Mark Abramovich of Bragin ( 1863 - 1951 ) - Russian and Soviet publicist, translator, Narodovolets , Social Revolutionary .
| Mark Abramovich Braginsky | |
|---|---|
| Aliases | Vilyuets |
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | Chernihiv province Russian empire |
| Date of death | |
| Place of death | |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | professional revolutionary, publicist, translator, editor |
| Education | St. Petersburg University |
| Religion | absent ( atheist ) |
| The consignment | People's Will , Party of Socialist Revolutionaries |
| Main ideas | populism , democratic socialism |
Content
Biography
Born in a family of Chernigov bourgeois. Jew. Parents: Abraham Haimovich Braginsky and Pearl Sosia Moiseevna. The family moved to Taganrog, where the younger brother David was born, and then moved to Samara.
He studied at the Samara Gymnasium, for a physics and law degree. faculties of the imperial University of St. Petersburg. In 1889 he was sentenced to 20 years of hard labor for participation in the Yakut case . Released ahead of schedule. From 1896 he lived in Odessa . In 1902 he emigrated to France , in 1907 he returned to Russia. He entered the university again. In 1911 he was arrested and sent to Estonia. It was published in imperial editions: Russian Thought , Testaments , Requests for Life, Past , Northern Notes, as well as Social Democratic and Revolutionary editions: Son of the Fatherland, Our Days, Thoughts , "The cause of the people", "People’s Bulletin."
He was buried in Moscow at the Novodevichy cemetery .
Sisters and brother
- Braginskaya Sofya Abramovna (after Ivanchin-Pisarev's husband) (1861-1946) - translator, publisher, dentist.
- Braginskaya Rosalia Abramovna (1862-1914) - translator, private practitioner, school doctor
- Braginsky David Abramovich (b. 25.10.1865, Taganrog) - bibliographer, pharmacist , official of the 2nd district of the St. Petersburg Excise Department , college secretary . The author of the "Bibliographic Index of Translated Fiction in Russian Magazines for Five Years 1897-1901", type. N.N. Klobukova, St. Petersburg, 1902, 68 pp.
Favorite
- Weil J. History of France from 1848 to the present day (1908)
- Chamignon E. France on the eve of the revolution (1909)
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