Leonid Krasin

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Leonid Krasin
Леони́д Кра́син
Krasin in 1924
People's Commissar for Foreign Trade
In office
6 July 1923 – 18 November 1925
PremierAlexei Rykov
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlexander Tsiurupa
People's Commissar for Trade and Industry
In office
November 1918 – June 1920
People's Commissar for Transport
In office
March 1919 – December 1920
Personal details
Born
Leonid Borisovich Krasin

(1870-07-27)27 July 1870
Kurgan, Tobolsk Governorate, Russian Empire
Died24 November 1926(1926-11-24) (aged 56)
London, England
Resting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis, Moscow
CitizenshipSoviet
Political partyRSDLP (1898–1903)
RSDLP (Bolsheviks) (1903–1918)
Russian Communist Party (1918–1926)
Alma materKharkov Technological Institute

Leonid Borisovich Krasin (Russian: Леони́д Бори́сович Кра́син; 27 July [O.S. 15 July] 1870 – 24 November 1926) was a Russian Soviet politician, engineer, social entrepreneur, Bolshevik revolutionary and a Soviet diplomat. In 1924 he became the first Soviet ambassador to France. A year later, he left Paris to become ambassador to London, where he remained until his death. He was an early and close associate of Vladimir Lenin and his financier and the first finance wizard of the Communist Party.[1]

Early years

Krasin was born in Kurgan, Tobolsk Governorate in Siberia. His father, Boris Ivanovich Krasin, was the local chief of police. The composer and Proletkult activist Boris Krasin was one of his younger brothers.[2] He was educated at a technical school in Tyumen. He was a star pupil at school, and met the American explorer George Kennan when he visited Siberia.[3]

In 1887, Krasin enrolled at the Petersburg Technological Institute, to study chemistry. He was briefly expelled from St Petersburg for his part in a student demonstration in 1890. On his return, in October, he joined a Marxist circle founded by Mikhail Brusnev, which was one of the first social democratic groups to make contact with factory workers.[4] He was expelled from the Institute and banished from Petersburg again in 1891, for taking part in a student demonstration. He moved to Nizhny Novgorod where he started military service, only to be arrested in 1892 because of his link with Brusnev, and taken to Moscow, where he spent ten months in prison. After his release, he resumed military service in Tula. During a visit to St Petersburg, he delivered a talk to a Marxist circle organised by Stepan Radchenko, and was aggressively challenged by Vladimir Ulyanov, later known as Lenin, who was in the audience.[5]

In 1893, Krasin visited Leo Tolstoy, the author of War and Peace, who lived nearby, but, according to Krasin's wife, Liubov, who was present, they argued so furiously about revolutionary politics that Tolstoy "began to stamp with rage."[6] Later, Krasin also became friendly with the writer Maxim Gorky, who described Krasin as:

Thin and bony, shrewd-looking, his face for all the world like an old icon. When you looked into it, the pursed lips, wide nostrils and square brow with a deep furrow in the middle, revealed a man of Russian charm, at the same time with an energy that was not Russian.[7]

Arrested again in January 1895, he spent three months in prison before being deported to Irkutsk, where he worked as a draughtsman on the Trans-Siberian Railway. He graduated from Kharkov Technological Institute in 1901.[1]

Career

Leonid Krasin in Baku around 1903

On his release from exile in 1900, Krasin had moved to Baku on the Caspian Sea, where he worked as an engineer in a large electric power plant, and played an important role in the electrification of the Baku oilfields. In Baku, he also joined the underground Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP). At its 2nd Congress in 1903, the RSDLP split into Menshevik and Bolshevik factions; Krasin supported the Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, and was elected to the Bolshevik Central Committee. In these early years he was "the most influential Leninist in the whole of Russia",[8] although, unlike Lenin, Krasin was a 'conciliator' who hoped to reunite the opposing factions of the RSDLP. He lived his double life as an apparently law-abiding factory manager so convincingly that the workers at one point called for his dismissal, unaware that he was secretly helping produce the literature that encouraged them to resist.

Krasin raised the money from wealthy liberals that made it possible for the RSDLP to organise its first clandestine printing press in Baku, a huge underground operation accessed by a disappearing trap door designed by Krasin.[9] This Nina Printing House, whose main operators were Lado Ketskhoveli and Avel Yenukidze,became for a period the main vehicle for Vladimir Lenin's newspaper Iskra.[10] In the late 1930s, Soviet history books were revised to attribute the creation and running of the printing press to "Koba" Djughashvili (later known as Joseph Stalin), who was also in Baku at the time.[10]

Krasin left Baku in 1904 for the sake of his health, after contracting malaria, and obtained a job as to work as the chief engineer for the industrialist, Savva Morozov who owned textile works in Orekhovo-Zuyevo, near Moscow, to whom he had been introduced by Maxim Gorky. Morozov gave Krasin 2000 rubles per month to support the Bolsheviks and other needs.

