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Grigorii Petrovich Maksimov ( Russian: Григо́рий Петро́вич Макси́мов; 1893–1950) was a Russian anarcho-syndicalist. From the first days of the Russian Revolution, he played a leading role in the country's syndicalist movement – editing the newspaper Golos Truda and organising the formation of factory committees.
Grigorii Petrovich Maksimov was a Russian anarcho-syndicalist. From the first days of the Russian Revolution, he played a leading role in the country's syndicalist movement – editing the newspaper Golos Truda and organising the formation of factory committees.
A short biography of leading Russian anarcho-syndicalist Grigori Maximov who was active in the 1917 Revolution. Author Nick Heath Submitted by Steven. on November 9, 2006 Grigori Petrovitch Maximov Aka Gregory or G.P. Maximov or Maximoff, born 10 November 1893 – Russia, died 16 March 1950 - Chicago, USA
The magazine was then picked up by Grigorii Maksimov, who moved it to the United States and edited it until his death in 1950. History In 1925, Delo Truda was founded in Paris by Peter Arshinov and Nestor Makhno, two former confederates of the Makhnovist movement, which had attempted to establish libertarian communism in Ukraine. [1]
Bolshevism. The cases of Vladimir Shatov, Volin (Vsevolod Eikhenbaum), and Grigorii Maksimov not only represent different anarcho-syndicalist perceptions of Bolshevism during the summer and fall of 1917 but also illustrate the transnationalism of Russian-anarcho-syndicalism.
The cases of Vladimir Shatov, Volin (Vsevolod Eikhenbaum), and Grigorii Maksimov not only represent different anarcho-syndicalist perceptions of Bolshevism during the summer and fall of 1917 but also illustrate the transnationalism of Russian-anarcho-syndicalism. Expand abstract Files and links (1) pdf
Anatolii Gorelik commented favorably on Lenin's Political Parties in Russia(April 1917) and on State and Revolution(1918), "where he reveals and proves that the Bolsheviks are more anarchist than the anarchists themselves. Many other Bolsheviks expressed themselves the same way."
Some peasants who moved up the list as a result of Gagarin's intervention focused on a household head, Grigorii Maksimov, whom they claimed was not a contributing member of the community. He hadlived two years off the estate without a passport, and the mir had gone to great expense to bring him back.
Avrich suggests that this was the work of Grigorii Maksimov. If so, Maksimov’s critical faculties were considerably blunted and vulgarised by the time he wrote The Guillotine at Work in the 1940s. 43. R.V. Daniels, The Conscience of the Revolution, Cambridge 1960, pp.51, 160. 44. A.
Grigorii Petrovich Maksimov (Russian: Григо́рий Петро́вич Макси́мов; 1893–1950) was a Russian anarcho-syndicalist. From the first days of the Russian Revolution, he played a leading role in the country's syndicalist movement – editing the newspaper Golos Truda and organising the formation of factory committees.