about that last sentence, millions died within 2 years all because of the armies needing food. Why this is a problem is because Stalin knew he was doing this to his people, but didnt change the way he governed. Everyone was in war at
  • 2. the time, but atleast in America we didnt have our people starving to death. The second thing I will talk about in this paper will be during the cold war. The cold war was between the U.S. and the Soviets, from around the 1950's through the fall of the U.S.S.R. This quote is from boundless.com and i think it sums Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 3. Research Paper On Joseph Stalin The vast majority of people regard Adolf Hitler as the worst human being of all time. This title is well deserved, as Hitler himself was responsible for starting a world war and killing over eleven million people. However, there was a dictator much more ruthless than Hitler. He ruled with an iron fist, and had an unquenchable thirst for power. He was responsible for almost double the amount of fatalities than even Hitler himself. This man was Joseph Stalin. The actions of Stalin during his early life, rise to power, and reign of terror are what molded him into one of the most despicable human beings in the history of civilization. Stalin was born in Gorgi, Georgia on December 18th, 1878 under the birth name of Loseb Dzhugashvili (Joseph Stalin)....show more content... He implemented a series of 5 year plans to help transform the nation (History.com staff). His plan hinged on the government taking the lands of the wealthy, peasant farmers, called the kulaks. When the kulaks protested and would not give in to Stalin's demands, Stalin had thousands of kulaks executed and exiled (Joseph Stalin Britannica Library). The collectivization of farms led to widespread famine during 1932. It is alleged that over 10 million people died from starvation because of this (Joseph Stalin). Throughout his rule Stalin continued to intervene in the industrialization of the Soviet Union. To try to keep up with his lofty industrialization plans, Stalin proclaimed that time was limited and the Soviets needed to be able to protect themselves from outsiders. This launched a feverish push to industrialize as quickly as possible. Although industrialization was achieved, the strain it put on the countries resources was immense (Joseph Stalin Britannica Library). Aside from the mass starvations going on in the Soviet Union, Stalin also enacted a reign of terror on his own people. Stalin and his secret police, the KGB, concocted a plan to dispose of all people who were viewed as "Anti Soviet"(Joseph Stalin). The beginning of the Great Purge took place on July 3rd, 1937. Stalin ordered millions to be placed in work camps, and such Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 4. Essay about Joseph Stalin Joseph Stalin was the leader of the Soviet Union from 1922–1953, when he died. He was responsible for one of the most notable and devastating genocides, the Great Purge. His vicious reign took the lives of around 20–60 million people by his rigid and cruel treatment. Through his exploitation of the lower class and his manipulative abuse of power, Stalin created one of the worst examples of leadership in history. It takes an interesting character to be able to execute the cruelties displayed in his regime and the traits that Stalin developed into his cult of personality were likely acquired as a child and adolescent. This paper will discuss how Stalin's background helped build the qualities of a ruthless leader and how he displayed them...show more content... Stalin had two wives; Ekaterina Svanidze (m. 1906–1907) and Nadezhda Alliluyeva (m. 1919–1932). He had three children with his first wife; Vasily Dzhugashvili, Svetlana Alliluyeva, and Yakov Dzhugashvili. He adopted a fourth son, Artem Sergeev. Stalin had an incredibly similar attitude to Vissorian as a child. He had a very cold personality and lacked a sense of empathy, especially towards his peers. One of his classmates reported that he had never seen him cry and that he greeted his peers with a snide chuckle instead of showing sympathy or compassion when he saw they were suffering. He was top and center in his school portrait. (This bared an unusual similarity to Adolf Hitler who took the same position in his school portrait). Stalin was born into poverty and suffered a series of health complications growing up. He suffered from small pox at a young age and his face was left permanently marked, resulting in nicknames like 'pocky' and 'pock–marked–joe'. He was born with his second and third toe conjoined and due to blood poisoning; his right arm was made shortened and stiff. Stalin was abused by both his parents, his father in particular, although his mother claimed he had a wonderful childhood and home life. Stalin and Marxism Stalin learned about Marxism at a young age. He even studied and wrote about it prior to the revolution. However, once he was tasked with preserving it as a power in the USSR, he quickly demonstrated that Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 5. Essay Joseph Stalin Joseph Stalin Joseph Stalin