front 1 Pogroms | back 1 Violent attacks against Jewish communities in Russia, often encouraged or allowed by the government. |
front 2 Marxism | back 2 The ideas of Karl Marx, which argue that society is divided into classes and that workers (proletariat) should overthrow the wealthy (bourgeois) to create a classless society. |
front 3 Leninism | back 3 A form of Marxism developed by Vladimir Lenin that called for a small group of dedicated revolutionaries to lead the working class in a revolution. |
front 4 Bolsheviks | back 4 A radical Marxist group led by Lenin that took control of Russia during the Russian Revolution of 1917. |
front 5 “Whites” | back 5 The groups that opposed the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War, including supporters of the czar, nobles, and foreign nations. |
front 6 Czar | back 6 The title of the Russian emperor before 1917. |
front 7 Duma | back 7 Russia’s national assembly (parliament) created after the Revolution of 1905, but it had limited power under the czar. |
front 8 Proletariat | back 8 The working class; factory workers and laborers. |
front 9 Bourgeois | back 9 The middle and upper classes who owned businesses and property. |
front 10 Treaty of Brest-Litovsk | back 10 A 1918 treaty between Russia and Germany that ended Russia’s involvement in World War I. Russia lost land as part of the agreement. |
front 11 Command Economy | back 11 An economic system where the government controls production, prices, and distribution of goods. |
front 12 War Communism | back 12 Lenin’s policy during the Russian Civil War where the government took control of industry and seized grain from peasants. |
front 13 NEP (New Economic Policy) | back 13 Lenin’s temporary policy that allowed small private businesses and farming to help rebuild the economy after the Civil War. |
front 14 Totalitarianism | back 14 A system of government where the state has complete control over all aspects of public and private life. |
front 15 Cheka | back 15 Lenin’s secret police force used to arrest and execute enemies of the Bolsheviks. |
front 16 Soviet | back 16 A council of workers, peasants, or soldiers that helped govern after the revolution. |
front 17 Collectivization | back 17 Stalin’s policy of forcing peasants to give up private farms and work on large government-owned farms. |
front 18 5-Year Plans | back 18 Stalin’s programs to rapidly industrialize the Soviet Union by setting production goals for industry and agriculture. |
front 19 Gulag | back 19 A system of forced labor camps where prisoners were sent for hard labor. |
front 20 Red Terror | back 20 A campaign of violence and executions carried out by the Bolsheviks against political opponents. |
front 21 Great Purge | back 21 Stalin’s campaign in the 1930s to eliminate anyone he saw as a threat, including party members, military leaders, and ordinary citizens. |
front 22 Dissent | back 22 Disagreement with or opposition to the government. |
front 23 Censorship | back 23 Government control of information, including limiting what people can read, hear, or say. |
front 24 Nicholas II (Romanov) | back 24 The last czar of Russia (ruled 1894–1917).
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front 25 Grigori Rasputin | back 25 A Siberian mystic who gained influence over the royal family.
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front 26 Vladimir Lenin | back 26
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front 27 Leon Trotsky | back 27 A leading Bolshevik and close partner of Lenin.
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front 28 Joseph Stalin | back 28
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