fbpx
Wikipedia

Vatslav Vorovsky

Vatslav Vatslavovich Vorovsky (Russian: Ва́цлав Ва́цлавович Воро́вский; Polish: Wacław Worowski) (27 October [O.S. 15 October] 1871 – 10 May 1923) was a Russian Bolshevik, Marxist revolutionary, literary critic, publicist and Soviet diplomat. One of the first Soviet diplomats, Vorovsky is best remembered as the victim of a May 1923 political assassination in Lausanne, Switzerland, where he was the official representative of the Soviet government to the Conference of Lausanne.

Vatslav Vatslavovich Vorovsky
Born(1871-10-27)27 October 1871
Died10 May 1923(1923-05-10) (aged 51)
Resting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis, Moscow
NationalityRussian
Other namesP. Orlovsky, Y. Adamovich, M. Schwarz, Josephine, Felix Alexandrovich
Occupation(s)diplomat, literary critic
Years active1895–1923
Known forbeing the victim of a political assassination

Biography edit

Early years edit

Vatslav Vorovsky was born on 27 October 1871 (n.s.) in Moscow, the son of an ethnically Polish but Russified noble and engineer.[1] His father died when he was a year old, and he was raised by his mother. Following the completion of secondary school. In 1890, Vorovsky enrolled at the University of Moscow, where he was exposed to the ideas of political radicalism.[1]

Political career edit

In his autobiography, Vorovsky dated his involvement with the socialist movement from 1894, when he made contact with workers' circles in Moscow.[2] He was arrested by the Tsarist secret police in 1897, held for two years in Taganka Prison, then exiled in 1899 to the city of Orlov.[1] Upon his release, Vorovsky adopted a new underground pseudonym, "P. Orlovsky," as a tribute to this experience.[1] During the course of his underground career, Vorovsky also used the pseudonyms "Y. Adamovich," "M. Schwarz," "Josephine," and "Felix Alexandrovich."[1]

 
A young Vorovsky in 1899

Vorovsky emigrated to Europe in 1902, spending time in Italy, Germany, and Switzerland.[1] He acted as an agent for the newspaper Iskra, founded abroad by V.I.Lenin. In 1903 he was a founding member of the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party. During 1904, he was based in Odesa, Ukraine, but emigrated again in August 1904,[3] to help launch the first exclusively Bolshevik publication, Vperyod (Forward), of which he was an editor.[1]

During the Russian Revolution of 1905, Vorovsky returned to Russia, working actively as a revolutionary in St. Petersburg.[1] Following the defeat of the 1905 uprising he moved to Odesa, where he was a leading underground Bolshevik from 1907 to 1912.[1] In 1912, Vorovsky was arrested again, this time to be deported to Vologda province, in Russia.[2] In 1915, he moved to Stockholm, where he worked as an engineer for the Swedish Lux company and for Siemens-Schuckert. [4] In 1917, after the February Revolution in Russia, Vorovsky was appointed to three-man Bolshevik Stockholm Bureau, along with Karl Radek and Yakov Hanecki.

Vorovsky was the first director of Gosizdat, the State Publishing House, from its foundation in 1919 until 1921.[5]

Diplomatic career edit

Following the victory of the Bolshevik Revolution in November 1917, Vorovsky was named the Soviet government's diplomatic representative to Scandinavia, remaining based in Stockholm.[1] In Stockholm, Vorovsky was the point of contact between the new Bolshevik government and representatives of the government of Germany, being introduced by Alexander Parvus to members of the Social-Democratic Party of Germany including Philipp Scheidemann during November and December 1917.[6]

In December 1918, Sweden, responding to pressure on the part of the Allied powers who were intent upon imposing an unbreakable blockade, withdrew official recognition of Vorovsky as the representative of Soviet Russia.[7] This action on the part of the Swedish government forced Vorovsky's return to Russia the following month.[8] This action taken against Vorovsky followed the actions taken by Great Britain in expelling Maxim Litvinov in September 1918 and that of Germany in expelling Adolph Joffe in November of that same year.[9]

In March 1919, Vorovsky served as a member of the Soviet delegation to the Founding Congress of the Communist International.[1] He was named the representative of the Russian Communist Party to the Executive Committee of the Comintern.[1] He also served as one of the secretaries of the organization, along with Angelica Balabanova.[10] Grigorii Zinoviev was tapped as president of the organization.[10]

In July 1920, Vorovsky resumed work as a Soviet diplomat, participating in diplomatic negotiations with Poland.[1]

From 1921 to 1923, Vorovsky was the Soviet representative to Italy.[1] In that capacity he was involved in attempts at negotiation of a trade agreement between the two countries, with a preliminary pact signed in December 1921.[11] This success proved short-lived, however, as negotiations to extend the six-month treaty failed in May 1922.[11]

Vorovsky was a member of the Soviet delegation to the 1922 Genoa Conference, a group headed by Soviet Foreign Minister Georgii Chicherin.

