Aleksei Feodorovich Aladin (Russian: Алексе́й Фёдорович Ала́дьин; 28 March [O.S. 15 March] 1873 1873 – 30 July 1927) was a Russian soldier and politician who formed and led the Trudoviks, the Labour Party. He was elected to the First Duma in 1906 but spent his later years in exile in the United Kingdom.[1][2]
Aladin came to Britain as an exile in 1901-2 having escaped Russia where he was briefly imprisoned for political agitation. He returned to Russia in 1905 under a political amnesty to contest the elections for the First Duma, becoming prominent in Russian politics when he was elected a member in 1906. Aladin believed that the future of Russia lay with the peasants and so formed and led the Trudoviks and became one of Russia's most respected members of the Duma. He was sent to England as a delegate from the Duma to a peace conference in London but while he was there, the Duma was dissolved. The most prominent left-wing members fled to Vyborg, in the Grand Duchy of Finland, where they issued the Vyborg Manifesto against Nicholas II. The members were banished including Aladin even though he had not been party to the manifesto and had considered it ill-advised.[1][2]
Aladin remained in the United Kingdom as a lecturer and journalist and working for a motor boat company. In 1907 he went on a lecture tour of the United States.[5] In 1917, he returned to Russia at some risk to himself in the hope that he would have some influence in saving his country. Instead, he was captured and imprisoned by the Bolsheviks. Managing to escape, he joined Generals Anton Denikin and Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel in the Crimea between 1917 and 1920 during the Russian Civil War.
Exile
Aladin subsequently returned to the UK in 1920 where he spent the last years of his life trying to bridge the gap between various Russian political groups and Western society.[2] Aladin was deeply attached to the United Kingdom, speaking fluent English (and French and Italian) and having many friends there, causing Leon Trotsky to write disparagingly of him in his History of the Russian Revolution that Aladin was a man who "never removed an English pipe from his mouth and therefore considered himself a specialist in international affairs".[6]