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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. It
was stablished in 1919 with Geneva-based, integrated with 45 countries. Society of
Nations was organized to guarantee the security and integrity of all states. The
League’s institutions, established in Geneva, consisted of an Assembly, in which each
member country had a veto
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. The war changed the United States in two important ways: the
country's military was turned into a large-scale fighting force with the intense experience of modern
war, a force that was clearly equal to that of the old Great Powers; and the balance of economic power
began to shift from the drained nations of Europe to America
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
After the bloodshed of 1905, Czar Nicholas II promised the formation of a series of representative
assemblies, or Dumas, to work toward reform. Russia was a huge empire of 170 million of inhabitants of
many nationalities. It was the begging of the industrialization. Russia was governed by
Tsar Nicholas II.
UNION OF SOVIETS SOCIALISTS REPUBLIC (USSR)
Since 1918, “White movement” supported by the Europeans Powers and sought to overthrow the
Bolshevik government, then was defeated by the “Red army”. Lenin imposed “War Communism”. He
nationalized industry and commerce. He requisitioned the farmer’s crops to feed the army. In 1919,
Poles were expelled from Russia, but the country was devastated.