was one of the biggest mass murderers of the twentieth century. From the purges in the Red Army to forced relocations, Stalin had the blood of millions on his hands. This essay is not going to debate the fact that this was indeed a brutal and power hungry individual, because he was indeed just that. I will on the other hand show you that through his way of governing the Soviet Union, he actually saved mother Russia from the German invasion in World War Two through his cunning and ruthlessness. Joseph Stalin was a very industrious person and used every means possible to better prepare his country for the coming war that he believed was inevitable. Wether it was diplomatic plotting, economic maneuvering, or...show more content... E. Zinoviev and L. B. Kamenev. From this point on Stalin simply concentrated more and more power into his own hands. In 1925 Stalin made a turn to the right, got rid of his two companions and established a coalition with moderate leaders Burkharin, Rykov, and Tomsky, which lasted until 1928, when collectivization of agriculture and the forced industrialization came about. Stalin now followed a simple pattern, he simply systematically replaced all those who were not his absolute followers. By 1930 his rule was absolute. Stalin was now free to go ahead and pursue his plans to industrialize and arm the Soviet Union. The only other obstacle in his path was the army leadership. Stalin viewed the army as a threat to his power and took steps to remove that threat. He organized all of his followers to delve into the lives of the military leadership and find out if they were traitors. Many of Stalin's followers used this as a way of getting back at old rivals and enemies. All kinds of false evidence was manufactured. Stalin took all of this at face value and a great number of the army leadership was either killed or exiled. There were also several show trials put on to demonstrate to the Soviet people that all of the killing was being done for a reason and that there really were conspirators and spies among them. Several accused openly confessed to active membership of a plot to murder the Soviet leadership. With the Army purges done, Stalin Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 6. Joseph Stalin Research Paper On December eighteenth 1879 in Gori, Georgia, Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili (Joseph Stalin) was born into a large family. Stalin had two brothers, Georgy Jughashvili, born one year before Stalin, and Mikhail Jughashvili, born three years before Stalin. Stalin's father, Besarion Jughashvili was a cobbler though later became an alcoholic later becoming a vagrant. Stalin's mother, Ketevan Geladze worked as a washerwoman. Stalin's childhood seems to be what formed him into the person he became. When Stalin was only five, his father left him and his mother. At the age of seven Stalin contracted smallpox, leaving his face scarred. With the scars on Stalin's face the other children often teased him. Stalin and his family experienced poverty that was widespread throughout Russia during the nineteenth century....show more content... Stalin's mother being a devout Russian Orthodox Christian wanted Stalin to become a priest. Stalin's mother enrolled him into the Gori Church School in 1888, when Stalin was only eight years old. At the school, Stalin excelled, receiving excellent grades and joining the school's choir. Stalin graduated six years later in July 1894 almost at the top of his class. In 1894, Stalin received a scholarship to the Tiflis Theological Seminary. During stalin's time at the Seminary he didn't dedicate his time to studying rather revolutionary activities. Stalin became associated with Messame Dassy, a secret organization that supported Georgian independence from Russia. Through the people at Messame Dassy he was introduced to the ideas of Karl Marx and Engels (the theory and practice of communism). When the Seminary found out about Stalin's revolutionary involvement Stalin was Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 7. Essay on Stalin Stalin Stalin, whose original name was Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, was born on Dec. 21, 1879, in the Caucasian town of Gori, Georgia. He was the only one of four children to survive infancy. His father, Vissarion Dzhugashvili, an unsuccessful cobbler, entered a factory in Tiflis, took to drink, and died in 1890 from wounds received in a brawl. However, his mother, Yekaterina, kept the family together by taking in washing and sewing, hiring out for housework, and nursing young Joseph through various sicknesses including smallpox and septicemia, which left his left arm slightly crippled for life. An illiterate peasant girl herself, Yekaterina was deeply religious, puritanical, ambitious, and intent on securing for her son...show more content... Thus began a life of dedicated privation. He lived and wrote under a succession of pseudonyms, of which his favorites were Koba (the name of a legendary Georgian folk hero meaning "The Indomitable) and, after 1913, Stalin ("The Man of Steel). In 1901 his first articles appeared in the clandestine periodical Brdzola (The