User:Formigues/Anatoly Vaneyev

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Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vaneyev
Анатолий Александрович Ванеев
Born(1872-03-09)9 March 1872
Died20 September 1899(1899-09-20) (aged 27)
Yermakovskoye
Cause of deathTuberculosis
NationalityRussian Empire
OccupationPolitician
SpouseDominika Trukhovskaya (married 1897–99)
ChildrenAnatoly Anatolevich Vaneyev

Anatoly Aleksandrovich Vaneyev (9 March [O.S. 26 February] 1872, Arkhangelsk[1] – 20 September [O.S. 8 September] 1899, Yermakovskoye village[1], now capital of the Yermakovsky District in the Krasnoyarsk Krai) was an active participant of the revolutionary movement in the Russian Empire.

Biography[edit]

Members of the League. Standing (left to right): A. L. Malchenko, P. K. Zaporozhets, A. A. Vaneyev; Sitting (left to right): V. V. Starkov, G. M. Krzhizhanovsky, Lenin, Julius Martov. St. Petersburg, 1897.

Anatoly Vaneyev was born in the family of an official. He went to the Saint Petersburg State Institute of Technology. Being a student he participated, under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin, in the creation of the St. Petersburg League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class and its activities. He supervised the technical preparation of the publication of the newspaper Rabocheye Delo. He also took part in the hectography of Lenin's 1894 work What the “Friends of the People” Are and How They Fight the Social-Democrats.

In December 1895 he was arrested and, in 1897, banished to Eastern Siberia. In exile, he married Dominika Trukhovskaya.[1] In the late summer of 1899 he signed A Protest by Russian Social-Democrats, directed against the so-called "economists".

He died shortly after, in September, from tuberculosis, which he contracted during solitary confinement in prison, prior to his banishment.

The son of Anatoly and Dominika was born three weeks after his death and was named Anatoly, like his father.[1]

Memorials[edit]

  • In honor of Anatoly Vaneyev, several streets were named after him in cities and towns of the former Soviet Union.
  • In Yermakovskoye, a memorial house-museum was opened where he lived in exile.
  • Also in Yermakovskoye, a sovkhoz (state farm) was named after him.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Terenteva, Valentina (21 January 2012). "K 140-letiyu so dnya rozhdeniya Anatoliya Vaneyeva (1872-1899)" К 140-летию со дня рождения Анатолия Ванеева (1872-1899) [At the 140th-anniversary of the birth of Anatoly Vaneyev (1872-1899)]. Krasnoyarskiy Rabochiy (in Russian). Retrieved 9 March 2018.

Bibliography[edit]

Category:Russian_revolutionaries