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Russia and How
* Vladimir Petrov, How South Caucasus was armed, Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies ( Moscow, Russia )
Marx and Engels posed the question: How was Russia to progress to socialism?
How the U. S. Gave Away Nazi Supersecrets to Russia " ( 1985 ) by self-identified " British Intelligence agent " Tom Agoston.
* 2004 Brian Gavin presents his paper " Hearts and Arrows-How They are Formed and How They are Graded ", at the First International Diamond Cut Conference ( IDCC ) in Moscow, Russia.
* Russia: How the Revolution was lost ( 1974 )
* " The Positive Unity: How Solovyov ’ s Ethics Can Contribute to Constructing a Working Model for Business Ethics in Modern Russia " by Andrey V. Shirin
Brian Myers argues in his book The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves and Why It Matters that the North Korean ideology of a region bordering China, North Korea, and Russia, should be part of Korea, based on prior Koguryo control of the area.
* How Russia Transformed her Colonial Empire: a challenge to the imperialist powers ( with Dorothy Pizer ) ( 1946 )

Russia and Revolution
In addition, El Lissitzky's book Russia: an Architecture for World Revolution published in German in 1930 featured several illustrations of Vkhutemas / Vkhutein projects there.
The Bolsheviks came to power in Russia during the October Revolution phase of the Russian Revolution of 1917, and founded the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic which would later in 1922 become the chief constituent of the Soviet Union.
After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, at the age of 22, Vertov began editing for Kino-Nedelya (, the Moscow Cinema Committee's weekly film series, and the first newsreel series in Russia ), which first came out in June 1918.
Amanullah came to power just as the entente between Russia and Britain broke down following the Russian Revolution of 1917.
In 1917, Mussolini as leader of the Fasci of Revolutionary Action praised the October Revolution that brought Vladimir Lenin and the Bolshevik movement to power in Russia, as Mussolini himself desired a revolution in Italy to bring the Fascists to power.
A major event that greatly influenced the development of fascism was the October Revolution of 1917 in which Bolshevik communists led by Vladimir Lenin seized power in Russia.
The collapse of Russia in the February Revolution resulted in a loss of institutional authority in Finland and the dissolution of the police force, creating fear and uncertainty.
The disintegration of Russia offered the Finns a historic opportunity to gain independence, but after the October Revolution, the positions of the conservatives and the Social Democrats on the sovereignty issue had become reversed.
In December 1917 the Bolsheviks were themselves under intense pressure from the Germans to conclude peace negotiations at Brest-Litovsk, and Russia Bolshevism was in deep crisis, with a demoralized army and the fate of the October Revolution in doubt.
Czarist Russia collapsed in the February Revolution of 1917 and Germany claimed victory on the Eastern Front.
The breakdown of Russian forces – exacerbated by internal turmoil caused by the 1917 Russian Revolution – led to an imposed peace and the favorable Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on 3 March 1918 as Russia withdrew from the war.
Following the February Revolution in Russia, the Tsar's support for his cousin was removed, and Constantine was forced to leave the country, without actually abdicating, in June 1917.
As West European economic growth accelerated during the Industrial Revolution, sea trade and colonialism which had begun in the second half of the 18th century, Russia began to lag ever farther behind, creating new problems for the empire as a great power.
The Industrial Revolution, which began to exert a significant influence in Russia, was meanwhile creating forces that would finally overthrow the tsar.
Trotsky, and others believed that the revolution could only succeed in Russia as part of a world revolution, which was in fact shortly after the Russian Revolution spreading in the defeated central powers of Europe.
In 1917 Radek was one of the passengers on the " sealed train " that carried Lenin and other Russian revolutionaries through Germany after the February Revolution in Russia.
However, he was refused entry to Russia and went on to Stockholm and produced the journals Russische Korrespondenz-Pravda and Bote der Russischen Revolution to publish Bolshevik documents and Russian information in German.
Although critical of the Tsar, General Kornilov felt that Russia, as part of the Triple Entente, was committed to continue the war against the Central Powers, and he shared the widespread belief of some Russians that after the February Revolution the country was descending into anarchy and that military defeat would be disastrous for Russia.
After the October Revolution of 1917, Leninism was the dominant version of Marxism in Russia, and then the official state ideology of Soviet democracy ( by workers ’ council ) in the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic ( RSFSR ), before its unitary amalgamation into the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ( USSR ), in 1922.
Moreover, because the industrialization was financed mostly with foreign capital, Imperial Russia ( 1721 – 1917 ) did not possess a revolutionary bourgeoisie with political and economic influence upon the workers and the peasants ( as occurred in the French Revolution, 1789 ).
Li authored a series of articles in New Youth on the subject of the October Revolution which had just occurred in Russia, during which the communist Bolshevik Party under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin ( 1870 – 1924 ) had seized power.
A Methodist presence was continued in Russia for 14 years after the Russian Revolution of 1917 through the efforts of Deaconess Anna Eklund.
* 1919 – The Hungarian Soviet Republic is established becoming the first Communist government to be formed in Europe after the October Revolution in Russia.

