Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
The Postwar and The Russian Revolution - Coggle Diagram
The Postwar and The Russian Revolution
League of Nations
Woodrow Wilson raised the creation of a Society of Nations or League of Nations. Established in 1919 with Geneva-based, integrated with 45 countries.
Its first weakness was the veto. Secondly, when in March 1920 the U.S. Congress failed to ratify the
Versailles treaty by the necessary two-thirds majority.
A New Great Power
BEFORE ITS ENTRY INTO WORLD WAR I
the United States of America was a nation of untapped military potential and growing economic might.
WAR CHANGED THE UNITED STATES
The country's military was turned into a large-scale fighting force with the intense experience of modern war.
The balance of economic power began to shift from the drained nations of Europe to America.
The balance of economic power began to shift from the drained nations of Europe to America.
IN 1917, A STRIKE IN PETROGRAD SUMMONED THE UPRISING AGAINST THE TSAR, WHO THREW HIM OUT OF POWER
RUSSIA ENTERED INTO WORLD WAR I IN AUGUST 1914 IN SUPPORT OF THE SERBS AND THEIR FRENCH AND BRITISH ALLIES.
THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTIONARIES WITH THE SLOGAN “PEACE, LAND AND BREAD”, CLAIMED IMMEDIATE PEACE, THE POWER TO SOVIETS AND THE LAND FOR THE FARMERS
UNION OF SOVIETS SOCIALISTS REPUBLIC (USSR)
SINCE 1918
“War Communism”.
IN 1922
Bolsheviks created a Federal State (URSS).
SINCE 1918
“White movement” supported by the Europeans Powers and sought to overthrow the Bolshevik government, then was defeated by the “Red army”.
STALIN
was the maximum boss of the URSS after Lenin’s death in 1924.