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Donat Cherepanov

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Donat Cherepanov
Born1886
DisappearedMarch 1920
Moscow
Years active1917–1920
Political partyLeft Socialist Revolutionary Party (1917–1919)
Other political
affiliations
Socialist Revolutionary Party (1917)

Donat Andreevich Cherepanov (1886; disappeared March 1920) was a Russian revolutionary. He joined the Socialist-Revolutionaries around the time of the Russian revolutions of 1917, and emerged as a leading dissident in the Left-Socialist Revolutionary movement the following year. He is believed to have died in captivity after being arrested in 1920.

Biography

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Donat Andreevich Cherepanov was the son of an unsuccessful Moscow entrepreneur. According an account by his former 3rd Moscow Gymnasium [ru] classmate V.F. Khodasevich, Cherepanov did not appear to be involved in politics as of late 1916. He became politically active in 1917, joining the Socialist Revolutionary Party, and later the same year siding with the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries in the party split. He gained some fame as a Left SR leader, along with such figures as Spiridonova and Kamkov.[1]

Cherepanov became a member of the Central Committee of the Party of Left Socialist-Revolutionaries. He took a direct part in the uprising of July 1918. After the failure of the attempted insurrection, he went underground and became the leader of the so-called 'left-wing of Left SRs' who advocated an irreconcilable terrorist struggle against the Bolsheviks. His underground nickname was 'Cherepok'. He established contacts with a group of underground anarchists led by Kazimir Kovalevich, and together they organized an explosion in Leontyevsky Lane on September 25, 1919.[1] Vladimir Zagorsky and 11 others were killed in this attack.[2] Cherepanov was expelled from PLSR(i) in September 1919.[3]

Cherepanov was arrested by the Moscow Cheka on February 20, 1920. Cherepanov was personally interrogated by the leaders of the Cheka, Feliks Dzerzhinsky and Ivan Ksenofontov.[4] Cherepanov was thought to have been executed shortly after his capture, but it is possible he died of typhus.[1]

In media

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Khodasevich, Vladislav F. (26 March 1936). "Черепанов" [Cherepanov]. Vozrojdénie (in Russian). Vol. 16. Retrieved 2024-10-03 – via dugward.ru.
  2. ^ Sokolov, Boris (24 September 2004). "Теракт под черным знаменем" [A Black Banner Terrorist Attack]. Grani.ru [ru] (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-10-03.
  3. ^ Leontev, Yaroslav V. [in Russian] (2007). "Скифы" русской революции: партия левых эсеров и её литературные попутчики [‘Scythians’ of the Russian Revolution: the Left Social Revolutionary Party and its literary fellow travellers] (in Russian). АИРО-XXI. p. 140. ISBN 9785910220342. OCLC 78990545.
  4. ^ Makintsian, P. (1989). "Следственный материал по делу анархистов подполья" [Investigative material on the case of underground anarchists]. In Velidov, Aleksei S. (ed.). Красная книга ВЧК [Red Book of the Cheka]. Vol. 1. Politizdat [ru]. ISBN 9785250010252. OCLC 749307871. Retrieved 2024-10-03 – via leftinmsu.narod.ru.
  5. ^ The Sixth of July (1968) - IMDb. Retrieved 2024-05-09 – via www.imdb.com.