Lenin

16 Mar, 2000 940 History of Europe

For some time, in some intellectual quarters in the West, Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov - also known as Lenin - was regarded as an understandable revolutionary, perhaps a necessary revolutionary given the actions of the Tsars, certainly a sympathetic revolutionary compared with his successor - Stalin. He became an icon in Russia - his body unburied, lying in Red Square in a state of permanent, imminent resurrection. The Russian Presidential Elections take place at the end of the month, and the Acting President, Vladimir Putin, promised that if he won he would finally take the body of Lenin from Red Square and bury him. But whether the country will be able to escape the extraordinary influence of the man, his ideas and his machinery of oppression is another matter. In his short period in power between 1917 and 1924 Vladimir Illyich Lenin invented the one party state, developed a model to export communism around the world and built a completely original political system that remained intact for over seventy years. What drove him and enabled him to achieve success?Robert Service, lecturer in Russian History and Fellow of St Anthony’s College, Oxford and biographer of Lenin; Vitali Vitaliev, author, columnist, broadcaster former Soviet Journalist of the Year.

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Guests

  • Robert Service 2 episodes
    Lecturer in Russian History and Fellow of St Anthony's College, Oxford
  • Vitali Vitaliev No other episodes
    Author, columnist, broadcaster former Soviet Journalist of the Year

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Auto-category: 947.084 (Russian Revolution and Soviet Union (1917-1991))

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello. The Russian presidential elections take place at the end of the month and the acting president Vladimir Putin has promised that if he wins he'll finally take the body of Lenin from Red Square and bury him.