Struggle), published in Baku. He was arrested for the first time in Batum on April 18, 1902, and exiled to Siberia in 1903, only to escape and reappear in Tiflis in 1904––a pattern that he experienced many times prior to 1917. Dzhugashvili––unlike many of his fellow conspirators, who particularly valued intellectual brilliance and mastery of the written and spoken word––began to show a special interest in practical problems and party organization. This predilection led him to join the handful of Georgian Socialists who backed Bolshevism, as Lenin's conception of a highly disciplined, centralized conspiratorial Socialist party came to be called, and he helped propagate Lenin's views in the local clandestine press. He was not yet sufficiently prominent, however, to attend the founding meeting of the Georgian Bolshevik organization in 1904 or the third national congress of the Social Democratic party in April 1905. In June 1904 he married Yekaterina Svanidze, a simple, devout peasant girl who was devoted to him. The marriage, evidently a happy one, was typical of the more conventional unions that Georgian radicals, unlike their Russian Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 8. Stalin 's Impact On The Soviet Union Joseph Stalin was a callous dictator who governed the Soviet Union for nearly thirty years. He rose to power as the General Secretary of the Communist Party and became the dictator of Russia after Vladimir Lenin's death in 1924. Stalin was known for his Marxist–Leninist ideology, but his policies soon became known as Stalinism. He rose through the ranks and became one of the most powerful leaders and communist revolutionaries that Russia had ever seen. A few of Stalin's policies did in fact benefit the social, political and economic prosperity of the country, but overall, his leadership was detrimental to the Soviet Union and its people. While the Soviet Union was under Stalin's rule, he developed a crude political system centralized on...show more content... Ultimately, Stalin propaganda was unavoidable. "Every shop window displayed his bust... Towns and cities, rivers and canals, schools and hospitals, mountains and lakes, were named after him... Films, plays, poems, stories and novels celebrated every detail of his life" (Life under Stalin's rule). Marxism and Leninism ideologies endorsed the Communist propaganda that was plastered across all of Russia. During the time period of Stalin's rule, Russian society was full of chaos and citizens were constantly living in fear. Education, where you live, medical care, and other basic social goods were completely controlled by state departments. The quality of life in the Soviet Union greatly decreased due to the fact that citizens were forced to live in overcrowded areas and had very little to eat, often leading to starvation. Aside from the harsh living conditions, they also had very restricted civil rights. The Soviet people had no political freedoms and were allowed very limited economic freedom, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion. "Worship of Stalin was encouraged but religious worship was strongly discouraged. – In Muslim areas, women were forbidden to wear the veil and pilgrimages to Mecca were banned. Church leaders were arrested and imprisoned. Those who escaped arrest were forbidden to organise any religious activity in public" (Life under Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 9. Short Essay On Joseph Stalin Joseph Stalin was born Josef Vissarionovich Djugashvili, which he later took the name Stalin, meaning "man of steel." Stalin was an only child and had grown up poor. This lead to him being kicked out of school and becoming more and more interested in Russian politics. Joseph Stalin later became an important person in the future of the Soviet Union as the future dictator. Though Stalin did some great and possibly wonderful things during his years as dictator of the Soviet Union, he still did many and more horrible things to out way the good that he did. Although some perceived Joseph Stalin as a good leader of the Soviet Union during the mid–1920s to 1953 when he died, he did more harmful acts than good acts. Joseph Stalin had been a charming person, a fatherly figure to some and his dictatorship had not been seen as one in the eyes of many that had been under his rule. Some of the people that Stalin had ruled liked him and did not see him as a bad person or leader, "He (Stalin) was a great popular leader. No revelation about what he did will change my mind" (Oleg Koprbalev). This perception of his greatness is still...show more content... He had been appointed to serve on the first Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party, which began his rise to power. He gained his first foothold on the political ladder as secretary general of the Central Committee of the Communist party in 1922. Through this position that he held Stalin was able to appoint his allies to the government jobs that he saw available to begin to build his base of political support ("Joseph Stalin" History.com). He was handed numerous unimportant jobs that no one else at the time had wanted, but they