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Peter Struve

Peter (or Pyotr or Petr) Berngardovich Struve (Russian: Пётр Бернга́рдович Стру́ве; pronounced [pʲɵtr bʲɪrnˈɡardəvʲɪtɕˈstruvʲɪ]; 26 January 1870 – 22 February 1944) was a Russian political economist, philosopher, historian and editor. He started his career as a Marxist, later became a liberal and after the Bolshevik Revolution joined the White movement. From 1920, he lived in exile in Paris, where he was a prominent critic of Russian Communism.

Biography Edit

Marxist theoretician Edit

Peter Struve is probably the best known member of the Russian branch of the Struve family. Son of Bernhard Struve (Astrakhan and later Perm governor) and grandson of astronomer Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von Struve, he entered the Natural Sciences Department of the University of Saint Petersburg in 1889 and transferred to its law school in 1890. While there, he became interested in Marxism, attended Marxist and narodniki (populist) meetings (where he met his future opponent Vladimir Lenin) and wrote articles for legally published magazines—hence the term Legal Marxism, whose chief proponent he became. In September 1893 Struve was hired by the Finance Ministry and worked in its library, but was fired on 1 June 1894 after an arrest and a brief detention in April–May of that year. In 1894, he also published his first major book, Kriticheskie zametki k voprosu ob ekonomicheskom razvitii Rossii (Critical Notes on the Economic Development of Russia) in which he defended the applicability of Marxism to Russian conditions against populist critics.

In 1895, Struve finished his degree and wrote an Open letter to Nicholas II on behalf of the Zemstvo. He then went abroad for further studies, where he attended the 1896 International Socialist Congress in London and befriended famous Russian revolutionary exile Vera Zasulich.[1]

After returning to Russia Struve became one of the editors of the successive Legal Marxist magazines Novoye Slovo (The New Word, 1897), Nachalo (The Beginning, 1899) and Zhizn (1899–1901). Struve was also the most popular speaker at the Legal Marxist debates at the Free Economic Society in the late 1890s—early 1900s in spite of his often impenetrable-to-laymen arguments and unkempt appearance.[2] In 1898 Struve wrote the Manifesto of the newly formed Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. However, as he later explained:

Socialism, to tell the truth, never aroused the slightest emotion in me, still less attraction... Socialism interested me mainly as an ideological force – which... could be directed either to the conquest of civil and political freedoms or against them[3]

Leaving Socialism Edit

 
Struve as a member of State Duma

By 1900, Struve had become a leader of the revisionist, i.e. compromising, wing of Russian Marxists. Struve and Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky represented the moderates during the negotiations with Julius Martov, Alexander Potresov and Vladimir Lenin, the leaders of the party's radical wing, in Pskov in March 1900. In late 1900, Struve went to Munich and again held lengthy talks with the radicals between December 1900 and February 1901. The two sides eventually reached a compromise which included making Struve the editor of Sovremennoe Obozrenie (Contemporary Review), a proposed supplement to the radicals' magazine Zaria (Dawn), in exchange for his help in securing financial support from Russian liberals. The plan was frustrated by Struve's arrest at the famous Kazan Square demonstration on 4 March 1901 immediately upon his return to Russia. Struve was banished from the capital and, like other demonstrators, was offered to choose his own place of exile. He chose Tver, a center of Zemstvo radicalism.[4]

In 1902 Struve secretly left Tver and went abroad, but by then the radicals had abandoned the idea of a joint magazine and Struve's further evolution from socialism to liberalism would have made collaboration difficult anyway. Instead he founded an independent liberal semi-monthly magazine Osvobozhdenie (Liberation) with the help of liberal intelligentsia and the radical part of Zemstvo. The magazine was financed by D. E. Zhukovsky and was at first published in Stuttgart, Germany (1 July 1902 – 15 October 1904). In mid-1903, after the founding of the liberal Soyuz Osvobozhdeniya (Union of Liberation), the magazine became the Union's official organ and was smuggled into Russia, where it enjoyed considerable success.[5] When German police, under pressure from Okhrana, raided the premises in October 1904, Struve moved his operations to Paris and continued publishing the magazine for another year (15 October 1904 – 18 October 1905) until the October Manifesto proclaimed freedom of the press in Russia.[6]

Liberal Politician Edit

In October 1905 Struve returned to Russia, and became a co-founder of the liberal Constitutional Democratic party and a member of its Central Committee. In 1907 he represented the party in the Second State Duma.

