Sergei Trishatny
Sergei Trishatny | |
---|---|
Born | Тришатный, Сергей Иосифович 19 March [O.S. 7] 1865 |
Disappeared | April 21, 1920 (aged 55) Petrograd, RSFSR |
Body discovered | no |
Nationality | Russian |
Citizenship | Russian Empire, RSFSR |
Style | monarchism, antisemitism |
Political party | Union of Russian People |
Sergei Iosifovich Trishatny (19 March [O.S. 7] 1865 — after April 21, 1920) was an elder brother of Alexander Trishatny, with whom he worked in the supreme bodies of the Union of the Russian People (URP), a loyalist right-wing nationalist party, the most important[1] among Black-Hundredist monarchist and antisemitic political organizations in the Russian Empire of 1905–1917. In 1905–1908 he was a secretary of the URP. In January 1920, he was detained and in April 1920, he escaped from a detention camp. After that, all traces of him were lost.[2]
Biography[]
Sergei Iosifovich Trishatny was born on 19 March [O.S. 7] 1865.[2] Graduated the law faculty of the Petersburg University. Biographers point at his contacts with Pyotr Rachkovsky — the famous chief of Okhrana, the secret service of the Russian Empire, an antisemite by devotion. In November 1902 Rachkovsky returned from Paris (supposedly bringing the notoriously known "Protocols of the Elders of Zion" with himself) to Petersburg.[3]
When the Russian revolution of 1905 began, Sergei Trishatny was a barrister. In October 1905 together with his younger brother, Alexander Trishatny took part in the organization of the Union of the Russian People (URP) under the leadership of Alexander Dubrovin. When on 8 November [O.S. 26 October] 1905 the founding of the Union of the Russian People was formally announced, Sergei Trishatny was appointed a Secretary, while his brother Alexander Trishatny became the deputy chairman of the Main Board (Russian: Главный Совет) of this union, headed by Dr. Dubrovin.[4]
Sergei Trishatny is named as the organizer of terroristic combat squads (Russian: боевые дружины) which shot and murdered political opponents of URP, from deputies of Duma to the left-wing functionaries. In 1907–1908 following growing internal conflicts and power struggle in the URP Trishatny withdrew from his active participation in the Union. From 1908 he worked as legal adviser to the Central Post Office in St. Petersburg.
After the October revolution of 1917, Trishatny did not emigrate and went to work for the Soviets. In December 1918 he got a job as an auditor of the Food committee of Nikolaevskaya railway. A year after, on December 20, 1919 he was detained by the Cheka of Petrograd which was investigating the URP case at that time, as once a member of this union. In 3 weeks, on January 12, 1920 the investigator found no corpus delicti in Trishatny's testimony and released him from detention.
Five days later, on January 17, 1920 the Cheka of Petrograd decided to detain Trishatny "as an ex-member of the URP" upon lifting of martial law in the city. Trishatny worked a camp in Petrograd until April 1, 1920, when he escaped. On April 21, 1920, the Cheka officially put Trishatny on its wanted list. His ultimate fate is unknown.
See also[]
- Alexander Dubrovin
- Alexander Trishatny
- Black Hundreds
- List of people who disappeared
- Union of the Russian People
Sources[]
- Rawson, Don C. (March 1995). Russian rightists and the revolution of 1905. Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies (No. 95). Cambridge University Press. pp. xv, 312, 1 map, 28 tables. ISBN 978-0-521-48386-5.
- Klier J.D., Lambrozo S. (1992). Pogroms: Anti-Jewish Violence in Modern Russian History. Cambridge University Press. p. 415. ISBN 978-0-521-40532-4.
- John D. Klier (2005). "Black Hundreds". Antisemitism: a historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution. ответственный: Richard S. Levy. ABC-CLIO. p. 71 of 828. ISBN 1-85109-444-X.
- Rogger, Hans (1986). "Was there a Russian Fascism? The Union of Russian People". Jewish policies and right-wing politics in imperial Russia. University of California Press. p. 289. ISBN 0-520-04596-3.
- Ascher, Abraham (1986). The Revolution of 1905: Authority restored. University of California Press. pp. 240, 276, 285, 358. ISBN 0-520-04596-3.
- Oleg Platonov. "Указатель имён к тому 2 (гл. 57-85)". История русского народа в XX веке (in Russian).
- Степанов, А. "Тришатный Сергей Иосифович". In Oleg Platonov (ed.). Чёрная сотня. Историческая энциклопедия 1900-1917. (in Russian) (Институт русской цивилизации ed.). Moscow, 2008: Крафт+.
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References[]
- ^ John D. Klier (2005). "Black Hundreds". Antisemitism: a historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution. ответственный: Richard S. Levy. ISBN 9781851094394. p. 71–72.
- ^ a b Степанов, А. "Тришатный Сергей Иосифович". In Oleg Platonov (ed.). Чёрная сотня. Историческая энциклопедия 1900-1917. (in Russian) (Институт русской цивилизации ed.). Moscow, 2008: Крафт+.
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: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Рачковский, Пётр Иванович (in Russian)
- ^ Rawson, Don C. (1995). Russian rightists and the revolution of 1905. p. 59.
- 1865 births
- 1920s missing person cases
- Anti-Masonry
- Antisemitism in the Russian Empire
- Forced disappearances in the Soviet Union
- Members of the Union of the Russian People
- Missing person cases in Russia
- People from Saint Petersburg
- People from Sankt-Peterburgsky Uyezd
- Russian anti-communists