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  1. Vasily Vitalyevich Shulgin (Russian: Василий Витальевич Шульгин; Ukrainian: Василь Віталійович Шульгін; 13 January 1878 – 15 February 1976), also known as Basil Shulgin, was a Russian conservative politician, monarchist and member of the White movement.

    • Saint Vladimir Imperial University
    • Russian
    • All-Russian National Union
    • Baygushi Cemetery, Vladimir
  2. 10 de dic. de 2020 · This “knight,” herald of a virulent anti-Semitic Russian nationalism and fervent monarchism, was at the time of writing an exiled man, who, just eight years before, had played a critical role in trying to change the course of history: on a cold day in February 1917, Vasily Shulgin went to Pskov to convince the last Romanov tsar ...

    • Giovanni Savino
  3. Vasily Shulgin 's memoir, providing a fascinating glimpse into the opinions of a Russian nationalist from the right, is a much rarer commodity. This new translation of a work which first appeared in Sofia in 1925 is welcome indeed. It comes with a succinct introduction, giving an account of Shulgin 's astoundingly full life (he died aged ninety ...

  4. 12 de jun. de 1990 · Vasily Vitalevich Shulgin (1878-1976) was a conservative newspaper editor, ardent Russian nationalist and member of the State Duma. These are his memoirs. The first few chapters describe his experiences in the 1905 revolution, whereupon he skips ahead to the events of 1917.

    • (2)
    • V.V. Shulgin, Bruce F. Adams
  5. 24 de ago. de 2017 · Vasily Shulgin. the editorial office of "Kievlyanin" on the corner of Karavaevskaya and Kuznechnaya, Kiev, Russian Empire. 13.06.17. In one of Jules Verne’s novels, a Frenchman from Marseilles says: “I am twice French, because I am from Marseilles.”

  6. 1 de ene. de 2022 · The author analyses the works of the prominent politician and memoirist Vasily Shulgin published in the emigre periodicals to examine his views on the origin of the Slavic people and the...

  7. This “knight,” herald of a virulent anti-Semitic Russian nationalism and fervent monarchism, was at the time of writing an exiled man, who, just eight years before, had played a critical role in trying to change the course of history: on a cold day in February 1917, Vasily Shulgin went to Pskov to convince the last Romanov tsar, Nicholas II ...