Silibistro Jibladze

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Silibistro (Silva) Jibladze

Silibistro Jibladze (1859–1922) was a Georgian Social Democrat.

Silibistro "Silva" Jibladze was the Marxist founder of Mesame Dasi ('Third Group'), a Georgian socialist group, and revolutionary. He was a member of the founding assembly of Georgia. He died while engaged in underground resistance to the Sovietization of Georgia.

He was born in the family of a deacon. In 1872, at the age of 13, he entered the Ozurgeti Theological School. While studying at the school, he lived in the Totibadze family, where Anton Totibadze, later the dean, also grew up. At the school, advanced students gathered around Jibladze, among whom was Egnate Ninoshvili.

Jibladze and Ninoshvili organized a one-week strike in support of school inspector Liadze, who was dismissed from his job due to his liberal leanings. Due to the strike, Ninoshvili, as a peasant, was expelled from the school, while Jibladze, as a representative of the clergy, escaped the expulsion. As a sign of solidarity with Ninoshvili, Jibladze also stopped studying, but at Ninoshvili's request, he returned to the school and helped Ninoshvili to receive home education.

After graduating from the school, from 1879, he studied at the Tbilisi Theological Seminary, where he was considered a good student. He soon began reading forbidden literature and forming secret circles in the seminary. In 1885, while in his sixth year, while he was in hospital, his room was searched and banned literature was found. According to the decision of the rector of the seminary, deacon Chudetsky, he was expelled with a "wolf ticket". Jibladze responded by beating Chudetsky and pulling his hair, for which he was sent to the disciplinary battalion in Kharkiv for either two or three years,[1] which was subsequently extended to four years. (Chudetsky, who had banned the Georgian language as medium of instruction in the seminary and described it as "dogspeak",[2] was later assassinated by a Georgian student expelled from the seminary for his nationalist beliefs.)

Political activity under the Tsar

Political activities during the Russian Revolution

References

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