Results 101 to 110 of about 1,475 (151)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

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 ...
openaire   +1 more source

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 ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Legal Opposition The Mensheviks

1977
None of the opposition parties which have been discussed was faced with the same problem as the Mensheviks. This party alone, of all those which opposed the Communists, set itself from the first a task which it ceaselessly pursued for four years—that of ousting them from power by strictly constitutional means.
openaire   +1 more source

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?
openaire   +1 more source

The Mensheviks and NEP Society in Russia

Russian History, 1982
AbstractContemporary scholarship on the development of the Soviet political system in the 1920s has largely bypassed the history of the Menshevik opposition. Those historians who regard NEP as a mere transition to Stalinism have dismissed the Menshevik experience as irrelevant,1 and those who see a democratic potential in the NEP system have focused on
openaire   +1 more source

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.
openaire   +1 more source

The Far Eastern Mensheviks and October 1917

2019
The article examines the history of the Menshevik organizations in the Russian Far East for the period from October 1917 until the end of the year. The attitude of the Menshevik Party to the events of October 1917 is covered and the tactics of the Mensheviks in the first months of the Soviet period are analyzed.
V. L. Kuzmin, Yu. N. Tsipkin
openaire   +1 more source

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.
openaire   +1 more source

The Mensheviks

Social Scientist, 1990
Nalini Taneja   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy