Sofya Bogomolets

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Sofya Bogomolets

Sofya Nikolaevna Bogomolets (née Prisetskaya) (Russian: Софья Николаевна Богомолетц; née Присецкая) (27 September 1856 – 11 January 1892) was a Russian revolutionary and political prisoner.

Her family were hereditary Polish nobility, who owned land in Poltava province of Russia. All three siblings joined the populist movement in the 1870s. After graduating from a Kiev gymnasium, she enrolled in a women's medical course in St Petersburg, but abandoned her studies when in order to 'live with the people'.[1] She and her husband, Alexander Bogolomets, whom she married in 1876, moved to Kuban, where they practised medicine and distributed anti-government propaganda. In 1879, they were forced to move to Kharkiv, but she was expelled and ordered to return to her native Poltava. Instead, she moved to Kiev, where she joined the South Russian Workers' Union, founded by Nikolai Schedrin and Elizaveta Kovalskaya. She formed an intense bond with Kovalskaya, who wrote in her memoirs that "I trusted Bogolomets completely; I knew she took things very seriously and - unlike some of the Kievans - strictly observed conspiratorial procedures.".[2] After the two leaders were arrested, in 1880, she took over leadership of the union.

Prison and Siberia

Family

References

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