Event class: soviet, russian, moscow, stalin, soviet union, became, revolution, russia, republic, government

normalize
de-normalize

Events with high posterior probability

Mikhail TomskyHe was freed by the Provisional Government after the February Revolution in 1917 and moved to Moscow where he participated in the October Revolution.
Vsevolod LytkinAfter the Supreme Soviet of Russia on 6 September 1991 officially recognized the independence of Estonia, he began preaching Christianity according to the Lutheran tradition in Akademgorodok, a suburb of Novosibirsk, Siberia.
George Bagration of MukhraniHe was, nevertheless, arrested by the Soviet authorities in 1930, but was soon released through the efforts of the Russian writer Maxim Gorky.
Javad Malik-YeganovBy the time of Azerbaijan's independence in 1918 besides his native Azeri Malik-Yeganov was fluent in Russian, German, Persian, Armenian, and Georgian.
Scarlat CallimachiHe, with N. D. Cocea, Miron Constantinescu, and Ion Pas, organized the expulsion and denouncement of journalists who professed anti-communism, and maintained this position after the proclamation of the People's Republic of Romania in 1948, before moving on to become head of the Romanian-Russian Museum (Muzeul Româno-Rus), an institution created to highlight cultural and social links between Romania and the Soviet Union in accordance with the Zhdanov Doctrine.
Dimitar BlagoevIn a Declaration against the Treaty of Neuilly, read by Dimiter Blagoev in the Bulgarian National Assembly in 1919 he protested against the partition of the Bulgarian land and nation and promoted the ideas of the Bulgarian Soviet Socialist Republic, as a part of a Balkan Federal Soviet Socialist Republic, as the only political solution able to assure freedom of Macedonia, Thrace and Dobroudja and as a counterweight of Bulgarian nationalism.
L?szl? Moholy-NagyHe was a supporter of the Communist Dictatorship (known as `` Red Terror'' and also `` Hungarian Soviet Republic''), declared early in 1919, though he assumed no official role in it.
Alexandru NicolschiHe was sent undercover into Romania on May 26, 1941, carrying papers with the name Vasile Ștefănescu, and reporting on Romanian Army movements in preparation for Operation Barbarossa (the invasion of the Soviet Union by Nazi Germany, in which Romanian troops, under the command of Marshal Ion Antonescu, participated ; see Romania during World War II).
Moses RosenIn 1956, the same year when many of the Zionist activists were freed from the Romanian prisons, the authorities allowed to Rabbi Rosen to took part again to Jewish meetings and conferences abroad.
Ivan Vladimirovich MichurinOn September 11, 1922, Mikhail Kalinin visited Michurin at Lenin's personal request.
Patriarch Pavle of Serbia After spending 33 years in Kosovo, Pavle was elected the Patriarch of Serbia in 1990, instead of ill Patriarch German, and moved to Belgrade.
Felix DzerzhinskyAfter 1917, Dzerzhinsky would oppose Lenin on such crucial issues as the Brest-Litovsk peace, the trade unions, and Soviet nationality policy, during the April 1917 Party Conference when Lenin accused Dzerzhinsky of Great-Russian chauvinism he replied :'' I can reproach him (Lenin) with standing at the point of view of the Polish, Ukrainian and other chauvinists.''
Slatan DudowIn 1929, he visited the Soviet Union, where he met Vladimir Mayakovsky and Sergei Eisenstein in Moscow and eventually, Bertolt Brecht.
Zygmunt BaumanFaced with increasing political pressure and the anti-Semitic campaign led by Mieczysław Moczar, the Chief of the Polish Communist Secret Police, Bauman renounced his membership in the governing Polish United Workers' Party in January 1968.
Nikita KhrushchevThe speech was a factor in unrest in Poland and revolution in Hungary later in 1956, and Stalin defenders led four days of rioting in his native Georgia in June, calling for Khrushchev to resign and Molotov to take over.
Vladimir LeninBecause of the German threat Lenin moved the Soviet Government from Petrograd to Moscow on 10 -- 11 March 1918.
Mykhailo TelihaHis repertoire on the records included : 1) Zaporozhian march 2) Hej vydno selo 3) Oj lita orel 4) Oj ne khody Hrytsiu 5) Vyklyk 6) Vstaye khmara 7) Oj na hori vohon' horyt' In 1941, during the German occupation of Ukraine he returned with his wife to Kiev to participate in the rebuilding of Ukrainian culture and a Ukrainian presence in the capital.