Death and legacy edit

Vorovsky's final diplomatic mission came in the spring of 1923, when he served as Soviet representative to the Lausanne conference of 1923.[1] Accompanied by two diplomatic attachés, Vorovsky arrived in Lausanne from Rome on April 27, hoping to force the conference's official participants to recognize Soviet interests in the Turkish Black Sea Straits.[12]

On May 9, Vorovsky dispatched his final report to Moscow, noting that three days earlier a group of right wing youths had appeared at his hotel and sought a meeting. Vorovsky wrote:

"I refused to receive them, and Comrade Ahrens, who went out to them to find out what it was all about, disposed of them at once, telling them that they should put such matters before their Government. Now they are going about the town declaring that they will compel us to leave Switzerland by force, and so on.

"As to whether the police are taking any measures for our safety, we have no idea. At any rate, it is not apparent on the surface. It is only too evident that behind these hooligan boys there is some conscious directing hand — possibly foreign. The Swiss Government, well aware of what is going on — for the papers are full of it — must bear responsibility for our safety. The behaviour of the Swiss Government is a shameful violation of the guarantees given at the beginning of the conference, and any attack on us in this particularly well-organised country is only possible with the knowledge and permission of the authorities. On them is the responsibility."[13]

On the evening of 10 May 1923 Vorovsky was seated at a dining table in the restaurant of his hotel with his colleagues when the group was approached by an individual they did not know. The unknown figure, a Russian White émigré named Maurice Conradi, pulled a gun and shot Vorovsky to death, wounding his two companions, Ahrens and Divilkovsky, in the attack.[12] Conradi was defended by the advocate Théodore Aubert and later acquitted by the Swiss court in the epilogue of what would be known as the Conradi affair.

 
Coffin of Vorovsky being carried in Berlin

Vatslav Vorovsky was 51 years old at the time of his death. He is buried in Mass Grave No. 7 of the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in Red Square, Moscow.

Memory edit

 
Image of Vorovsky on a Soviet stamp, 1971

A number of settlements and streets in dozens of cities in the USSR were named after Vorovsky under Soviet rule. Among the significant renaming: Kiev Khreshchatyk, which was renamed into Vorovskogo Street between 1923 and 1937.

In Moscow on 11 May 1924, in the courtyard of a former apartment building of the First Russian Insurance Company, a bronze monument of Vorovsky was erected under the project of sculptor Mikhail Kats. In connection with the installation of the monument and the demolition of the Vvedenskaya church located at the corner of Kuznetsky Most and Bolshaya Lubyanka, the vacated place was named Vorovsky Square.[14]

A poem by Vladimir Mayakovsky, titled Vorovsky, was dedicated to him in honor of his death.

The Palaces of Culture in the city of Konakovo, Tver region  and in the city of Ramenskoye, Moscow region were named after Vatslav Vorovsky.[15]