After the Duma's dissolution on 3 June 1907, Struve concentrated on his work at Russkaya Mysl (Russian Thought), a leading liberal newspaper, of which he had been publisher and de facto editor-in-chief since 1906.

Struve was the driving force behind Vekhi (Milestones, 1909), a groundbreaking and controversial anthology of essays critical of the intelligentsia and its rationalistic and radical traditions. As Russkaya Mysl editor, Struve rejected Andrey Bely's seminal novel Petersburg, which he apparently saw as a parody of revolutionary intellectuals.[7]

With the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Struve adopted a position of support for the government, and in 1916 he resigned from the Constitutional Democratic party's Central Committee over what he saw as the party's excessive opposition to the government in a time of war.[citation needed]

Opponent of Bolshevism Edit

In May 1917, after the February Revolution of 1917 overthrew monarchy in Russia, Struve was elected as member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, until he was excluded by the Bolshevik-engineered expulsion of 1918.

Immediately after the October Revolution of 1917, Struve went to the South of Russia where he joined the Volunteer Army's Council.

In early 1918 he returned to Moscow, where he lived under an assumed name for most of the year, contributed to Iz Glubiny (variously translated as De Profundis, From the Deep or From the Depths, 1918[8]), a follow-up to Vekhi, and published several other notable articles on the causes of the revolution.

With the Russian Civil War raging and his life in danger Struve had to flee; and after a three-month journey arrived in Finland, where he negotiated with general Nikolai Yudenich and the Finnish leader Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim before leaving for Western Europe. Struve represented general Anton Denikin's anti-Bolshevik government in Paris and London in 1919, before returning to Denikin-controlled territories in the South of Russia, where he edited a leading newspaper of the White Movement. With Denikin's resignation after the Novorossisk debacle and general Pyotr Wrangel's rise to the top in early 1920, Struve became foreign minister in Wrangel's government.[9]

With the defeat of Wrangel's army in November 1920 Struve left for Bulgaria, where he relaunched Russkaya Mysl under the aegis of the emigre "Russko-Bolgarskoe knigoizdatel'stvo" publishing house.[10] Then Struve left for Paris, where he remained until his death in 1944.In Bulgaria, Struve left many followers in the field of economics, especially his students, who emigrated and took academic positions at Bulgarian universities (the most famous of which are Simeon Demostenov and Naum Dolinski).[11][12]

His children were prominent in the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

Personal life Edit

Religion Edit

Struve's father was Russian Orthodox while his mother was Lutheran. During his Marxist years Struve was a religious skeptic. Afterwords, he returned to Orthodoxy, maintaining a strongly individualistic view that was close to Protestantism.[13]

Descendants Edit

Peter Struve's son Gleb Struve (1898–1985) was one of the most prominent Russian critics of the 20th century. He taught at the University of California, Berkeley and befriended Vladimir Nabokov in the 1920s.

Pyotr's grandson, Nikita Struve (1931–2016), was a professor at a Paris university and an editor of several Russian-language periodicals published in Europe.

