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Vladimir Petrovich Makhnovets (Russian: Владимир Петрович Махновец; 7 September 1872 – 15 November 1921), also known as Akimovhe, was a leader of the Russian Social-Democrats. He was born in 1872 in Vorornezh and studied in Saint Petersburg. He returned illegally to England in 1905 during the revolution and joined the Cordwainer trade union, which enabled him to participate in the Saint Petersburg Soviet. In 1911, he was jailed for his text "Cutting Heads", which was published in 1908. However, he was successful in escaping exile. He returned to Russia after the 1913 amnesty.

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  • Wladimir Petrowitsch Machnowez (de)
  • Vladimir Makhnovets (fr)
  • Махновец, Владимир Петрович (ru)
  • Vladimir Makhnovets (en)
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  • Vladimir Petrovitch Makhnovets (1872-1921), en russe Владимир Петрович Махновец, également connu sous le pseudonyme Akimov, est un dirigeant social-démocrate russe. (fr)
  • Владимир Петрович Махновец (псевдонимы: Акимов, Бахарев, 7 сентября 1872, Новый Оскол, Курская губерния — 15 ноября 1921, Москва) — деятель русского революционного движения, публицист. Один из редакторов женевского «Рабочего дела». Делегат II съезда Российской социал-демократической рабочей партии (1903), член Петербургского совета рабочих депутатов (1905), делегат IV съезда Российской социал-демократической рабочей партии (1906). (ru)
  • Wladimir Petrowitsch Machnowez (russisch Владимир Петрович Махновец; auch: Makhnovets; Pseudonyme: Wladimir Akimow, Akinoff, Bacharew) (* 1869–1875 in Stary Oskol; † 15. November 1921 in Moskau) war ein russischer Theoretiker des Ökonomismus und Revolutionär. 1905 kehrte er illegal nach Russland zurück und formte einen sozialdemokratischen Zirkel. Als er 1906 Delegierter des 4. Kongress der SDAPR in Stockholm war, sprach er sich gegen einen bewaffneten Aufstand aus. (de)
  • Vladimir Petrovich Makhnovets (Russian: Владимир Петрович Махновец; 7 September 1872 – 15 November 1921), also known as Akimovhe, was a leader of the Russian Social-Democrats. He was born in 1872 in Vorornezh and studied in Saint Petersburg. He returned illegally to England in 1905 during the revolution and joined the Cordwainer trade union, which enabled him to participate in the Saint Petersburg Soviet. In 1911, he was jailed for his text "Cutting Heads", which was published in 1908. However, he was successful in escaping exile. He returned to Russia after the 1913 amnesty. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Akimov_Machnovets_V._P..jpg
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  • December 2020 (en)
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  • ru (en)
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  • Махновец, Владимир Петрович (en)
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  • Wladimir Petrowitsch Machnowez (russisch Владимир Петрович Махновец; auch: Makhnovets; Pseudonyme: Wladimir Akimow, Akinoff, Bacharew) (* 1869–1875 in Stary Oskol; † 15. November 1921 in Moskau) war ein russischer Theoretiker des Ökonomismus und Revolutionär. In Sankt Petersburg war er in der Gruppe der Narodowol aktiv, wurde 1897 nach Sibirien verbannt und entkam in die Schweiz, wo er eine Zeitung herausgab. Er unterstützte den bundistischen . 1903 war er Delegierter des 2. Kongress der Sozialdemokratischen Arbeiterpartei Russlands (SDAPR) in Stockholm. Seit dieser Zeit gab es Kontroversen mit Lenin und Georgi Walentinowitsch Plechanow. 1905 kehrte er illegal nach Russland zurück und formte einen sozialdemokratischen Zirkel. Als er 1906 Delegierter des 4. Kongress der SDAPR in Stockholm war, sprach er sich gegen einen bewaffneten Aufstand aus. (de)
  • Vladimir Petrovitch Makhnovets (1872-1921), en russe Владимир Петрович Махновец, également connu sous le pseudonyme Akimov, est un dirigeant social-démocrate russe. (fr)
  • Vladimir Petrovich Makhnovets (Russian: Владимир Петрович Махновец; 7 September 1872 – 15 November 1921), also known as Akimovhe, was a leader of the Russian Social-Democrats. He was born in 1872 in Vorornezh and studied in Saint Petersburg. In 1890, Akimov participated in revolutionary groups: first with the Narodnik, then the League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class. He was arrested and deported to Siberia in April 1898. In September 1898, he escaped and fled to Geneva. There he joined the Union of Russian Social Democrats Abroad and became one of the editors of its magazine Rabocheye Delo. Akimov then formed a faction opposed to the group that would soon establish the Iskra newspaper, with Georgi Plekhanov and Vladimir Lenin. Along with Aleksandr Martynov, he represented the Economist trend at the Second Congress (1903). His faction was defeated at the congress by the majority of the Iskra. However, as the majority split between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, his faction joined forces with the Mensheviks of Martov. In the following years he aligned with the right-wing of the Mensheviks. He returned illegally to England in 1905 during the revolution and joined the Cordwainer trade union, which enabled him to participate in the Saint Petersburg Soviet. At the fourth Congress of the party (1906), Akimov spoke against an armed uprising and, in general, opposed insurrection as a means of achieving socialism. Instead, he stated that the social-democrats should support the liberals (Cadets) in the elections for the State Duma. He maintained this position in the 1912 elections and was criticized by other militants, like Lenin. In 1911, he was jailed for his text "Cutting Heads", which was published in 1908. However, he was successful in escaping exile. He returned to Russia after the 1913 amnesty. He died in Zenigorod (Moscow oblast) in November 1921. The two major works of Akimov have not been republished since 1969. (en)
  • Владимир Петрович Махновец (псевдонимы: Акимов, Бахарев, 7 сентября 1872, Новый Оскол, Курская губерния — 15 ноября 1921, Москва) — деятель русского революционного движения, публицист. Один из редакторов женевского «Рабочего дела». Делегат II съезда Российской социал-демократической рабочей партии (1903), член Петербургского совета рабочих депутатов (1905), делегат IV съезда Российской социал-демократической рабочей партии (1906). (ru)
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