Yulia Krukovskaya Explained

Yulia Krukovskaya
Native Name:Юлия Круковская
Native Name Lang:ru
Birth Place:Mglin, Chernihiv, Russian Empire
Death Place:Chita, Transbaikal, Russian Empire
Resting Place:Mglin, Bryansk, Russia
Credits:, which produces label "Notable credit(s)"; or by
Works:, which produces label "Works"; or by
Label Name:, which produces label "Label(s)" -->
Office:may be used as an alternative when the label is better rendered as "Office" (e.g. public office or appointments) -->
Movement:Narodniks
Relatives: (cousin)
Lesya Ukrainka (grandniece)

Yulia Iosifovna Krukovskaya (Russian: Юлия Иосифовна Круковская; 1850–1913) was a Russian Narodnik revolutionary. Associated with the revolutionary circle in Kyiv, where she worked with Anna Kuliscioff, Leo Deutsch and Yakov Stefanovich, she was arrested and exiled to Siberia for her activities.

Biography

Krukovska was born in 1850, in the Chernihiv Governorate of the Russian Empire, the daughter of a school supervisor. She lived with her father until 1875, when she moved to Kyiv in order to work in a workers' orphanage run by her cousin . The following year, she was investigated for having helped Anna Kuliscioff obtain a passport and escape abroad. Suspected of being involved in a criminal association, Krukovska was kept under surveillance by Kyiv provincial police, but after a year they found no evidence and terminated their investigation of her.

Krukovska then made contact with the revolutionary circle around Leo Deutsch and Yakov Stefanovich, helping run their clandestine printing operations in Kyiv. Towards the end of 1877, she was arrested and imprisoned in Lukyanivska Prison, awaiting trial. Together with Deutsch and Stefanovich, on 8 July 1879, she was found guilty of destroying evidence of their clandestine printing operations and sentenced to three and a half years of exile in Irkutsk. On 17 January 1881, her case was reviewed and her sentence increased to 13 years of penal labour.

Throughout the 1880s, Krukovska was transferred between various Siberian prisons, before being released in August 1890. She settled in Chita in the Transbaikal Oblast, where she died. She was buried in Mglin, where her epitaph reads: "Lord, rest her soul in Your kingdom my dear sufferer Yulia, who fought for fraternity, equality, freedom and independence of all nations and estates without distinction of position and condition."[1]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1997. Церковь Николая Чудотворца (г. Мглин). Church of Nicholas the Miracle-worker (Mglin). Земля Мглинская - родной край. Bryansk. Nauka. 14 December 2023. ru.