gave Stalin the perfect insight into who he could trust to support him and who he could not and had to get rid of during his rise to position of Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 10. Essay on Joseph Stalin "The man who turned the Soviet Union from a backward country into a world superpower at unimaginable human cost (Joseph Stalin)." "Stalin was born into a dysfunctional family in a poor village in Georgia (Joseph Stalin)." Permanently scarred from a childhood bout with smallpox and having a mildly deformed arm, Stalin always felt unfairly treated by life, and thus developed a strong, romanticized desire for greatness and respect, combined with a shrewd streak of calculating cold–heartedness towards those who had maligned him. "He always felt a sense of inferiority before educated intellectuals, and particularly distrusted them (Joseph Stalin)." Sent by his mother to the seminary in Tiflis (now Tbilisi), the capital of Georgia, to...show more content... At first, these people were removed from their posts and exiled abroad. "Later, when he realized that their sharp tongues and pens were still capable of inveighing against him even from far away, Stalin switched tactics, culminating in a vast reign of terror and spectacular show trials. In the 1930s during which the founding fathers of the Soviet Union were one by one unmasked as "enemies of the people" who had supposedly always been in the employ of Capitalist intelligence services and summarily shot (Stalin Internet Library)." The particularly pesky Leon Trotsky, who continued to badger Stalin from Mexico City after his exile in 1929, had to be silenced once and for all with an ice pick in 1940. "The purges, or "repressions" as they are known in Russia, extended far beyond the Party elite, reaching down into every local Party cell and nearly all of the intellectual professions, since anyone with a higher education was suspected of being a potential counterrevolutionary (Stalin Internet Library)." "This depleted the Soviet Union of its brainpower, and left Stalin as the sole force in the country. "He was an expert on virtually every human endeavor (Stalin Internet Library)." Driven by his own sense of inferiority, which he projected onto his country as a whole, Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 11. Essay on Hitler vs. Stalin Stalin vs. Hitler If two men were to be tagged with having the most impact, good or bad, on twentieth century Europe the names Joseph Stalin and Adolph Hitler would ring loud and clear. Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin were the most recognizable and known totalitarian leaders in Europe. They both had a great impact on the world's history. Adolf Hitler was the Fuhrer of the III Reich and a leader of the Nazi Party. He is to blame for the break out of the II World War and for the creation of an ideology which caused the holocaust and suffering of many nations. Stalin was a leader of the Soviet Union until 1953. He was the initiator of the Great Purges in 1937 and the collectivization which caused a huge amount of victims in his own...show more content... Stalin's scheme looked differently because it started in a state which has already been authoritarian and had already been involved in it. He didn't have to win support of masses as Hitler did but had to eliminate his contenders and strengthen his position inside the party. The biggest difference in the two's method on becoming the central figure in their countries government was Hitler's was very short, and acted more on instinct to win over the respect of his country in a little over a year. While Stalin's was more of a very strategic chess match, so he had to build his positions slowly and had to remove many contenders that would enable him in his goal. Then very carefully set up his last opposition for his crucial, checkmate. Both men were very influential people, both men were skilled users of propaganda, they could use their words to twist and manipulate the minds of people into believing that what they were saying was the absolute truth. Using this power, they would use people as their individual puppets and wouldn't think twice as if it was morally right or wrong. Since their countries were still recovering from World War I it was easier for both men to gain support of the people, with their lies of a better life and the prosperity that was just ahead over the horizon. Restoring the power back into their countries was of great importance to both men. After World War I, Russia had 9,150,000 casualties and Germany had Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 12. Mussolini And Stalin Comparison Essay There were many revolutions around the globe leading up to World War II. Though spread out were the actions, many of the ideas that were fought for were very similar. For example, two very similar revolutions were that of Italy and Russia. In both cases the revolution occurred between the socialist people, believing in social organization as a whole, and the fascist dictators in power, Stalin and Mussolini. Each side in both situations had their reasons as to why they were correct, all in accordance with