Stalin: The Dictator Who Reshaped the 20th Century — Fexingo History

Stalin's 1928 Shakhty Trial: The First Show Trial

8 min · 10. juni 2026
episode Stalin's 1928 Shakhty Trial: The First Show Trial cover

Beskrivelse

In this episode of Stalin: The Dictator Who Reshaped the 20th Century, Lucas and Luna explore the 1928 Shakhty Trial, the first major show trial under Stalin. They discuss how a group of mining engineers in the Donbas region were accused of sabotage, conspiracy with former capitalists, and wrecking — all part of a fabricated case designed to discredit the 'bourgeois specialists' and justify a new wave of industrialization and terror. The hosts delve into the trial's mechanics: the coerced confessions, the role of the OGPU, the public spectacle, and the use of foreign 'masterminds' (including a fictional French spy ring). They examine the political context — the end of NEP, the grain crisis, and Stalin's turn toward rapid industrialization and class war. The episode also touches on the legacy of the Shakhty Trial as a template for later purges, including the 1930s Great Terror. Specific names include Georgy Pyatakov, Vlas Chubar, and the accused engineers like Nikolai Skorutto and Andrei Bakhir. A nuanced look at how a single trial reshaped Soviet justice and labor policy. #ShakhtyTrial #Stalin #SovietUnion #ShowTrial #Donbas #OGPU #Industrialization #FiveYearPlan #NEP #Wrecking #1928 #GeorgyPyatakov #VlasChubar #NikolaiSkorutto #AndreiBakhir #GreatTerror #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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168 episoder

episode Kuropatkin's 1916 Turkestan Revolt: Stalin's First Mass Deportation cover

Kuropatkin's 1916 Turkestan Revolt: Stalin's First Mass Deportation

In 1916, Tsar Nicholas II ordered the conscription of Central Asian Muslims into labor battalions, sparking a massive rebellion across the Turkestan region. The revolt was brutally suppressed by General Aleksey Kuropatkin, and its aftermath included the first mass deportations of ethnic groups in modern Russian history — a grim precedent for Stalin's later policies. We follow the revolt's outbreak in the Ferghana Valley, the massacre of Russian settlers, and the flight of hundreds of thousands of Kyrgyz and Kazakhs across the border into China. We also examine how Stalin, then a young Bolshevik agitator in exile, wrote about the revolt as a sign of imperial fragility. This episode draws on the memoirs of Mustafa Chokaev, a Kazakh nationalist who led the uprising, and on recent scholarship about the 1916 rebellion as a forgotten pivot point in the region's relationship with Moscow. #1916Revolt #Turkestan #Kuropatkin #Stalin #MustafaChokaev #Kyrgyz #Kazakh #CentralAsia #FerghanaValley #TsarNicholasII #Deportation #Massacre #RussianEmpire #Conscription #Bolshevik #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. juli 20268 min
episode Stalin and the 1943 Tehran Conference: Big Three at the Summit cover

Stalin and the 1943 Tehran Conference: Big Three at the Summit

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the 1943 Tehran Conference, the first meeting of the Big Three—Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill—during World War II. They discuss the politics of the conference, including the decision to open a second front in Normandy, the division of postwar Germany, and the secret protocols that shaped Eastern Europe's fate. Lucas explains Stalin's leverage at the conference, his relationship with Roosevelt, and the tensions with Churchill over Poland's borders. The episode also touches on the assassination of Iranian collaborators, the role of the NKVD in security, and the symbolic gift of the Sword of Stalingrad. It's a deep dive into a pivotal summit that redrew the map of Europe and set the stage for the Cold War. #TehranConference #BigThree #Stalin #Roosevelt #Churchill #OperationOverlord #SecondFront #PolishBorders #CurzonLine #SwordOfStalingrad #NKVD #Iran1943 #WWII #EasternEurope #ColdWarOrigins #History #FexingoHistory #WorldWarII Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. juli 20269 min
episode Stalin's 1937 Census: The Numbers He Couldn't Control cover

Stalin's 1937 Census: The Numbers He Couldn't Control

In 1937, the Soviet Union conducted its first census since 1926. Stalin expected numbers that would prove the success of his Five-Year Plans and collectivization. But when the results came in, they were catastrophic for his propaganda. The population was far lower than projected, revealing millions of excess deaths from famine, purges, and upheaval. This episode explores how the census became a political weapon. Ivan Kraval, the census director, was arrested and shot for presenting the truth. The results were suppressed, and a new census in 1939 produced the 'correct' numbers. We also look at how ordinary citizens, suspicious of state motives, gave false answers, and at the poet Osip Mandelstam, whose census questionnaire became a act of defiance. Join Lucas and Luna as they uncover the story of the 1937 census — a silent rebellion of statistics that Stalin tried to bury. #1937Census #Stalin #SovietUnion #IvanKraval #OsipMandelstam #NKVD #Gosplan #GreatTerror #Demographics #FiveYearPlan #Collectivization #Famine #Propaganda #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #USSR #Census Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går5 min
episode Stalin's 1945 Yalta Conference: Dividing the World cover

Stalin's 1945 Yalta Conference: Dividing the World

In February 1945, with Nazi Germany collapsing, Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill met at the Livadia Palace in Yalta, Crimea, to redraw the map of Europe. This episode unpacks the negotiations that decided the fate of Poland, Germany, and Eastern Europe for decades. We explore Stalin's strategic goals, his leverage from the Red Army's occupation of Eastern Europe, and the controversial agreements on the 'Declaration on Liberated Europe' and the Polish government. We also examine the roles of key figures like Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Vyacheslav Molotov, and the long-debated question of whether Roosevelt's concessions at Yalta enabled Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. The episode also touches on the repatriation of Soviet POWs and the secret deal on Soviet entry into the war against Japan. A critical look at how one conference set the stage for the Cold War. #YaltaConference #Stalin #Roosevelt #Churchill #Crimea #LivadiaPalace #WWII #ColdWar #PolishGovernment #DeclarationonLiberatedEurope #Repatriation #SovietPOWs #PacificWar #1945 #FexingoHistory #History #EasternEurope #BigThree Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går5 min
episode Stalin's 1930s Railway: The Iron Road That Built an Empire cover

Stalin's 1930s Railway: The Iron Road That Built an Empire

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore Stalin's railway expansion in the 1930s — a mammoth infrastructure project that moved millions of tons of coal, steel, and grain across the Soviet Union while also transporting prisoners to the Gulag. They focus on the Turkestan–Siberia Railway (Turksib), a 1,500-kilometer line completed in 1930 that connected Central Asia's cotton fields to Siberian grain. The conversation delves into the use of forced labor from the Gulag, the role of American engineers like John S. Rizor, and the railway's strategic importance for supplying troops during World War II. Lucas explains how the railway became a symbol of Soviet modernity in propaganda films like Viktor Turin's 'Turksib' (1929), while also serving as a tool of repression, deporting entire nationalities. The episode also touches on lesser-known figures like the railway's chief engineer, Ivan Rerberg, and the deadly construction conditions that claimed thousands of lives. Tightly focused on a single, powerful thread of Stalinist policy, this episode reveals how railways literally and figuratively connected the Soviet experiment — for better and worse. #Stalin #Turksib #SovietRailway #Gulag #ForcedLabor #Industrialization #CentralAsia #Siberia #JohnRizor #IvanRerberg #ViktorTurin #FiveYearPlan #History #FexingoHistory #Propaganda #Infrastructure #1930s #USSR Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. juli 20267 min