Academic literature on the topic 'Bolshevik Centre'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bolshevik Centre"

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Abekhtikov, Yevgeniy Ye. "The role of the proletariat as a class in 1917 and at first after the October Revolution." Vestnik of Kostroma State University, no. 4 (2019): 41–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.34216/1998-0817-2019-25-4-41-43.

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The article examines the role of the proletariat in the preparation and implementation of the October Revolution of 1917. The author shows that after the revolution, the Bolsheviks had every reason to be disappointed in the proletariat as a class as they started decreasing in number rapidly due to the return of peasants to villages and difficulties in working in enterprises in cities. Much attention is paid in the article to the concept of "dictatorship of the proletariat", which has become the centre of the Bolshevik ideological programme. Due to the fact that the Marxist class analysis turne
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Buchaveckas, Stanislovas. "Kelmė and Vaiguva Jewish Communities and Their Perishing in 1941." Genocidas ir rezistencija 1, no. 29 (2024): 7–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.61903/gr.2011.101.

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It is believed that Jews settled in Kelmė in the 15th century and in Vaiguva in the 18th century. In 1897, 2,710 of the 3,914 residents of Kelmė were Jews. In the 20th century, the Kelmė Jewish community shrank, but the town continued to remain an important centre of Jewish (Litvak) culture. In 1937, 1,302 of the 3,599 residents of the town were Jews. The town had a rabbinical school and five synagogues and houses of worship. Prior to the Germany-USSR war, Kelmė (Raseiniai County) may have had approximately 1,350 Jews, while there were over 1,400 Jews in the entire volost, in which a number of
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Sorokin, Andrey. "A Broken Screw in the Soviet System. The Life and Fate of Leonid Nikolaev." Connexe : les espaces postcommunistes en question(s) 5 (October 23, 2020): 180–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.5077/journals/connexe.2019.e246.

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The tectonic change of 1917 not only disrupted the country but also placed, for a brief moment, a “little man” at the centre of “big story.” Nikolaev was a typical representative of ordinary people being pushed into a corner by circumstances and deceived in their expectations by a pseudo-socialist state. The high expectations of ordinary people, who were involved by the Bolsheviks in their politics, naturally crashed into the harsh realities of the construction of socialism.Brought to political life from social non-existence, this ordinary man soon became unnecessary to the new political regim
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Kotyukova, Tatiana. "The Russian Revolution in Turkestan Through the Eyes of an Eyewitness: “Red”-“White” Memoirs of Alexander Gzovsky." Novaia i noveishaia istoriia, no. 1 (2022): 69. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s013038640018259-2.

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The memoirs of the publicist and writer Alexander Gzovsky, a participant in the revolutionary events in Turkestan, are centred around several dramatic events that took place in Central Asia in late 1917 and early 1918: the fall of tsarism and the coming to power of the Turkestan Committee of the Provisional Government, the defeat of the Turkestan Committee of the Provisional Government and the coming to power of the Bolsheviks, the proclamation of Turkestan (Kokand) autonomy and its liquidation by the Bolsheviks and, finally, the Bolshevik, the so-called Kolesov campaign in Bukhara in March 19
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ROMERO SALVADÓ, FRANCISCO J. "BETWEEN THE CATALAN QUAGMIRE AND THE RED SPECTRE, SPAIN, NOVEMBER 1918 – APRIL 1919." Historical Journal 60, no. 3 (2017): 795–815. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x16000480.

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AbstractDrawing upon a vast array of primary sources, this article focuses on a key period of modern Spanish history: November 1918 – April 1919. In the aftermath of the First World War and spurred on by the Allied victory, demands by Catalonia's political elites for greater autonomy seized the country's agenda. However, the political tussle between the centre and the Catalan elites ended a few months later with their mutual defeat. The upsurge of labour agitation and the hopes of the proletariat generated by the Bolshevik Revolution combined with bourgeois fear resulted in the question of nat
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Beslin, Milivoj, Petar Zarkovic, and Srdjan Milosevic. "The Third Road policy: Eurocommunism and its Yugoslav assessment." Filozofija i drustvo 33, no. 4 (2022): 1037–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/fid2204037b.