Augustine's Just War Theory. Mussolini based righteousness in his cruel acts simply because he knew he could win. He knew that the Italian government was weak and there would be no challenge in his takeover. Stalin gained power through his...show more content... He and his fascist followers rebelled against the government fighting for control, with support from both Italian and German forces. In the end Fransico won and took power. Francisco was a brutally ruler who started "The White Terror" campaign, aiming to eradicate all Republicans. After World War II Francisco was the only dictator to remain in power, continuing his reign for 15 years. In a different world a revolution like that of Italy and Russia was taking place. The Egyptian people had long been ruled by pharaohs and gods, until the arrival of the British. During their explorations Britain had chanced upon a frugal desert in eastern Africa we now know as Egypt. They proceeded to take control of the county leaving the people inhabiting it little say. The Egyptian people, like the citizens of Russia and Italy did not appreciate the change and fought against it. The difference however was a major one. They did so with no violence. No guns, no fists, nothing. To this day it is recognized as one of the world's largest peaceful movements in history. Many revolutions happen for many different reasons, but the all share one thing in the Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 13. Joseph Stalin Essay example Joseph Stalin, whose real name is Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, was born on December 21, 1879 in the small town of Gori, Georgia. His family was poor and he was the only child of four to survive. His father was a shoemaker. He was a heavy drinker and died from wounds in a brawl when Stalin was 11 years old. His mother was a pious and hardworking woman. She wanted her son to have a good life so she entered him into priesthood. He attended elementary school run by the Orthodox Church and went on to the Orthodox theological seminary in Tiflis. There he joined a secret study group that opposed the Russian tsarist government. They discussed the radical ideas of Karl Marx and Stalin became a devout Marxist. Eventually, Stalin was expelled...show more content... Weakened by four long years of war the tsarist regime collapsed and a Provisional Government was set up to maintain control. In October of 1917 the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government and took over Moscow. Then in 1918 the Treaty of Brest–Litovsk made Russia give up large tracts of land to lots of countries. Then a civil war erupted between Bolsheviks, Reds, and anti–Bolsheviks, Whites. In northern Russia, British, French, and U.S troops are capturing cities, as well as in the Russian Far East. Then Russia declares a policy of war communism with the state taking control of the whole economy causing millions of peasants to starve to death because the army confiscates grain for it own needs. Lenin proposes New Economic Policy which partially returns the market economy and provides a period of stability. A union treaty joins Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and the Transcaucasia into the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union adopts a constitution based on dictatorship of the working class and the public ownership of land and the means of production. When Lenin dies, Joseph Stalin takes over. Stalin takes the situation of the Soviet Union and uses it to make himself in absolute control of the country. Joseph Stalin becomes a Totalitarian dictator by maneuvering to establish a powerful place in the party. By 1901, Stalin was a member in the Social Democratic Party. Then it split into two separate parties. Stalin supported the more Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 14. Stalinist Revolution Essay In the Soviet Union during the 1920s and 1930s a second revolution occurred within the government, economy, and culture. This second revolution is known as the Stalinist Revolution. The Stalinist Revolution brought with it many reforms that continued to change the state from the Tsarist Regime. The new communist government also caused many political changes. Within the Stalinist Revolution there were many political changes. Along with the political changes there was also another revamp of the economic policy of the USSR. Potentially one of the largest changes to the USSR was the Stalinist Revolution also revamped the economic policy of the USSR. The Stalinist Revolution began in 1928 when Stalin took power in the Soviet Union. After...show more content... The Purges allowed Stalin even further control of the party. Under the guise of unmasking enemies, Stalin selected government and party members who would be tried as counter–revolutionaries and sentenced to death or sent to Gulags that were set up all across Russia. This idea itself is a major addition to the idea that Stalin started a second revolution in the USSR . By removing anyone who stood in the way of his policies, Stalin was free to rule the way he saw fit. In essence Stalin had created a government where anything he