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Women’s Protest and the Fall of the Tsar [Deep Dive] - March 8th, 2026
On March 8, 1917, a demonstration for bread and peace in Petrograd, Russia, unexpectedly ignited the February Revolution. Led by female textile workers, these International Women's Day protests escalated into massive civil unrest, ultimately forcing the a
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Show Notes
On March 8th, we journey back to the streets of Petrograd in 1917, where a strike by female textile workers served as the catalyst for the February Revolution. Demanding bread and peace amidst the hardships of World War I, these women triggered a sequence of events that ended the Romanov dynasty and fundamentally altered the course of Russian history. This episode of Deep Dive connects the labor roots of International Women's Day to the broader fight for political representation. We also examine the lives of three birthday luminaries: Nobel laureate Otto Hahn, legal giant Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., and pioneering actress Louise Beavers. Each individual left an indelible mark on science, law, and culture, respectively. To conclude, we highlight a landmark moment from the American Revolution era, when Vermont became the first U.S. territory to constitutionally ban slavery in 1777, a decade before the Bill of Rights was even drafted.
Topics Covered
- 📜 The 1917 Petrograd protests and the fall of the Russian Empire.
- ⚛️ Otto Hahn’s discovery of nuclear fission and the birth of atomic science.
- ⚖️ Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. and the shaping of American civil liberties.
- 🎬 Louise Beavers and the humanization of Black characters in cinema.
- 🗽 Vermont's 1777 constitution as a pioneer for emancipation in America.
Deep Dive is AI-assisted, human reviewed. Explore history every day on Neural Newscast.
- (00:10) - Introduction
- (00:19) - The Spark of Revolution
- (02:56) - Scientific and Legal Legacies
- (03:44) - Pioneering Justice and Equality