Mark Maxim Natanson

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Mark Maxim Natanson

Russian: Марк Андреевич(Аронович) Натансон
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Svencjany, - Švenčionys, Vilna, Lithuania, then in the Russian Empire
Death: July 29, 1919 (68)
Bern District, Canton of Bern, Switzerland
Immediate Family:

Son of Andre Natanson
Husband of Olga Natanson and Варвара Ивановна Натансон
Brother of Nathan Аронович Natanson; Абрам-Меер Натансон and Yetta Ароновна Беркман

Managed by: Eilat Gordin Levitan
Last Updated:

About Mark Maxim Natanson

Max Nathanson -- or Mark Andreevich Natanson, to give the Russian form of his name -- was born in 1849 of a well-to-do Jewish family in Vilna province. As a medical student in St. Petersburg at the end of the 1860s, he organized a revolutionary commune whose members, above all Natanson himself, opposed the immoralism of Sergei Nechaev, for whom every crime and treachery was justified in order to overthrow the tsarist order. (See my essay on "Bakunin and Nechaev", serialized in Freedom in November and December 1973). Instead, Natanson sought a "revolutionary ethic" based on libertarian rather than authoritarian methods. Inspired by the decentralist socialism of Fourier and Owen, his brand of Populism was strongly tinged with anarchist sympathies; and he was admired by his comrades for his clear-headedness, organizing ability, integrity, and self-sacrifice, traits which his nephew was to exhibit in equal measure.

In 1869 Natanson took an active part in student disorders in the capital, and the following year he was arrested and briefly imprisoned in the notorious Peter and Paul fortress. In 1871 he was expelled from the medical academy for distributing radical literature. Undaunted, he threw his energies into organizing the so-called Chaikovsky circle, of which Kropotkin and Stepniak were among his fellow members. Arrested in November 1871, he was deported a few months later to Archangel province, but after being moved to Voronezh and to Finland, he escaped in 1875 and returned to St. Petersburg where he led a precarious underground existence.

By this time the Chaikovsky Circle had been riddled by arrests. Kropotkin, for one, was locked up in the prison of St. Petersburg Military Hospita after spending nearly two years of solitary confinement in the dungeons of Peter and Paul. It was Natanson, interestingly enough, who organized Kropotkin's sensational escape on June 30, 1876, and who drove the coach which spirited his comrade to safety.

Natanson next turned his organizational talents to the formation of Land and Liberty, the largest revolutionary society in Russia during the 1870s. To establish connections and gain recruits he travelled from city to city -- Moscow, Kiev, Kharkov, Odessa -- rallying the scattered Populist groups under the common banner of overthrowing the autocracy and emancipating the people. He also journeyed abroad to confer with Lavrov and other expatriates (though he did not see Bakunin, who died the same year, on July 1, 1876). Returning to St. Petersburg, he organized a network for smuggling revolutionary literature from abroad and also took part in the famous demonstration of December 6, 1876 in front of the Kazan Cathedral, in which George Plekhanov, the "father of Russian Marxism" (though then a follower of Bakunin), was another participant.

Natanson was arrested again in 1877 and, after two years in the Peter and Paul fortress, was exiled to Siberia where he remained for the next ten years. When he returned to St. Petersburg he took up where he had formed a link between Land and Liberty and the future Socialist Revolutionaries. In April 1894, however, he was once again arrested and banished to Siberia until the beginning of the new century.

In 1905 Natanson joined the Socialist Revolutionaries and soon became a member of their executive committee. Always on the extreme left wing of the party (and therefore quite close to the anarchists), he was -- like his nephew -- a staunch anti-militarist during the First World War, taking part in the famous Zimmerwald Conference of September 1915, where he called for the transformation of the war into a social revolution. With the outbreak of the Russian Revolution in 1917 he returned to Petrograd as one of the oldest and most respected veterans of the revolutionary movement.

After the October Revolution Natanson was, with Maria Spiridonova, I. N. Steinberg, and Boris Kamkov, a founder of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries, who formed a temporary coalition with the Bolsheviks in the Soviet government. But he soon became disillusioned with the new dictatorship. With the anarchists he criticized the Brest-Litovsk Treaty, the growing centralization of power, and the persecution of other revolutionary croups. In 1918 he finally emigrated to Switzerland, a deeply disappointed man, and died in Bern (the burial place of Bakunin) on July 29, 1919. Mark Andreyevich Natanson (Russian: Марк Андреевич Натансон; alias - Бобров, or Bobrov) (December 25, 1850 (N.S. January 6, 1851), Švenčionys - July 29, 1919) was a Russian revolutionary and one of the founders of the Circle of Tchaikovsky, Land and Liberty, and the Socialist-Revolutionary Party. In 1917 he was a leader of the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries, supporting the Bolsheviks in the October Revolution.

He was the uncle of Alexander Berkman.

О Марке Андреевиче(Ароновиче) Натансоне (русский)

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Mark Maxim Natanson's Timeline

1850
December 25, 1850
Svencjany, - Švenčionys, Vilna, Lithuania, then in the Russian Empire
1919
July 29, 1919
Age 68
Bern District, Canton of Bern, Switzerland