Steve HankeHaving witnessed the positive effects of neighboring Estonia's currency board, Lithuanian Prime Minister Adolfas Šleževičius, met with Hanke and his wife Liliane over lunch in January 1994 to discuss the possibility of a currency reform package for Lithuania.
Nikolai YudenichAt Helsinki, Yudenich joined the'' The Russian Committee'', which had been established in November 1918 to oppose the Bolsheviks, and was proclaimed leader of the White movement in northwest Russia with absolute powers.
Emma Goldmanin Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic | Soviet Russia led to her 1923 book, -LSB- -LSB- My Disillusionment in Russia. -RSB- -RSB-
Mykhailo TelihaIn 1918, he moved to Kiev to aid in the establishment of the newly independent Ukraine.
Todor AleksandrovIn the spring of 1920, Aleksandrov went with a cheta to Serbian Macedonia where he restored the revolutionary organization and attracted the world's attention to the unsolved Macedonian question.
Mariya DolinaLived in the city of Šiauliai (now Lithuania) and then in Riga (now Latvia) where she worked in the Latvian Communist Party Central Committee until 1975.
Mykola KhvylovyBecause of Stalin's repressions against his friends in the pro-Ukrainian Communist movement, Khvylovy committed suicide on 13 May 1933 in front of his friends in his apartment in Kharkiv.
Theodore BikelAt the 1977 AFL -- CIO Convention, Bikel (right) welcomed the Russian dissident Vladimir Bukovsky (center) upon his release from the Soviet Union.
Eugeniusz KwiatkowskiWith the strengthening of the communist and Soviet grip on the Polish government, which he opposed, he fell out of favour of the communist government of the People's Republic of Poland and was forced to retire in 1948.
Johannes R. BecherHe migrated to the Soviet Union in 1935 with the central committee of the KPD, but got caught up in Stalin's Great Purge.
Otto StrasserHe returned to Germany in 1919 where he served in the Freikorps that put down the Bavarian Soviet Republic which was organized on the principles of workers' council s.
Andrei Kirilenko (politician)By 1976 Kirilenko's position within the Soviet leadership had grown to such an extent that leading officials, such as Brezhnev and Suslov, were beginning to worry about his'' organisational tail'' in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR).
Salome ZurabishviliIn course of the Georgian presidential election in 2008, Salome Zurabishvili and many other politicians in opposition agreed to the Patriarch of Georgia Ilia II's indicated support to the establishment of a constitutional monarchy under the Bagrationi dynasty.
Uzeyir HajibeyovUzeyir Hajibeyov composed the music of the national anthem of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (which was re-adopted after Azerbaijan regained its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991).
V?clav Klaus Klaus entered Czechoslovak politics during the Velvet Revolution in 1989, during the second week of the political uprising, when he offered his co-operation as an economic advisor Civic Forum, whose purpose was to unify the anti-authoritarian forces in Czechoslovakia and to overthrow the Communist regime.
Roman ZvarychMore importantly, during the Orange Revolution in the midst of the 2004 presidential election, he successfully argued a case on behalf of Viktor Yushchenko to prevent the creation of Ukrainian voting districts for Ukrainians in Russia.
Shirinsho Shotemur Shirinsho Shotemur is one of the main initiators of establishing the Tajik Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic within the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic in 1924.
David Wilshire On 20 April 2010, as Co-rapporteur of the Monitoring Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) he held a meeting with member of the government of separatist South Ossetia (Georgia) in the self-proclaimed Embassy of the Republic of South Ossetia in Moscow.
Semyon DimansteinIn 1920 Dimanstein was sent to Bukhara People's Soviet Republic where he established Soviet institutions and supported creation of a local Party-approved elite.
Mihail SadoveanuAt the time, he was reelected President of the Writers' Society, a provisional mandate which ended in 1918, when Romania signed the peace with the Central Powers, He was joined by Topîrceanu, who had just been released from a POW camp in Bulgaria, and with whom he founded the magazine Însemnări Literare.
Shripad Amrit DangeAndrei Zhdanov and Mikhail Suslov, leading Soviet theorists of the period, participated in the 1947 talks with Dange.
Arnold MeriAfter the Soviet occupation in 1940, he was elected to the City Komsomol Committee in Tallinn and was instructed to create a Komsomol organization in his Estonian army unit.
Bogumil Vo?njakIn 1917, he was among the signers of the Corfu Declaration, a joined political statement of the Yugoslav Committee and the representatives of the Kingdom of Serbia, which was the first step in the creation of Yugoslavia.
Aksel BergDuring Stalin's purges, Berg was imprisoned for three years, but was freed and rehabilitated in 1940, when Stalin became interested in developing radar.
Lev Rebet On June 30, 1941 when the OUN proclaimed independence in Lviv occupied by German troops, Rebet became the deputy prime minister of the Ukrainian government, appointed by the prime minister Yaroslav Stetsko.
Lev KamenevAfter Lenin's return to Russia on 3 April 1917, Kamenev briefly resisted Lenin's anti-government April Theses, but soon fell in line and supported Lenin until September.
Marcos GrigorianIn 1989, he traveled to Russia at the invitation of the Union of Russian Artists, visiting Moscow and Leningrad.
Vladimir KovalevskySaint Petersburg State Polytechnical University in 1902, three years after its creation by -LSB- -LSB- Dmitry Mendeleev, Sergey Witte, and Vladimir Kovalevsky and others. -RSB- -RSB-
Efraim ZuroffOn January 22, 2009, he was granted the honorary citizenship of the Serbian city of Novi Sad, in appreciation for the exposure of Sándor Képíró, who allegedly helped organize the murder of the city's Jews.
Alexander Vvedensky (religious leader)With Stalin's concordat with the'' Patriarchal'' or Tikhonite church after his meeting with Metropolitan Sergey on September 8, 1943, the Living Church lost the support of the Soviet authorities and the rest of faithful.
Boris YeltsinOn 6 November 1991, Yeltsin issued a decree banning all Communist Party activities on Russian soil.
Vo Nguyen GiapAt the 10th Plenum of the Communist Party, 27-29 October 1956, Giap stood in front of the assembled delegates and said :' Cadres, in carrying out their antifeudal task, created contradictions in thee tasks of land reform and the Revolution, in some areas treating them as if they were separate activities....
Yakov Blumkin In 1929, Blumkin was the chief illegal resident in Turkey, where he was allegedly selling Hebrew incunabula that he collected from synagogue s all over Ukraine and Southern Russia and even from state museums such as the Lenin Library in Moscow, in order to finance an espionage network in the Middle East.
Mihail SadoveanuHaving served as a host to official Soviet envoys Andrey Vyshinsky and Vladimir Kemenov during their late 1944 visits, he soon after became president of the ARLUS'' Literary and Philosophical Section'' (seconded by Mihai Ralea and Perpessicius).
Volodymyr Ivanovych SavchenkoAfter the 1967 publication of the novel Self-Discovery, in which Savchenko warned about the ethical problems involved in the creation of clones, Savchenko occupied the leading position in Soviet science fiction.
Alexei KhvostenkoIn 2004, after a personal appeal to President Vladimir Putin, Khvostenko regained his Russian citizenship.
Vladimir LeninFrom the Smolny Institute for girls, Lenin directed the Provisional Government's deposition (6 -- 8 November 1917), and the storming (7 -- 8 November) of the Winter Palace to realise the Kerensky capitulation that established Bolshevik government in Russia.
Natalya GorbanevskayaGorbanevskaya was also one of eight protesters in the 1968 Red Square demonstration on 25 August 1968 against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia.
Mikheil GelovaniSoviet cinema played an important part in cultivating the leader's cult of personality : from 1937 and onward, in a gradual process, Stalin's reign was legitimized by depicting him as Vladimir Lenin's most devout follower and by positively presenting historical autocrats - like in Sergei Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible.
Dashgyn GulmammadovOn 18 September 2007 on the initiative of Gulmammadov the Supreme Majlis of NAAG at its enlarged meeting in an Azerbaijanian city Ganja adopted a special resolution with the requirement to provide the official status to the Azerbaijani language and declare it one of the official languages of Georgia.
Avetik IsahakyanHe was awarded the Stalin State Prize in 1946, served as a member of the Soviet Committee for Protection of Peace, and was a deputy of the II-IV Supreme Soviets of the Armenian SSR.
Noe RamishviliHe sponsored the preparation for the 1924 August Uprising in Georgia, which ended unsuccessfully and was followed by mass repressions against the Georgian nobility and intellectuals.
Stefan RoweckiThere have been claims that the arrest of Rowecki on 30 June 1943 was a result of a wider intelligence operation against the Polish Underground State with the goal of eliminating top commanders and political leaders of the Polish resistance.
Yaroslav Stetsko On 30 June 1941, Stetsko declared in Lviv the formation of a Ukrainian state which'' will closely cooperate with the National-Socialist Greater Germany, under the leadership of its leader Adolf Hitler which is forming a new order in Europe and the world'' -- as stated in the text of the'' Act of Proclamation of Ukrainian Statehood'' On 5 July, OUN-B leader Bandera was placed under honorary arrest () in Kraków, and transported to Berlin the next day.
Alexander KaletskiIn 1975, fleeing political prosecution and the threat of arrest by the KGB, artist and author Alexander Kaletski left the USSR.
Ruslana In November 2013, she was one of the leading figures of Euromaidan which were a series of protests in Ukraine that began on November 22, 2013, when Ukrainian citizens started spontaneous protests in the capital of Ukraine, Kiev.
Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia On 11 March 1918, Uritsky sent Michael and Johnson to Perm, a thousand miles to the east, on the order of the Council of the People's Commissars, which included both Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin.
Vyacheslav MolotovHowever, after the 22nd Party Congress in 1961, during which Khrushchev carried out his de-Stalinisation campaign, including the removal of Stalin's body from Lenin's Mausoleum, Molotov (along with Lazar Kaganovich) was removed from all positions and expelled from the Communist Party.
Nikita Khrushchev Nestor Lakoba (first from the left), Khrushchev (second left), -LSB- -LSB- Lavrenti Beria (third left) and Aghasi Khanjian (first from the right) during opening of the Moscow Metro -RSB- -RSB- Stalin's office records show meetings at which Khrushchev was present as early as 1932.
Mikhail ChernyayevIn 1879 he organized a Bulgarian rising, but was arrested at Adrianople (Edirne) and sent back to Russia.
Alexandru TomaIn Romania, the fascist and antisemitic National Legionary government expelled Toma from the Romanian Writers' Society (SSR), together with all other Jewish members (October 1940).
Grigori SokolnikovHe was removed from his position in the Sovnarkom (Council of People's Commissars) and demoted from the Politburo after calling for Joseph Stalin's removal as General Secretary of the Communist Party at the Fourteenth Congress of the Bolsheviks in December 1925.
Gotse DelchevIn 1897 he, along with Gyorche Petrov, wrote the new organization's statute, which divided Macedonia and Adrianople areas into seven regions, each with a regional structure and secret police, following the Internal Revolutionary Organization's example.
Dmytro PavlychkoIn late 80-s Dmytro Pavlychko was one of the founders of People's Movement of Ukraine, participated in the renewal of'' Prosvita'' Society as well as taking an active part in elaboration of the Act on Independence of Ukraine which was approved on August 24, 1991.
Sidney ReillyAccording to Rosenblum, in 1892, the Imperial Russian Secret Police arrested him for being a messenger for the Friends of Enlightenment revolutionary group.
Dimitri KipianiFollowing the collapse of the 1832 Georgian plot against the Russian rule, to which Kipiani was a participant, he was deported to Vologda, where he briefly worked for the local governor's chancellery.
Yukhym MedvedevMedvedev was dismissed as the chairman of TsVK in March 1918 and with withdrawal of the Soviet forces from Ukraine moved to Moscow.
Gy?rgy FrundaOn July 3, 2007, the Democratic Party representatives to the Parliamentary Assembly asked the Romanian Parliament to recall Frunda from his leadership of the delegation, claiming that he had been absent from the Judicial Committee during deliberations over Marty's report (they also indicated that they were not going to attend meetings at the Council of Europe until Marty would come and verify his conclusions on the spot).
Konstantin RokossovskyIn October 1949, with the establishment of a fully Communist government under Bolesław Bierut in Poland, Rokossovsky, on Stalin's orders, became the Polish Minister of National Defense, with the additional title of Marshal of Poland.
Hilding HagbergHe supported the Soviet crushing of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and he also defended the building of the Berlin Wall as'' serving the cause of peace''.
Tadeusz Kondrusiewicz (bishop)html On April 13, 1991, two Apostolic Administrations were erected in Russian Federation : that of Russia Europea (European part of Russia) and of Siberia, Msgr. Kondrusiewicz being appointed to head the former and Msgr. Joseph Werth SJ to the latter.
Vitaly Ginzburg Irina Presnyakova, a spokeswoman for the Russian Academy of Sciences, announced that Ginzburg died in Moscow on November 8, 2009, from cardiac arrest.
Zygmunt MineykoIn 1861, Mineyko returned home to spread anti-Russian agitation among the Polish and Belarusian population.
Bedri SpahiuOn 24 July 1953 he was Minister of Education and Culture in the government of Prime Minister Enver Hoxha and has held this position until his replacement by Ramiz Alia 1955th Together with another prominent communist figure Tuk Jakova, he requested for a slowdown of the industrialization of Albania, of the process of collectivization of agriculture, and the'' democratization'' of Albanian communist party For his standing he was the accused by Enver Hoxha of being a'' revisionist'' and was released from his executive and Party roles.
Alexander LukashenkoDuring this ceremony, Lukashenko defended the legitimacy of his re-election and vowed that Belarus would never have its own version of the Orange Revolution and Georgia's 2003 Rose Revolution.
Arshag ChobanianIn 1933 he visited Soviet Armenia and met with prominent intellectuals.
Demyan BednyIn 1938, Bedny was stripped of membership in the Communist Party and the Union of Soviet Writers, but slowly he regained the favour of Stalin through the years of World War II.
Konstantin VaginovShe and Vaginov were both part of a group of writers who gathered about the poet, world traveler and decorated war hero Nikolai Gumilyov, who was shot in 1921, after being wrongly accused of plotting against the government.
Danylo Shumuk On 28 November 2002 he returned to Ukraine, independent by then, and moved to Krasnoarmiysk of the Donetsk Oblast (province) in the east of Ukraine.
Georgy MalenkovIn 1961 the Central Committee fired Malenkov from the Communist Party of USSR, as people throughout USSR demanded punishment for organizers of Stalin's Purge, and Malenkov was one of them.
Johan LaidonerWhen the Soviet Union occupied Estonia on June 17, 1940, Laidoner was one of the few top political leaders of the country not executed by the Soviet regime.
Otto TiefTief then published a proclamation reestablishing the independence of the Republic of Estonia on the basis of legal continuity, and attempted to organise a defence of Tallinn against the invading Red Army, which pushed into the capital on 22 September 1944.
Valentin PavlovIn 1989, Pavlov gathered together enough information on the errors and omissions of Ivan Silayev, the future Soviet Premier and Russian SFSR Premier, to weaken his position as Deputy Premier.
Claude PepperPepper had traveled to the Soviet Union in 1945 and, after meeting Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, declared he was'' a man Americans could trust.''
Josip Broz TitoIn 1934 the Zagreb Provincial Committee sent Tito to Vienna where all the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia had sought refuge.
Movses Silikyan After the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Russian Caucasus Army disintegrated and Silikyan left the Russian army.
Igor Shafarevich On 21 December 1991 he took part in the first congress of the Russian All-People's Union headed by Sergei Baburin.
Dmitri ShostakovichHe was a close friend of Marshal of the Soviet Union Mikhail Tukhachevsky, who was executed in 1937 during the Great Purge.
Naftaly FrenkelHis stepdaughter Tamara was the fiancée of Leonid Makhnach, son of Vladimir Makhnach the former boss of the Mosgaz Trust, which controlled Moscow's gas supply, who returned to Moscow in June 1955 after 14 years in the Taishet labour camp.
Vilmos Nagy de Nagybaczon He managed to return to Hungary in 1946, and in the initial period of the governing coalition of the various political factions, he participated as a committee member for the assessment of military pensions.
Karl KorschWhen widespread unrest began to sweep through the German military in 1917, this company established a soldiers' soviet with Korsch being elected by his fellow soldiers to serve as one of this soviet's delegates.
Vissarion LominadzeShortly after his arrival in Tbilisi, Lominadze made several speeches criticizing the way collectivization had been carried out in the region, telling the Seventh Congress of the Georgian party in May 1930,'' Here in the Transcaucasian village the material productive base which would allow us to undertake such a tempo of collectivization as in the North Caucasus, Lower Volga, or Ukraine does not exist.''
Hans EppingerIn 1936 he is known to have travelled to Moscow to treat Joseph Stalin.