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Growth of Nations in Eastern Europe

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Growth of Nations in Eastern Europe Chapter 32 Section 5 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Growth of Nations in Eastern Europe


1
Growth of Nations in Eastern Europe
  • Chapter 32
  • Section 5

2
Defined
  • Eastern Europe is an eastern region of Europe
    variably defined. It can denote
  • the region lying between the variously and
    vaguely defined areas of Central Europe and
    Russia. This contemporary delineation is more
    commonly used to identify the region since the
    dissolution of the Warsaw Pact
  • a diverse area of land stretching from east to
    west as follows
  • - its eastern limit is either the Ural Mountains
    within Russia or from the Pacific coast of the
    Russian Far East
  • - its western limit is the boundary between the
    European Union and the Commonwealth of
    Independent States

3
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4
  • Politically, "Eastern Europe" may in fact cover
    all of northeastern Eurasia, since Russia is one
    single transcontinental geo-political entity.
    Cyprus is also frequently taken to be a European
    state, although geographically it is in Asia. The
    same approach is also sometimes taken with the
    post-Soviet states of Georgia, Armenia, and
    Azerbaijan in the Caucasus.

5
  • More recently, the term "Eastern Europe" has been
    used to refer to all European countries that were
    previously ruled by Communist regimes - the
    so-called "Eastern Bloc". The idea of an "Iron
    Curtain" separating "Western Europe" and
    Soviet-controlled "Eastern Europe" was dominant
    throughout the period of Cold War which followed
    the Second World War.

6
  • As a cultural and ethnic concept, the term
    Eastern Europe was defined by 19th century German
    nationalists to be synonymous with "Slavic
    Europe", as opposed to Germanic (Western) Europe.
    This concept was re-enforced during the years
    leading up to World War II and was often used in
    a racist terminology to characterize
    Eastern/Slavic culture as being backwards and
    inferior to Western/Germanic culture, language,
    and customs.
  • Eastern Europe would then refer to the imaginary
    line which divided predominantly German lands
    from predominantly Slavic lands. The dividing
    line has thus changed over time as a result of
    the World Wars, as well as numerous expulsions
    and genocides.

7
Previous to 1989
8
  • Poland began to form into a recognizable unitary
    and territorial entity around the middle of the
    10th century under the Piast dynasty. Poland's
    first historically documented ruler, Mieszko I,
    was baptized in 966, adopting Catholic
    Christianity as the country's new official
    religion, to which the bulk of the population
    converted in the course of the next century. In
    the 12th century Poland fragmented into several
    smaller states, which were later ravaged by the
    Mongol armies of the Golden Horde in 1241.

9
  • In Polish Democracy every member of parliament
    was able to break any work or project by shouting
    'Liberum Veto' during the session. Russian czars
    took advantage of this unique political
    vulnerability by offering money to Parliamentary
    traitors, who in turn would consistently and
    subversively block necessary reforms and new
    solutions.

10
  • The Soviet Union instituted a new communist
    government in Poland, analogous to much of the
    rest of the Eastern Bloc. In 1948 a turn towards
    Stalinism brought in the beginning of the next
    period of totalitarian rule. The People's
    Republic of Poland (Polska Rzeczpospolita Ludowa)
    was officially proclaimed in 1952.
  • In 1956 the régime became more liberal, freeing
    many people from prison and expanding some
    personal freedoms. In 1970 the government was
    changed. It was a time when the economy was more
    modern, and the government had large credits.
    Labour turmoil in 1980 led to the formation of
    the independent trade union, "Solidarity"
    ("Solidarnosc" in Polish), which over time became
    a political force. It eroded the dominance of the
    Communist Party by 1989 it had triumphed in
    parliamentary elections.
  • Lech Walesa, a Solidarity candidate, eventually
    won the presidency in 1990. The Solidarity
    movement greatly contributed to the
    soon-following collapse of Communism all over
    Eastern Europe.

11
Tatra Mountains
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