See also Edit

Notes and references Edit

  1. ^ Christian Rakovsky (1980). "An Autobiography", in Christian Rakovsky. Selected Writings on Opposition in the USSR 1923–30, ed. Gus Fagan, Allison & Busby, London & New York. ISBN 0-85031-379-1
  2. ^ Yel. Kots. "Kontrabandisty" (Vospominaniya) ("Contrabandists" ("Memoirs")), in Byloye (Leningrad series), 1926, 3 (37), (magazine closed down in 1926, issues 2 and 3 remained unpublished until 1991), ISBN 5-289-01021-1 p. 43
  3. ^ Slavonic and East European Review, vol. xxii, no. 34, p. 350, quoted in Alan Woods (1999) Bolshevism: The Road to Revolution, Wellred Publications ISBN 1-900007-05-3 Part One: The Birth of Russian Marxism 28 August 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Shmuel Galai (1973). The Liberation Movement in Russia 1900–1905, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-52647-7 p. 113.
  5. ^ Leopold H. Haimson. The Making of Three Russian Revolutionaries: Voices from the Menshevik Past, Cambridge University Press, 1987, ISBN 0-521-26325-5 p.469.
  6. ^ See the catalog of the Library of Congress (LCCN 52-56132 for publication details.
  7. ^ Oleg A. Maslenikov. The Frenzied Poets, [Berkeley, University of California Press, 1952], p. 124, quoted in Arthur Levin (1978) "Andrey Bely, M. O. Gershenzon and Vekhi: A Rejoinder to N. Valentinov" in Andrey Bely: A Critical Review, The University Press of Kentucky, ISBN 0-8131-1368-7 p. 178
  8. ^ Since the book was printed illegally and its distribution history is obscure, there is some disagreement regarding its publishing history. Some e.g. Pedro Ramet (ed.) (1989) Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics, Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-0891-6 p. 437 mention that the book was printed in 1921. It was reprinted by YMCA Press in Paris in 1967.
  9. ^ W. Bruce Lincoln (1989). Red Victory: A History of the Russian Civil War, 1918–1921, NY, Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-306-80909-5 p.426
  10. ^ Sergei Glebov (2003). "Russian and East European Books and Manuscripts in the United States" in Russian and East European Books and Manuscripts in the United States: Proceedings of a Conference in Honor of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European History and Culture (Slavic and East European Information Resources, Volume 4, Number 4 2003), eds. Jared S. Ingersoll and Tanya Chebotarev, The Haworth Press. ISBN 0-7890-2405-5 p. 29
  11. ^ "Nenovsky, N., P. Pencjev (2018). The Austrian school in Bulgaria: A history, Russian Journal of Economics, 4(1): 44-64". Russian Journal of Economics. 4 (1): 44–64. 23 April 2018. doi:10.3897/j.ruje.4.26005.
  12. ^ "Nenovsky, N., P. Pencjev // Between Carl Menger and Peter Struve: On Russian Liberal Economics, History of Economic Ideas, 2017, 25 (3): 11- 40". {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  13. ^ Richard Pipes. Sturve.

Works in English Edit

  • Collected Works in 15 volumes, ed. Richard Pipes, Ann Arbor, MI, University Microfilms, 1970
  • "Past and present of Russian economics" in Russian realities & problems: Lectures delivered at Cambridge in August 1916, by Pavel Milyukov, Peter Struve, Harold Williams, Alexander Sergeyevich Lappo-Danilevsky and Roman Dmowski, Cambridge, University press, 1917, 229p.
  • "Foreword", in Alexander A. Valentinov. The assault of heaven; the black book containing official and other information illustrating the struggle against all religion carried by the Communist government in Russia, [Berlin, M. Mattisson, ltd., printer, 1924], xxiv, 266p.
  • Food Supply in Russia During the World War, Yale University Press, 1930, xxviii, 469p.

Works in Russian Edit

  • Sub'ektivism i idealizm (Subjectivism and Idealism), 1901, 267p.
  • Na raznye temy (On Various Topics), 1902, 555p.
  • Khozyaistvo i tsena (Enterprise and Price), in 2 volumes, 1913–1916.
  • Itogi i suschestvo kommunisticheskago khozyaistva (The End Results and the Essence of the Communist Enterprise), [1921], 30p.
  • Sotsial'naya i ekonomicheskaya istoriya Rossii (Social and Economic History of Russia), 1952, 386p.