 
Monument of Vatslav Vorovsky on the Vorovsky Square

In 1990, the Russian Coast Guard launched a Menzhinskiy-class (project 11351 - NATO Krivak III Class) ship named for Vorovskiy (Воровский 160).[16]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Branko Lazitch with Milorad M. Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern: New, Revised, and Expanded Edition. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1986; pp. 498–499.
  2. ^ a b Shikman, A.P. "Воровский Вацлав Вацлавович 1871-1923 Биографический Указатель". Khronos. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  3. ^ Schwarz, Soloman M. (1967). The Russian Revolution of 1905, The Workers' Movement and the Formation of Bolshevism and Menshevism. Chicago: Chicago U.P. pp. 258–59.
  4. ^ Futrell, Michael (1963). Northern Underground, Episodes of Russian Revolutionary Transport and Communications through Scandinavia and Finland 1863-1917. London: Faber and Faber. p. 156.
  5. ^ "Gosizdat". The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970–1971). The Gale group. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  6. ^ E.H. Carr, A History of Soviet Russia: The Bolshevik Revolution, 1917–1923: Volume 3. London: Macmillan, 1953; pg. 23.
  7. ^ Louis Fischer, The Soviets in World Affairs: A History of the Relations between the Soviet Union and the Rest of the World, 1917–1929. Second Edition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1951; vol. 1, pg. 248.
  8. ^ Carr, The Bolshevik Revolution, vol. 3, pg. 114, fn. 1.
  9. ^ Carr, The Bolshevik Revolution, vol. 3, pp. 113–114.
  10. ^ a b Carr, The Bolshevik Revolution, vol. 3, pg. 121.
  11. ^ a b Carole Fink, The Genoa Conference: European Diplomacy, 1921–1922. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1984; pg. 282.
  12. ^ a b Fischer, The Soviets in World Affairs, vol. 1, pg. 409.
  13. ^ "The Murder of Vorovsky," first published in Izvestiia, (Moscow) May 15, 1923; reprinted in Russian Information and Review (London), vol. 2, no. 35 (June 9, 1923), pg. 547.
  14. ^ The monument was created with the participation of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, the NKVD and the USSR mission abroad, as evidenced by the inscription on the back of the pedestal. The monument is made in a lively, mobile manner, testifying to the impressionistic predilections of the sculptor. The marble pedestal of the monument is made of stone sent by Italian workers
  15. ^ "ДК имени Воровского — Муниципальное Учреждение Культуры Дворец Культуры имени Воровского. город Раменское Московской области" (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-08-23.
  16. ^ "Coast guard patrol ships Project 11351". russianships.info. Retrieved 27 June 2021.

Works edit

  • Советъ против партии (The Council Against the Party). Geneva: Bonch-Bruevich and Lenin Publishing House of Social-Democratic Party Literature, November 1904. —Reissued by Partizdat, 1933.
  • Литературно-критические статьи (Literary-Critical Articles). Moscow: Gospolitizdat, 1948.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Vatslav Vorovsky at Wikimedia Commons

