OCR - Y110
Full and complete revision notes covering the OCR topic from Pitt to Peel: Britain 1783–1853. Also includes a seperate document for the enquiry topic: Peel and the Age of Reform 1832–1853 (the source question).
Covers the entire unit in chronological order, following the OCR provided specification , including key statistics. 24 pages over two documents of crucial information.
INCLUDES NOTES ON
Pitt the Younger Royal support, the 1784 election; reform of finance and
administration; trade; the impact of the French Revolution;
radical threats; Whig splits 1790–1794; anti-radical legislation
1794–1801.
Lord Liverpool and the Tories 1812–1830 Liverpool and the radical challenge 1812–1822, the Corn
Law 1815, Peterloo, government policy on law and order,
the Gagging Acts and the Six Acts 1819. Tory governments
1815–1830; Liverpool, Canning and Wellington as Prime
Ministers; Huskisson on trade and finance; Peel at the
Home Office; repeal of the Combination Laws and Test and
Corporation Acts; Roman Catholic Emancipation.
Foreign Policy 1783–1830 Ending isolation 1783–1789; French Revolution to 1793; Pitt
as War Minister 1793–1806 (Blue water strategy, Coalitions,
Peace of Amiens); War with Napoleon – blockades, coalitions
and the Peninsular campaign; Castlereagh 1812–1822 (Vienna
Settlement, Congress diplomacy), Canning 1822–1827 (Holy
Alliance, Spain, Portugal, Latin America and the Greek Question
to 1830).
Parliamentary reform and the Great Reform
Act 1832
Whigs and Tory attitudes to reform 1783–1830; early reform
attempts 1785–1830; reasons for parliamentary reform
1828–1830, extent of popular discontent 1830–1832, the aims
and terms of the 1832 Act.
Pitt the Younger Royal support, the 1784 election; reform of finance and
administration; trade; the impact of the French Revolution;
radical threats; Whig splits 1790–1794; anti-radical legislation
1794–1801.
Lord Liverpool and the Tories 1812–1830 Liverpool and the radical challenge 1812–1822, the Corn
Law 1815, Peterloo, government policy on law and order,
the Gagging Acts and the Six Acts 1819. Tory governments
1815–1830; Liverpool, Canning and Wellington as Prime
Ministers; Huskisson on trade and finance; Peel at the
Home Office; repeal of the Combination Laws and Test and
Corporation Acts; Roman Catholic Emancipation.
Foreign Policy 1783–1830 Ending isolation 1783–1789; French Revolution to 1793; Pitt
as War Minister 1793–1806 (Blue water strategy, Coalitions,
Peace of Amiens); War with Napoleon – blockades, coalitions
and the Peninsular campaign; Castlereagh 1812–1822 (Vienna
Settlement, Congress diplomacy), Canning 1822–1827 (Holy
Alliance, Spain, Portugal, Latin America and the Greek Question
to 1830).
Parliamentary reform and the Great Reform
Act 1832
Whigs and Tory attitudes to reform 1783–1830; early reform
attempts 1785–1830; reasons for parliamentary reform
1828–1830, extent of popular discontent 1830–1832, the aims
and terms of the 1832 Act.
OCR - Y219
Full and complete revision notes covering the entire Russia 1894-1941 topic. Covers all 4 subheadings; The rule of Tsar Nicholas II, The 1917 Revolution, The Civil War and Lenin and The rule of Stalin.
Covers the entire unit in chronological order, following the OCR provided specification , including key statistics. 20 pages of crucial information.
INCLUDES NOTES ON
The rule of Tsar Nicholas II Character, attitude and abilities of Nicholas II; political,
economic and social problems of Russia in 1894; opposition,
liberals, populists and Marxists; national minorities; the
influence of Pobedonostsev, Witte; the Russo-Japanese War;
the causes, extent, nature and consequences of the 1905
Revolution; Witte and the October Manifesto; the Fundamental
Law; the Dumas; repression and reform under Stolypin; the
political social and economic situation in Russia in 1914.
The 1917 Revolutions The impact of the First World War 1914–1917, defeats, losses,
economic dislocation, food shortages, transport problems,
inflation; Nicholas’ leadership; Rasputin; criticism in the
Duma; the events of March 1917; Kerensky, the Provisional
Government and Petrograd Soviet; return of exiles and the April
Theses; July Days; Kornilov Revolt; events of November 1917;
the roles of Lenin and Trotsky.
The Civil War and Lenin The Constituent Assembly, Lenin decrees; Civil War, White
forces, foreign intervention, Red Army, ‘war communism’,
reasons for Bolshevik victory/White defeat; murder of the Tsar;
Red Terror, Kronstadt Rising; NEP; constitution and government;
strengths and weaknesses of Lenin as leader.
The rule of Stalin Character and abilities of Stalin; rivalries and divisions in the
Bolshevik party, Trotsky, Bukharin, Kamenev, Zinoviev; Stalin’s
tactics and victory, ‘socialism in one country’ v ‘permanent
revolution’; consolidation of power, propaganda and ‘Cult
of Personality’, growth of police state (OGPU, NKVD, purges
and gulags); economic policies in the 1930s, agriculture,
kulaks, voluntary and forced collectivisation, mechanisation;
industrialisation, Gosplan, first two Five Year Plans; economic,
social and political effects of Collectivisation and Five Year Plans.