Further reading Edit

  • Richard Pipes. Struve:
    • Vol 1. Struve: Liberal on the Left, 1870–1905, Harvard University Press, 1970, xiii, 415p. ISBN 0-674-84595-1
    • Vol 2. Struve: Liberal on the Right, 1905–1944, Harvard University Press, 1980, xix, 526p. ISBN 0-674-84600-1
  • Richard Pipes. Bibliography of the published writings of Peter Berngardovich Struve (Bibliografiia pechatnykh rabot Petra Berngardovicha Struve), Ann Arbor, Mich., Published for Russian Research Center, Harvard University by University Microfilms International, 1980, 220p, ISBN 0-8357-0503-X
  • S. L. Frank. Biografiya P. B. Struve, New York, 1956.
  • Geir Flikke. "Democracy or Theocracy: Frank, Struve, Berdjaev, Bulgakov, and the 1905 Russian Revolution".
  • Horowitz, Brian (2016), "Unity in "Landmarks" ("Vekhi")?: The Tensions between Petr Struve and Mikhail Gershenzon", Znanie. Ponimanie. Umenie, 13 (2): 329–342, doi:10.17805/zpu.2016.2.29.


External links Edit

  • Works by or about Peter Struve at Internet Archive
  • Works by Peter Struve at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Register of the Petr Berngardovich Struve Papers, 1890–1982 at the Hoover Institution Archives.
  • Register of the Gleb Struve Papers, 1810–1985 at the Hoover Institution Archives.

