Filipp Medved | |
Office1: | Chairman of the GPU under the Council of People's Commissars of the Byelorussian SSR |
Term Start1: | 7 April 1924 |
Term End1: | 3 December 1925 |
Successor1: | Roman Pilar |
Office2: | Chairman of the Petrograd Cheka |
Term Start2: | 5 May 1919 |
Term End2: | 30 August 1919 |
Predecessor2: | Semyon Lobov |
Successor2: | Georgy Blagonravov |
Birth Date: | 1890 |
Birth Place: | Masevo village, Pruzhansky Uyezd, Grodno, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
Nationality: | Soviet |
Party: | RSDLP (Bolsheviks) (1907–1918) Russian Communist Party (1918–1937) |
Commands: | Petrograd Cheka |
Battles: | First World War Russian Civil War |
Mawards: | 2 2 Honorary Worker of the Cheka |
Office: | Head of the NKVD of the Leningrad Region |
Successor: | Leonid Zakovsky |
Predecessor: | Position established |
Predecessor1: | Jan Olsky |
Termstart: | 15 July 1934 |
Termend: | 3 December 1934 |
Native Name: | Филипп Медве́дь |
Filip Demyanovich Medved (Russian: Филипп Демьянович Медве́дь; 1890 – 27 November 1937) was a Belarusian revolutionary and official of the Soviet state securities, the Cheka, OGPU and NKVD.
Born in to a Belarusian working-class family, Medvedev vs 5s was active in the workers' movement in Warsaw from a young age and was expelled from his school.
Medved worked as a constructor technician and was a member of an underground Marxist circle. In 1907 he joined Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania and the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. He was arrested four times for his revolutionary activity and served in prison for two years. During World War I he was drafted and briefly served in the Imperial Russian Army.[1]
After the October Revolution from November 1917 to May 1918, he was one of the organizers of the Sokolniki District militia, he consecutively held the posts of a member of the Sokolniki District Military Revolutionary Committee, the head of the 1st Moscow Revolutionary Detachment, and was the military commissar of the Sokolniki District.
Among the founders of the Cheka, he was a member of the Control Board of the Cheka and worked directly under the leadership of Feliks Dzerzhinsky. He was chairman of Tula, and then from August to May 1919 he served as the chairman of the Petrograd Cheka. In 1919, he was transferred to the front as the head of the special department of the Cheka on the Western Front. From October to December 1919, he was the head of the Department of Forced Labor of the NKVD of the RSFSR. Then, he was transferred to the Western Front again.[2]
A member of the Cheka Collegium, he was deputy chairman of the Moscow Cheka and head of the Moscow Provincial Political Department.
In the years 1934-35 he was plenipotentiary representative of the OGPU under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR for the Western Territory and then the Chairman of the OGPU under Council of People's Commissars of the Byelarussian Soviet Socialist Republic.[3]
From 1926 to 1929, he was the plenipotentiary representative of the OGPU at the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR for the Far-Eastern Krai. From 1930 to 1934, he was head of the OGPU of the Leningrad Military District, simultaneously from 1930 to 1932 the head of the special department of the OGPU of the Leningrad Military District as well as a member of the OGPU Collegium under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR.
Medved was head of the NKVD Directorate of Leningrad from July to December 1934. He oversaw arrests and expulsions from Leningrad of supporters of the Party Oppositionists and led repressions against "representatives of the exploiting classes" and "class alien elements." He was a close friend and associate of the first secretary of the Leningrad Party Region, Sergei Kirov, and enjoyed his support throughout his service as head of the Leningrad NKVD. [4]
After the murder of Sergei Kirov he was removed from his office, was summoned to Moscow and arrested. On 9 January 1935 he was expelled from the VKP (b), and on 23 January 1935 the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the USSR sentenced him to 3 years in prison for "criminally negligent attitude to their duties to protect the state security".
In late 1935 he was pardoned and was released. From 1935 to May 1937 he was the head of the Southern Mining and Industrial Directorate of the Main Directorate for the Construction of the Dalstroy of the NKVD of the USSR.
During the Great Purge he was once again arrested in September 1937 and was sentenced to death for his participation in the anti Soviet "Polish military organization.". On 27 November 1937 he was shot along with the former People's Commissar of the NKVD of the Ukrainian SSR Vsevold Balitsky.[5]
On 17 December 1957 Filipp Medved was posthumously rehabilitated by the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union.