Solomon Mogilevsky

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Preceded byYakov Davydov
Succeeded byRuben Katanyan
Succeeded byMikhail Trilisser
Born1885 (1885)
Solomon Mogilevsky
Соломо́н Могиле́вский
Head of the Foreign Department of the Cheka/GPU
In office
August 5, 1921  May 13, 1922
Preceded byYakov Davydov
Succeeded byRuben Katanyan
Succeeded byMikhail Trilisser
Personal details
Born1885 (1885)
DiedMarch 22, 1925(1925-03-22) (aged 39–40)
PartyRussian Communist Party (1918–1925)
Other political
affiliations
RSDLP (Bolsheviks) (1902–1918)
Military service
Allegiance Russian Empire (1916–1917)
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (1917–1922)
Soviet Union (1922–1925)
Battles/warsWorld War I
Russian Civil War
August Uprising

Solomon Grigorevich Mogilevsky (Russian: Соломо́н Григо́рьевич Могиле́вский; 1885 – March 22, 1925) headed the Soviet foreign intelligence service, the INO of the GPU, from 1921 until May 1922. He was then sent to head the GPU in the South Caucasus region,[1] where he was involved in the suppression of the 1924 August Uprising in the Georgian SSR. He died in a plane crash near Tiflis (Tbilisi)[2] in unclear circumstances.

Death

References

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