Pyotr Voykov
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Pyotr Lazarevich Voikov (Russian: Петр Лазаревич Войков; party alias - Пётрусь and Интеллигент, or Piotrus and Intelligent) (August 13 [O.S. August 1] 1888, Kerch — June 7, 1927, Warsaw, buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis) was a Russian revolutionary and Soviet diplomat.
The son of a mining engineer, Voikov became involved in revolutionary activity on the side of the Mensheviks at the age of 15. Following a botched attempt on the life of the mayor of Yalta, he was expelled both from grammar school and later from the St. Petersburg Mining Institute. He went into exile in Switzerland, where he graduated from the University of Geneva.
On returning to Russia in August 1917, he joined the Bolsheviks and was appointed People's Commissar for Government Supply for the Ural region in 1918, where he was known by his party code name of "The Intellectual". He subsequently became an important member of the Ural Soviet and was put in charge of prodrazvyorstkas. He knew N. N. Ipatiev, and had visited the Ipatiev House before it was selected as the final residence of Nicholas II of Russia and his family.
It seems to have been on the basis of information supplied by Voikov that Ipatiev was summoned to the office of the Soviet at the end of April 1918 and ordered to vacate what was soon to be called 'The House of Special Purpose.' Clearly party to the decision to execute the royal family, Voikov was given the specific task of arranging for the disposal of their remains, obtaining 150 gallons of gasoline and 400 pounds of sulphuric acid, the latter from the Yekaterinburg pharmacy. After the killings, he was to declare that "The world will never know what we did with them." His role in the regicide was fully investigated by the commission set up after Admiral Kolchak's White Army captured Ekaterinburg from the Bolsheviks.
Back in Moscow in 1920, Voykov presided over the sales of the imperial treasures from the Kremlin Armoury and the Diamond Fund. That's how many Fabergé Eggs found their way abroad. Voikov was appointed Soviet "plenipotentiary representative" in Poland in October 1924, and was assassinated in Warsaw in 1927 by Boris Koverda - an 18-years old son of the White Russian monarchist, a pupil of the Russian Gymnasium (High School) from Wilna. The killing has been later justified as the revenge for Voykov's part in the killing of the Tsar and his family. Voikov's body was transported to Moscow to be buried on Red Square.
This incident further damaged Soviet-Polish relations, already soured by the Polish-Soviet War of 1921. The Soviets broke off negotiations about a non-aggression pact (they would be resumed in 1931), accusing Poles of supporting the anti-Soviet White resistance. The situation of Polish minority in the Soviet Union worsened.
The Soviet authorities cherished his memory, giving his name to the Moscow Metro station Voikovskaya, several streets and plants, and a coal mine in Ukraine. After the canonization of the royal family, the Russian Orthodox Church urged the authorities to erase the name of the "regicide and infanticide" from public objects. On July 17, 2007, the remembrance day of the Russian Royal Family, several Orthodox groups publicly prayed that the metro station in Moscow might be renamed.[1]
[edit] References
- Edvard Radzinsky. The Last Tsar: the Life and Death of Nicholas II. Doubleday, 1992. ISBN 0385423713.
- Robert K. Massie. Nicholas and Alexandra. Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, 2005. ISBN 157912433X.
- (Polish) 75 rocznica podpisania w Moskwie polsko-sowieckiego paktu o nieagresji, PAP, 2007-07-23