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・ Peter the Great (disambiguation)
・ Peter the Great (Fabergé egg)
・ Peter the Great (film)
・ Peter the Great (horse)
・ Peter the Great (miniseries)
・ Peter the Great Gulf
・ Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University
・ Peter the Great Statue
・ Peter the Great's Naval Fortress
・ Peter the Great's Negro
・ Peter the Hermit
・ Peter the Hermit of Galatia
・ Peter the Iberian
・ Peter the Lame
・ Peter the Mariner
Peter the Painter
・ Peter the Patrician
・ Peter the Pirate
・ Peter the Venerable
・ Peter the Wild Boy
・ Peter the Wonderworker
・ Peter the Younger
・ Peter Theisinger
・ Peter Thejll
・ Peter Thellusson
・ Peter Thellusson, 1st Baron Rendlesham
・ Peter Theo Curtis
・ Peter Theobalds
・ Peter Theodor Holst
・ Peter Theophil Riess


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Peter the Painter : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter the Painter
Peter the Painter, also known as Peter Piaktow (or Piatkov, Pjatkov, Piaktoff), was the leader of a gang of Latvian criminals in the early 20th Century. After supposedly fighting in and escaping the Sidney Street Siege in 1911, he became an anti-hero in London's East End. He was never caught, and there is some question as to whether or not he actually ever existed.
==Biography==
In the wake of the Houndsditch Murders on 16 December 1910, one of the gang involved was found dead at a flat at which Peter Piatkow had lived with Fritz Svaars aka Fricis Svars, both of whom were believed to be members of a Latvian radical group. Svaars was the cousin of Jacob Peters, another Latvian far-leftist. The Siege of Sidney Street was triggered when the police were informed that Svaars and his comrades were hiding out at 100 Sidney Street in January 1911.
There are a number of candidates for the true identity of Peter the Painter. He was frequently identified with Yakov Peters (Jacob Peters), who was tried but acquitted for his involvement in the affair and later became a Cheka agent after the Russian Revolution. Donald Rumbelow, for example, identifies Peters with the Painter.〔Rumbelow ''The Siege of Sidney Street'' 1974 St Martins Press〕
In 1988, based on research in the KGB archives, the historian of anarchism Philip Ruff suggested Peter the Painter might in fact be Gederts Eliass,〔.〕 a Latvian artist involved in the 1905 Revolution and living in exile during the time of the Siege, returning to Riga after the 1917 Revolution. More recently, Ruff has identified Peter the Painter with Janis Zhaklis, or Zhakles, another Latvian far-leftist. Like Peters, Zhaklis was a member of the Latvian Social Democratic Workers' Party in 1905; among his exploits was the breaking Fritz Svaars out of prison in Riga. Zhaklis associated with Eliass in exile in Finland, where they were involved together in the robbing the Russian State Bank branch. He broke with the Social Democrats and became an anarchist. It is unclear what happened to him after 1911. In August 2012 Ruff's researches into the life of Janis Zhaklis were published by Dienas Gramata (in Latvian) as ''Pa stāvu liesmu debesīs : Nenotveramā latviešu anarhista Pētera Māldera laiks un dzīve'' (''A towering flame : the life & times of Peter the painter'')〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/doc/peter-painter-book-last )
The type of gun Peter the Painter allegedly used at Sidney Street, a German Mauser C96 pistol, was also sometimes called a Peter the Painter after him, particularly in Ireland during the War of Independence and later.〔(''The Independent'', 17 February 2004 )〕
A social housing development built in 2006 by Tower Hamlets Community Housing on the corner of Sidney Street and Commercial Road has been called ''Peter House'' and ''Painter House'', after Peter the Painter, provoking condemnation from a local councillor and the Metropolitan Police Federation.〔.〕
The song "Peter the Painter", by Ian Dury and the Blockheads, is unrelated, referring instead to the artist Peter Blake.

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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