Piotr Ławrow
Piotr Ławrowicz Lavrov, Russian Пётр Лаврович Лавров, ps. "P. Mirtow "(born June 14, 1823 in Meliechow near Novgorze, in the province of Pskov, February 6, 1900 in Paris) is a Russian thinker, journalist and revolutionary. One of the main, alongside Mikhail Bakunin and Nikolai Mikhailovsky, ideologists of the national movement.
The Russian revolutionary, artillery colonel and professor of military academies in St. Petersburg was almost the same age as Cyprian Kamil Norwid, born in 1823. Czernyszewski's sympathy was sent to the Vologda Governorate. Here was his famous work - Historical Letters. A few months after the exile, in 1870 Lavrov fled to Paris where he stood on the side of the communists. He spent thirty years of his life in exile. Through his small apartment in a Parisian townhouse, many luminaries of the Polish left fled. Ławrow acquainted with Norwid owing to his wife Polka, Annie Czaplicka. After the death of his wife, Lavrov left France. He stayed in England until 1877 and returned to Paris.
wiki
Comments
Post a Comment