Bolshevik Revolution

  • John Reed, Journalist

    Johnreed1

    John Silas "Jack" Reed (October 22, 1887 – October 17, 1920) was an American journalist, poet, and socialist activist, best remembered for Ten Days That Shook the World, his first-hand account of the Bolshevik Revolution. He married the writer and feminist Louise Bryant in 1916. Reed died of typhus in Russia in 1920. He is one of three Americans honored by being buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis (the others are labor organizer Bill Haywood and Charles Ruthenburg, founder of the Communist Party USA).

  • Leah, the Revolutionary

    Moscow 2

    Leah will be sent to live in the lap of tsarist luxury, in St. Petersburg, with her aunt Rasa Poliakov, niece of Samuel and Lazar Poliakov, one who is the railroad magnate of Tsarist Russia, and the other the banker of the Tsar and rumored father of the prima ballerina Anna Pavlova. From that lap of luxury in which she literally played with the Tsar’s four daughters and hemophiliac son, Leah will become first disillusioned and then impassioned with Revolutionary fervor. As her uncle’s fortune collapses, at the age of fifteen, Leah will go and live with the factory workers and young revolutionaries in the Vyborg District of St. Petersburg. She will become enchanted with the bohemian revolutionary poets and painters and, on International Women’s Day, she will be thrust into the forefront of history, leading women textile workers out on strike, in contravention of Party orders. The workers on strike will swell into the hundreds of thousands, and Leah will be one of its leaders. Finally, the army will go over to the side of the workers, and one particularly dashing young officer will fall in love with the beautiful, teenaged revolutionary. And the Tsar will be toppled, ending four hundred years of Romanoff rule. As one of the leaders of the Women’s Movement, Leah will be a rising star in the Bolshevik Party. She and her young husband, the former Tsarist cavalry officer, will overthrow the Kerensky government and create the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin. These will be heady days, when these teenaged lovers and revolutionaries believe they are literally bringing about the worker’s paradise.

  • Leah's Russia

    Russia convulsed and its revolutions and violence reverberated throughout the world before and during WWI

    Between the wars, Stalin rose to power and famine and death raged as he purged the Soviet Union of old-time Bolsheviks.

     

  • Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Mensheviks)

    Noe Schordania

    The Mensheviks (Russian: Меньшевики́)[1][2] were a faction in the Russian socialist movement, the other being the Bolsheviks.

    The factions emerged in 1903 following a dispute in the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) between Julius Martov and Vladimir Lenin. The dispute originated at the 2nd Congress of the RSDLP, ostensibly over minor issues of party organization. Martov's supporters, who were in the minority in a crucial vote on the question of party membership, came to be called Mensheviks, derived from the Russian word меньшинство (minority), while Lenin's adherents were known as Bolsheviks, from большинство (majority).[3][4][5][6][7]

  • The Russian Revolution of 1917

    640px Armed soldiers carry a banner reading Communism Nikolskaya street Moscow October 1917

    The Russian Revolution was a pair of revolutions in Russia in 1917 which dismantled the Tsarist autocracy and led to the rise of the Soviet Union. The Russian Empire collapsed with the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II and the old regime was replaced by a provisional government during the first revolution of February 1917 (March in the Gregorian calendar; the older Julian calendar was in use in Russia at the time). Alongside it arose grassroots community assemblies (called 'Soviets') which contended for authority. In the second revolution that October, the Provisional Government was toppled and all power was given to the Soviets.

  • Tzar Nicholas II of Russia

    630px Император Николай II

    Nicholas II or Nikolai II (Russian: Николай II Алекса́ндрович, tr. Nikolai II Aleksandrovich; 18 May [O.S. 6 May] 1868 – 17 July 1918), known as Saint Nicholas the Passion-Bearer in the Russian Orthodox Church, was the last Emperor of Russia, ruling from 1 November 1894 until his forced abdication on 15 March 1917.[1] His reign saw the fall of the Russian Empire from one of the foremost great powers of the world to economic and military collapse. He was given the nickname Nicholas the Bloody or Vile Nicholas by his political adversaries due to the Khodynka Tragedyanti-Semitic pogromsBloody Sunday, the violent suppression of the 1905 Russian Revolution, the execution of political opponents, and his perceived responsibility for the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905).[2][3] Soviet historians portrayed Nicholas as a weak and incompetent leader whose decisions led to military defeats and the deaths of millions of his subjects.[4]

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Moshe "Morris" Levy

Bodyguard and General to Chinese Nationalist Army

Two-Gun Levy was a real person named Morris Cohen and given the nickname "2-Gun" because he always carried two guns. He protected both Dr. Sun Yat-Sen and Chiang Kai-Shek from 1911 until his death in the 1950s.

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Pinchas Levy

Poet and Warrior

Pinchas Levy participated in a love battle that became the talk of Ottoman Palestine. He fought with the Jewish Legion in WWI and then settled down at one of the first Kibbutzim.

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Dovid "Davey Boy" Levy

Head of the Freedman Gang and Mobster

David Levy joined one of the lower East side New York City gangs and eventually became head of one of the most notorious mobs in the US.

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Leah Levy

Bolshevik revolutionary

Leah Levy was a member of the wealthy and influential Polyakov family who became disillusioned and radicalized. She joined the Bolsheviks and through much suffering remained a member of the Communist party until her death in the late 1950s.