In April 1905, Krasin chaired the Third Congress of the RSDLP, called to create a Bolshevik organisation that excluded Mensheviks and others, and was re-elected to the Central Committee. He was also the Bolsheviks' leading technical expert. His activities were a tight secret at the time. His wife, Liubov, whom he married in 1904, appears to have known nothing about them. In her memoirs, she wrote that Krasin went to Moscow on party business "quite frequently" but was "reticent" about what he was doing there. "It was only many years afterwards that I found out from his friends something about the personal dangers he used to run."[11]

Martyn Liadov, who led the Moscow Bolsheviks in 1905-06, said in memoirs published in 1928 that Krasin organised the bank robberies conducted by Bolsheviks to raise funds, and was involved in planning the 1907 Tiflis bank robbery, in Yerevan Square, during which forty people were killed and fifty injured. Lyadov also said that the bomb used to blow up the home of the Russian Prime Minister, Pyotr Stolypin was made under Krasin's direction.[12][13]

Yuri Felshtinsky identified Leonid Krasin as the most likely assassin of Savva Morozov, who died on 26 May 1905 in Cannes, France, by gunshot wound.[14]

In summer 1907, Krasin clashed with Lenin over whether the Bolsheviks should participate in elections to the Second Duma. During a conference near Vyborg, in July 1907, Krasin and Alexander Bogdanov led the call for a boycott. Lenin refused to concede, and the Bolshevik faction split, with Krasin supporting the Vpered faction. Lenin, who was usually acerbic in such circumstances, remained complimentary towards Krasin, and continued to exhort him to rejoin the Party.[15]

In 1908, Krasin was arrested in Finland and held in Vyborg prison for 30 days. After his release, he emigrated to Berlin, gave up revolutionary activity and focused on his career as an engineer, working for Siemens. In 1912, he was appointed manager of their Moscow office, and in 1914 was made managing director of the Russian subsidiary, based in St Petersburg. By now a wealthy man, he was approached by a mutual friend, George Soloman, who asked for a donation for Lenin. Krasin reportedly told him: "Lenin doesn't deserve help. He's a destructive type and you can never tell what wild scheme will suddenly emanate from his Tatar skull. To hell with him!"[16]

During 1917, Krasin supported the Provisional Government, predicting that a Bolshevik revolution would bring a "rush headlong into anarchy."[17] but early in 1918, he returned to the fold and rejoined the Bolsheviks.[18] though he was appalled by the Red Terror in September 1918, telling his wife that it was "one of the most disgusting acts of neo-Bolsheviks ... I had to fight for the release of at least thirty engineers - not a pleasant or easy job."[19]

In the Russian Bolshevik government Krasin served as People's Commissar of Foreign Trade from 1920 to 1924.

Diplomatic career

Leonid Krasin in 1920

Krasin met E. F. Wise in Copenhagen in April 1920. Wise was representing the Entente's Supreme Economic Council; with him[citation needed] Krasin negotiated the Anglo-Soviet Trade Agreement, signed in March 1921. In 1924 Krasin was elected to the Communist Party's Central Committee, an office he held until his death in 1926.

In Paris in 1921, he established the second Soviet overseas bank as the Commercial Bank for Northern Europe (French: Banque commerciale pour l'Europe du Nord) or BCEN-Eurobank.[a]

After Krasin's organized Bolshevik supporters obtained BCEN-Eurobank in Paris as the first overseas Soviet bank,[20] he, as head of the Centrosoyuz mission, which was formed on 24 February 1920 and was an attempt by the Bolshevik's Council of People's Commissars to break through the trade and political blockade of Bolshevist Russia by Western countries, travelled to London, met with British authorities beginning on 31 May 1920, and established "Soviet House" or "Russia House" at 49 Moorgate in London,[24] which was known as the All-Russian Cooperative Limited Liability Company "ARCOS" (Russian: ООО Всероссийское Кооперативное Общество, «АРКОС»). It supported Bolshevik control of the Moscow Narodny Bank Limited, which had formed in October 1919, through Centrosoyuz as the next Soviet bank located overseas.[1][20][b]

In 1924, he became the first Soviet Ambassador to France. He left a year later to become the Soviet Plenipotentiary in London, where he died. His role in London was filled by Christian Rakovsky after his death.

