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Lisienko, Arseny Pavlovich

Arseny Pavlovich Lisienko , he was until 1914 Fyodor Semyonovich Semenov (June 1, 1890-1973) - a Social Revolutionary , a member of the All-Russian Constituent Assembly , a journalist.

Arseny Pavlovich Lisienko
Fedor Semenovich Semenov
Date of BirthJune 1, 1890 ( 1890-06-01 )
Place of BirthSaint Petersburg
Russian empire
Date of death1973 ( 1973 )
Place of deathNew Zealand
Citizenship Russian Empire → Russian Republic →
Far Eastern Republic
FER →
New Zealand
Occupationmember of the All-Russian Constituent Assembly .
The consignmentParty of Socialist Revolutionaries

Content

Biography

According to some sources, he was born in St. Petersburg [1] , according to other Staritsky district of the Tver province [2] . The illegitimate son of a soldier [1] , according to the estate belonging to a peasant [2] . In 1907, a second-level school graduate [3] , according to other sources of the 4-class city school [2] . He was admitted to the Maritime College of distant navigation [3] in St. Petersburg and graduated from it [1] . Later he served as a clerk, cook, sailor. In 1906 he became a member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party , conducted party work in St. Petersburg [2] . In 1907 he was exiled to Verkhoyansk [1] . In 1911 he was arrested [2] , sentenced to eternal exile [3] , an exiled settler in the Verkholensk district of Irkutsk province [1] [2] . In exile, he earned his living as a lumberjack, sawyer, uprooter, worker of the hydrographic party [3] .

In 1914 he escaped from exile. At first he lived illegally for several months in Novonikolaevsk . Having received fake documents in the name of Arseny Pavlovich Lisienko moved to Biysk , and in 1915 he moved to Mariinsk [4] . (These surname, name and patronymic he used later until the end of his life). He served as an instructor in oil production in Novonikolaevsk cooperatives [2] , clerk, cooperator, accountant, secretary of the Commission for the Promotion of Siberian Cooperation [3] . Working in the Mariinsk system of Siberian cooperation, he continued his active revolutionary activity, was one of the organizers of the Siberian Union of Socialists-Revolutionaries (two organizational conferences were held in Mariinsk [4] at the end of 1915 and in March 1916) [5] .

In 1917, Lisienko moved to Tomsk, became a member of the Tomsk City Committee of the Socialist Revolutionary Party [4] , and then from March 1917 [2] and the provincial committee. Editor of the main press organ of the Socialist Revolutionaries of Tomsk - the newspaper "Way of the People" [4] . Elected as a fellow chairman of the executive committee of the Tomsk provincial council of peasant deputies [2] . According to other sources, in 1917-1920 he was chairman of the Tomsk Provincial Council of Peasant Deputies, the Tomsk Provincial Zemsky Committee, a member of the Tomsk Military Revolutionary Committee [1] [3] . He was delegated to the II and III All-Russian Congresses of Soviets of Workers 'and Soldiers' Deputies . The delegate of the III Congress of the Party of Socialists-Revolutionaries, belonged to the left wing [1] . He was in the position of the Socialist Revolutionaries, was opposed to cooperation with the "bourgeois" parties and even during the February Revolution called for the transfer of all power to the Soviets [4] . At the Fourth Congress, the AKP sharply criticized the Central Committee and left the congress [1] . In October 1917, Lisienko ran for the vowels of the Tomsk City Council on the list of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, but was not elected. In October 1917, he was elected a delegate to the I Siberian Regional Congress [4] .

In November [4] 1917 he was elected to the All-Russian Constituent Assembly in the Tomsk constituency according to list No. 2 (Socialist-Revolutionaries) [1] . A participant in the sole meeting of the Constituent Assembly on January 5, condemned its dissolution. For which he was arrested on January 9 by the Bolsheviks, released at the request of the Left Social Revolutionaries [1] .

In May 1918 he became a delegate to the VIII Council of the Social Revolutionary Party. He was a member of Komuch [1] . He returned to Tomsk only in the autumn of 1918. He entered the Siberian Regional Duma as a member of the All-Russian Constituent Assembly [6] . He stood in sharp anti-Kolchak positions. Together with the Social Revolutionaries P. Ya. Mikhailov , B. D. Markov and M. Ya. Lindberg he revived the Siberian Union of Socialists-Revolutionaries and was one of its leaders. In November 1919, together with members of the AKP from Tomsk , V.O. Sidorov and E.V. Zakharov, he participated in an unsuccessful attempt at an armed anti-Kolchak rebellion in Vladivostok . The basis of the rebels was the zemstvo-regionalist ideology, the military leader was the Czech Radola Gaida . In December 1919, he participated in the same but successful armed coup in Irkutsk . After that, he headed the military-political headquarters in the partisan detachment of the anarchist Nestor Kalandarishvili [4] . He participated in the partisan movement in the Baikal region [3] and fought in the Transbaikalia with the remnants of the Kolchak and Semenov troops [4] .

