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ISBNs | 978-5-4461-1478-8 |
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The weight | 0,704 kg |
Size | 171 × 241 mm |
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Delivery
€19,99
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I. S. Ratkovsky is a specialist in the history of Russian revolutions and the Civil War, the history of state institutions in Russia in the XNUMXth century, candidate of historical sciences, associate professor at the Institute of History of St. Petersburg State University.
In his new book, the author covers the chronicle of the White Terror from 1917 to 1920. He analyzes how the models of white power were formed and developed, how the whites interacted with various counter-revolutionary and anti-Bolshevik movements. Based on archival materials, documentary sources and memoirs of the leaders of the White movement, historian I. S. Ratkovsky answers the questions: - how was the White movement formed and did it have a chance to turn the tide of the Civil War? - what was the punitive practice of the White movement, who was personally responsible for its implementation? - can it be argued that the red terror was a response to the terror of the white movement? The collection includes a number of previously unpublished materials: about the punitive practice of the Kolchak regime (1918–1920) in Siberia and the Far East, about repressions in the North Caucasus, the Volga region and other regions.