Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), Major political party of Russia and the Soviet Union from the Russian Revolution of 1917 to 1991. It arose from the Bolshevik wing of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party. From 1918 through the 1980s it was a monolithic, monopolistic ruling party that dominated the Soviet Union’s political, economic, social, and cultural life. The constitution and other legal documents that supposedly regulated the government were actually subordinate to the CPSU, which also dominated the Comintern and the Cominform. Mikhail Gorbachev’s efforts to reform the country’s economy and political structure weakened the party, and in 1990 it voted to surrender its constitutionally guaranteed monopoly of power. The Soviet Union’s dissolution in 1991 marked the party’s formal demise.
Communist Party of the Soviet Union Article
Communist Party of the Soviet Union summary
Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
Great Purge Summary
Great Purge, three widely publicized show trials and a series of closed, unpublicized trials held in the Soviet Union during the late 1930s, in which many prominent Old Bolsheviks were found guilty of treason and executed or imprisoned. All the evidence presented in court was derived from
Georgy Zhukov Summary
Georgy Zhukov was a marshal of the Soviet Union, and the most important Soviet military commander during World War II. Having been conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army during World War I, Zhukov joined the Red Army in 1918, served as a cavalry commander during the Russian Civil War, and
Leonid Brezhnev Summary
Leonid Brezhnev was a Soviet statesman and Communist Party official who was, in effect, the leader of the Soviet Union for 18 years. Having been a land surveyor in the 1920s, Brezhnev became a full member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) in 1931 and studied at the metallurgical
Boris Yeltsin Summary
Boris Yeltsin was a Russian politician who became president of Russia in 1990. In 1991 he became the first popularly elected leader in the country’s history, guiding Russia through a stormy decade of political and economic retrenching until his resignation on the eve of 2000. Yeltsin attended the