In 1879 Aleksandr Yulievich Golberg (later known by his pseudonym "Ge")[1] was born Königsberg,[2] then in the territory of the German Empire.[1] At the age of two, Ge was brought by his family to Moscow, where he was raised. He went to school in the city's Lazarev Institute of Oriental Languages, from which he was expelled while in the 6th grade for spreading revolutionary propaganda.[2] From 1902 he lived in Saint Petersburg and attended lectures at the local university.[3]
In exile Ge collaborated with various anarchist press organs,[5] and made a living writing articles and essays for newspapers and magazines in Kyiv.[6] In January 1914, he became one of the organizers of the 1st United Conference of Russian Communist Anarchists in London. Around the same time he was elected to the editorial board of the anarchist newspaper Working World (Russian: Рабочий Мир, romanized: Rabochiy Mir).[5]
By this time, anarchist detachments known as the Black Guards were already being established to wage guerrilla warfare against the German occupation of Ukraine and to carry out "expropriations" of private property.[15] The Bolsheviks responded by carrying out a series of raids against anarchist centers in Moscow, killing dozens and taking hundreds prisoner.[16] With anarchists beginning to accuse the Bolsheviks of being "counterrevolutionary", Ge protested the raids at a VTsIK meeting, but was assured by his colleagues that the raids were only targeting criminals, not "ideological anarchists".[17]
At a meeting of the Central Executive Committee on 29 April 1918, Ge criticised Vladimir Lenin's report The Immediate Tasks of the Soviet Government, for which he was in turn denounced by Lenin.[5]
When the White forces of Andrei Shkuro attacked the North Caucasus, Ge was one of the leaders of the Extraordinary Headquarters for the defence of Pyatigorsk.[19] On 7 January 1919, Ge was captured in Pyatigorsk and killed by the Whites,[1] who cut him to death with sabres.[20]
Essays
Ge, Aleksandr (1916). Бакунин и Маркс. (Личные характеристики) [Bakunin and Marx. (Personal Characteristics)] (in Russian). Lausanne.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
——————— (1917). Путь к победе [The Road to Victory] (in Russian). Lausanne.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Usyskin, Grigori (1987). "Старший следователь ЧК" [Senior Investigator of the Cheka]. In Stishova, L.I. (ed.). Октябрём мобилизованные [October mobilised] (in Russian). Moscow: Politizdat. pp. 198–212. OCLC25342064.
Further reading
Krivenky, V. V. (1993). "Александр Юльевич Ге". Политические деятели России 1917: Биографический словарь (in Russian). Moscow.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)