Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Note on dates, etc.
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part One ORIGINS
- Part Two THE FORMATION OF THE LIBERATION MOVEMENT
- Part Three WAR AND REVOLUTION
- Appendix A The origins of Beseda
- Appendix B A bibliographical note on the writings of Kuskova and Prokopovich in the years 1898–9
- Appendix C Note on sources on the formation of the Liberation Movement
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix C - Note on sources on the formation of the Liberation Movement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Note on dates, etc.
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part One ORIGINS
- Part Two THE FORMATION OF THE LIBERATION MOVEMENT
- Part Three WAR AND REVOLUTION
- Appendix A The origins of Beseda
- Appendix B A bibliographical note on the writings of Kuskova and Prokopovich in the years 1898–9
- Appendix C Note on sources on the formation of the Liberation Movement
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In the absence of archival material [if Prince D.I. Shakhovskoy, one of the founding-fathers of the Liberation Movement, is to be believed, such material never existed (see Shakhovskoy IV, p. 81); Professor Pipes seems to believe that such an archive existed but may have perished (see Pipes IIa, p. 308n.)], the main source on the history of the formative stage of the Liberation Movement is provided by the memoirs and early recollections of its principal participants. Among these the most important are: Belokonskiy II, pp. 92–4 and Shakhovskoy IV, pp. 85–7. The former obtained his information from V. Ya. Bogucharskiy (‘a well-known writer who accompanied Struve during his negotiations with the editors of Iskra in Europe’) and the latter wrote the only existing history of the Union of Liberation. Besides these two sources, valuable information is also found in the following: Kuskova V, pp. 325–6; VIII, pp. 383–4; IXc; XI, pp. 368–70; XVIIIa (one must exercise caution with these memoirs since she often contradicts herself); Maklakov I, pp. 142–4; Milyukov V3, pp. 116–17; Petrunkevich II, pp. 336–7 (Petrunkevich's memory failed him with regard to dates: meetings which took place in 1901 he placed in 1902, and 1902 meetings are dated in 1903); and Rodichev IV, pp. 322–3. Valuable new information on the formative stage of the Liberation Movement is found in Chermenskiy II, p. 50 and Mikheyeva, p. 243.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1973