said, went. The Purges also changed the face of the government. Offices that had long been held by a single man were now occupied by new faces. This is comparable to the personnel changes that occurred during the October Revolution. Another component of the Stalinist Revolution was the idea of Socialism in One Country. After the fall of all other socialist regimes in Europe, Stalin came to the conclusion that the Soviet Union must strengthen itself internally and must push towards communism alone until other countries were ready for the Socialist Revolution. This idea that Stalin supported so vehemently was a large contributor to Stalin's ability to further exercise his control over the nation and influence the economic policy of the Soviet Union, with such measures as the Five Year Plans and the removal of the New Economic Policy . During the Tsarist Reign the citizens underwent a conditioning that has become known as Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 15. Joseph Stalin Essays Joseph Stalin ruled the Soviet Union from 1922 until his death in 1954. He is widely recognized as a dictator, an oppressor, and a ruthless ruler who took the Soviet Union from economic shambles to a superpower, but with the high cost of human sacrifice and his paranoia of opposition. Stalin saw himself as the natural successor of Leninism–Marxism, but in actuality he created a system of his own which did not go according to the philosophy of Karl Marx and Engels. Stalin's early political career began just like everyone else who gained prominence in the Bolshevik takeover of the Russian Empire. Lenin had successfully launched his revolution in October, 1917 and became the leader of the Russian Communist Party until his death in January...show more content... Stalin's form of Marxism was based on a totalitarian system of power in the hands of one leader, Stalin and the Communist Party which was run by him. The economic policies of Stalinism forced industrialization and collectivization as the two main tools for boosting the Soviet Union onto the world stage. Also, the population of the Soviet Union was controlled by the party and Stalin with the use of propaganda, and Stalin's cult of personality. Any opposition would be repressed, including deportation to gulags which were labor camps in Siberia and other republics of the Soviet Union and most of the time, the opposition would face death by Stalin's purges and the NKVD, the secret police organization lead by Lavrentiy Beria. An example of Stalin's economic policies was the five year plans that were bestowed upon the large peasantry class of the Soviet Union. Unlike Stalinism, Karl Marx and Engels explained in their works such as the Communist Manifesto that popular revolution would be key to economic, social, and political reform. There was no mention ever of a single person who would lead the revolution and proclaim him to be the most powerful and rule a communist state as a dictator. Eventually,Communism would turn itself into Socialism, and the proletariat class would rule themselves in favor of national interest for all. Karl Marx held the notion that class struggle Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 16. Essay on The life of Joseph Stalin The life of Joseph Stalin Joseph Stalin. One of the Russias most supreme leaders. But one of its most horrid as well. He brought them up while also letting them down. Some could say where would we be without him. But others wish they never were led by him. He went from nothing to the most powerful man in the now most powerful country. In the early years. He was first born Josef Vissarionovich Djugashvili to a poor shoemaker of a father on December 21 1879. It was a small village called Gori Georgia. He was a only child, whose father was a drunk and would beat him from time–to–time was a poor man. And a mother who did luandre just to earn more money. As a child he contracted smallpox which left him with life–long facial...show more content... Which was were the government would support the money flow from the small tenant farmers would bring in from there crop. Many farmers wouldn't cooperate with Stalin which led to him killing them and taking over their farm. The forced collectivization caused a mass famine that killed millions. Stalin ruled with a iron fist. He soon began to build a personality around himself. There was art work, rewritten history books to make him seem more heroic in the revolution. Oh by the way, the government controlled the media as well. WWII In 1939 Stalin and Hitler signed a nonagression pact. He annex parts of Poland and Romania and even invaded Finland. Then Germany broke that pact by invading Russia. The Soviets were not prepared for war. So the Germans almost reached the Russian capital of Moscow. But Stalin and the Red Army drove the Nazis out of Russia about 2 years later. But his son, died in a German war camp before the war was over. Then in 1945 the Red Army took Berlin and dividing it half communist, half democratic. In his final years After WWII his reign did not recede but to only harden. Western influence was a thing of the past in Russia. He turned easter