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This paper deals with a critical stage in the dissolution of the Soviet Communist (Bolshevik) Party?s domination in the Communist commonwealth. The gradual emancipation of European Communist parties, starting with Yugoslavia (1948), through the developments that caused the Soviet interventions in Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968), gave birth to independent strategies of political struggle, autonomous from Moscow?s ideological centre, which were implemented by the largest Communist parties in Western Europe. The attempts aimed at the syncretism of the communist platform, and ideas of pol
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Stasulane, Anita. "Le succès rencontré par les disciples de Roerich en Lettonie (1920-1940)." Slavica Occitania 48, no. 1 (2019): 417–35. https://doi.org/10.3406/slaoc.2019.1224.

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Success of followers of the Roerichs in Latvia (1920-1940). The present article examines a special input of Latvia in the development of the Roerich movement. After 1917, Latvia played an important role in the formation of the network of Theosophists who had emigrated as refugees from the Bolshevik regime. The development of a new branch of Theosophy, i. e. Agni Yoga / Living Ethics was closely related to Latvia as the place of origin of the Roerich family. Starting their activities, Nicholas Roerich (1874-1947) and his wife Helena Roerich (1879-1955) founded small groups of people sharing the
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JOSEPHSON, PAUL, and ALEKSANDR SOROKIN. "Physics moves to the provinces: the Siberian physics community and Soviet power, 1917–1940." British Journal for the History of Science 50, no. 2 (2017): 297–327. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007087417000309.

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AbstractThe rich tradition of Siberian science and higher education is little known outside Russian academic circles. Using institutional history, this article focuses on the founding and pre-war period of the Siberian Physical Technical Institute, the establishment of its research focus and its first difficult steps to become a leading centre of R & D in Siberia. Based on archival materials, the article describes how local and national physicists justified the institute's creation by demonstrating ties with industry and building on the presence of a cohort of locally trained physicists, w
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Pashkov, Alexandr M. "‘… The “Popularity” of Doctors Should Not Be the Sole Reason for Their Arrest as Hostages’: The Red Terror of Autumn 1918 in Documents from the National Archive of the Republic of Karelia." Herald of an archivist, no. 3 (2018): 809–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2073-0101-2018-3-809-820.

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September 2018 will see the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Bolshevik Red Terror, first announced on September 2, 1918. Although in Russia in the last 20 years there have been published some valuable synthesis works on the history of the Red Terror of 1918, many details, especially of its realization at the local level, remain little-studied. The National Archive of the Republic of Karelia stores in its fond R-460 ‘Petrozavodsk City Soviet’ a file entitled ‘Excerpts from the minutes of the Olonets Gubernia Revolutionary Executive Committee and Military Commissariat meetings; correspo
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Rendiuk, Teofil. "The Pinnacle in the Activity of the Extraordinary Diplomatic Mission of the Ukrainian People’s Republic in Romania (1921)." Diplomatic Ukraine, no. XXII (2021): 71–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.37837/2707-7683-2021-3.

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The article deals with the peculiarities in the activity of the Extraordinary Diplomatic Mission of the Ukrainian People’s Republic (EDM of the UPR) in Romania during 1921, when the whole territory of Ukraine was occupied by Bolshevik troops. In those circumstances, the State Centre of the Ukrainian People’s Republic in exile considered Romania as its important military and political partner in the struggle for Ukraine’s independence. For its part, the then Romanian leadership was deeply interested in the existence of independent Ukraine, primarily as a military and political buffer between Ro
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Books on the topic "Bolshevik Centre"

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Stephen, White. The Bolshevik poster. Yale University Press, 1988.

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1957-, Hillyar Anna, ed. Midwives of the Revolution: Female Bolsheviks and women workers in 1917. Ohio University Press, 1999.

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1957-, Hillyar Anna, ed. Midwives of the revolution: Female Bolsheviks and women workers in 1917. UCL Press, 1999.

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Gramsci, Antonio. Tjuremnye tetradi: V 3 č. Politizdat, 1991.

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Wright, Alistair S. Revolution and Civil War in North Russia. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2025. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350434042.