vatslav, vorovsky, vatslav, vatslavovich, vorovsky, russian, Ва, цлав, Ва, цлавович, Воро, вский, polish, wacław, worowski, october, october, 1871, 1923, russian, bolshevik, marxist, revolutionary, literary, critic, publicist, soviet, diplomat, first, soviet, . Vatslav Vatslavovich Vorovsky Russian Va clav Va clavovich Voro vskij Polish Waclaw Worowski 27 October O S 15 October 1871 10 May 1923 was a Russian Bolshevik Marxist revolutionary literary critic publicist and Soviet diplomat One of the first Soviet diplomats Vorovsky is best remembered as the victim of a May 1923 political assassination in Lausanne Switzerland where he was the official representative of the Soviet government to the Conference of Lausanne Vatslav Vatslavovich VorovskyBorn 1871 10 27 27 October 1871Moscow Russian EmpireDied10 May 1923 1923 05 10 aged 51 Lausanne SwitzerlandResting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis MoscowNationalityRussianOther namesP Orlovsky Y Adamovich M Schwarz Josephine Felix AlexandrovichOccupation s diplomat literary criticYears active1895 1923Known forbeing the victim of a political assassination Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Political career 1 3 Diplomatic career 1 4 Death and legacy 2 Memory 3 See also 4 References 5 Works 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Vatslav Vorovsky was born on 27 October 1871 n s in Moscow the son of an ethnically Polish but Russified noble and engineer 1 His father died when he was a year old and he was raised by his mother Following the completion of secondary school In 1890 Vorovsky enrolled at the University of Moscow where he was exposed to the ideas of political radicalism 1 Political career edit In his autobiography Vorovsky dated his involvement with the socialist movement from 1894 when he made contact with workers circles in Moscow 2 He was arrested by the Tsarist secret police in 1897 held for two years in Taganka Prison then exiled in 1899 to the city of Orlov 1 Upon his release Vorovsky adopted a new underground pseudonym P Orlovsky as a tribute to this experience 1 During the course of his underground career Vorovsky also used the pseudonyms Y Adamovich M Schwarz Josephine and Felix Alexandrovich 1 nbsp A young Vorovsky in 1899Vorovsky emigrated to Europe in 1902 spending time in Italy Germany and Switzerland 1 He acted as an agent for the newspaper Iskra founded abroad by V I Lenin In 1903 he was a founding member of the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party During 1904 he was based in Odesa Ukraine but emigrated again in August 1904 3 to help launch the first exclusively Bolshevik publication Vperyod Forward of which he was an editor 1 During the Russian Revolution of 1905 Vorovsky returned to Russia working actively as a revolutionary in St Petersburg 1 Following the defeat of the 1905 uprising he moved to Odesa where he was a leading underground Bolshevik from 1907 to 1912 1 In 1912 Vorovsky was arrested again this time to be deported to Vologda province in Russia 2 In 1915 he moved to Stockholm where he worked as an engineer for the Swedish Lux company and for Siemens Schuckert 4 In 1917 after the February Revolution in Russia Vorovsky was appointed to three man Bolshevik Stockholm Bureau along with Karl Radek and Yakov Hanecki Vorovsky was the first director of Gosizdat the State Publishing House from its foundation in 1919 until 1921 5 Diplomatic career edit Following the victory of the Bolshevik Revolution in November 1917 Vorovsky was named the Soviet government s diplomatic representative to Scandinavia remaining based in Stockholm 1 In Stockholm Vorovsky was the point of contact between the new Bolshevik government and representatives of the government of Germany being introduced by Alexander Parvus to members of the Social Democratic Party of Germany including Philipp Scheidemann during November and December 1917 6 In December 1918 Sweden responding to pressure on the part of the Allied powers who were intent upon imposing an unbreakable blockade withdrew official recognition of Vorovsky as the representative of Soviet Russia 7 This action on the part of the Swedish government forced Vorovsky s return to Russia the following month 8 This action taken against Vorovsky followed the actions taken by Great Britain in expelling Maxim Litvinov in September 1918 and that of Germany in expelling Adolph Joffe in November of that same year 9 In March 1919 Vorovsky served as a member of the Soviet delegation to the Founding Congress of the Communist International 1 He was named the representative of the Russian Communist Party to the Executive Committee of the Comintern 1 He also served as one of the secretaries of the organization along with Angelica Balabanova 10 Grigorii Zinoviev was tapped as president of the organization 10 In July 1920 Vorovsky resumed work as a Soviet diplomat participating in diplomatic negotiations with Poland 1 From 1921 to 1923 Vorovsky was the Soviet representative to Italy 1 In that capacity he was involved in attempts at negotiation of a trade agreement between the two countries with a preliminary pact signed in December 1921 11 This success proved short lived however as negotiations to extend the six month treaty failed in May 1922 11 Vorovsky was a member of the Soviet delegation to the 1922 Genoa Conference a group headed by Soviet Foreign Minister Georgii Chicherin Death and legacy edit Vorovsky s final diplomatic mission came in the spring of 1923 when he served as Soviet representative to the Lausanne conference of 1923 1 Accompanied by two diplomatic attaches Vorovsky arrived in Lausanne from Rome on April 27 hoping to force the conference s official participants to recognize Soviet interests in the Turkish Black Sea Straits 12 On May 9 Vorovsky dispatched his final report to Moscow noting that three days earlier a group of right wing youths had appeared at his hotel and sought a meeting Vorovsky wrote I refused to receive them and Comrade