Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution

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Russian Revolution, also called Russian Revolution of 1917, two revolutions in 1917, the first of which, in February (March, New Style), overthrew the imperial government and the second of which, in October (November), placed the Bolsheviks in power.

Russian Empire

Centuries of virtually unchecked Russian expansion in Asia ended with an embarrassing defeat in the Russo-Japanese War (1904–05). This military reverse shattered Russia’s dreams of establishing hegemony over the whole of Asia, but it also contributed to a wave of domestic unrest. The Revolution of 1905 compelled Nicholas II to issue the October Manifesto, which ostensibly transformed Russia from an unlimited autocracy into a constitutional monarchy. The tsar’s reactionary policies, including the occasional dissolution of the Duma, or Russian parliament, the chief fruit of the 1905 revolution, had spread dissatisfaction even to moderate elements of the nobility. The Russian Empire’s many ethnic minorities grew increasingly restive under Russian domination.

World War I

Despite some reforms that followed the Russo-Japanese War, the Russian army in 1914 was ill-equipped to fight a major war, and neither the political nor the military leadership was up to the standard required. Nevertheless the army fought bravely in World War I, and both soldiers and junior officers showed remarkable qualities. The Russian invasion of East Prussia in August 1914 was defeated by Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff at Tannenberg, but it required the Germans to send reinforcements from the Western Front and so saved France from defeat and made possible the victory on the Marne. The campaigns of 1915 and 1916 on the Eastern Front brought terrible casualties to the Russian forces, which at times did not even have sufficient rifles. As late as July 1916, however, the Russian army was capable of making a successful offensive under Gen. Aleksey Brusilov in Volhynia and Bukovina.

Grigori Rasputin

The Russian people did not respond to the war with real enthusiasm. The government could not overcome its traditional distrust of any public initiative, even in the organization of medical supplies or munitions for the forces at the front. In the Fourth Duma a majority of the centre and moderate right formed a Progressive bloc and proposed the creation of a national coalition government “possessing the confidence of the country” and a program of reforms which could be carried out even in wartime. The emperor rejected the proposal and prorogued the Duma on September 3 (September 16, New Style), 1915. Eleven days earlier Nicholas had decided to assume personal command of the armies in the field. The result was that in Petrograd (as the capital had been renamed at the beginning of the war, in place of the German-sounding St. Petersburg) the empress Alexandra was in fact in control. She herself was under the influence of the self-styled “holy man” Grigori Rasputin, whose hold over her was because of his ability to arrest the bleeding of the hemophiliac tsarevich, Alexis. Thus to the massive casualties at the front, the retreat of the armies, and the growing economic hardships was added the knowledge, widespread in the capital and among the upper classes, that the government was in the hands of incompetents. Rumours of treason in high places were widely believed, though the historical evidence does not suggest that they were true. On the night of December 16–17 (December 29–30, New Style), 1916, Rasputin was murdered by a group of conservative nobles, but by then the system was beyond salvation. There was no hand at the helm, and the ship was drifting onto the rocks.

Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution

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Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution

A. Red October was the culminating event in the path towards a communist revolution in Russia, as the Bolsheviks officially took power.B. Though it preceded the revolution by more than two decades, the Great Famine of 1891 under czar Nicholas II’s rule was one of the causes of the Russian Revolution.C. Whatever progress was made under Nicholas II was outweighed by the catastrophic mistakes and bloody tragedies that characterized his rule.D. Nicholas II could have easily prevented the Russian Revolution and his own death if he had only abdicated sooner.E. Lenin ultimately failed in his objective, as he died of a brain hemorrhage before he could obtain absolute power.F. Despite the violence and cruelty of Lenin’s rule, it paled in comparison to that of Stalin’s regime. None

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Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution

A yes, the  Bolshevik Coup took place on Nomver 7 (October 25 in Old Style Calendar) 1917.B is wrong because at that time was Alexander III, he died in 1894 and the his son Nicholas II became czar, but undoubtedly the famine was one of the first signs of the population's dissatisfaction with the Romanov family -- the czarian family. C yes, although the general condition of the people, mainly middle class, improved, there was still the problems of managing the government as a whole, by refusing to stablish a parliament, the Duma, also the problems in managing the famine, declaring War against Japan and entering World War I.D would be case but it is not explictly expressed in the text, the text mentions that if Nicholas had stablished the Duma with real governing powers this would at least halted the Soviet Revolution. The text also shows that Nicholas fundamentally believed that God had given him power to rule over Russia.E is wrong because the text makes it explicit that he had enjoyed more power than no czar had ever had before. Surely his whole project of defeating Capitalism around the planet never came to be but it does not deny the fact that he was powerful.It cannot be F because there is no mention of Stalin in the text or any comparison of Lenin and Stalin.

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Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution
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Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution
Which two of the following statements best summarize central ideas of the text Russian Revolution