Joseph Stalin's Rise to Power<span>. In 1912, Lenin, then in exile in Switzerland, appointed </span>Joseph Stalin<span> to serve on the first Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party. Three years later, in November 1917, the Bolsheviks seized </span>power in Russia<span>. The Soviet Union was founded in 1922, with Lenin as its first leader.</span>
Answer:
The Byzantine Empire was the eastern continuation of the Roman Empire after the Western Roman Empire's fall in the fifth century CE. It lasted from the fall of the Roman Empire until the Ottoman conquest in 1453.
First question.
1. Every man will be punished accordingly to the wrong he did.
2. No one can be punished for an offense without a trial before.
3. The enforces of the law have no right to take whats yours.
4. Justices applies the same to everyone.
Second Question
It guarantees the <em>liberty right</em>
Third question
It is important because it <em>gives you the freedom to do, to be, and to fulfill your dreams, </em>as long as it doesn´t break the law.
Fourth question
This right limits the power of government because it sets a pathway to make things, they can´t come and take your propety, they can´t put you in jail if they don´t like you, <em>it limits it´s power by giving the people the liberty to do.</em>
The Russian revolutionaries wanted something more than famine and injustice -- and that's much of what existed in Russia at that time. They wanted equality for all persons. That was a big goal of the communist agenda, and the Russian Revolution was a communist endeavor. They wanted to achieve that equality both in terms of wealth/property and in terms of political status and rights.
Was it dangerous? Absolutely. The reign of the tsars had gone on in Russia for centuries, and military victory over the tsar's armies had to be won for the revolution to succeed. And it was not going to be easy to make the nation better off, even after the revolution. The people would expect results from the new government. Those results were going to be hard to achieve.
Over time, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), which was the nation brought about by the Russian Revolution, has to become more and more authoritarian and repressive to keep its agenda going. And eventually that agenda failed, when about 75 years after the revolution, the USSR's government collapsed.