Philip Mironov and the Russian Civil War by Starikov, Sergei

Philip Mironov and the Russian Civil War
by Starikov, Sergei

(#8CCOM96)

Follett eBook (90-day term) (assigned-user access) Knopf, c1978, p2013
Description: 1 online resource (1 online resource (xvi, 267 pages)) : digital.
Dewey: 947.084

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From Follett

Title proper from title frame.;Mode of access: World Wide Web.;Includes bibliographical references and index.;Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL;Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL;digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL;Print version record.;Description based on print version record. He was an authentic hero of World War I and the Russian Revolution. He commanded a successful Red Army that treated prisoners mercifully, refrained from pillaging the countryside, and educated the people about the objectives of the Bolshevik regime. His eloquent advocacy of the ideas and aspirations of farmers and workers in the civil war period after World War I helped to weaken the cause of the White armies. Yet Philip Mironov has been systematically defamed in official Soviet history, and today his name is remembered by very few. This Cossack leader was distrusted and even despised by the more radical Communists, removed from his army command, and tried for treason. Leon Trotsky declared him a traitor and careerist who wanted "to climb upward on the backs of the toiling masses." After being pardoned and "rehabilitated" (at least partly through Lenin's personal intervention), Mironov continued in his independent ways until he was again arrested by the Cheka (Secret Police). While exercising in a prison courtyard in Moscow on April 2, 1921, he was mysteriously shot in the back and killed. Drawing upon archives, reminiscences, and Mironov's own brief, fragmentary, unpublished memoir, Sergi Starikov and the celebrated Soviet scholar Roy Medvedev have written a compelling book that helps explain the complex social processes of revolutionary Russia.

From the Publisher
He was an authentic hero of World War I and the Russian Revolution. He commanded a successful Red Army that treated prisoners mercifully, refrained from pillaging the countryside, and educated the people about the objectives of the Bolshevik regime. His eloquent advocacy of the ideas and aspirations of farmers and workers in the civil war period after World War I helped to weaken the cause of the White armies.  Yet Philip Mironov has been systematically defamed in official Soviet history, and today his name is remembered by very few. This Cossack leader was distrusted and even despised by the more radical Communists, removed from his army command, and tried for treason. Leon Trotsky declared him a traitor and careerist who wanted “to climb upward on the backs of the toiling masses.” After being pardoned and “rehabilitated” (at least partly through Lenin’s personal intervention), Mironov continued in his independent ways until he was again arrested by the Cheka (Secret Police). While exercising in a prison courtyard in Moscow on April 2, 1921, he was mysteriously shot in the back and killed.  Drawing upon archives, reminiscences, and Mironov’s own brief, fragmentary, unpublished memoir, Sergi Starikov and the celebrated Soviet scholar Roy Medvedev have written a compelling book that helps explain the complex social processes of revolutionary Russia.
Product Details
  • Publisher: Knopf
  • Publication Date: October 2, 2013
  • Format: Follett eBook (90-day term) (assigned-user access)
  • Dewey: 947.084
  • Description: 1 online resource (1 online resource (xvi, 267 pages)) : digital.
  • Tracings: Medvedev, Roy Aleksandrovich, 1925- author.
  • ISBN-10: 0-8041-5011-7
  • ISBN-13: 978-0-8041-5011-8
  • Follett Number: 8CCOM96