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Learning to Lead our LivesWhy was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

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Page 1: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

“Learning to Lead our Lives”

Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900?

Skill: Knowledge and Understanding

NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Page 2: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Russia – An overview

Russia – An overview

End Show

Page 3: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

•4,000 miles East to West

•2,000 miles North to South

•As large as the surface of a moon that you can see at night.

•11 different time zones.

•Beyond the Ural Mountains, Russia was a wild place with frontier settlements.

Russia:

An overview

Russia:

An overview

Picture courtesy of Keith McInnes

Page 4: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

In the countryside there were very few paved roads. Outside main cities, roads would turn to mud in heavy rain. This made travel very slow.

Back to theRussia mapBack to theRussia map

Picture courtesy of Keith McInnes

Page 6: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Poland

130 million people lived in Russia, but over 50% weren’t Russian. The non-Russians were from all sorts of races, for example, Polish people from Poland.

Many of these non-Russians resented the fact that Russian officials controlled them.

The Russians made non-Russians speak Russian, wear Russian clothes and follow Russian customs. This policy was called “Russification”

In Poland it was forbidden to teach children in Polish. Russians, not Poles, had all the important jobs.

Poland

130 million people lived in Russia, but over 50% weren’t Russian. The non-Russians were from all sorts of races, for example, Polish people from Poland.

Many of these non-Russians resented the fact that Russian officials controlled them.

The Russians made non-Russians speak Russian, wear Russian clothes and follow Russian customs. This policy was called “Russification”

In Poland it was forbidden to teach children in Polish. Russians, not Poles, had all the important jobs.

Back to theRussia map

Page 7: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Photograph used with the kind permission of Keith McInnes

Page 8: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Petrograd / Moscow – the biggest cities

Petrograd

Moscow

Page 9: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Petrograd / Moscow – the biggest cities

Petrograd was the capital of Russia. The Tsar and his Ministers ruled the country from there.

Around 1900, Russia experienced industrial growth and many factories were built in Petrograd and Moscow. These were owned by rich businessmen who dined on caviar and smoked salmon at beautiful restaurants, or visited the ballet and concerts. The profits they made went on their grand houses.

The factory workers lived in filthy, crowded, disease-ridden dormitories near the cities. There was little privacy. Sometimes beds were occupied 24 hours a day by 2 workers in turn. The workers were not content with low pay and long working hours!

Back to theRussia mapBack to theRussia map

Page 10: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924
Page 11: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

The best farmland – the “black earth” region

Ural mountains

Page 12: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

The best farmland

Only 25% of Russia was really good farmland. Most of this was in the South and West of the country, especially in the Ukraine, the “Bread basket” of Russia. The rest of Russia was either desert, arctic tundra, or taiga (woods).

4 out of 5 Russians were peasants. They had a hard life and there was often starvation and disease. Why?

The best farmland

Only 25% of Russia was really good farmland. Most of this was in the South and West of the country, especially in the Ukraine, the “Bread basket” of Russia. The rest of Russia was either desert, arctic tundra, or taiga (woods).

4 out of 5 Russians were peasants. They had a hard life and there was often starvation and disease. Why?

Page 13: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Peasants used a strip method of farming, wooden tools, and had few animals. They ate rye bread and cabbage soup. Meat was rare. They lived in wood and straw houses, slept on beds of straw and wore coarse woollen shirts. The poorest had sandals made of tree bark.

Peasants were often in debt to their landlords, the nobles. Nobles made up 1% of the population but owned almost 25% of the land. They were very rich, with 2 houses, and enjoyed the ballet and other social events.

If peasants protested (for example during times of famine), the Tsar would use his feared Cossack soldiers against them.

Peasants used a strip method of farming, wooden tools, and had few animals. They ate rye bread and cabbage soup. Meat was rare. They lived in wood and straw houses, slept on beds of straw and wore coarse woollen shirts. The poorest had sandals made of tree bark.

Peasants were often in debt to their landlords, the nobles. Nobles made up 1% of the population but owned almost 25% of the land. They were very rich, with 2 houses, and enjoyed the ballet and other social events.

If peasants protested (for example during times of famine), the Tsar would use his feared Cossack soldiers against them.

Back to theRussia map

Page 14: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Pictures courtesy of Keith McInnes

Page 15: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Siberia

Trans-Siberian railway

Page 16: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Travel in Siberia in the Summer today: Just imagine what it was like back then!

Picture courtesy of Keith McInnes

Page 17: “Learning to Lead our Lives” Why was Russia such a hard country to rule in 1900? Skill: Knowledge and Understanding NGfL: Russia 1900-1924

Siberia

Extremely cold (up to –60 degrees C). Very large. Huge natural resources but very small population. The rulers of Russia traditionally sent any person who opposed them to Siberia.

Most Russian railways were in European Russia apart from the Trans-Siberian Railway. To travel from one end to the other took a week, so communication was very difficult.

Civil Servants ran each part of Russia, including Siberia, carrying out the Tsar’s wishes. Since the wages of Civil Servants were low, and because they were far away from central government (especially in Siberia), there was a lot of corruption and bribery.

Siberia

Extremely cold (up to –60 degrees C). Very large. Huge natural resources but very small population. The rulers of Russia traditionally sent any person who opposed them to Siberia.

Most Russian railways were in European Russia apart from the Trans-Siberian Railway. To travel from one end to the other took a week, so communication was very difficult.

Civil Servants ran each part of Russia, including Siberia, carrying out the Tsar’s wishes. Since the wages of Civil Servants were low, and because they were far away from central government (especially in Siberia), there was a lot of corruption and bribery.

Back to theRussia map