Pyotr Kobozev Explained

Pyotr Kobozev
Office:People's Commissar of Transport of the RSFSR
Native Name Lang:ru
Country:Russian Empire, Soviet Union
Predecessor:Aleksei Rogov
Successor:Vladimir Nevsky
Termend:13 June 1918
Termstart:9 May 1918
Office2:Rector of Leningrad Polytechnical Institute
Preceded2:Alexander Baykov
Party:Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, Bolsheviks
Office1:Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Far Eastern Republic
Preceded1:Pyotr Nikiforov
Succeeded1:Office annulled
Termend1:14 November 1922
Termstart1:4 October 1922
Termend2:1 September 1929
Termstart2:2 November 1928
Succeeded2:Alexander Shumsky
Birth Name:Pyotr Alekseevich Kobozev
Birth Date:13 August 1878
Birth Place:Pesochnya, Spassky Uyezd, Ryazan Governorate
Death Date:4 January 1941 (aged 62)
Death Place:Moscow, Soviet Union
Resting Place:Novodevichy Cemetery
Citizenship:Russian, Soviet
Nationality:Russian, Soviet
Spouse:Alevtina Rakitina
Alma Mater:Riga Polytechnical Institute
Occupation:Revolutionary, politician
Profession:Engineer
Nickname:Engineer, Doubting Thomas
Order3:Rector of Moscow Land Survey Institute
Term3:1924 – November 1928
Premier:Vladimir Lenin

Pyotr Alekseevich Kobozev (Russian: Пётр Алексеевич Кобозев; 13 August 1878 — 4 January 1941) was a prominent Russian revolutionary, Soviet statesman and professor. He had played a significant role in establishing and maintaining Soviet regime in the Ural region, Turkestan and the Far East.

Biography

Pyotr Kobozev was born in 1878 in the village of Pesochnya, Spassky Uyezd (now Shilovsky District), Ryazan Governorate, in the family of Aleksey Fedotovich Kobozev,[1] a Moscow railroad employee.[2] Influenced by his mother, the daughter of a church acolyte, he went to a theological school and later to the Moscow seminary.[3] In 1895 he left (other sources say he was expelled for participating in a student uprising) the seminary and entered the Moscow secondary school of Ivan Findler. In 1896 he began to take part in A.P. Alabin's Marxist circle, where he met his future wife, Alevtina Ivanovna Rakitina,[4] a gimnasium student. They married in 1898.

In 1898 he entered the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and started studies at the Moscow Higher Technical School. But in 1899 he was expelled from it due to being involved in the all-Russian student strike. In 1900, together with his wife and a new-born daughter, he was exiled to Riga, Latvia, where he lived and studied at the Riga Polytechnical Institute until 1904. In Riga, Pyotr Kobozev worked at the German-Dutch Van der Zypen und Charlier company manufacturing railroad wagons. He was part of the Riga RSDLP section and a member of the editorial board of the Voice of the Soldier Newspaper. Later on, he, together with his family, went to the petrolium mines in the Caucasus, but returned to Moscow in a short while, where he was arrested and exiled to Riga again. He was blacklisted for his revolutionary activity, which resulted in unemployment, and P. Kobozev had to earn through private tuturing.

In 1915 – 1916 P. Kobozev and his family were in exile in Orenburg, where he worked as a railroad engineer. In Orenburg P. Kobozev became the leader of the local section of RSDLP, and was under personal control of the governorate's gandarmerie head.

The Revolution

After the February Revolution, Pyotr Kobozev organized an agitation train, in which he covered the route from Orenburg to Tashkent agitating among railroad employees for support of the Bolsheviks. In April 1917, P. Kobozev was appointed the Commissar of the Tashkent railroad, which, however, faced opposition from the Provisional Government and he was commissioned back to Petrograd. In May 1917, P. Kobozev was elected to the Petrograd City Duma from the Bolsheviks, and was appointed the chief inspector over the educational institutions of the Ministry of Transport.

