14, crowned at 16
Ivan the Great (Ivan III) then Ivan the terrible (Ivan IV) Ivan the Great came first
in 1533AnswerIn 1547, Ivan IV became the first crowned Czar of Russia. He was known to be extremely, perhaps even insanely brutal, hence his nickname of Ivan the Terrible. Once when in a fit of complete rage he struck his own son with an iron bar and killed him.
Peter I (the Great) and his half-brother Ivan V ruled under the regency of his half-sister Sofiya from 1682 to 1689. When Peter became old enough, Sofiya was packed off to a monastery for her treachery. Peter and Ivan jointly ruled Russia until 1696 when Ivan died of one of the many illnesses he had suffered all of his life. Peter carried on alone and really came into his own. He dragged Russia into the European world and picked up European technology and led Russia to become a world power before his death in 1725. One way or another, Peter I (the Great) ruled Russia from 1682 to 1725 when he died without leaving an heir to the throne.
When Vladimir Lenin overthrew Russia's Provisional Government, he entered into the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ending Russia's involvement in World War 1.
Lenin ousted Alexander Kerensky, head of Russia's Provisional Government, which had replaced Tsar Nicholas II. Lenin did not overthrow the Tsar.
Ivan the Great (Ivan III) then Ivan the terrible (Ivan IV) Ivan the Great came first
Henry, Philip and Charles. In Europe. Ivan. In Russia. They were all related. Except Ivan. They all came from their mothers. Except Ivan.
Ivan the terrible was ruler of dictatorship. After his wife died, things had been ruff him, so he put all on the people and started to kill any who did not listen to him. But when Ivan the terrible died, everyone was free and that was when democracy came.
in 1533AnswerIn 1547, Ivan IV became the first crowned Czar of Russia. He was known to be extremely, perhaps even insanely brutal, hence his nickname of Ivan the Terrible. Once when in a fit of complete rage he struck his own son with an iron bar and killed him.
Vladimir Lenin came to power via a October Revolution in Russia in 1917, which brought an end to Czarist Russia and started the creation of a Communist State.
Peter I (the Great) and his half-brother Ivan V ruled under the regency of his half-sister Sofiya from 1682 to 1689. When Peter became old enough, Sofiya was packed off to a monastery for her treachery. Peter and Ivan jointly ruled Russia until 1696 when Ivan died of one of the many illnesses he had suffered all of his life. Peter carried on alone and really came into his own. He dragged Russia into the European world and picked up European technology and led Russia to become a world power before his death in 1725. One way or another, Peter I (the Great) ruled Russia from 1682 to 1725 when he died without leaving an heir to the throne.
Bolsheviks.
Andrew came first, as it was in 1992. Fran occurred in 1996 and Ivan was in 2004.
There wasn't really a consequence. They saved themselves from losing more men and resource's. But, Stalin came into power and there was a famine and disaster in Russia.
the soviet party the Bolsheviks
When Vladimir Lenin overthrew Russia's Provisional Government, he entered into the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ending Russia's involvement in World War 1.
There wasn't really a consequence. They saved themselves from losing more men and resource's. But, Stalin came into power and there was a famine and disaster in Russia.