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Nechaev : ウィキペディア英語版
Sergey Nechayev

Sergey Gennadiyevich Nechayev (or Nyechayev; (ロシア語:Серге́й Генна́диевич Неча́ев)) (October 2, 1847 – November 21 or December 3, 1882) was a Russian revolutionary associated with the Nihilist movement and known for his single-minded pursuit of revolution by any means necessary, including political violence.
==Early life in Russia==
Sergey Nechayev was born in Ivanovo, then a small textile town, to poor parents—his father was a waiter and sign painter. His mother died when he was eight. His father remarried and had two more sons. They lived in a three-room house with his two sisters and grandparents. They were ex serfs who had moved to Ivanovo. He had already developed an awareness of social inequality and a resentment of the local nobility in his youth. At 10, Sergey had learned his father's trades—waiting at banquets and painting signs. His father got him a job as an errand boy in a factory, but Sergey refused the servant's job. His family paid for good tutors who taught him Latin, German, French, History, Maths and Rhetoric.〔Ana Siljak, Angel of Vengeance, page 90〕
In 1865 at age 18, Nechayev moved to Moscow, where he worked for the historian Mikhael Pogodin. A year later, he moved to St. Petersburg, passed a teacher's exam and began teaching at a parish school. From September 1868, Nechayev attended lectures at St. Petersburg University (as an auditor, he was never enrolled) and became acquainted with the subversive Russian literature of the Decembrists, the Petrashevsky Circle, and Mikhail Bakunin, among others, as well as the growing student unrest at the university. Nechaev was even said to have slept on bare wood and lived on black bread in imitation of Rakhmetov, the ascetic revolutionary in Chernyshevsky's novel ''What Is to Be Done?''.〔Andrew Michael Drozd, Chernyshevskii's What is to be done?: a reevaluation, page 115〕
Inspired by the failed attempt on the Tsar's life by Karakozov, Nechayev participated in student activism in 1868–1869, leading a radical minority with Petr Tkachev and others. Nechayev took part in devising this student movement's "Program of revolutionary activities", which stated later a social revolution as its ultimate goal. The program also suggested ways for creating a revolutionary organization and conducting subversive activities. In particular, the program envisioned composition of the ''Catechism of a Revolutionary'', for which Nechayev would become famous.
In December 1868 he met Vera Zasulich (who would make an assassination attempt on General Trepov, governor of St. Petersburg in 1878) at a teachers' meeting. He asked her to come to his school where he held candlelit readings of revolutionary tracts. He would place pictures of Robespierre and Saint-Just on the table while reading.〔Ana Siljak, Angel of Vengeance, page 93〕 At these meetings he plotted to assassinate the Tsar on the 9th anniversary of serfdom's abolition.
The last of these student meetings occurred on January 28, 1869. Nechayev presented a petition calling for freedom of assembly for students.〔Ana Siljak, Angel of Vengeance, page 97〕 97 did, though he wouldn't say what he'd do with the petition. Two days later, he handed it to the police, intending to radicalize the students through prison and exile.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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