The Russian Revolution of 1917 changed the course of history. Who led the Bolsheviks during this revolution? A. Lenin B. Stalin C. Trotsky D. Kerensky 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 A。1917 年俄国革命中,领导布尔什维克的是列宁。选项 B“Stalin”(斯大林)在后来发挥了重要作用,但不是此时的领导...
Who lead the March Against Fear? Who caused the invasion of Poland? Who was involved in the Reign of Terror? Who spread the Black Death throughout China? Who financed the Russian Revolution? Who led a crusade against communism in the 1950s?
What did the Bolshevik Revolution lead to? What was the result of the slave revolt in the Dominican Republic? What is the Texas Revolution vs. Cuban Revolution? What is a brief history of Haiti? What caused the Bolivian Revolution?
Frederick Douglass, one of the greatest human rights leaders of the 19th century, helped lead the American abolition movement. Though slavery had been annulled in the United States in 1865, African Americans still suffered from discrimination, so in the next century Martin Luther King Jr.37, ...
Sun did not say who would lead the campaign in Mongolia. Chiang was not explicit either. But there was the implicit hope that it would be the Red Army under the command of Trotsky. After all, why not lead an army across Mongolia into China when Trotsky had considered the possibility of ...
No sane White man is ever going to be supportive of the policies which lead again to this type of occurence in any of our White (We now have to qualify that today) countries. If there are some who can’t beleive it’s possible, then those are unable to open their eyes. ...
Vladimir Lenin was the architect of Russia’s 1917 Bolshevik revolution and the first leader of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
Kerensky trained as a lawyer and provided advice to individuals who had been mistreated by the government. In 1912 he was elected to the fourth Duma as a member of the labour-aligned Trudovik party; he quickly took a lead role into investigations into the Lena River shootings that year. ...
Trotsky was regarded by his supporters as the saviour for his country for his efforts in organising the Red Army during the Civil War. According to historian E.H Carr , 'Trotsky was a great administrator, great intellectual, and a great orator...' but at times was overbearing and lead to...
His transition wasn't just geographical but also professional as he moved from playing lead roles in German cinema to supporting roles in Hollywood. He notably starred in Alfred Hitchcock's first American film, The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934), and later became part of Warner Brothers' ...