peter, struve, peter, pyotr, petr, berngardovich, struve, russian, Пётр, Бернга, рдович, Стру, ве, pronounced, pʲɵtr, bʲɪrnˈɡardəvʲɪtɕˈstruvʲɪ, january, 1870, february, 1944, russian, political, economist, philosopher, historian, editor, started, career, marxi. Peter or Pyotr or Petr Berngardovich Struve Russian Pyotr Bernga rdovich Stru ve pronounced pʲɵtr bʲɪrnˈɡardevʲɪtɕˈstruvʲɪ 26 January 1870 22 February 1944 was a Russian political economist philosopher historian and editor He started his career as a Marxist later became a liberal and after the Bolshevik Revolution joined the White movement From 1920 he lived in exile in Paris where he was a prominent critic of Russian Communism Pyotr Berngardovich StruvePeter StruveBornJanuary 26 1870Perm Russian EmpireDied22 February 1944 1944 02 22 aged 74 Paris German occupied FranceAlma materSaint Petersburg State UniversityEraContemporary philosophyRegionRussian philosophySchoolMarxism Nationalism Liberalism Conservative liberalismMain interestsRussian Nationalism Panslavism Legal Marxism Anti communismNotable ideasLegal Marxism Russian Nationalism Anti Sovietism Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Marxist theoretician 1 2 Leaving Socialism 1 3 Liberal Politician 1 4 Opponent of Bolshevism 2 Personal life 2 1 Religion 2 2 Descendants 3 See also 4 Notes and references 5 Works in English 6 Works in Russian 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditMarxist theoretician Edit Peter Struve is probably the best known member of the Russian branch of the Struve family Son of Bernhard Struve Astrakhan and later Perm governor and grandson of astronomer Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von Struve he entered the Natural Sciences Department of the University of Saint Petersburg in 1889 and transferred to its law school in 1890 While there he became interested in Marxism attended Marxist and narodniki populist meetings where he met his future opponent Vladimir Lenin and wrote articles for legally published magazines hence the term Legal Marxism whose chief proponent he became In September 1893 Struve was hired by the Finance Ministry and worked in its library but was fired on 1 June 1894 after an arrest and a brief detention in April May of that year In 1894 he also published his first major book Kriticheskie zametki k voprosu ob ekonomicheskom razvitii Rossii Critical Notes on the Economic Development of Russia in which he defended the applicability of Marxism to Russian conditions against populist critics In 1895 Struve finished his degree and wrote an Open letter to Nicholas II on behalf of the Zemstvo He then went abroad for further studies where he attended the 1896 International Socialist Congress in London and befriended famous Russian revolutionary exile Vera Zasulich 1 After returning to Russia Struve became one of the editors of the successive Legal Marxist magazines Novoye Slovo The New Word 1897 Nachalo The Beginning 1899 and Zhizn 1899 1901 Struve was also the most popular speaker at the Legal Marxist debates at the Free Economic Society in the late 1890s early 1900s in spite of his often impenetrable to laymen arguments and unkempt appearance 2 In 1898 Struve wrote the Manifesto of the newly formed Russian Social Democratic Labour Party However as he later explained Socialism to tell the truth never aroused the slightest emotion in me still less attraction Socialism interested me mainly as an ideological force which could be directed either to the conquest of civil and political freedoms or against them 3 Leaving Socialism Edit nbsp Struve as a member of State DumaBy 1900 Struve had become a leader of the revisionist i e compromising wing of Russian Marxists Struve and Mikhail Tugan Baranovsky represented the moderates during the negotiations with Julius Martov Alexander Potresov and Vladimir Lenin the leaders of the party s radical wing in Pskov in March 1900 In late 1900 Struve went to Munich and again held lengthy talks with the radicals between December 1900 and February 1901 The two sides eventually reached a compromise which included making Struve the editor of Sovremennoe Obozrenie Contemporary Review a proposed supplement to the radicals magazine Zaria Dawn in exchange for his help in securing financial support from Russian liberals The plan was frustrated by Struve s arrest at the famous Kazan Square demonstration on 4 March 1901 immediately upon his return to Russia Struve was banished from the capital and like other demonstrators was offered to choose his own place of exile He chose Tver a center of Zemstvo radicalism 4 In 1902 Struve secretly left Tver and went abroad but by then the radicals had abandoned the idea of a joint magazine and Struve s further evolution from socialism to liberalism would have made collaboration difficult anyway Instead he founded an independent liberal semi monthly magazine Osvobozhdenie Liberation with the help of liberal intelligentsia and the radical part of Zemstvo The magazine was financed by D E Zhukovsky and was at first published in Stuttgart