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A LEVEL HISTORY A: PAST PAPER 1: RUSSIA AND ITS RULERS 1855–1964. ALL ASSESSMENT & MARK SCHEME FINAL TEST 2026 QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT ANSWERS GRADED A+

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A LEVEL HISTORY A: PAST PAPER 1: RUSSIA AND ITS RULERS 1855–1964. ALL ASSESSMENT & MARK SCHEME FINAL TEST 2026 QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT ANSWERS GRADED A+

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A LEVEL HISTORY
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A LEVEL HISTORY

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A LEVEL HISTORY A: PAST PAPER 1:
RUSSIA AND ITS RULERS 1855–1964. ALL
ASSESSMENT & MARK SCHEME FINAL
TEST 2026 QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT
ANSWERS GRADED A+

◍ Cult of personality.
Answer: Promotion of an idealized and heroic image of Stalin, often through
propaganda
◍ Nicholas II (Changes to living conditions).
Answer: Urban: Industrial workforce exploded, but workers lived in squalid
dormitories or shared rooms with 11.5-hour workdays; 40% of St.
Petersburg homes lacked sewage systems by 1911.Rural: Land hunger
worsened; Stolypin's reforms tried to create independent "Kulak" farmers
but only benefited a minority, leaving the rest in deep poverty.
◍ What did Stalin's collectivisation policy involve?.
Answer: Combining farms into state-controlled kolkhozy/sovkhozy,
removing kulaks, 93% of farms collectivised by 1937
◍ Who ruled Russia between 1855-1964?.
Answer: AII (1855-81), AIII (1881-94), NII (1894-1917), PG (Feb-Oct
1917), Lenin (1917-24), Stalin (1928-53), Khrushchev (1953-64)
◍ Alexander II (Changes to living conditions).
Answer: Peasants: "Tsar Liberator" who emancipated serfs (1861), granting
them personal freedom but saddling them with 49-year redemption
payments for small, often poor-quality land plots.Urban: Rapid
industrialisation began, leading to early overcrowding and unsanitary

, "kommunalka" (communal) housing.
◍ Why was Stolypin's land reform significant?.
Answer: Attempted to create a class of loyal kulaks; allowed private land
ownership; limited long-term impact
◍ What did the 1936 Constitution claim?.
Answer: Gave USSR universal suffrage and civil rights — in practice, party
still had total control
◍ What was Sovietisation?.
Answer: Spread of USSR's political and economic model to satellite states;
often involved repression
◍ What was the Decree on Workers' Control (1917)?.
Answer: Allowed workers to manage factories; later reversed under War
Communism
◍ limitations on religious freedom of workers.
Answer: Experienced a dramatic shift from living under an official State
Church to an officially atheist state. In both eras, religious freedom was
tightly controlled to ensure loyalty to the government.
◍ Warsaw Pact (1955).
Answer: Military alliance of Eastern Bloc countries, response to NATO
◍ Limitations on political freedoms of workers.
Answer: Characterised by state-imposed restrictions designed to maintain
autocracy or party control, with only brief interludes of expanded rights.
◍ What was the Red Terror?.
Answer: Cheka-led repression to eliminate opponents (1918-21), executed
over 100,000 people
◍ Vladimir Lenin (Changes to working conditions).
Answer: Militarisation: Under "War Communism," labour became
militarised with compulsory work and harsh discipline to support the Red
Army.State Control: Trade unions were stripped of independence and

, transformed into "transmission belts" for Bolshevik policy.
◍ What was the Zemstva?.
Answer: Local government bodies introduced by Alexander II in 1864,
allowed limited self-governance for nobles and professionals
◍ What was the Nazi-Soviet Pact (1939)?.
Answer: Non-aggression pact between Hitler and Stalin; secretly agreed to
divide Poland
◍ Deaths in Stalin's Great Terror (1936-38).
Answer: Approx. 700,000 executed, 1.5 million arrested
◍ Provisional Government (Changes to living conditions).
Answer: Crisis: Conditions plummeted due to WWI; inflation rose 600%
and food supplies to cities dropped by 75%.Failure: Refused to redistribute
land until a Constituent Assembly met, leading peasants to forcibly seize
estates and desert the army.
◍ Who were the Okhrana?.
Answer: Secret police under AIII and NII used to suppress opposition, arrest
revolutionaries, operate outside legal system
◍ Impact of War communism.
Answer: Economic Collapse: Total industrial output fell to 20% of 1913
levels. Currency became worthless, leading to a barter economy and a
massive illegal black market.Agricultural Ruin: Forced grain requisitioning
(Prodrazverstka) discouraged farming, causing food production to drop by
40% and triggering a famine that killed 5+ million people.Social Crisis:
Starvation led to urban depopulation (Petrograd lost 70% of its workforce)
and harsh "militarisation of labour" where strikers faced execution or the
Cheka's Red Terror.Political Instability: Extreme hardship sparked major
uprisings, specifically the Tambov Rebellion and the Kronstadt Mutiny,
which threatened Bolshevik control.The NEP Pivot: The manifest failure of
these policies forced Lenin to abandon "pure" communism in 1921 in favour
of the New Economic Policy, reintroducing limited private trade.

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