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Revolution and Civil War in North Russia shines a much-needed light on the establishment and consolidation of Bolshevik power on the civil war periphery and examines the Allied/anti-Bolshevik military and home fronts from a previously uncharted perspective. Expanding our understanding of the Russian civil war, this book provides the first detailed, archival-based study in English to analyse the two neighbouring regions of Karelia and Murmansk. Despite not being far from the revolutionary capital, Petrograd, both territories resisted the establishment of Bolshevik power longer than many others
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Hallett, Carr Edward, and Philip Lee Carr. Bolshevik Revolution, 1917-1923. Norton & Company, Incorporated, W. W., 1985.

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Russia Under The Bolshevik Regime. Books on Tape, Inc., 1996.

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Russia Under The Bolshevik Regime. Books on Tape, Inc., 1996.

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Brinegar, Sara G. Power and the Politics of Oil in the Soviet South Caucasus. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350286719.

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Sara G. Brinegar’s book is the first to show how the politics of oil intersected with the establishment of Soviet power in the Caucasus; it reveals how the Soviets cooperated and negotiated with the local elite, rather than merely subsuming them. More broadly, Power and the Politics of Oil in the Soviet South Caucasus demonstrates not only how the Bolsheviks understood and exploited oil, but how the needs of the industry shaped Bolshevik policy. Brinegar reflects on the huge geopolitical importance of oil at the end of World War I and the Russian Civil War. She discusses how the reserves sitti
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Buxton, D. F. Challenge of Bolshevism. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bolshevik Centre"

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Abazov, Rafis. "The Bolshevik Revolution." In The Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of Central Asia. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230610903_34.

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Motta, Giuseppe. "Ethnicization of Anti-Bolshevism." In Postwar Continuity and New Challenges in Central Europe, 1918–1923. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003185017-13.

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Ekmekçioğlu, Lerna. "Cohabitating in Captivity: Vartouhie Calantar Nalbandian (Zarevand) at the Women’s Section of Istanbul’s Central Prison (1915–1918)." In Documenting the Armenian Genocide. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-36753-3_4.

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AbstractVartouhie Calantar Nalbandian (1893–1978), the only Armenian woman known to have been arrested by the Ottoman Turkish authorities in Istanbul in the spring of 1915, was born in Bursa to a Russian Armenian father and an Ottoman Armenian mother. One of the first generation of Armenian girls who received a European university education, Vartouhie sent letters home from Lausanne that would change the course of her life. In 1915, the Ottoman police raided the family home as Tavit Kalantar had been a high-level educator in Armenian schools. They found Vartouhie’s letters to her parents and h
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Kibita, Nataliya. "New System." In The Institutional Foundations of Ukrainian Democracy. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/9780191925351.003.0003.

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Abstract Although formalized in 1920, the Ukrainian government was weak; the Communist Party (Bolshevik) of Ukraine was fragmented; and the Ukrainian leadership had limited authority over the regions. In the period between 1921 and 1925, the Ukrainian leadership made a persistent effort to become the essential link between the Ukrainian regions and the All-Russian centre, and the authority that adjusted central policies to the context of Ukraine. In 1922, Chairman of the Ukrainian Government Christian Rakovsky attempted to obtain de facto autonomy for the Ukrainian commissariats for the purpos
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Pethybridge, Roger. "The West." In One Step Backwards Two Steps Forward. Oxford University PressOxford, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198219279.003.0002.

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Abstract THE Western borderlands of Soviet Russia were the nearest to Moscow of all frontier regions, yet they were relatively neglected by historians and travellers alike.1 Even by 1926 party contacts between the capital and Smolensk were to remain mostly at the written rather than at the human level. Arnold Toynbee once argued that it is the ‘barbaric’ vital periphery that finally topples a declining civilization, but this maxim does not hold for the Russian Revolution. The political centre suffered a series of heart attacks from 1905 onwards, of which the body of society as a whole was only
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Bailey, Lt Col F. M. "Kashgar To Tashkent." In Mission to Tashkent. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192803870.003.0003.

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Abstract The position in Russian Turkestan was obscure. We knew that Bolsheviks were in control but no one quite knew what a Bolshevik was or what were his aims and objects. It seemed that it would be useful to go and see them, and find out what sort of people they were and to try to persuade them to continue the war against Germany, or at least not to help the Central Powers in the war against us.
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Fitzpatrick, Sheila. "The Civil War." In The Russian Revolution. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192802040.003.0004.

