Preview

Nauchnyi dialog

Advanced search

Political Thought of Russia’s Allies in Poland in 1920: An Intellectual History of B.V. Savinkov Group

https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2025-14-1-509-529

Abstract

This article reconstructs the political thought of the Russian anti-Bolshevik emigration in Poland during the Polish-Soviet War and the subsequent peace negotiations. The primary sources include materials from the Warsaw newspaper “Svoboda,” published by the Russian Political Committee (RPK) led by B.V. Savinkov. It emphasizes that, operating on foreign soil, émigrés laid the ideological groundwork for Russian-Polish cooperation. The article notes that Polish authorities harbored distrust towards the White movement, perceiving it as a potentially hostile force against Poland. It demonstrates that the RPK sought to dispel these suspicions by openly declaring a pro-Polish stance, which, in turn, provoked irritation among the right wing of Russian society (monarchists and supporters of “United and Indivisible Russia”). The author concludes that B.V. Savinkov, during the Civil War years, adopted a nationalist discourse, reflecting the influence of Józef Piłsudski — a socialist, revolutionary, and nationalist. The question of an independent Poland as a source of inspiration for democratic émigrés, who hoped for a similar awakening of Russian national consciousness, is also raised. The relevance of this study lies in the necessity to explore the Civil War within the context of intellectual history.

About the Author

F. A. Popov
I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University of the Ministry of Healthcare of the Russian Federation (Sechenovskiy University)
Russian Federation

Fyodor A. Popov - PhD in History, Associate Professor, Department of Humanities, Institute of Social Sciences.

Moscow



References

1. “For Freedom!”. (2000). In: Literary Encyclopedia of the Russian Diaspora. 1918—1940, 2. Moscow: Rosspen. 152—157. ISBN 5-8243-0097-6. (In Russ.).

2. GARF — The State Archive of the Russian Federation. F. 5881 (Collection of individual documents and memoirs of emigrants). Op. 1. 577-2. (In Russ.).

3. Volkov, S. V. (ed.). (2005). The Voikov murder and the Coverda case. In: Russian emigration in the struggle against Bolshevism. Moscow: ZAO Centropolygraf. 210—274. ISBN 978-5-227-10138-9. (In Russ.).

4. Ustryalov, N. V. (1920). Old dispute. In: In the struggle for Russia (collection of articles). Harbin: Okona Publ. 24—29. (In Russ.).

5. Freedom. 1920. July 29; July 30; August 6; August 10; August 13; August 21; September 17; October 5; October 7; October 14; October 16; October 17; October 19; October 26; October 31; November 3; November 7; November 10; November 13. (In Russ.).

6. Bazanov, P. N. (2013). Russian Truth Brotherhood — the most mysterious organization of the Russian Diaspora. Moscow: Posev. 424 p. ISBN 978-5-9902820-8-7. (In Russ.).

7. Karpus, Z. (1999). Wschodni sojusznicy Polski w wojnie 1920 roku: oddziały wojskowe ukraiʹnskie, rosyjskie, kozackie i białoruskie w Polsce w latach 1919—1920. Toruń: Wydawn. Uniwersitetu Mikołaja Kopernika. 230 p. ISBN 83-231-1035-2. (In Polan.).

8. Kolonitsky, B. I. (2023). “Comrade Kerensky”: the anti-monarchist revolution and the formation of the cult of the “leader of the people” (March — June 1917). Moscow: New Literary Review. 520 p. ISBN 978-5-4448-1940-1. (In Russ.).

9. Kolonitsky, B. I. (ed.). (2022). Words and conflicts: the language of confrontation and the escalation of the civil war in Russia: a collection of articles. St. Petersburg: Publishing House of the European University in St. Petersburg. 328 p. ISBN 978-5-94380-347-5. (In Russ.).

10. Kozellek, R. (2006). Social history and the history of concepts. In: Historical concepts and political ideas in Russia of the XVI—XX century: collection of scientific papers. Saint Petersburg: Aleteya. 33—53. ISBN 5943800611. (In Russ.).

11. Kurenyshev, A. A. (2008). Peasant organizations of the Russian Diaspora. (1920—1951). Moscow: AIRO-XXI. 192 p. ISBN 978-5-91022-057-1. (In Russ.).

12. Mikulenok, A. A. (2018). Russian emigration in Poland: socio-economic, socio-political and cultural activities (1917—1939): monograph. Saint Petersburg: Alethea. 210 p. ISBN 978-5-907115-02-6. (In Russ.).

13. Moiseev, D. S. (2019). Political philosophy of Italian fascism. Formation and development of the doctrine. Moscow; Yekaterinburg: Cabinet Scientist. 320 p. ISBN 978-5-7584-0233-7. (In Russ.).

14. Morozov, K. N. (2022). Boris Savinkov: the experience of scientific biography. Moscow; St. Petersburg: Nestor-Istoriya. 768 p. ISBN 978-5-4469-1964-2. (In Russ.).

15. Puchenkov, A. S. (2016). National policy of General Denikin (spring 1918 — spring 1920). Moscow: Scientific and Political Book. 399 p. ISBN 978-5-906594-10-5. (In Russ.).

16. Serapionova, E. P. (2005). T. G. Masaryk and Russian emigrants to the Czechoslovak Republic. In: T. G. Masaryk and the “Russian Action” of the Czechoslovak government: on the 150th anniversary of the birth of T. G. Masaryk. Based on the materials of the international scientific conference. Moscow: Russian Way. 61—69. (In Russ.).

17. Simonova, T. M. (2013). Soviet Russia (USSR) and Poland: Russian anti-Soviet volunteer formations in Poland (1919—1925). Moscow: Quadriga, Zebra E. 368 p. ISBN 978-5-91791-10-2. (In Russ.).

18. Skinner, K. (2023). Meaning and understanding in the history of ideas. In: Cambridge School: Theory and Practice of Intellectual History. Moscow: New Literary Review. 53—122. ISBN 978-5-4448-1935-7. (In Russ.).

19. Suomela, Yu. (2004). Foreign Russia. Russian emigration’s ideological and political views on the pages of the Russian European press in 1918—1940. Saint Petersburg: Kolo Publishing House. 352 p. ISBN 5-901841-20-4. (In Russ.).

20. Tsikhoratsky, P. (2014). Contrary to the tradition of mutual hostility. From the history of Polish-Russian cooperation in 1920. History and historical memory, 9: 176—184. (In Russ.).


Review

For citations:


Popov F.A. Political Thought of Russia’s Allies in Poland in 1920: An Intellectual History of B.V. Savinkov Group. Nauchnyi dialog. 2025;14(1):509-529. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2025-14-1-509-529

Views: 670


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2225-756X (Print)
ISSN 2227-1295 (Online)