Answer:
D.The Russian Revolution of 1905 led to limits on the czar's power, but the Russian Revolution of 1917 ended thn revolution of 1905 different from the russian revolution of 1917
Step-by-step explanation:
- The Russian Revolution of 1905 was a wave of mass political agitation throughout large areas of the Russian Empire that occurred throughout the year 1905. Some of the altercations were directed against the government, others simply lacked purpose beyond very grievances. punctual of the working class or the peasantry. There were cases of terrorism, strikes of workers, peasant disturbances and military riots, all having in common a widespread popular dissatisfaction with the regime of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. The revolution led to the establishment of a limited constitutional monarchy and to the State Duma of the Russian Empire.
- The term Russian Revolution groups together all the events that led to the overthrow of the imperial tsarist regime and the prepared restoration of another, republican Leninist, between February and October 1917, which led to the creation of the Soviet Federative Socialist Republic of Russia. The Tsar was forced to abdicate and the old regime was replaced by a Provisional Government during the first revolution of February 1917 (March in the Gregorian calendar, since the Julian calendar was in use in Russia at that time). In the subsequent October revolution, the Provisional Government was eliminated and replaced with a Communist-led Bolshevik government known as the Sovnarkom.