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A Menshevik in the Duma

1976
In May 1906 Tsereteli returned to Georgia. His illness had left him severely weakened and he took a long time to recover. During the summer of 1906 he was not able to take part in political life.
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Mensheviks Wage the Cold War

Journal of Contemporary History, 1995
The tattered remnants of the exiled Menshevik party organization arrived in New York in 1940 from their previous French refuge. They brought with them their twenty-year-old journal, Sotsialisticheskii vestnik, their internal quarrels and many dashed hopes.1 Readily dismissed by US authorities as 'long forgotten in Russia and with no real roots in ...
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A Georgian Menshevik

1976
In November 1900 there appeared in the Georgian periodical Kvali a poem entitled A Fearless Knight, in which the nineteen-year-old poet Irakli Tsereteli described an encounter between a young knight and a disillusioned old man. The old man had abandoned all hope that the younger generation would find the strength and courage to fight for the cause for ...
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Daniel Bell – American Menshevik

Thesis Eleven, 2013
Long before he became one of the leading voices in American sociology and letters, Daniel Bell had a tough early life. He experienced poverty and socialism early, in a life taking on the big themes of the 20th century: communism, capitalism, Marxism, Americanism, modernism.
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Gorbachev: Bolshevik or Menshevik?

1990
The relative status of party cadre and Soviet citizen, the definition of political membership, more generally the ‘constitution’ of the Soviet polity, is the key issue of Gorbachev’s rule. Under Gorbachev’s leadership, can the Soviet regime recast the until now categoric status, the ‘non-biodegradable’ quality of the party apparat and cadre?
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Menshevik Origins: The Letters of Fedor Dan

Slavic Review, 1986
Fedor Il'itch Dan (1871-1947) would have made an excellent Soviet commissar. Unlike most of his comrades, Dan displayed practical efficiency, a taste for routine organizational work, a talent for backroom politics, and a keen interest in state institutions.' Dan's qualities resembled those of that other Il'ich, V. I.
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The Smashing of the Menshevik-Kulak Revolt in Georgia in 1924

Soviet Studies in History, 1977
Organized with the assistance of international imperialism and the leaders of the Second International, the Menshevikkulak revolt in Georgia in August and September 1924 was the last major outbreak of armed counterrevolution in the Transcaucasus, a vain attempt to split the Soviet system from within and to tear Georgia from the united fraternal family ...
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