History, asked by aastasharma, 1 year ago

What is the difference between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks?

Please answer it fast....

Answers

Answered by sharma0001
2
Bolsheviks believed in a radical —and elitist— revolution, whereas Mensheviks supported a more progressive change in collaboration with the middle class and the bourgeoisie. The central figures were Julius Martov, at the head of the Mensheviks, who opposed Vladimir Lenin, leader of the bolcheviks

aastasharma: Thanks...
sharma0001: PLSS MARK BRAINLIST ANS
aastasharma: whats that?
sharma0001: MERE ANS KE UPR LIKHA HOGA MARK AS BRAINLIEST ANSWER
sharma0001: OHKK SRY MT KIJIYE AGR DIL ME HO TO EKR DENA
aastasharma: mtlb??
Answered by RatanBhaskar
2
During the early 1900s, the Social-Democrat Worker's Party was created in tsarist Russia. This would escalate into the Russian Revolution of 1917. Within the party, there was a spilt and two factions emerged: the Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks. The word Menshevik comes from the word "minority" (in Russian of course), and Bolshevik from "majority". Bolsheviks believed in a radical —and elitist— revolution, whereas Mensheviks supported a more progressive change in collaboration with the middle class and the bourgeoisie. The central figures were Julius Martov, at the head of the Mensheviks, who opposed Vladimir Lenin, leader of the bolcheviks. The Bolcheviks did not truly have the majority, yet it was their vision that prevaded for the upcoming decades.

aastasharma: Thanks..
RatanBhaskar: no thanks
Similar questions