The most common term is "Tsar" or Czar" which had been in use informally since Ivan III and formally since Ivan IV (the Terrible). Just before the creation of the Soviet Union and before Tsar Nicholas II abdicated the formal title was "Emperor" although "Tsar/Czar" was still commonly used.
When the USSR ceased to exist in 1991, Russia became the obvious successor to the Soviet legacy - historically, territorially, militarily, etc. Boris Yeltsin was the President of Russia at the time, and in that sense can be considered Gorbachev's successor.
nobody because the soviet union was not formed until 1917
No. Karl Marx wrote the Communist Manifesto. While his ideas were put into practice when the Soviet Union formed, Marx never had any official power.
he was 36 when he rose to power
During World War II, Joseph Stalin, the absolute ruler of the Soviet Union, wanted (and even demanded) a "Second Front" in the West for several reasons. Primarily, he sought relief from the German forces that were attacking the Soviet Union: the opening of a "Second Front" would force Germany to withdraw troops from the East in order to meet the threat in the West.
The ruler of the Soviet Union was Joseph Stalin in 1941.
When the USSR ceased to exist in 1991, Russia became the obvious successor to the Soviet legacy - historically, territorially, militarily, etc. Boris Yeltsin was the President of Russia at the time, and in that sense can be considered Gorbachev's successor.
nobody because the soviet union was not formed until 1917
The USSR or Soviet Union.
President of the Russian Federation .
No. Karl Marx wrote the Communist Manifesto. While his ideas were put into practice when the Soviet Union formed, Marx never had any official power.
Vladimir Lenin was the leader of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1924. Joseph Stalin lead the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1953.
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look it up and what was the q look it up
he was 36 when he rose to power
There were many - Lenin, Stalin, Brezhnev etc.
After Vladimir Lenin's stroke in 1922, Joseph Stalin gradually consolidated power within the Communist Party, ultimately becoming the de facto leader of the Soviet Union. Lenin's declining health and eventual death in 1924 created a power vacuum that Stalin exploited, outmaneuvering rivals such as Leon Trotsky. By the late 1920s, Stalin had established himself as the unquestioned ruler of the Soviet Union.