1/77
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No study sessions yet.
When Charles surrendered (end of first civil war)
May 1646
Who Charles surrendered to
The Scots
When the Newcastle Propositions were
1646
What Parliament demanded in the Newcastle Propositions
Control of the army for 20 years and a Presbyterian Church settlement
When the Heads of the Proposals were
1647
Why the settlements failed
Charles believed divisions would work in his favour and he refused to compromise on religion and royal authority. Parliament and the Army could not agree.
New Model Army grievances
Unpaid wages from the war, threat of disbandment which increased stress over backpay and fear Parliament would settle with the King against army interests.
Popular sovereignty
The belief that political authority should come from the people rather than a King.
Legal equality
The idea that all men should be equal before the law, regardless of status.
When the Putney Debates happened
1647
What the Putney Debates were
Discussions within the New Model Army between radical Levellers and senior officers over political rights and the future of government.
When the Second Civil War began
1648
Charles’ secret agreement with the Scots to invade
The Engagement
The people who defeated the Scottish invasion
Thomas Fairfax and Oliver Cromwell
Results of the Second Civil War
Radicalised the army and shifted opinion from settlement to punishment .
When Pride’s Purge occurred
December 1648
The result of Pride’s Purge
Thomas Pride, backed by the Army, excluded MPs who favoured negotiation which left a small, compliant Parliament: the Rump Parliament. This meant Parliament was not free and that army dominated over politics.
Charles’ execution date
30th January 1649
What Charles was charged with
Treason against the people of England
Cavaliers
Royalists, supporters of the King
Roundheads
Parliamentarians, supporters of Parliament
Levellers
A radical political group who advocated for popular sovereignty and legal equality.
When the Battle of Preston occurred
1648
What the Engagement promised
Presbyterianism in exchange for military support
Presbyterianism
A form of Protestant Christianity that wanted the Church run by elders instead of bishops and supported one national church for everyone.
Alexander II’s rule
1855 - 1881
Alexander III’s rule
1881 - 1894
Nicholas II’s rule
1894 - 1917
The Provisional Government’s rule
February 1917 - October 1917
Lenin’s rule
1917 - 1924
Stalin’s rule
1924 - 1953
Khrushchev’s rule
1953 - 1964
Year of the Emancipation of the Serfs
1861
Year of the introduction of the Zemstva
1864
Zemstva
Local councils created to improve local government, but they were subordinate to central authority.
Year of the Judicial reforms
1864
Judicial reforms
Introduced independent courts, trial by jury and more equality before law (excluding peasants).
Year of the Manifesto of Unshakeable Autocracy
1881
Manifesto of Unshakeable Autocracy
A declaration rejecting constitutional government and reaffirming Tsarist authority.
Year of the Zemstva Act
1890
How the Zemstva Act effected local government
Reduced Zemstva independence and increased central control to be more autocratic.
Year of the Fundamental Laws
1906
Duma
An elected Russian parliament, created in 1905 after the October Manifesto, intended to advise on laws and government.
Year of the October Manifesto
1905
Dual Power
Shared authority between the Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet.
Declaration of rights
Political reforms promised by the Provisional Government in March 1917. They included civil liberties and legal equality.
Sovnarkom
The Bolshevik government created after October 1917.
1918 Constitution
Established the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.
The year the USSR was formed
1922
WWII dates
1941 - 1945
WWI dates
1914 - 1918
The power holders during Lenin’s rule
The Communist Party
The reason for the USSR’s formation
To formalise a centralised socialist state.
Stalin’s style of government
Totalitarian
Year of the Sovnarkhoz reforms
1957
The Sovnarkhoz reforms
Attempts to decentralise economic administration to regional councils.
The Emancipation of the Serfs
Freed 23 million peasants legally but left them with insufficient land and reparation payments.
The Mir
A commune which restricted peasant mobility and economic independence.
The Peasant Land Bank
A scheme which aimed to allow peasants to buy land.
Year of the Peasant Land Bank
1883
Industrial working conditions under Alexander III
Long hours, low wages and poor housing.
Peasant problems under Nicholas II
Vulnerability to famine, such as the 1891 famine.
Industrial growth under Nicholas II
Increased urbanisation and growth of the working class.
The economic situation that the Provisional Government inherited
Wartime inflation and food shortages
War Communism
State control of industry and grain requisitioning.
War Communism dates
1918 - 1921
The year the NEP was introduced
1921
The New Economic Policy (NEP)
Allowed peasants to sell their surplus produce and for small businesses to operate.
Collectivisation
Forced collection of farms and no private land ownership.
Five-Year Plans
Programmes aimed at improving heavy industry and rapid industrial growth.
The Virgin Lands Scheme
A plan to cultivate new land to increase grain production.
Change under Alexander II
Social and economic change was limited as peasant living standards improved slowly and unevenly.Â
Change under Alexander III
Industrial workers faced poor living and working conditions, while most peasants remained poor despite the Peasant Land Bank.Â
Change under Nicholas II
Industrial workers faced poor living and working conditions, while most peasants remained poor despite the Peasant Land Bank.Â
Change under the Provisional Government
Failed to improve living standards or economy, contributing to loss of popular support.Â
Change under Lenin
NEP (1921) stabilised the economy and improved living standards unevenly, benefiting peasants more than urban workers.Â
Change under Stalin
Workers gained employment but faced shortages and low consumer living standards.Â
Change under Khrushchev
Some improvement in urban living standards occurred, but political power remained firmly monopolised by the Communist Party.Â