Russia and Was
Was part of the winning side in the 1st round Davis Cup match against Russia, where he won his first day singles match.

Russia and Lost
The second story tells of an ethnic Estonian Mihkelson who will now be knighted by the Czar as he has been instrumental in putting down a rebellion in Russia ; this is the story of his pangs of conscience, but also how he brings his peasant parents to the ceremony to show his origins ( Mihkelson's Matriculation ) The third story is set in around 1824, and about the collator of Estonian folk literature Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald who, after passing his exams, does not want to become a theologian but wants to study military medicine in Saint Petersburg, then the capital of the Russian Empire ; meanwhile, he meets a peasant who can tell him about the Estonian epic hero Kalev, here of the epic Kalevipoeg ( Two Lost Sheets of Paper ).
*** Lost to Sazhid Sazhidov of Russia ( 0-5 )
:* Round of 16 — Lost to Sergey Kazakov of Russia, 41-16
** 1 / 32 Round: Lost to Natalia Bolotova of Russia ( 143-154 )
** Round of 32: Lost to Gaydarbek Gaydarbekov of Russia ( 35-13 )
** Repechage Round 1: Lost to Natalia Yukhareva of Russia ( Uchi-mata ; ippon-0: 26 )
** Quarterfinal: Lost to Sergey Kazakov of Russia ( 18-11 )
** Lost to Russia ( 58-93 )
** Round 2: Lost to Oksana Fadeeva and Galina Melnik of Russia ( 11-7, 3-11, 9-11, 2-11, 11-6, 12-10, 6-11 )
*** Lost to Sazhid Sazhidov of Russia ( 0-4 )
** Round of 16: Lost to Evgeny Stanev of Russia ( Sukui-nage ; ippon-3: 03 )
** Quarterfinal: Lost to Murat Khrachev of Russia ( 18-31 )
:* Round of 32 — Lost to Oleg Saitov of Russia ( 15-30 )
:* Round of 64 — Lost to Serguey Kotchetkov of Russia ( 6-15 )
:* Round of 32 — Lost to Evgeny Stanev of Russia ( Uki-waza ; ippon-0: 29 )
** Lost to Alexei Lezin ( Russia ) PTS
** Semifinal — Lost to Gaidarbek Gaidarbekov of Russia → Image: Med 3. pngBronze Medal
** Quarterfinal — Lost to Oxana Grichina of Russia
:* Round 2 — Lost to Oleg Saitov of Russia (→ did not advance )
:* Round 2 — Lost to Alexandr Maletin of Russia (→ did not advance )
:* First Round — Lost to Ramaz Paliani ( Russia ), 7-10
:* Lost to Russia ( 0-3 )
:* First Round — Lost to Eduard Zakharov ( Russia ), 6-21
:* Second Round — Lost to Alexander Lebziak ( Russia ), referee stopped contest in third round

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