orig.
Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili
Joseph Stalin, 1950.
(born Dec. 21, 1879, Gori, Georgia, Russian Empire—died March 5, 1953, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) Soviet politician and dictator. The son of a cobbler, he studied at a seminary but was expelled for revolutionary activity in 1899. He joined an underground revolutionary group and sided with the
Bolshevik faction of the
Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party in 1903. A disciple of
Vladimir Lenin, he served in minor party posts and was appointed to the first Bolshevik Central Committee (1912). He remained active behind the scenes and in exile (1913–17) until the
Russian Revolution of 1917 brought the Bolsheviks to power. Having adopted the name Stalin (from Russian
stal, “steel”), he served as commissar for nationalities and for state control in the Bolshevik government (1917–23). He was a member of the
Politburo, and in 1922 he became secretary-general of the party's Central Committee. After Lenin's death (1924), Stalin overcame his rivals, including
Leon Trotsky,
Grigory Zinovyev,
Lev Kamenev,
Nikolay Bukharin, and
Aleksey Rykov, and took control of Soviet politics. In 1928 he inaugurated the
Five-Year Plans that radically altered Soviet economic and social structures and resulted in the deaths of many millions. In the 1930s he contrived to eliminate threats to his power through the
purge trials and through widespread secret executions and persecution. In
World War II he signed the
German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact (1939), attacked Finland (
see Russo-Finnish War), and annexed parts of eastern Europe to strengthen his western frontiers. When Germany invaded Russia (1941), Stalin took control of military operations. He allied Russia with Britain and the U.S.; at the
Tehrān,
Yalta, and
Potsdam conferences, he demonstrated his negotiating skill. After the war he consolidated Soviet power in eastern Europe and built up the Soviet Union as a world military power. He continued his repressive political measures to control internal dissent; increasingly paranoid, he was preparing to mount another purge after the so-called
Doctors' Plot when he died. Noted for bringing the Soviet Union into world prominence, at terrible cost to his own people, he left a legacy of repression and fear as well as industrial and military power. In 1956 Stalin and his personality cult were denounced by
Nikita Khrushchev.
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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.