Stepan Petrichenko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stepan Petrichenko

In office
December, 1917 – February 26, 1918
Preceded by Vladimir Lenin (Russian SFSR)
Succeeded by Wilhelm II (German Empire)

Born 1892
Imperial Russia
Died June 2, 1947 (aged 55)
Soviet Union
Nationality Russian
Political party Anarcho-syndicalism
Profession Politician, revolutionary

Stepan Maximovich Petrichenko (Russian: Степан Максимович Петриченко; 1892June 2, 1947), was a Russian revolutionary, an anarcho-syndicalist politician, one of the main leaders of the Third Russian Revolution, the head of the Soviet Republic of Soldiers and Fortress-Builders of Nargen and in 1921, de facto leader of the Kronstadt Commune, and the leader of the revolution comiteé appointed which led to the Kronstadt Rebellion of 1921.

[edit] Biography

Petrichenko was born in 1892 in the village of Nikitenka, Zhizdrinskogo county, Kaluga province (Russia) to a family of peasants. Two years after his birth his family moved to Zaporizhia, where Stepan graduated from City College and joined the local ironworks as a metalworker. In 1913 Petrichenko was called up for military service with the Russian navy, where he was assigned to the Russian battleship Petropavlovsk, part of the Baltic Fleet.

During the February Revolution in Russia, he had been with the fleet at the Estonian island Nargen (now Naissaar).

Sailors of the Petropavlovsk in Helsinki, before the Finnish Civil War (Summer 1917); Flag calls for "death to the bourgeoisie".
Sailors of the Petropavlovsk in Helsinki, before the Finnish Civil War (Summer 1917); Flag calls for "death to the bourgeoisie".

In December 1917, it was proclaimed a Soviet Republic of Soldiers and Fortress-Builders. A republic under the red-black flag of anarcho-syndicalism was launched with eighty-two navy troops guiding hundreds of indigenous islanders.

Petrichenko fought the Bolsheviks, and the German Empire, aiding in the evacuation of Naissaar on February 26 with the Baltic Fleet in the direction of Helsinki, and from there to Kronstadt.

In 1919 he entered the Russian Communist Party (bolsheviks) himself but later resigned (a veiled cleansing). In the summer of 1920, he went home and returned with the approval of Nestor Makhno. He was not a career officer in the Baltic fleet, and when he took the responsibility of guiding the fleet he was an engineer on the battle ship Petropavlovsk. After the rebellion was struck down by Trotsky, he fled over the ice to Finland, where he continued his agitation against the Bolsheviks. He stayed in Finland for many years, until he came into conflict with the Finnish government over his support of Soviet groups during the Winter War between the Soviet Union and Finland in 1940. He was expelled to the Soviet Union, where he was soon arrested and deported to prison camp where he died shortly after.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Petrichenko, Stepan (1921). Pravda o kronshtadtskikh sobytiiakh.  (Russian: Правда о кронштадтских событиях) (bibrec)
The truth about the Kronstadt events
Languages