- Sergei Kravchinski
Infobox Person
name=Sergius Michaelovitch Kravchinski
caption=
birth_date=1851
birth_place=South Russia
death_date=death date|1895|12|23|mf=y
death_place=Bedford Park ,Chiswick ,England Sergius Michaelovitch Kravchinski, known in 19th century
London revolution ary circles as Stepniak or Sergius Stepniak, was theRussia n who killed the chief of that country'ssecret police with a dagger in the streets ofSt Petersburg in 1878.Early life
Stepniak was the son of an army doctor, born 1851. He went on to attend Military academy and the artillery school before joining the Russian army. He was able to reach the rank of
Second lieutenant before resigning his commission in 1871.Revolutionary life
He received a liberal education, and, when he left school, became an officer in the artillery; but his sympathy with the peasants, among whom he had lived during his boyhood in the country, developed in him at first democratic and, later, revolutionary opinions. Together with a few other men of birth and education, he began secretly to sow the sentiments of
democracy among the peasants. His teaching did not long remain a secret, and in 1874 he was arrested.In 1874 Stepniak went to the Balkans and joined the rising against the Turks in Bosnia in 1876, and used that experience to write a manual on
guerrilla warfare . He also joined the anarchistErrico Malatesta in his small rebellion in the Italian province of Benevento in 1877. He returned to Russia four years later joiningZemlya i volya (Land and Liberty) were he along with Nikolai Morozov andOlga Liubatovich edited the party journal.He succeeded in making his escape, possibly being permitted to escape on account of his youth, and immediately began a more vigorous campaign against
autocracy . His sympathetic nature was influenced by indignation against the brutal methods adopted towards prisoners, especially political prisoners, and by the stern measures which the government of thetsar felt compelled to adopt in order to repress the revolutionary movement.His indignation carried him into accord for a time with those who advocated the terrorist policy. In consequence he exposed himself to danger by remaining in Russia, and in 1880 he was obliged to leave the country. He settled for a short time in
Switzerland , then a favourite resort of revolutionary leaders, and after a few years came toLondon . He was already known in England by his book, "Underground Russia", which had been published in London in 1882.He followed it up with a number of other works on the condition of the Russian peasantry, on Nihilism, and on the conditions of life in Russia. His mind gradually turned from belief in the efficacy of violent measures to the acceptance of constitutional methods; and in his last book, "King Stork and King Log", he spoke with approval of the efforts of politicians on the Liberal side to effect, by argument and peaceful agitation, a change in the attitude of the Russian government towards various reforms.
He was convinced that individual acts of political terrorism would convince Emperor
Alexander II of Russia to introduce democratic reforms. In August, 1878 he assassinated the chief of Gendarme corps, the head of the country'ssecret police with a dagger in the streets ofSt Petersburg in 1878.After the killing, he left Russia and lived in several countries including the
United States . Eventually settling inEngland where he established the "Friends of Russian Freedom" and the "Russia Free Press", linking withCharlotte Wilson andKarl Pearson (see ISBN 0691114455, pp.108-109).Stepniak constantly wrote and lectured, both in
Great Britain and theUnited States , in support of his views, and his energy, added to the interest of his personality, won him many friends. He was chiefly identified with theSocialists inEngland and the Social Democratic parties on the Continent; but he was regarded by men of all opinions as an agitator whose motives had always been pure and disinterested. Stepniak was killed by a railway engine at alevel crossing atBedford Park ,Chiswick , where he resided, on23 December 1895 . He was cremated atWoking on28 December .References
*"
The Anarchists ",James Joll , second edition, page 103.External links
*worldcat id|id=lccn-n79-111446
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