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Vladimir Zabrezhnev

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Vladimir Ivanovich Zabrezhnev
Владимир Иванович Забрежнев
Born(1877-03-28)March 28, 1877
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
DiedMarch 9, 1939(1939-03-09) (aged 61)
Leningrad, Soviet Russia
SpouseEdda Stepanovna Zabrezhneva
ChildrenMikhail Vladimirovich Zabrezhnev,
Stepan Vladimirovich Zabrezhnev

Vladimir Ivanovich Zabrezhnev (March 28, 1877, Petersburg – March 9, 1939, Leningrad) was a Russian revolutionary, criminologist and NKVD officer. He was a disciple of Peter Kropotkin.[1]

Zabrezhnev founded the first Moscow propaganda centre in 1905.[1]

Essays

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  • "On Terror", in the book: "Russian Revolution and Anarchism. Papers read at the Congress of Communists-Anarchists in October 1906 ”, London, 1907;
  • "Preachers of Individualist Anarchism in Russia (Report to the Amsterdam Congress of Anarchist Communists, held on August 24–31, 1907)", "Burevestnik", Paris, 1908, No. 10-11;
  • "On individualistic anarchism." London. 1912.
  • “The first years of my party work (1895–1899)”, “Proletarian Revolution”, 1923, no. 10;
  • "Butyrki 1905 and the first successful escape from them." "Hard labor and exile", 1925, No. 4;
  • "Behind the Mass", in the book: "December 1905 at Krasnaya Presnya", 3rd ed., M., 1925.
  • "Theory and Practice of Mental Impact", 1922.
  • "Controversial Issues of Hypnology", 1925.
  • "Problems of Modern Hypnology", 1926.

References

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  1. ^ a b Gooderham, P. The anarchist movement in Russia, 1905-1917. p. 124.