Ahrens who went out to them to find out what it was all about disposed of them at once telling them that they should put such matters before their Government Now they are going about the town declaring that they will compel us to leave Switzerland by force and so on As to whether the police are taking any measures for our safety we have no idea At any rate it is not apparent on the surface It is only too evident that behind these hooligan boys there is some conscious directing hand possibly foreign The Swiss Government well aware of what is going on for the papers are full of it must bear responsibility for our safety The behaviour of the Swiss Government is a shameful violation of the guarantees given at the beginning of the conference and any attack on us in this particularly well organised country is only possible with the knowledge and permission of the authorities On them is the responsibility 13 On the evening of 10 May 1923 Vorovsky was seated at a dining table in the restaurant of his hotel with his colleagues when the group was approached by an individual they did not know The unknown figure a Russian White emigre named Maurice Conradi pulled a gun and shot Vorovsky to death wounding his two companions Ahrens and Divilkovsky in the attack 12 Conradi was defended by the advocate Theodore Aubert and later acquitted by the Swiss court in the epilogue of what would be known as the Conradi affair nbsp Coffin of Vorovsky being carried in BerlinVatslav Vorovsky was 51 years old at the time of his death He is buried in Mass Grave No 7 of the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in Red Square Moscow Memory edit nbsp Image of Vorovsky on a Soviet stamp 1971A number of settlements and streets in dozens of cities in the USSR were named after Vorovsky under Soviet rule Among the significant renaming Kiev Khreshchatyk which was renamed into Vorovskogo Street between 1923 and 1937 In Moscow on 11 May 1924 in the courtyard of a former apartment building of the First Russian Insurance Company a bronze monument of Vorovsky was erected under the project of sculptor Mikhail Kats In connection with the installation of the monument and the demolition of the Vvedenskaya church located at the corner of Kuznetsky Most and Bolshaya Lubyanka the vacated place was named Vorovsky Square 14 A poem by Vladimir Mayakovsky titled Vorovsky was dedicated to him in honor of his death The Palaces of Culture in the city of Konakovo Tver region and in the city of Ramenskoye Moscow region were named after Vatslav Vorovsky 15 nbsp Monument of Vatslav Vorovsky on the Vorovsky SquareIn 1990 the Russian Coast Guard launched a Menzhinskiy class project 11351 NATO Krivak III Class ship named for Vorovskiy Vorovskij 160 16 See also editAlexander Griboyedov Russian ambassador to Persia assassinated in 1829 Pyotr Voykov Soviet ambassador to Poland assassinated in 1927 Andrei Karlov Russian ambassador to Turkey assassinated in 2016References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Branko Lazitch with Milorad M Drachkovitch Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern New Revised and Expanded Edition Stanford CA Hoover Institution Press 1986 pp 498 499 a b Shikman A P Vorovskij Vaclav Vaclavovich 1871 1923 Biograficheskij Ukazatel Khronos Retrieved 11 December 2022 Schwarz Soloman M 1967 The Russian Revolution of 1905 The Workers Movement and the Formation of Bolshevism and Menshevism Chicago Chicago U P pp 258 59 Futrell Michael 1963 Northern Underground Episodes of Russian Revolutionary Transport and Communications through Scandinavia and Finland 1863 1917 London Faber and Faber p 156 Gosizdat The Great Soviet Encyclopedia 3rd Edition 1970 1971 The Gale group Retrieved 26 January 2016 E H Carr A History of Soviet Russia The Bolshevik Revolution 1917 1923 Volume 3 London Macmillan 1953 pg 23 Louis Fischer The Soviets in World Affairs A History of the Relations between the Soviet Union and the Rest of the World 1917 1929 Second Edition Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1951 vol 1 pg 248 Carr The Bolshevik Revolution vol 3 pg 114 fn 1 Carr The Bolshevik Revolution vol 3 pp 113 114 a b Carr The Bolshevik Revolution vol 3 pg 121 a b Carole Fink The Genoa Conference European Diplomacy 1921 1922 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 1984 pg 282 a b Fischer The Soviets in World Affairs vol 1 pg 409 The Murder of Vorovsky first published in Izvestiia Moscow May 15 1923 reprinted in Russian Information and Review London vol 2 no 35 June 9 1923 pg 547 The monument was created with the participation of the People s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs the NKVD and the USSR mission abroad as evidenced by the inscription on the back of the pedestal The monument is made in a lively mobile manner testifying to the impressionistic predilections of the sculptor The marble pedestal of the monument is made of stone sent by Italian workers DK imeni Vorovskogo Municipalnoe Uchrezhdenie Kultury Dvorec Kultury imeni Vorovskogo gorod Ramenskoe Moskovskoj oblasti in Russian Retrieved 2021 08 23 Coast guard patrol ships Project 11351 russianships info Retrieved 27 June 2021 Works editSovet protiv partii The Council Against the Party Geneva Bonch Bruevich and Lenin Publishing House of Social Democratic Party Literature November 1904 Reissued by Partizdat 1933 Literaturno kriticheskie stati Literary Critical Articles Moscow Gospolitizdat 1948 Further reading editN F Piyashev Vorovskij Vorovsky Moscow Molodaya Gvardiya 1959 Marabello Thomas Quinn 2023 The Centennial of the Treaty of Lausanne Turkey Switzerland the Great Powers and a Soviet Diplomat s Assassination Swiss American Historical Society Review Vol 59 Available at https scholarsarchive byu edu sahs review vol59 iss3 4External links edit nbsp Media related to Vatslav Vorovsky at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vatslav Vorovsky amp oldid 1214451169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.