Germany 1 July 1902 15 October 1904 In mid 1903 after the founding of the liberal Soyuz Osvobozhdeniya Union of Liberation the magazine became the Union s official organ and was smuggled into Russia where it enjoyed considerable success 5 When German police under pressure from Okhrana raided the premises in October 1904 Struve moved his operations to Paris and continued publishing the magazine for another year 15 October 1904 18 October 1905 until the October Manifesto proclaimed freedom of the press in Russia 6 Liberal Politician Edit In October 1905 Struve returned to Russia and became a co founder of the liberal Constitutional Democratic party and a member of its Central Committee In 1907 he represented the party in the Second State Duma After the Duma s dissolution on 3 June 1907 Struve concentrated on his work at Russkaya Mysl Russian Thought a leading liberal newspaper of which he had been publisher and de facto editor in chief since 1906 Struve was the driving force behind Vekhi Milestones 1909 a groundbreaking and controversial anthology of essays critical of the intelligentsia and its rationalistic and radical traditions As Russkaya Mysl editor Struve rejected Andrey Bely s seminal novel Petersburg which he apparently saw as a parody of revolutionary intellectuals 7 With the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Struve adopted a position of support for the government and in 1916 he resigned from the Constitutional Democratic party s Central Committee over what he saw as the party s excessive opposition to the government in a time of war citation needed Opponent of Bolshevism Edit In May 1917 after the February Revolution of 1917 overthrew monarchy in Russia Struve was elected as member of the Russian Academy of Sciences until he was excluded by the Bolshevik engineered expulsion of 1918 Immediately after the October Revolution of 1917 Struve went to the South of Russia where he joined the Volunteer Army s Council In early 1918 he returned to Moscow where he lived under an assumed name for most of the year contributed to Iz Glubiny variously translated as De Profundis From the Deep or From the Depths 1918 8 a follow up to Vekhi and published several other notable articles on the causes of the revolution With the Russian Civil War raging and his life in danger Struve had to flee and after a three month journey arrived in Finland where he negotiated with general Nikolai Yudenich and the Finnish leader Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim before leaving for Western Europe Struve represented general Anton Denikin s anti Bolshevik government in Paris and London in 1919 before returning to Denikin controlled territories in the South of Russia where he edited a leading newspaper of the White Movement With Denikin s resignation after the Novorossisk debacle and general Pyotr Wrangel s rise to the top in early 1920 Struve became foreign minister in Wrangel s government 9 With the defeat of Wrangel s army in November 1920 Struve left for Bulgaria where he relaunched Russkaya Mysl under the aegis of the emigre Russko Bolgarskoe knigoizdatel stvo publishing house 10 Then Struve left for Paris where he remained until his death in 1944 In Bulgaria Struve left many followers in the field of economics especially his students who emigrated and took academic positions at Bulgarian universities the most famous of which are Simeon Demostenov and Naum Dolinski 11 12 His children were prominent in the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia Personal life EditReligion Edit Struve s father was Russian Orthodox while his mother was Lutheran During his Marxist years Struve was a religious skeptic Afterwords he returned to Orthodoxy maintaining a strongly individualistic view that was close to Protestantism 13 Descendants Edit Peter Struve s son Gleb Struve 1898 1985 was one of the most prominent Russian critics of the 20th century He taught at the University of California Berkeley and befriended Vladimir Nabokov in the 1920s Pyotr s grandson Nikita Struve 1931 2016 was a professor at a Paris university and an editor of several Russian language periodicals published in Europe See also EditStruve family Russian legal history List of Russian legal historiansNotes and references Edit Christian Rakovsky 1980 An Autobiography in Christian Rakovsky Selected Writings on Opposition in the USSR 1923 30 ed Gus Fagan Allison amp Busby London amp New York ISBN 0 85031 379 1 Yel Kots Kontrabandisty Vospominaniya Contrabandists Memoirs in Byloye Leningrad series 1926 3 37 magazine closed down in 1926 issues 2 and 3 remained unpublished until 1991 ISBN 5 289 01021 1 p 43 Slavonic and East European Review vol xxii no 34 p 350 quoted in Alan Woods 1999 Bolshevism The Road to Revolution Wellred Publications ISBN 1 900007 05 3 Part One The Birth of Russian Marxism Archived 28 August 2005 at the Wayback Machine Shmuel Galai 1973 The Liberation Movement in Russia 1900 1905 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 52647 7 p 113 Leopold H Haimson The Making of