Alexander Kropotkin
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Prince Alexander Alexeevich Kropotkin (Александр Алексеевич Кропоткин, 1841–1886) was a Russian mathematician and populariser of astronomy, and was the brother of the anarchist theorist Pyotr Alexeevich Kropotkin.


Biography

Alexander Kropotkin was born on into the family of Major General Alexei Petrovich Kropotkin (1805–1871). He was the second youngest boy of four children. His brother Pyotr was a year younger, and another brother, Nicholas, and a sister, Helen, were older. His father was a royal officer who owned serfs in three provinces and whose family descended from the
princes of Smolensk The Prince of Smolensk was the ''kniaz'', the ruler or sub-ruler, of the Rus' people, Rus' Principality of Smolensk, a lordship based on the city of Smolensk. It passed between different groups of descendants of Grand Prince Iaroslav I of Kiev unti ...
. His mother, Ekatarina Sulima, was the daughter of General Nikolai Sulima and a descendant of a Zaporozhian Cossack leader. His mother died of tuberculosis when he was about six and a half years of age. Kropotkin's father remarried two years later, to Yelizaveta Mar'kovna Korandino.  The stepmother was indifferent towards the Kropotkin children and had a streak of jealous vindictiveness, going through great lengths to remove the memory of Kropotkin's mother. Alexander Kropotkin published articles on astronomy and celestial mechanics in "
Russkoye Bogatstvo ''Russkoye Bogatstvo'' (, Russian Wealth) was a monthly literary and political magazine published in St. Petersburg, Russia, from 1876 to mid-1918. In the early 1890s it served as an organ of the liberal Narodniks. From 1906 it became an organ o ...
" and in specialized French and English journals, and was a journalist who wrote for the Siberian press. He became radicalised as a follower of
Pyotr Lavrov Pyotr Lavrovich Lavrov (14 June O.S. 2 June">Old_Style_and_New_Style_dates.html" ;"title="nowiki/>Old Style and New Style dates">O.S. 2 June1823 – 6 February .S. 25 January1900) was a prominent Russians, Russian theorist of narodism, philos ...
.Osofsky 1979, p. 35 On his return from Europe to Russia in 1876, he was arrested by the police. The conclusion of the head of the Third Section on his case stated that he was not guilty as provided for by the law on punishment for political crimes, but he had demonstrated an "extremely harmful" way of thinking, and therefore his case was resolved not by a judicial but by an administrative procedure. He was accused of helping his brother Peter, who had escaped from the
Peter and Paul Fortress The Peter and Paul Fortress () is the original citadel of Saint Petersburg, Russia, founded by Peter the Great in 1703 and built to Domenico Trezzini's designs from 1706 to 1740 as a star fortress. Between the first half of the 1700s and early ...
and was living abroad, for which he was exiled to
Tomsk Oblast Tomsk Oblast () is a federal subjects of Russia, federal subject of Russia (an oblast). It lies in the southeastern West Siberian Plain, in the southwest of the Siberian Federal District. Its administrative center is the types of inhabited loca ...
until 3 September 1886. ( in another source.) He participated in the publication of the newspaper "Sibirsky Vestnik" ("''Siberian Herald''"). Before the end of his exile, his wife and three young children were sent to relatives in
Kharkov Oblast Kharkiv Oblast (, ), also referred to as Kharkivshchyna (), is an oblast (province) in eastern Ukraine. Kharkiv borders Luhansk Oblast to the east, Donetsk Oblast to the southeast, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast to the southwest, Poltava Oblast to the wes ...
, where he intended to go from
Siberia Siberia ( ; , ) is an extensive geographical region comprising all of North Asia, from the Ural Mountains in the west to the Pacific Ocean in the east. It has formed a part of the sovereign territory of Russia and its predecessor states ...
. However, on , at about nine o'clock in the evening, Kropotkin shot himself with a revolver. One source states that although "after the departure of his family, he began to lead an irregular life, he had no motive to take his own life" -however, another source suggests that a refusal of compassionate prison leave to visit one of his children, reported to be dying, may have been a factor. Afterwards, Alexander Kropotkin's ailing widow (who was left with three small children to care for) was nursed back to health by
Sophie Kropotkin Sofia Grigorievna Kropotkina (; 1856–1941), commonly known by her anglicised name Sophie Kropotkin, was a Ukrainian teacher, writer, lecturer and museum director. Born into a Ukrainian Jewish family, she grew up in Tomsk, where her father ...
, her sister-in-law, in London.


Family and children

* Wife — Vera ('Faith') Sevastyanovna Berynda-Tchaikovsky (1849–1935). * Son — Nikolai Alexandrovich Kropotkin (1878–1949). * Grandson — Pyotr Nikolaevich Kropotkin (1910–1996).


Notes


Literature

* * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Kropotkin, Alexander 1841 births 1886 deaths 19th-century non-fiction writers from the Russian Empire 19th-century astronomers from the Russian Empire 19th-century mathematicians from the Russian Empire