Role in Lenin's tomb project

Leonid Krasin (on right) with Alexander Shliapnikov, photo taken in 1924.

Krasin, in the tradition of Nikolai Federov, believed in immortalization by scientific means. At the funeral of Lev Karpov in 1921, he said:

I am certain that the time will come when science will become all-powerful, that it will be able to recreate a deceased organism. I am certain that the time will come when one will be able to use the elements of a person's life to recreate the physical person. And I am certain that when that time will come, when the liberation of mankind, using all the might of science and technology, the strength and capacity of which we cannot now imagine, will be able to resurrect great historical figures- and I am certain that when that time will come, among the great figures will be our comrade, Lev Iakovlevich.[25]

Lenin died in January 1924. Shortly afterwards Krasin wrote an article on "The Immortalization of Lenin" and proposed a monument containing Lenin's corpse that would become a center of pilgrimage like Jerusalem or Mecca. Krasin, along with Anatoly Lunacharsky, announced a contest for designs of the permanent monument/mausoleum. Krasin also attempted - unsuccessfully - to preserve Lenin's body cryogenically.[26]

Personal life

Despite his Siberian upbringing, Krasin was considered one of the most urbane and westernised of the leading Bolsheviks. The Menshevik Simon Liberman, who worked with Krasin in Russia in the 1920s, wrote that:

Krasin was unlike the general run of Lenin's communist aides. Perfect taste always distinguished his attire. His necktie matched his suit and shirt in colour, and even his stickpin was stuck with the special jauntinees of a well-dressed man ... Krasin always emphasised his foreign experience and contacts - his cosmopolitanism. He broadly hinted that he had accepted hardships and privations by returning from Germany to Russia of his own free will.[27]

He and his wife were the parents of three daughters, including:[28]

While Krasin was negotiating formal recognition of the Bolshevik government by the United Kingdom and France, and despite remedies proposed by his old friend, the physician Alexander Bogdanov, he died from a blood disease. Krasin's funeral procession three days later included 6,000 mourners, many of them Bolshevik sympathizers; he was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium before being buried at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in Moscow.

Honors and legacy

During the Great Purge and until Stalin's death in 1953, he was largely omitted from the history of the Communist Party and the Soviet government.[32]

Two icebreakers (one launched in 1917 and one in 1976) commemorated Krasin.