governments into communist states. He led them all to the nuclear age. Then in 1950 he gave North Koreas Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 17. Stalin 's Influence On The Soviet Union This quote, in my opinion, does hold truth and historical context to it. Joseph Stalin indeed was a despot; a man who held complete control of the Soviet Union after Vladimir Lenin's death in 1924. While I would have to agree that his paranoid, tyrannical, and cruel demeanor of ruling the country played a large role in the rise of a term named for him, Stalinism, I do not think that was the only reason of why he managed to keep such an iron grip on the USSR for a period of almost thirty years. Another major of reason of why terror, violence, and oppression became so widespread and prevalent in Russia was because Stalin was so gifted in using the "cult of personality." While Stalin may have truly been as this quote described; angry, vengeful, and power–hungry, that was not the image that many people in the Soviet Union had in their heads at the time. Stalin had totalitarian control of mass–media, propaganda, and news outlets, he established himself to appear in a certain way to the people, as a means to keep control of them. The State presented Stalin as the "father" or "uncle" of the USSR, who was devoted to the working class and to the Communist Party. Kind, benevolent and powerful, propaganda was a powerful weapon that represented him as their ideal and perfect leader, which people began to believe wholeheartedly, even with the events that would transpire later on in his leadership; such as the Great Terror. While Stalin's actual personality may have been oppressive and Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 18. Stalin's Life In Russia Life in the USSR is not always as it seems. The country of Russia is under the rule of the communist Stalin. There are many things he wants you to believe, and many things the public has exposed. We plan on exposing the truth about the Soviet Union. The communist country under the rule of Stalin has many great things or what he wants you to think. In Russia you can get free healthcare for everyone. There are doctors and hospitals in every city, and now in rural areas too! Another amazing thing is cities and factories are being built everywhere. This can offer new jobs to people who need it. All of these cities will help Russia become denominate in resources and import and exports. This helped modernize Russia. Speaking of jobs women get the same pay as men and equal rights. Women can now get important jobs like doctors and government officials, they can also vote now. One of the best things is everyone is educated, more then 85% of people were educated. Education is free and...show more content... An example of this is how the communist said they would give everyone equal rights but if you went against them you could be killed, over 600,000 people were executed under Stalin's rule. They also moved the minority's into cities made them learn Russian, and said Russians were the only real working class. Another thing that was an unfinished promise was religious freedom. He promised all religions were free, but he took money from the church, he also tried to get rid of all religions. An example is with women rights. They said they can vote, but really they don't have that right. There's also a wage gap between men and women, women get lower pay. I got all of this information from anonymous sources. As you can see now the USSR isn't so glamorous as it seems. Russia often lies about what really happens in the country. And for many reasons they need a new leader it's a matter of time. The only question is Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 19. Stalin 3. Assess the impact that Stalin had on Russia and the Russian people During his rule of Russia from 1928 until 1953, Joseph Stalin made decisions and had characteristics that left both long term and short term impact on the country and its people. One of the biggest impacts made by Stalin on Russia was the Industrialisation of the country; Stalin's reasons for doing this were mainly down to the fact that Russia was still a backwards, poor, impoverished country when he came to power in 1928. Stalin wanted to change this, and make Russia into a modern, industrial and high power nation. In order to fulfil his aims, Stalin introduced new industrial areas in places such as Kusbass and the Fergana Valley, which were previously not industrial...show more content... This left an impact on peasants, as it was different to the more independent lives they had previously leaded. However, collective farms also provided peasants with hospitals and crГЁches, which meant that workers could quickly be made healthy if injured or ill, and women could also work as their children were being looked after. While this may have just been to enable more workers provide more food for the cities, it also meant that what peasants would have previously maybe struggled to have was given to them. Schools were part of collective farms, and during this period of collectivisation many peasants were educated and literate, leaving an