Bolshevik revolutionary
Ksenofontov
Ivan Ksenofontovich Ksenofontov
(Russian: Иван Ксенофонтович Ксенофонтов; August 29, 1884 ? March 23, 1926) was a
Bolshevik
revolutionary and one of the founders of the
Soviet secret police
and state security agency, the
Cheka
(later
GPU
and
OGPU
).
He gained notoriety as Chairman of the Supreme Revolutionary Tribunal and later as First Deputy Chairman of the Cheka, the agency's "number two" under
Felix Dzerzhinsky
, where he played a decisive role in crushing various anti-Bolshevik factions and the
Kronstadt uprising
. An early supporter of
Joseph Stalin
, he was described as Stalin's "mole" in the security services.
[1]
[2]
Biography
[
edit
]
Born
Ivan Kraikov
in
Moscow
, he came from a family of ethnic
Pontic Greeks
.
[3]
Not much is known about his childhood and education.
One of the earliest members of the Bolsheviks, he joined them in 1903 upon their formation. From 1906 to 1909 he served in the 15 Rifle Regiment of the
Imperial Russian Army
, stationed in
Latvia
. After that, he did "party work", which included armed robberies, for which he was arrested. Released in 1914 upon the outbreak of
World War I
to serve again in the Army, he bravely fought in the frontlines and was one of the organizers of the Bolshevik committee of the Second Army of the Western Front.
[4]
In 1917 he took part in the
October Revolution
and the seizure of political power by the Bolsheviks.
[5]
In the election to the Constituent Assembly, he was elected as a Bolshevik for
Western Front electoral district
. After the October Revolution he was one of the creators of the
Cheka
,
[6]
and its vice-chairman, while at the same time chairman of the Special Tribunal of the Cheka and of the Supreme Tribunal of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee.
Ksenofontov took part in the liquidation of the Kronstadt anti-Soviet mutiny of 1921. Between 1921 and 1925 he was charge d'affaires of the Central Committee of the Party and head of the
OGPU
Operations Department,
[7]
at the time heavily engaged against nationalist movements in the
Caucasus
and Muslim
Basmachi
guerrillas in
Soviet Central Asia
. At the same time, he was alleged to have set up the Party Control Office, to provide information to Stalin about the situation in the Party and the security agencies.
[8]
[9]
Ksenofontov was often accused of torture, including hitting and raping women, although in other sources he was described as being polite and art-loving.
[10]
He was a delegate to the Tenth, Twelfth, and Thirteenth Party Congresses. He was also elected a member of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee.
Suffering from stomach cancer which caused him excruciating pain, he died in 1926, aged 42.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Michael Parrish Soviet Security and Intelligence Organizations: 1917 - 1990 ; a Biographical Dictionary, pp 219-220
- ^
Moshe Lewin, The Soviet Century, pp 43-44
- ^
Michael Parrish Soviet Security and Intelligence Organizations: 1917 - 1990 ; a Biographical Dictionary, pp 219-220
- ^
Great Soviet encyclopedia, Volume 13, p 534
- ^
Historical Abstracts: Modern history abstracts, 1775-1914, Volume 17, p 225
- ^
Historical Abstracts: Modern history abstracts, 1775-1914, Volume 17, p 225
- ^
Michael Parrish Soviet Security and Intelligence Organizations: 1917 - 1990 ; a Biographical Dictionary, pp 219-220
- ^
Michael Parrish Soviet Security and Intelligence Organizations: 1917 - 1990 ; a Biographical Dictionary, pp 219-220
- ^
Moshe Lewin, The Soviet Century, pp 43-44
- ^
Walter Laqueur, Survey, Volume 21, pp 167-168