Transcript
Page 1: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

Revolutions, Rebellions, and Revolts!

Connecting history and current events to Animal

Farm

Page 2: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

Lesson Launch

• Make a list of the qualities of a good leader

• What happens when people are dissatisfied with a leader?

Page 3: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

French Revolution (1789)• Leading up to it…– Peasants were burdened with high taxes

levied to support wealthy aristocrats and their sumptuous, often gluttonous, lifestyles

– Power rested in the monarchy and those who were “privileged by birth”

– French government was essentially bankrupt

–Crop failures, shortage of grain, rising price of bread

Page 4: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

The 1905 Russian Revolution• People's faith in Nicholas II, the Russian Tsar, was waning.

(Russia was defeated by the Japanese in number of navy battles)

• Cold-blooded shooting of hundreds of unarmed demonstrators in St Petersburg on 22 January 1905

• In Kurland, today Western Latvia, 184 estates were burned and 82 Baltic Germans were killed by angry farmers .

•  The Tsar reacted harshly to these uprisings -- Nearly one thousand people in the Baltic were captured and executed and thousands were exiled to Siberian prison camps.

• Positive outcome to these uprisings? -- Not only did the people feel more empowered than ever before but one concession that the Tsar made was to grant people representation in the Russian government.

Page 5: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

Mexican Revolution (1910)• Tremendous disagreement among the Mexican people

over the dictatorship of President Porfirio Díaz, who stayed in office for thirty one years.

• Power was concentrated in the hands of a select few. The people had no power to express their opinions or select their public officials. Wealth was concentrated in the hands of the few.

• New generation of young leaders arose who wanted to participate in the political life of their country -- Denied the opportunity by the officials who were already entrenched in power and who were not about to give it up.

• Although the Mexican Constitution called for public election and other institutions of democracy, Díaz and his supporters used their political and economic resources to stay in power indefinitely.

Page 6: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

Looking at historical events…

• Identify reasons why a government would be overthrown

• What inspires a revolution? What is the purpose of a rebellion/revolution?

• What do citizens, peasants, political groups hope to achieve with a revolution?

Page 7: Revolutions, Rebellions,  and Revolts!

Aristotle’s Words… “Revolutions arise from inequalities …

from a numerical mass claiming an equality denied them, or from a minority claiming a superiority denied them. A revolution may result either in a complete change of polity, or only in a modification of the existing one. The purposes with which [revolutions] are set on foot are profit, honor, or avoidance of loss or dishonor. The inciting occasions are many; jealousy of those who have wealth and honor, official arrogance, fear of the law or of its abuse, personal rivalries, failure of the middle class to maintain a balance, race antagonisms, antagonism of localities, and others….”


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