Voldemar Vöölmann | |
Office1: | Chairman of the City Government of Tallinn |
Term Start1: | September 1917 |
Term End1: | March 1918 |
Predecessor1: | Gavriil Beljagin (as deputy mayor) |
Successor1: | Erhard Arnold Julius Dehio (as lord mayor) Alexander Riesenkampff (as second mayor) |
Birth Date: | 1887 |
Death Date: | 14 June 1937 (age 49–50) |
Voldemar Vöölmann (1887 – 14 June 1937) was an Estonian Communist politician who was the chairman of the city government of Tallinn from September 1917 to March 1918.
He was elected to the Tallinn City Council as part of the Bolshevik movement, with Jaan Anvelt as a council member.[1] He presided over Tallinn during the establishment of the first Republic of Estonia and the dissolution of the Russian Empire. He resigned in March 1918 after the German Empire occupied Tallinn. He was succeeded by Erhard Arnold Julius Dehio as the installed lord mayor. A member of the Bolshevik faction known as the Fontanniks, Vöölmann criticized Anvelt for his shortcomings during the failed uprising in 1924.[2] After the failed uprising, Vöölmann left for the Soviet Union. He was later the deputy head of the government of the Kazakh ASSR and the chairman of the Russian Construction Committee. He was executed on 14 June 1937, during the Great Purge.[3] He was later portrayed by Sulev Luik in the film Kaks päeva Viktor Kingissepa elust (1981).[4]