Boris Viktorovich Savinkov (Russian:Борис Викторович Савинков) (19 January 1879 - 7 May 1925) was a Russian writer and revolutionary terrorist. As one of the leaders of the Fighting Organisation of the Socialist-Revolutionary Party, he was responsible for the most spectacular assassinations of imperial officials in 1904 and 1905.
Later, he became Assistant War Minister in the Provisional Government. Savinkov emigrated in 1920, but in 1924 he made an endeavour to return to Russia, was arrested and either was killed in prison or committed suicide.
Young years
Savinkov was of noble origin, he was son of a judge in
Warsaw. In 1897 he entered the law department of
St. Petersburg University but was expelled in 1899 because of participation in students' riots. Later he studied in
Berlin and
Heidelberg. Since 1898 he was a member of various
Marxist organizations. In 1901 he was arrested and sent to exile to
Vologda. He served the exile with some prominent Russian intellectuals including
Nikolai Berdyaev and
Anatoly Lunacharsky. However he became disappointed with Marxism and shifted to terrorism. In 1903 Savinkov escaped abroad and joined
Socialist-Revolutionary Party, where he soon became Deputy Head of its Fighting Organization under
Yevno Azef.
Socialist-Revolutionary Party
For his assassination of Russian Minister of Interior
Vyacheslav von Plehve and participation in the assassination of Grand Prince
Sergei Romanov, he was arrested in 1906 and sentenced to death. However, he managed to escape from his prison cell in
Odessa and found refuge in exile. When Azef was revealed as an agent of the
Okhrana in 1908, Savinkov became the head of the Fighting Organization, but it was too weak to conduct any serious operations. While in
France Savinkov participated in
World War I as a volunteer in the French Army. He returned to Russia in April 1917, several months after the
February Revolution, and became Assistant War Minister under
Alexander Kerensky. However, he was soon expelled from the government and
Socialist-Revolutionary Party because of his role in the uprising of General
Lavr Kornilov in September 1917. He remained in Russia as a
counter-revolutionary during the period after the
October revolution.
Civil war
As a leader of the
Society for Defence of Motherland and Freedom, Savinkov inspired several armed uprisings against the
Bolsheviks, most notably in
Yaroslavl,
Rybinsk and
Murom. After these were crushed by the
Red Army, Savinkov returned to France. There, he held various posts in the
Russian emigre societies and was the main diplomatic representative of admiral
Aleksandr Kolchak in
Paris. During the
Polish-Bolshevik War of 1919-1920 he moved to
Poland, where he formed a Russian political organisation responsible for the formation of several infantry and cavalry units out of former Red Army
POWs. In 1921, when Polish-Bolshevik War was over, Polish authorities sent Savinkov out of the country in order not to spoil relations with the Soviets.
Trust Operation and death
He was an acquaintance of
Sidney Reilly, the legendary renegade
British agent, and was involved in a number of "counter-revolutionary" plots against the
Bolsheviks, sometimes collaborating with the British
Secret Intelligence Service (SIS). These efforts were effectively undermined by
Trust Operation implemented by
OGPU. Savinkov was lured into the USSR to meet with false conspirators and consequently arrested. The USSR Supreme Court sentenced him to death but Presidium of
VTsIK converted the sentence into 10-years imprisonment. During his trial Savinkov declared that he recognized the Bolsheviks and assumed his defeat. While imprisoned he wrote satirical stories about white emigres and was allowed to see them published in Moscow. He committed suicide by means of jumping from the window (official version) in the
Lubyanka prison, in
Moscow. However, according to
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Savinkov had been killed in prison by OGPU officers.
Legacy
Boris Savinkov wrote several novels. His most famous are an autobiography "Memoirs of a Terrorist" and a loosely autobiographical novel called "Pale Horse". Savinkov's works raised huge controversy among SR's. Many of them disclaimed them as "spoofs" on terrorism.
Movie
2004:
Karen Shakhnazarov directed a movie
The Rider Named Death, based on Savinkov's book.
Works
- Memoirs of a terrorist, 1909, Воспоминания террориста
- Pale steed, 1909, Конь бледный
- That what haven't been, 1912 То, чего не было
- Black steed (novel), 1923 Конь вороной