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Abstract The October seizure of power was not the end of the Bolshevik Revolution but the beginning. The Bolsheviks had taken control in Petrograd and, after a week of street-fighting, in Moscow. But the soviets that had sprung up in most provincial centres still had to follow the capitals’ lead in overthrowing the bourgeoisie (often, at local level, this meant ousting a ‘Committee of Public Safety’ set up by the solid citizenry of the town); and, if a local soviet was too weak to take power, support was unlikely to be forthcoming from the capitals.
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"6. Marking the Center: Festivals and Legitimacy." In Bolshevik Festivals, 1917–1920. University of California Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520403512-009.

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Pethybridge, Roger. "Bolshevik Controls." In One Step Backwards Two Steps Forward. Oxford University PressOxford, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198219279.003.0006.

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Abstract IT was seen in the previous chapter that there were initial attempts in early NEP to adopt a less centralist approach to the railways and to the press for technical and cultural reasons respectively. Thus Dzerzhinsky on the spot in Siberia discarded faulty theoretical calculations made in Moscow, and in the spring of 1922 railway administration in general was partly decentralized. Yet soon thereafter political fear led to the chairman of each local board becoming a direct representative of the central Commissariat. It was the same with the local press. The Eleventh Party Congress inst
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Nazaroff, Paul. "Persecution And Alarms." In Hunted Through Central Asia. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192803689.003.0005.

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Abstract PRESENTL Y the weather turned warm. In April the apricots and peaches were in full blossom, but it was only through the chinks of the old wall that I could spy bits of blue sky and the twigs of trees, and only at night that I could come out into the open and inhale their fragrance. Spring and the warmth combined awoke some stirring in my veins, and life seemed somehow easier. though I had no plans at all for the future. Sometimes Akbar and I would debate how I could best make my way through the mountains to Ferghana, the greater part of which was still in the hands of native guerillas
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Conference papers on the topic "Bolshevik Centre"

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Norovsambuu, Khishigt, Leonid Kuras, and Bazar Tsybenov. "From Intelligence to the Beginning of Revolutionary Cooperation: the Evolution of Russian Policy in Respect of Mongolia (1905–1918)." In Irkutsk Historical and Economic Yearbook 2021. Baikal State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/978-5-7253-3040-3.43.

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The article is devoted to the evolution of the policy of the Russian Empire and Soviet Russia on the issue of Mongolia. The period under study begins with the Russo-Japanese War at the beginning of the 20th century and ends with the attempts of Soviet Russia to establish relations with Mongolia in 1917–1918. The authors analyzed in detail the military-intelligence, diplomatic and revolutionary aspects of Russian politics in Mongolia. The article also examines the question of the probable meeting in 1917 of Mongolian representatives with the revolutionaries of the Central Executive Committee of
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Reports on the topic "Bolshevik Centre"

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Tymoshyk, Mykola. Кадри тоталітарної журналістики для преси західноукраїнських областей. 40-50-ті роки хх ст. (На архівних матеріалах крайової газети «Радянська Буковина»). Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2023.52-53.11721.

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For the first time in Ukrainian journalism, the issue of totalitarian journalism has been outlined. The basis of the analysis is the archival materials of the Chernivtsi regional newspaper «Soviet Bukovyna» founded in 1940, which was re-registered in 1991 with the name «Bukovyna». The specifics of the formation of the assets of «pen workers» during the Soviet era are clarified; the qualitative composition of the staff, the reasons for their turnover and the typical types of journalists of that time were analyzed; information about the trials and investigations of journalists who were widely us
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Zhytaryuk, Marian. Ukraine in the international press in 1930 (on the materials of the Lviv newspaper «Dilo»). Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2022.51.11413.

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In the article of Professor Maryan Zhytaryuk, it is implemented the systematization of publications in the international press of 1930 about Ukraine on the materials of the Lviv newspaper «Dilo». Important political issues, in particular: Bolshevism in Soviet Ukraine, the massacre of the Ukrainian intelligentsia (Union for the Liberation of Ukraine), the interpretation of the «Ukrainian political problem» in European countries were singled out and generalized. The topicality of the article subject follows from the need to supplement the materials on the study of the «Ukrainian question», from
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