Anton Prykhodko

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Preceded byMykhailo Poloz
Succeeded byDaniil Petrovskii
Born1891 (1891)
DiedJanuary 29, 1938(1938-01-29) (aged 46–47)
Anton Prykhodko
Ukrainian SSR Ambassador to USSR
In office
1922–1924
Preceded byMykhailo Poloz
Succeeded byDaniil Petrovskii
Personal details
Born1891 (1891)
DiedJanuary 29, 1938(1938-01-29) (aged 46–47)

Anton (Antin) Terentiiovych Prykhodko (Ukrainian: Антін Терентійович Приходько; 1891 – January 29, 1938, Arkhangelsk[1]) was a Ukrainian Soviet statesman, born in Kuban Oblast, Tikhoretsky District, stanitsa (Cossack village) Novorozhdestvenskaya.[2] He was the Permanent Representative of Ukrainian SSR to the Government of the USSR.[3][4] He was also the member of VUTsVK.[5]

In 1907 — Attended Ukrainian Socialist circle of the high school of Stavropol[6]

Graduated from Stavropol Teacher Seminary[7]

In 1915 MGU student[8] and Esers' group member[9]

From 1916 USRP member[10] under the nickname "Professor"[9]

In 1917 (before October Revolution) — First time arrived to Ukrainian land (to Kyiv)[8]

In 1917 —Candidate for members of UCA from USRP with participation of Ukrainian Peasant Union in Poltava constituency[11]

January 16, 1918 — Arrested together with almost all leaders of left USRP group[12][13]

From June, 1918 CP(B)U member[14][15]

April 29, 1919 — Applied for withdrawal from USRP Central Committee[16]

1919-1920 UCP (borotbists) secretary [10]

June 1919 UCP (borotbists) Central Committee cashier [17]

1920-1929 — Chairman of the Board of State Publishing House of Ukraine[18]

1920-1930 — Secretary of Central Commission of Ukrainization of Soviet apparatus under Council of People's Commissars of the Ukrainian SSR[19]

In 1921

End of 1921 - May 1922 — Commissioner from the Poltava Governorate during the mobilization to prepare the sowing campaign in Ukraine[22]

May 1922 - November 1924 — Permanent Representative of Ukrainian SSR to the Government of the USSR[3][4] (see List of ambassadors of Ukraine to Russia)

September 12, 1922 — Enrolled in 1st course of Karl Marx Moscow Institute of the National Economy[7]

December 1924 - April 1926 — Adviser to the Permanent Representation of the USSR in Czechoslovakia[18][22][23][24]

January 27, 1926[11] - 1927 — Deputy Commissar of Education of Ukrainian SSR Alexander Shumsky[10][19]

1926 -1930 — Deputy General Prosecutor of Ukrainian SSR

1926 — Member of the State Spelling Commission[25]

1927 - December 25, 1929[11] — Deputy Commissar of Education of Ukrainian SSR Mykola Skrypnyk[10][19]

May 25 - June 3, 1927 Conference Member to discuss the draft spelling[25]

1928 — Member of the Presidium of the State Spelling Commission[26][27]

August 9, 1929 — He had a party ticket number #0751622 and was recognized as proven by the results of the meeting of the Verification Commission of the Cell of CP(B)U in People's Commissariat for Education of Ukrainian SSR (Zhuravliovskiy district committee, Kharkiv)[28]

March 9, 1930 - April 19, 1930 — Head of the Supreme Court of the Ukrainian SSR during Union for the Freedom of Ukraine process

In 1930-1931 — Executive editor of the journal "Bulletin of Soviet Justice"[29]

In 1931-1933 — Executive editor of the journal "Revolutionary law"[29]

Until December 31, 1933 — Chairman of the Arbitration Commission under Council of People's Commissars of the Ukrainian SSR[30]

December 31, 1933

June 4, 1934 — Convicted for 10 years of corrective labor by judicial group of three of OGPU of USSR (Criminal Code of Ukrainian SSR, article 54-11)[1]

July 1934 - End of 1936 — stayed on the island Vaigach (Amderma bay)[18][31]

January - November 1937 — stayed at Chibyu[18][31]

November 1937 — wrote the last letter to his wife (she received it January 1938)[31]

December 21, 1937 — sentenced to capital punishment by troika of NKVD Directorate of Arkhangelskaya Oblast (Criminal Code of RSFSR, articles 58-10, 58-11)[1]

January 29, 1938 — shot[1] together with Ivan Shchepkin, Nikolay Muzychenko, and Vladimir Ivanov[18]

December 6, 1957 — rehabilitated by the Military Court of the Kyiv Military District[32]

Writings

He wrote under a pseudonym "A. Pryideshnii".[33][34][35]

  1. What was the sea noisy about // Journal "Shliakhy Mystetstva". — 1921. — part 1. — pp. 31–32[34][36]
  2. The birth of the sun // Journal "Shliakhy Mystetstva". — 1921. — part 1. — pp. 32[34][36]
  3. Fatigue // Journal "Mystetstvo". — 1919. — #4. — pp. 13–14[34]
  4. Arrest of ten // Almanac "Zhshytky Borotby". — 1920. — pp. 34–55[13][34][37]

Articles

  1. Cultural and educational issues at the Xth Congress of the CP(b)U // Bilshovyk Ukrayiny . — 1927. — #14. — pp. 17–26[19]
  2. SVU on school front // Shlyakh osvity. — 1931. — ##5-6. — pp. 82–90[19]
  3. General education in Ukraine // Radianska Osvita. — 1928. — #10. — pp. 1–15[19]
  4. Hnat Mykhailychenko // Hnat Mykhailychenko. Works of art  — 1929. — pp. 5–15[38]

Personal life

Annotations

References

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