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terça-feira, 12 de fevereiro de 2013

Litlle Grandmother of the Russian Revolution (1918)


Litlle Grandmother of the Russian Revolution
Reminiscences and letters of Catherine Breshkovsky
Edited by Alice Stone Blackwell
Boston
Little, Brown & Company
duas edições de 1918 e 1919
348 p.
Capa cartonada

Obra editada por 4 vezes no período da revolução bolshevique na Rússia e distribuída massivamente em todos os EUA e nas tropas americanas estacionadas no pacífico.

Este exemplar era propriedade do War Service Library do Exército dos EUA

Vídeos  da Revolução russa de 1917


Link explicativo do enquadramento global, factos e pessoas da Revolução Bolshevique


Texto integral do livro na Web:


Sobre o livro:

A Revolução Russa foi um dos grandes acontecimentos da história moderna. Foi o também possível graças ao trabalho e sacrifício de milhares de homens nobres da Rússia e e algumas mulheres. das mais proeminentes destaca-se a figura de Catherine Breshkovsky, nascida Ekaterina Constantinovna Brechko-Brechkóvskaia, conhecida carinhosamente pelo povo russo (sobretudo os camponeses) como Baboushka, a avó querida da Revolução Russa. 

Este trabalho é uma compilação de textos e cartas de Madame Breshkovsky em que conta de sua infância e juventude ditada ao amigo de infância e juventude Dr. Abraham Cahan bem como a narrativa de sua vida, da sua primeira prisão, das experiências iniciais de prisão e um esboço de sua vida posterior dada em entrevista a Ernest Poole que as publicou inicialmente no Outlook.

Edição de 1918






Edição de 1919






Notas biográficas:


Catherine Breshkovsky (real name Yekaterina Konstantinovna Breshko-Breshkovskaya (RussianЕкатерина Константиновна Брешко-Брешковская); 13 January 1844 – 12 September 1934) was a Russian socialist, better known as Babushka (the Grandmother) of the Russian Revolution.

Revolutionary Life


She left her home at the age of 26 to join followers of anarchist Mikhail Bakunin in Kiev. As a Narodnik revolutionary, she was imprisoned 1874 at Katorga and exiled to Siberia in 1878. After her release in 1896, she formed a Socialist-Revolutionary group and helped to organize the Socialist-Revolutionary Party in 1901.


She escaped to Switzerland and the United States in 1900. After returning to Imperial Russia in 1905, she was captured and exiled to Siberia again. After the February Revolution of 1917, political prisoners were released, and Breshkovsky was given a seat in Aleksandr Kerensky's government. When the Bolshevik organized the October Revolution, Breshkovsky was again forced to flee. She died inCzechoslovakia.

Her son Nikolay Breshko-Breshkovsky became a writer.


The Little Grandmother of the Russian Revolution: Reminiscences and Letters, Little, Brown and Co, Boston, 1918. from Archive.org


A mulher na Revolução russa:
Women in the Russian Revolution


Among others, there was Catherine Breshkovsky (Catherine Breshkovskaya, Breshka Brashkoski, Yekaterina Breshko-Breshkovskaya, whatever), who is nicknamed the Little Grandmother of the Russian Revolution, or бабушка Русской революции if you speak Russian. 

This lady was co-founder and co-leader of the Russian Socialist Revolutionary Party. Like all decent Russian revolutionaries, Catherine spent many years in Siberian exile. After 1917, she left the country and moved to Prague because she couldn't agree with the Bolsheviks.

Catherine Breshkovsky 1844 - 1934

CATHERINE BRESHKOVSKY - MORE BALLS THAN THE REST COMBINED


Source Unknown


Many other women fought in the Revolution as well, some as visionary revolutionaries, some as protesters in the streets, some as armed rebels. Here are more girls with guns.

FEMALE UDARNITSKY BATTALION ASSIGNED TO THE PALACE AREA, 1917


FEMALE UDARNITSKY BATTALION ASSIGNED TO THE PALACE AREA, 1917

St Petersburg Encyclopaedia

Udarnik, also called Shock Worker, was the term for an enthusiastic worker assigned to a special task of urgency.

Arquivos de
Catherine Breshkovsky papers, 1923-1934.

Breshko-Breshkovskaia, Ekaterina Konstantinovna, 1844-1934.
3 linear foot (1 box)









New York Public Library
Contact an Archivist to learn more about access to materials in this collection
Contact Information
Notes and summaries
Entire collection Available on microfilm; New York Public Library.
Ekaterina Breshko-Breshkovskaia (1844-1934), whose anglicized name was Catherine Breshkovsky, was a member of the Social Revolutionary Party in Russia. After the 1917 Revolution, she left for Prague where she was active in efforts to aid the Russian refugee community.
Papers include letters and postcards, 1923-1934, from Breshkovsky in Prague to Irene Dietrich in Brooklyn, New York, in which she thanks Dietrich for her gifts of clothing, school supplies, money, and other necessities to the Russian refugees Breshkovsky was aiding. Breshkovsky also discusses her efforts to help the refugees, particulary children; conditions in Russia; Russian revolutionary figures; world affairs; and personal matters. Also included are letters to Dietrich from Breshkovsky's friends, George Lazarev, Olga Kerensky, Alice Stone Blackwell, and Larissa Archangelski, and family; and photographs of Breshkovsky, ca. 1920s-1930s, and of George Larazev and Olga Kerensky and her younger son Gleb. Lazarev correspondence includes a 23-page letter written in 1928 in which Lazarev describes Breshkovsky's and his own revolutionary activities in Russia.
A few letters Are in French and Russian.
This collection covers:
Breshko-Breshkovskai︠a︡, Ekaterina Konstantinovna, 1844-1934.
Refugees Soviet Union.
Refugees Czech Republic Prague.
Children Soviet Union.
International relief Czech Republic Prague.
Soviet Union History Revolution, 1917-1921 Refugees.
Soviet Union Social conditions.
Soviet Union Economic conditions 1917-1945.
Prague (Czech Republic) Social conditions.
Editors, Translators, and other contributors:
Dietrich, Irene.
Lazarev, George.
Kerensky, Olga.
Blackwell, Alice Stone, 1857-1950.
Archangelski, Larissa.
Kerensky, Gleb.
Livro marcante de uma época e de uma personalidade histórica.
Raro e de coleção
Edição 1918 - Em muito bom estado para a idade. Miolo impecável

Edição de 1919 - Em estado razoável para a idade. Lombada ferida. Miolo razoável

Edição 1918 Preço 150€ 


Edição 1919 Preço 75 €

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