Difference between revisions of "Stalin, the Red Dictator dies"
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=== March 5, 1953 === | === March 5, 1953 === | ||
− | [[File:20thMarch5|400px|thumbnail|left]] | + | [[File:20thMarch5.jpg|400px|thumbnail|left]] |
Stalin suffers a stroke and dies. He is succeeded by Nikita Krushchev, who denounces Stalin?s legacy and begins dismantling the cult of personality in a process known as De-Stalinisation. However, this does not bring an end to the persecution of dissidents, as uprisings in Poland and Hungary in 1956 are brutally crushed. | Stalin suffers a stroke and dies. He is succeeded by Nikita Krushchev, who denounces Stalin?s legacy and begins dismantling the cult of personality in a process known as De-Stalinisation. However, this does not bring an end to the persecution of dissidents, as uprisings in Poland and Hungary in 1956 are brutally crushed. | ||
[[Category:20th Anniversary of German Reunification]] | [[Category:20th Anniversary of German Reunification]] |
Latest revision as of 09:53, 31 March 2014
March 5, 1953[edit]
Stalin suffers a stroke and dies. He is succeeded by Nikita Krushchev, who denounces Stalin?s legacy and begins dismantling the cult of personality in a process known as De-Stalinisation. However, this does not bring an end to the persecution of dissidents, as uprisings in Poland and Hungary in 1956 are brutally crushed.