32. Andrei Vyshinsky, chief prosecutor in 1930s show trials
33. Faina Niurina, acting chief prosecutor of the Russian Federation in the 1930s
34. Rykov and Bukharin on their way to trial, 1938
35. Nikolai Ezhov with his brother Ivan
36. Ezhov conferring with Stalin, 1937
37. Ezhov and Orjonikidze at dacha, 1936
38. Red Army leaders in the late 1920s
39. Lazar Kaganovich, early 1930s
40. Orjonikidze very shortly after his suicide or murder, February 1937
Section Three
41. Lavrenti Beria, mid-1920s
42. Beria’s guards, chauffeurs, and pimps Nadaraia and Sarkisov
43. Caucasian party caucus 1935: Pilipe Makharadze, Mir-Jafar Bagirov, Beria
44. The Beria and Lakoba families sailing, Black Sea, 1933
45. Party conference, 1935: Lakoba, Beria, and head of Armenian party Agasi Khanjian
46. Lakoba’s funeral, January 1937
47. Vasili Blokhin, chief executioner at the Lubianka, 1940s
48. Meeting, 1936: Khrushchiov, Zhdanov, Lazar Kaganovich, Voroshilov, Stalin, Georgi Malenkov, and others
49. Head of SMERSH Viktor Abakumov,
50. Abakumov after his arrest, 1951
51. Latvians being deported to Siberia, 1946
52. Show trial, 1938
53. Vsevolod Meierkhold
54. Meierkhold and a portrait of his wife, Zinaida Raikh
55. Charlatan biologist Trofim Lysenko, late 1930s
56. Geneticist Nikolai Vavilov, Lysenko’s victim, late 1930s
57. Marina Tsvetaeva and her daughter, Ariadna, 1925
58. Nuclear physicist Piotr Kapitsa with the Jewish actor Solomon Mikhoels, 1946
59. Nine NKVD men:
Leonid Zakovsky (Stubis), head of Leningrad NKVD, 1937
Genrikh Liushkov, head of secret political section, defected to Japan in 1938
Baron Romuald Pillar von Pilchau, last aristocrat in NKVD
Anatoli Esaulov, who interrogated Ezhov
Vsevolod Merkulov, physics graduate and Beria’s deputy
Akvsenti Rapava, head of Georgian NKVD, after his second arrest, 1953
Bogdan Kobulov, Beria’s associate and NKVD representative in East Germany
General Vlasik, chief of Stalin’s household and tutor to his children, after his arrest, 1952
Iakov Agranov, NKVD specialist for intellectuals and associate of Mayakovsky
Illustration Acknowledgments
Except where indicated in the following list, all the photographs are reproduced courtesy of the David King Archive, London.
3. from Ostrovsky, Aleksandr,
13. from Litvin, A. L. et al. (eds.), Boris Savinkov na Lubianke.
18. from Kollontai, A. M.,
21, 24, 44, 45, 46. from Lakoba Archive, Hoover Institute, Stanford, California, courtesy of Memed Jikhashvili
25. from Chuev, Feliks,
26, 27, 28. from Kirilina, Alla,
33. from Zviagintsev, A. G., Orlov Iu. G.,
35. from Memorial Society, Moscow
39. from
41, 43, 59 a, b, e, g, h. from Antonov-Ovseenko, A.,
42, 50, 51, 59f. from Stoliarov, Kirill,
47. from Petrov, N. V., Skorkin, K. V., Kto rukovodil NKVD 1934–41:
48. from Gusliarov, Evgeni,
55, 56. from Rokitianskii, Ia. G., Vavilov, Iu., N., Goncharov, V. A.,
57. from Andreev A. F. (ed.),
58. from
CHRONOLOGY
PREFACE
Everything might have come right in the course of time. Russian life could have been pulled into order. . . . What bitch woke up Lenin? Who couldn’t bear the child sleeping? There is no precise answer to this question. . . . Anyway, he himself probably didn’t know, although his supply of vengeance never dried up. . . . And spiteful in his failure, he immediately started a revolution for all, so that nobody escaped punishment. And our fathers followed him to Golgothas with banners and songs. . . . In Russia you mustn’t wake anybody.