He became a member of the delegation of the Far Eastern Republic at the Hong Kong Conference [7] . In Verkhneudinsk, he was appointed Minister of Social Security in the government of the Far Eastern Republic [4] . He moved to Vladivostok, where in 1920 he was elected a member of the Constituent Assembly of the Far Eastern Republic . Mat 10, 1921, during the debate on the report of the Government of the Far Eastern Republic A.P. Lisienko criticized the political regime in the RSFSR and the actions of the State Political Guard of the Far Eastern Democratic Republic, accusing it of arbitrariness. In response, he was sharply criticized by the Bolshevik deputies [8] . He emigrated to China. In 1921–1955 he lived in Harbin , worked as a carpenter, secretary and employee of the working newspaper “Tribuna”, served as an accountant at the Far Eastern Bureau of the Supreme Economic Council, secretary-economist of the USSR trade mission [3] in Harbin, and also served as a Soviet trade representative in Mongolia (position not established) [1] , worked as the editor of the youth magazine "Youth" [3] .

In 1925, he provided assistance to the starving in the USSR [3] . After the conflict, the CER moved from Harbin to Tianjin , where he worked as deputy manager of the Kalgan office of the Central Cooperative [3] . During the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945) he campaigned for the support of the USSR [1] . In 1955 he emigrated from China to New Zealand. He was published in the newspapers “The Voice of the Motherland ”, “The Voice of the Emigrant”, “Dawn”, “The New Russian Word ” [9] . He was a member of the executive committee of the New Zealand Society for Rapprochement with the USSR. In 1955, he published in the Soviet magazine " Twinkle " the poem "A letter from a young man to his mother" [10] . Member of the All-Slavic Union of New Zealand [11] .

Addresses

  • 1917 - Tomsk, st. Bolshaya Kirpichnoy (now Oktyabrskaya), d. 22 [4] .

Sources

  • Shilovsky M.V. Semenov, Fedor Semenovich // Novosibirsk: Encyclopedia. Novosibirsk, 2003.
  • Chudnovsky S. , “Min. Years ”1908, V — VI, 373 (From distant years). - "Red. Archive »XXX (1928), 198 (Final of the 193s process)
  • Protasov L.G. People of the Constituent Assembly: a portrait in the interior of the era. M., ROSPEN, 2008.
  • Pomozov O. A. Day of the liberation of Siberia. c. 196.

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Protasov L. G. People of the Constituent Assembly: a portrait in the interior of the era. M., ROSPEN, 2008.
  2. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 M.V. Shilovsky Semenov, Fedor Semenovich // Novosibirsk: Encyclopedia. Novosibirsk, 2003.
  3. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 S. Chudnovsky , “Min. Years ”1908, V — VI, 373 (From distant years). - "Red. Archive »XXX (1928), 198 (Final of the 193s process)
  4. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pomozov O. A. Day of the liberation of Siberia. c. 196.
  5. ↑ Pomozov O. A. Creation of the West Siberian and East Siberian Commissariats.
  6. ↑ Appendix 1 to chapter VI. List of members of the Siberian Regional Duma by August 15, 1918
  7. ↑ On the site [1], an obvious typo of the "Hong Kong Conference" must be checked from the original source: L. Protasov. People of the Constituent Assembly: portrait in the interior of the era. M., ROSPEN, 2008.
  8. ↑ Kuzmin V.L., Tsipkin Yu.N. Socialist-Revolutionaries and Mensheviks in the Russian Far East during the Civil War.
  9. ↑ In the source, the newspaper called “The Russian Word” [2] , it is corrected here on the basis of information on the personal fund of A. P. Lisienko in the GA of the Russian Federation.
  10. ↑ Spark, 1955 p. 24.
  11. ↑ Travel Guide, Volume 5: Personal Funds of the State Archive of the Russian Federation (1917-2000).
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lisienko__Arseniy_Pavlovich&oldid=95431212


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