Dutov's Revolt

On the next day of the October Revolution (26 October), the Cossack Ataman Alexander Dutov claimed power in the Orenburg region. The Mensheviks and the Socialist Revolutionaries approved of it, but the Bolsheviks opposed. Eventually, the supporters of A. Dutov had taken over in the region. P. Kobozev was appointed the extraordinary commissar for fighting Dutov's counterrevolution. On 12 November 1917, P. Kobozev secretly came to Orenburg. He had a coordination meeting with the local Bosheviks and left the city for Buzuluk, from where they planned the offensive. However, only in January 1918, Kobozev's troops managed to get Orenburg back to the Soviet authorities. P. Kobozev drove one of the armored trains himself.

Turkestan and the Far East

After the Orenburg campaign, P. Kobozev was sent to Baku to nationalize the local oil industry, as well as transport Turkestan oil to Central Russia. V. Lenin entrusted P. Kobozev with 200 million rubles to support Bolsheviks in Orenburg, Baku and Tashkent.[5] The task was successfully fulfilled and the oil was sent to Russia.

In May 1918 he was elected First President of the Central Executive Committee of Turkestan Soviet Federative Republic and a member of the Revolutionary Military Council of the Turkestan Front. Soon he was called out back to Moscow and appointed the Minister of Transport, where he was in office until 13 June 1918. In September 1918 – April 1919 he was a member of the all-Russian Revolutionary Military Council. In February 1919 he was appointed chairman of the Central Executive Committee of the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Being in Turkestan he actively organized building of schools and Turkestan People's University, where in 1919 he gave lectures on energetics.

On 4 October 1922, P. Kobozev was appointed the Prime Minister of the Far Eastern Republic, and remained in office until 14 November 1922. During his office the Far East became part of the Soviet Union. P. Kobozev signed the peace treaty between the Far Eastern Republic and Japan on behalf of the Soviet Union.

Academic career

In autumn 1923, the severely ill Pyotr Kobozev returned to Moscow and asked to be transferred to academic work. In 1923 – 1928 he was the rector of Moscow Land Survey Institute; since 1928 to 1929 – the rector of Leningrad Polytechnical Institute. Later he returned to Moscow Land Survey Institute where he organized the department of aerial survey.

In 1938 he received the degree of candidate of technical sciences. He gave lectures on project geometry, hydraulics and aerial surveying. He was the head of the National Scientific Institute of Locomotive Construction, took part in organizing building the Moskva-Volga Canal, and gave the technical conclusion on the project of Dnieper Hydroelectric Station.

Family

Spouse: Alevtina Ivanovna Rakitina (1880–1968).[6]

Children: Sofia (born 1899, Moscow), Anna (b. 1906), Andrey (b. 1908–1965),[7] a lecturer and musician, twins Nikolay (1913–1977), engineer, and Natalia (b. 1913–1991).

Pyotr Kobozev lived in Moscow in the 3rd House of the Soviets.[8]

Bibliography

Publications by Pyotr Kobozev

Films

Pyotr Kobozev (played by Armen Djigarkhanyan) is a character in the Uzbek 1970 film 'Extraordinary comissar' (Russian: Чрезвычайный комиссар) about the years of the Soviet regime establishment in Turkestan.[9]

Memorials

References

  1. Вахабов М.Г., Зевелев А.И. Революционеры, вожаки масс: славная плеяда коммунистов Узбекистана. Узбекистан, 1967. С. 93.
  2. [Большая Советская Энциклопедия]
  3. Евгений Федорец Пётр Алексеевич Кобозев: дело всей жизни. 26 октября 2017 г. Информационное агентство Красная весна.
  4. Web site: Срок регистрации домена закончился.
  5. Web site: Пётр Алексеевич Кобозев. www.spbstu.ru. 22 February 2019.
  6. Web site: Центр генеалогических исследований – поиск родственников и предков по фамилии. rosgenea.ru. 22 February 2019.
  7. Web site: Фамилии на букву К – Центр генеалогических исследований. rosgenea.ru. 22 February 2019.
  8. Вся Москва. Адресная и справочная книга на 1927 год. Отдел 5. Адреса лиц, упомянутых в справочнике. Directmedia, 17 мар. 2013 г. С. 392.
  9. Web site: Чрезвычайный комиссар (1970). 22 February 2019. www.kino-teatr.ru.
  10. http://www.orenburg.ru/town/sight/pamjatniki_i_memorialy/imennye_pamjatniki/ Official website of the city of Orenburg