impact on those peasants as they now had a proper education. However, while some of these short term impacts benefitted peasants, for the Kulaks, slightly more wealthy and affluent famers that had previously thrived in Lenin's government, life was made much harder due to Stalin's "dekulakisation" policy. Stalin used the Kulaks as a scapegoat for anything and everything that went wrong, becoming a class enemy of everyone. This meant that during Stalin's rule many Kulaks faced the impact of being shot or deported or taken to labour camps. Children of Kulaks would often be bullied by the children of other peasants, and often became outcasts of communities, leaving a lasting impact on their lives. Stalin's use of terror by setting up the NKVD, a secret police organisation, and also the Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 20. hitler /stalin Essay Hitler and Stalin will probably go down in history as two of the greatest known evil leaders of the 20th Century. You might ask what could bring two men to become the menaces they were. What kind of upbringing would cause someone to turnout the way they did? December 21, 1879 in Georgia, Joseph Stalin is born. Around the time of Stalin's birth Georgia was not the best place to be. They were at a miserable level of poverty, there was no industry, and they had a 75% illiteracy rate and an increasing crime rate. Stalin was born to peasants. Both of his parents were illiterate and were born as serfs. His father was a rough, violent drunk who beat his wife and child, and found it hard to make a living. He...show more content... Hitler's attitudes led to his becoming a rabid German nationalist. His ancestors too were peasants, but not serfs. Unlike Stalin, Hitler's early years were not of hardship and poverty. He was never poor or harshly treated. His father moved up in the ranks in the service and retired with the highest rank open to a civil servant with his education. He had a secure income and a very high social standing and when he passed away he left his widow and children well provided for. Hitler came to power in 1935. His basis of hatred was director towards the Jews. One reason for the hatred towards the Jews was because his mother was sick with cancer, and it was a Jewish doctor that could not save her. Hitler had no real friends when he came to power, and he killed all of the ones he did have. Stalin came to power in 1924. They called him, "The man of Many Faces". The people that really knew him as a person were terrified of him. All of Stalin's generals were in fear of him, but stayed faithful to him. When Hitler attacked, he moved in with precision accuracy and moved quickly through the town of village he was destroying. Stalin on the other hand took a four to five year period of time to strike all of the villages and towns. Even in death Stalin was a killer. Stalin was paranoid by an assassination on him. To prevent assassination, Stalin would never sleep in the same Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 21. Essay about Stalin's Russia To what extent was a totalitarian state established in the USSR in the 1930's? From the start of Stalins self–imposed reign of control he always had the makings as a leader to create a totalitarian government, for example his ideology. Stalin wanted 'his' people to believe that he cared for them. It's interesting to say 'his' because it refers to the sense that Stalin himself believed he owned the Russian people which completely contradicts a lot of what he did and the reasons for which he did it. For example Stalin always told the people that he was doing things for 'the greater good of the Russian people'. This contradiction could alter the disposition of things when considering the totalitarianism in the USSR in the 1930s....show more content... It was not only fear that Stalin used to put people on his side, Stalin also appeased a lot of what people wanted. Women were given more rights and responsibilities in everyday life in Russia. For example, in World War One women didn't have a lot to do with it whereas in the the Second World War hundreds of women fought on the front line and many women achieved the highest award possible for serving in the armed forces. This was because Stalin believed that women were at the centre point of Russian society and therefore appeased them because he knew how important they were. Stalin also put himself at the point of every family and made it known how he felt about the importance of family life, it was made a rule that every family had to have a picture of him in the house so that he could be at the centre point of everything. To create a totalitarian state there has to be acceptance from everyone, this was not fully achieved in the USSR, but because of Stalin's Great Terror acceptance was not needed by everyone, the fear he inflicted left a great wound in the Russian people, through his 'reign' Stalin was responsible for over 20 million deaths. This would've meant that people feared for their lives which led to people being submissive to the State, therefore creating a totalitarian state because of the total Get more content on HelpWriting.net