Boris Bogdanov
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Boris Osipovich Bogdanov | |
|---|---|
Борис Осипович Богданов | |
| Born | Berel Bogdanov 16 March [O.S. 4 March] 1884 |
| Died | 15 June 1960 (aged 76) |
| Political party | Russian Social Democratic Workers Party Mensheviks |
Boris Osipovich Bogdanov (16 March 1884 – 15 June 1960) was a Russian revolutionary. As a Menshevik, he participated in the February Revolution in 1917.
Following the Bolshevik seizure of power in October 1917 he remained politically active against their regime.[citation needed] From the 1920s, he was repeatedly subject to repression by the USSR, being arrested and exiled multiple times and served 13 years in labour camps.[1]
Bogdanov was born into a merchant family of the first guild in Odessa to parents Osip Borisovich Bogdanov and Sofia Emmanuilovna Bogdanova.[2] He graduated from the Odessa Commercial School of Nicholas I in 1902.
In 1907, he was elected as a member of the St. Petersburg faction of the RSDLP. Until 1913, he was repeatedly arrested and exiled for his revolutionary activity.
Participation in February Revolution
Bogdanov was involved in the formation of the Petrograd Soviet.
In April 1917, he opposed the participation of socialists in the Provisional Government. In August 1917, at the socialist Conference of Democratic Organizations on Defence, he argued that military defeat in the war would put an end to the Revolution.[3]