Self determination lenin biography
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Lenin and his biographers
VLADIMIR ILYICH Lenin remains an object of interest to people around the world even today. Many people have no clear conception, or no conception at all, of who this man was, but there are significant numbers who do. For some he remains an object of fear and hate, for others of passionate hope, for some of disappointment—with others defined by yet other categories. “Tell me what you think of Lenin,” writes historian Christopher Read, “and I will tell you who you are.” One of the most challenging and idiosyncratic political theorists of the twentieth century, Hannah Arendt, commented in her 1963 reflection On Revolution that “it is perhaps noteworthy that Lenin, unlike Hitler and Stalin, has not yet found his definitive biographer, although he was not merely a ‘better’ but an incomparably simpler man; it may be because his role in twentieth-century history is so much more tvetydig and difficult to understand.”1
The full-scale biographies emerging in t
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Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and Woodrow efternamn on the Self-Determination of Nations
Olschowsky, Burkhard. "Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and Woodrow Wilson on the Self-Determination of Nations". Central and Eastern Europe after the First World War, edited by Burkhard Olschowsky, Piotr Juszkiewicz and Jan Rydel, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2022, pp. 149-170. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110757163-009
Olschowsky, B. (2022). Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and Woodrow Wilson on the Self-Determination of Nations. In B. Olschowsky, P. Juszkiewicz & J. Rydel (Ed.), Central and Eastern europe after the First World War (pp. 149-170). Berlin, Boston: dem Gruyter Oldenbourg. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110757163-009
Olschowsky, B. 2022. Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and Woodrow Wilson on the Self-Determination of Nations. In: Olschowsky, B., Juszkiewicz, P. and Rydel, J. ed. Central and Eastern Europe after the First World War. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, pp. 149-170. https://doi.org/10.1515/978
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Vladimir Lenin
Founding leader of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1924
"Lenin" and "Vladimir Ilyich Lenin" redirect here. For other uses, see Lenin (disambiguation). For the poem, see Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (poem).
In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Ilyich and the family name is Ulyanov.
Vladimir Lenin | |
|---|---|
Lenin in 1920 | |
| In office 6 July 1923 – 21 January 1924 | |
| Preceded by | Office established |
| Succeeded by | Alexei Rykov |
| In office 9 November 1917 – 21 January 1924 | |
| Preceded by | Office established |
| Succeeded by | Alexei Rykov |
| Born | Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov 22 April 1870 Simbirsk, Russian Empire |
| Died | 21 January 1924(1924-01-21) (aged 53) Gorki, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
| Resting place | Lenin's Mausoleum, Moscow, Russia |
| Political party | RCP(b)[a] (from 1912) |
| Other political affiliations |
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