Three Russian Revolutionaries Voices from the Menshevik Past Cambridge University Press 1987 ISBN 0 521 26325 5 p 469 See the catalog of the Library of Congress LCCN 52 56132 for publication details Oleg A Maslenikov The Frenzied Poets Berkeley University of California Press 1952 p 124 quoted in Arthur Levin 1978 Andrey Bely M O Gershenzon and Vekhi A Rejoinder to N Valentinov in Andrey Bely A Critical Review The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 1368 7 p 178 Since the book was printed illegally and its distribution history is obscure there is some disagreement regarding its publishing history Some e g Pedro Ramet ed 1989 Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 0891 6 p 437 mention that the book was printed in 1921 It was reprinted by YMCA Press in Paris in 1967 W Bruce Lincoln 1989 Red Victory A History of the Russian Civil War 1918 1921 NY Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 306 80909 5 p 426 Sergei Glebov 2003 Russian and East European Books and Manuscripts in the United States in Russian and East European Books and Manuscripts in the United States Proceedings of a Conference in Honor of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European History and Culture Slavic and East European Information Resources Volume 4 Number 4 2003 eds Jared S Ingersoll and Tanya Chebotarev The Haworth Press ISBN 0 7890 2405 5 p 29 Nenovsky N P Pencjev 2018 The Austrian school in Bulgaria A history Russian Journal of Economics 4 1 44 64 Russian Journal of Economics 4 1 44 64 23 April 2018 doi 10 3897 j ruje 4 26005 Nenovsky N P Pencjev Between Carl Menger and Peter Struve On Russian Liberal Economics History of Economic Ideas 2017 25 3 11 40 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Richard Pipes Sturve Works in English EditCollected Works in 15 volumes ed Richard Pipes Ann Arbor MI University Microfilms 1970 Past and present of Russian economics in Russian realities amp problems Lectures delivered at Cambridge in August 1916 by Pavel Milyukov Peter Struve Harold Williams Alexander Sergeyevich Lappo Danilevsky and Roman Dmowski Cambridge University press 1917 229p Foreword in Alexander A Valentinov The assault of heaven the black book containing official and other information illustrating the struggle against all religion carried by the Communist government in Russia Berlin M Mattisson ltd printer 1924 xxiv 266p Food Supply in Russia During the World War Yale University Press 1930 xxviii 469p Works in Russian EditSub ektivism i idealizm Subjectivism and Idealism 1901 267p Na raznye temy On Various Topics 1902 555p Khozyaistvo i tsena Enterprise and Price in 2 volumes 1913 1916 Itogi i suschestvo kommunisticheskago khozyaistva The End Results and the Essence of the Communist Enterprise 1921 30p Sotsial naya i ekonomicheskaya istoriya Rossii Social and Economic History of Russia 1952 386p Further reading EditRichard Pipes Struve Vol 1 Struve Liberal on the Left 1870 1905 Harvard University Press 1970 xiii 415p ISBN 0 674 84595 1 Vol 2 Struve Liberal on the Right 1905 1944 Harvard University Press 1980 xix 526p ISBN 0 674 84600 1 Richard Pipes Bibliography of the published writings of Peter Berngardovich Struve Bibliografiia pechatnykh rabot Petra Berngardovicha Struve Ann Arbor Mich Published for Russian Research Center Harvard University by University Microfilms International 1980 220p ISBN 0 8357 0503 X S L Frank Biografiya P B Struve New York 1956 Geir Flikke Democracy or Theocracy Frank Struve Berdjaev Bulgakov and the 1905 Russian Revolution Horowitz Brian 2016 Unity in Landmarks Vekhi The Tensions between Petr Struve and Mikhail Gershenzon Znanie Ponimanie Umenie 13 2 329 342 doi 10 17805 zpu 2016 2 29 vteStruve family treeJacob 1755 1841 MathematicianAnton SebastianCarl 1785 1838 PhilologistErnst 1786 1822 Gustav 1788 1829 Friedrich Georg Wilhelm 1793 1864 AstronomerLudwig 1795 1828 AnatomistJohann Christoph Gustav 1763 1828 DiplomatOtto Wilhelm 1819 1905 AstronomerHeinrich 1822 1908 ChemistBerngard 1827 1889 Russian governorKarl 1835 1907 PoliticianJohann Ludwig 1812 1898 Gustav 1805 1870 PoliticianKarl Hermann 1854 1920 AstronomerGustav Ludwig 1858 1920 AstronomerVasily Berngardovich 1854 1912 MathematicianPeter Berngardovich 1870 1944 RevolutionaryAlexander BerngardovichGeorg Hermann 1886 1933 AstronomerOtto 1897 1963 AstronomerVasily Vasilevich 1889 1965 HistorianGleb 1898 1985 PoetAleksey 1899 1976 Library founderWilfried 1914 1992 AstronomerNikita Alexeyevich 1931 2016 AuthorNotes External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Piotr Struve Works by or about Peter Struve at Internet Archive Works by Peter Struve at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Register of the Petr Berngardovich Struve Papers 1890 1982 at the Hoover Institution Archives Register of the Gleb Struve Papers 1810 1985 at the Hoover Institution Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Struve amp oldid 1165256383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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