Julius Petrovich Guzhon ( - ) - a Russian businessman who had French citizenship.
| Julius Goujon | |
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| Father | Pyotr Osipovich Gouzhon |
He was the largest shareholder of the Silk Manufactory Partnership ( Moscow ) and the Partnership of the Moscow Metallurgical Plant (MMZ, now the Hammer and Sickle Plant). For 10 years he was chairman of the Moscow Society of Breeders and Manufacturers (1907-1917). He was also a member of the Society for the Distribution of Useful Books, the French Society for Mutual Welfare, the Council of the Roman Catholic French Church of St. Louis, a full member of the Imperial Moscow Racing Society.
Member of the Society for the Advancement of Experimental Sciences and their Practical Applications [1] .
The author of a number of works on economic and industrial topics. Killed in his own country by officers of the Volunteer Army .
According to one version, the circumstances of the murder of Yu.P. Guzhon in December 1918 are connected with the hunt for the keys to a large financial trust in Switzerland, which in 1907 was opened by the emperor in favor of a group of Moscow entrepreneurs headed by N. A. Vtorov (killed by unknown in May 1918). This version is reflected in the novel by Yu. Shushkevich, “Promissory Note of Fate” (2014).
Content
Major works
- Normalization of the working day, 1907;
- A few words on the issue of increasing working capital among the people and attracting foreign capital to Russia, 1909
Notes
- ↑ Philanthropists and philanthropists, 2010 , p. 297.
Literature
- E. Yu. Gorbunova. Philanthropists and philanthropists in the history of Moscow University / Editor: V. I. Tropin. - M .: Publishing house of Moscow University, 2010. - 320 p. - ISBN 978-5-211-05745-6 .
