History Mock

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
call with kaiCall with Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/77

flashcard set

Earn XP

Description and Tags

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced
Call with Kai

No study sessions yet.

78 Terms

1
New cards

When Charles surrendered (end of first civil war)

May 1646

2
New cards

Who Charles surrendered to

The Scots

3
New cards

When the Newcastle Propositions were

1646

4
New cards

What Parliament demanded in the Newcastle Propositions

Control of the army for 20 years and a Presbyterian Church settlement

5
New cards

When the Heads of the Proposals were

1647

6
New cards

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.

7
New cards

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.

8
New cards

Popular sovereignty

The belief that political authority should come from the people rather than a King.

9
New cards

Legal equality

The idea that all men should be equal before the law, regardless of status.

10
New cards

When the Putney Debates happened

1647

11
New cards

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.

12
New cards

When the Second Civil War began

1648

13
New cards

Charles’ secret agreement with the Scots to invade

The Engagement

14
New cards

The people who defeated the Scottish invasion

Thomas Fairfax and Oliver Cromwell

15
New cards

Results of the Second Civil War

Radicalised the army and shifted opinion from settlement to punishment .

16
New cards

When Pride’s Purge occurred

December 1648

17
New cards

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.

18
New cards

Charles’ execution date

30th January 1649

19
New cards

What Charles was charged with

Treason against the people of England

20
New cards

Cavaliers

Royalists, supporters of the King

21
New cards

Roundheads

Parliamentarians, supporters of Parliament

22
New cards

Levellers

A radical political group who advocated for popular sovereignty and legal equality.

23
New cards

When the Battle of Preston occurred

1648

24
New cards

What the Engagement promised

Presbyterianism in exchange for military support

25
New cards

Presbyterianism

A form of Protestant Christianity that wanted the Church run by elders instead of bishops and supported one national church for everyone.

26
New cards

Alexander II’s rule

1855 - 1881

27
New cards

Alexander III’s rule

1881 - 1894

28
New cards

Nicholas II’s rule

1894 - 1917

29
New cards

The Provisional Government’s rule

February 1917 - October 1917

30
New cards

Lenin’s rule

1917 - 1924

31
New cards

Stalin’s rule

1924 - 1953

32
New cards

Khrushchev’s rule

1953 - 1964

33
New cards

Year of the Emancipation of the Serfs

1861

34
New cards

Year of the introduction of the Zemstva

1864

35
New cards

Zemstva

Local councils created to improve local government, but they were subordinate to central authority.

36
New cards

Year of the Judicial reforms

1864

37
New cards

Judicial reforms

Introduced independent courts, trial by jury and more equality before law (excluding peasants).

38
New cards

Year of the Manifesto of Unshakeable Autocracy

1881

39
New cards

Manifesto of Unshakeable Autocracy

A declaration rejecting constitutional government and reaffirming Tsarist authority.

40
New cards

Year of the Zemstva Act

1890

41
New cards

How the Zemstva Act effected local government

Reduced Zemstva independence and increased central control to be more autocratic.

42
New cards

Year of the Fundamental Laws

1906

43
New cards

Duma

An elected Russian parliament, created in 1905 after the October Manifesto, intended to advise on laws and government.

44
New cards

Year of the October Manifesto

1905

45
New cards

Dual Power

Shared authority between the Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet.

46
New cards

Declaration of rights

Political reforms promised by the Provisional Government in March 1917. They included civil liberties and legal equality.

47
New cards

Sovnarkom

The Bolshevik government created after October 1917.

48
New cards

1918 Constitution

Established the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.

49
New cards

The year the USSR was formed

1922

50
New cards

WWII dates

1941 - 1945

51
New cards

WWI dates

1914 - 1918

52
New cards

The power holders during Lenin’s rule

The Communist Party

53
New cards

The reason for the USSR’s formation

To formalise a centralised socialist state.

54
New cards

Stalin’s style of government

Totalitarian

55
New cards

Year of the Sovnarkhoz reforms

1957

56
New cards

The Sovnarkhoz reforms

Attempts to decentralise economic administration to regional councils.

57
New cards

The Emancipation of the Serfs

Freed 23 million peasants legally but left them with insufficient land and reparation payments.

58
New cards

The Mir

A commune which restricted peasant mobility and economic independence.

59
New cards

The Peasant Land Bank

A scheme which aimed to allow peasants to buy land.

60
New cards

Year of the Peasant Land Bank

1883

61
New cards

Industrial working conditions under Alexander III

Long hours, low wages and poor housing.

62
New cards

Peasant problems under Nicholas II

Vulnerability to famine, such as the 1891 famine.

63
New cards

Industrial growth under Nicholas II

Increased urbanisation and growth of the working class.

64
New cards

The economic situation that the Provisional Government inherited

Wartime inflation and food shortages

65
New cards

War Communism

State control of industry and grain requisitioning.

66
New cards

War Communism dates

1918 - 1921

67
New cards

The year the NEP was introduced

1921

68
New cards

The New Economic Policy (NEP)

Allowed peasants to sell their surplus produce and for small businesses to operate.

69
New cards

Collectivisation

Forced collection of farms and no private land ownership.

70
New cards

Five-Year Plans

Programmes aimed at improving heavy industry and rapid industrial growth.

71
New cards

The Virgin Lands Scheme

A plan to cultivate new land to increase grain production.

72
New cards

Change under Alexander II

Social and economic change was limited as peasant living standards improved slowly and unevenly. 

73
New cards

Change under Alexander III

Industrial workers faced poor living and working conditions, while most peasants remained poor despite the Peasant Land Bank. 

74
New cards

Change under Nicholas II

Industrial workers faced poor living and working conditions, while most peasants remained poor despite the Peasant Land Bank. 

75
New cards

Change under the Provisional Government

Failed to improve living standards or economy, contributing to loss of popular support. 

76
New cards

Change under Lenin

NEP (1921) stabilised the economy and improved living standards unevenly, benefiting peasants more than urban workers. 

77
New cards

Change under Stalin

Workers gained employment but faced shortages and low consumer living standards. 

78
New cards

Change under Khrushchev

Some improvement in urban living standards occurred, but political power remained firmly monopolised by the Communist Party. 

Explore top flashcards