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  1. Wolf-Dietrich Gutjahr legt 2011 die bisher umfangreichste und detaillierteste Biographie zu Karl Radek vor (900 Seiten mit über 4400 Anmerkungen). Gutjahr zeigt, wie der Protagonist von einem idealistischen Revolutionär zu einem zynischen Trinker wurde.

  2. yivoencyclopedia.org › article › Radek_KarlYIVO | Radek, Karl

    Translation. (1885–1939), international revolutionary activist and publicist. Born in Lwów, Karl Radek (originally surnamed Sobel’son) grew up in Tarnów, in his mother’s family, where the German culture was dominant. In gymnasium he was attracted by the ideas of Polish nationalism, which influenced his choice of pseudonym.

  3. Karl Berngardovich Radek (born Karol Sobelsohn) is a German communist of Lithuanian-Jewish origin. He was involved in the Russian Revolution, the September Insurrections in Germany 1918 and the French Revolution and has close ties with French, British and Italian authorities, former Russian Bolsheviks as well with the DOI, the German Association of the Internationale. Radek was born in Lemberg ...

  4. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Karl_RadekKarl Radek - Wikipedia

    Karl Berngardovič Radek, in russo Карл Бернгардович Радек?, pseudonimo di Karol Sobelsohn ( Leopoli, 31 ottobre 1885 – Verchneural'sk, 19 maggio 1939 ), è stato un rivoluzionario e politico sovietico .

  5. 27 de nov. de 2021 · The book contains Radek’s lecture course from 1925-1926 in which he tries to teach his students how to apply Marxist theory to China’s history in order to identify its primary class contradictions. Throughout his lectures, Radek reminds us that he does not know Chinese and that his goal is to identify general trends in Chinese history in ...

  6. Oktober: Karl Radek (eigentlich Karl Sobelsohn) wird als Sohn eines jüdischen Postbeamten im galizischen Lemberg (heute: Ukraine) geboren. 1902/03. Studium der Rechte in Krakau. 1904. Als Mitglied der polnischen sozialdemokratischen Partei arbeitet er für sozialistische Zeitungen. 1905.

  7. Karl Radek, the son of Jewish parents, was born in Lemberg in 1885. He joined the Social Democratic Party of Poland in 1902 and worked closely with Rosa Luxemburg, Felix Dzerzhinsky and Leo Jogiches. The authorities soon became aware of his political activities and he was forced into exile. Radek later explained that after the 1905 Revolution ...