Texts

Notes

  1. ^ The five overseas "daughter" (Russian: "дочек") banks or "motherland bins" or "bins of the motherland" (Russian: Закрома Родины) were established in London (1919) as part of the Moscow Narodny Bank, in Paris (1921) as the BCEN-Eurobank, in Vienna (1974) as the Donau Bank AG, in Frankfurt am Main (1971) as the Ost-West Handelsbank (OWH), and in Luxembourg (1974) as the East-West United Bank, Luxembourg. In order to financially assist Communist Parties, anti-imperialism, and pro national liberation movements worldwide, these banks acted as subsidiaries or daughters to their "mother" Gosbank, which was the central bank of Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (Russia) from 1921-1922 and the Soviet Union from 1923-1991.[20][21][22][23]
  2. ^ From 1920 to 1923, Krasin was the People's Commissar for Foreign Trade from 1920 to 1923, the first plenipotentiary and trade representative for Bolshevik Russia in Great Britain from 1920 to 1925, and the first plenipotentiary and trade representative for Bolshevik Russia in France from 1924 to 1925.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Румянцев, Вячеслав (Rumyantsev, Vyacheslav) [in Russian] (2004). "Красин Леонид Борисович" [Krasin Leonid Borisovich]. Хронос (сайт)XPOHOC (CRONOS) (in Russian). Retrieved 25 March 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ "КРАСИН в энциклопедии музыки". www.musenc.ru. Источник: Музыкальная энциклопедия. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  3. ^ Glenny, Michael (Oct 1970). "Leonid Krasin: The Years before 1917. An Outline". Soviet Studies. 22 (2). Taylor & Francis, Ltd.: 192–221. doi:10.1080/09668137008410749. JSTOR 150054.
  4. ^ George Haupt, and Jean-Jacques Marie (1974). Makers of the Russian Revolution: Biographies of Bolshevik Leaders. London: George Allen & Unwin (This volume includes a translation of Krasin's short authorised biography, published in Moscow in 1925). ISBN 0-04-947021-3.
  5. ^ Service, Robert (2010). Lenin, A Biography. London: Pan. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-330-51838-3.
  6. ^ Krassin, Lubov (1929). Leonid Krassin: His Life and Work. London: Skeffington & Son. pp. 28–30.
  7. ^ Krassin, Lubov. Leonid Krassin. p. 32.
  8. ^ Wolfe, Bertram D. (1966). Three Who Made a Revolution. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. p. 483.
  9. ^ Wolfe. Three Who Made a Revolution. p. 495.
  10. ^ a b Троцкий, Лев (Trotsky, Leon) (30 March 2004). Фельштинский, Ю Г (Felshtinsky, Yuri) (ed.). "Лев Троцкий. Сталин (том 1)" [Leon Trotsky. Stalin (volume 1)]. Библиотека Максима Мошкова (lib.ru) (in Russian). Retrieved 25 March 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Krassin, Lubov. Leonid Krassin. p. 84.
  12. ^ Haupt, and Marie. Makers of the Russian Revolution. p. 303.
  13. ^ Felshtinsky, Yuri (2003). Preface to Leonid Krasin: Letters to His Wife and Children (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2011-07-11.
  14. ^ Felshtinsky, Yuri; Litvinenko, Alexander (26 October 2010). Lenin and His Comrades: The Bolsheviks Take Over Russia 1917–1924. New York: Enigma Books. ISBN 9781929631957.
  15. ^ Adam Ulam, Stalin: The Man and His Times
  16. ^ Shub, David (1966). Lenin. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. p. 180.
  17. ^ Krassin, Lubov. Leonid Krassin. p. 63.
  18. ^ "The Anglo-Soviet Trade Agreement, March 1921", M. V. Glenny, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 5, No. 2. (1970), pp. 63-82.
  19. ^ Krassin, Lubov. Leonid Krassin. p. 98.
  20. ^ a b c Сухотина, Инна (Sukhotina, Inna) (10 November 2003). "Сколько стоит приданое "дочек" Банка России?" [How much is the dowry of the "daughters" of the Bank of Russia?]. «Российская газета» (Rossiyskaya Gazeta) (in Russian). Archived from the original on 29 November 2003. Retrieved 25 March 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ "Виктор Константинович Якунин: Нашим возможностям соответствовал, Ost-West Handelsbank" [Victor Konstantinovich Yakunin: Our capabilities matched, Ost-West Handelsbank] (PDF). letopis.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 August 2021. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  22. ^ Симонов, Дмитрий (4 May 1992). "Выкуплен первый совзагранбанк: Чьи деньги, Зин?" [The first sovzagranbank was redeemed: Whose money, Zin?]. Коммерсантъ (in Russian). Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  23. ^ Кротов, Н И (Krotov, N. I.) [in Russian], ed. (2007). ИСТОРИЯ советских и российских банков за границей. Воспоминания Oчевидцев Документы Том 1 [HISTORY Soviet and Russian banks Abroad. Memories Eyewitnesses Documentation Volume 1] (PDF) (in Russian). Moscow: АНО «Экономическая летопись» (ANO "Economic Chronicle"). ISBN 978-5-903388-08-0. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 February 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2022 – via vtb.ru.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) Other ISBN 978-5-903388-07-3
  24. ^ Blackstock, Paul W. (1969). "Chapter 6 Offensive and Counteroffensive: The 1927 War Scare (see section: The Arcos Raid and the Break in Diplomatic Relations)". The Secret Road to World War II Soviet Versus Western Intelligence 1921-1939 (PDF). Chicago: Quadrangle Books. pp. 132–135.
  25. ^ Tumarkin, Nina (1981). "Religion, Bolshevism, and the Origins of the Lenin Cult". Russian Review. 40 (1): 35–46. doi:10.2307/128733. JSTOR 128733.
  26. ^ John Gray, The Immortalization Commission, 2011, pp. 161-166.
  27. ^ Liberman, Simon (1945). Building Lenin's Russia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  28. ^ "Leonid Borisovich Krasin, Soviet Bolshevik politician, and his wife..." www.gettyimages.co.uk. Getty Images. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  29. ^ "Gen. d'Astier de la Vigerie Dies; Air Officer Was de Gaulle Aide". The New York Times. 11 October 1956. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  30. ^ "LUDMILLA KRASSIN TO WED FRENCH DUKE; Daughter of Late Leonid Krassin, Soviet Envoy to England, to Wed De Rochefoucauld". The New York Times. 5 August 1927. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  31. ^ Pound, Ezra (2015). Ezra Pound and 'Globe' Magazine: The Complete Correspondence. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-4725-8961-3. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  32. ^ Roy Medvedev, Let History Judge, 1971

External links