KROPOTKIN, PIOTR ALEKSEYEVICH, PRINCE

pyôˈtər əlyĭksyāˈĭvĭch krəpôtˈkĭn, 1842–1921, Russian geographer and anarchist. He came from a wealthy princely family and as a boy was a page to the czar. Repelled by court life, he obtained permission to serve as an army officer in Siberia, where his explorations and scientific observations established his reputation as a geographer. After returning to European Russia, he became an adherent of the Bakuninist faction of the narodniki and engaged in clandestine propaganda activities until arrested in 1874. Two years later he escaped to Western Europe, where he worked with various anarchist groups until his imprisonment in France (1883). Pardoned in 1886, partly as the result of the popular clamor for his release, he moved to England and spent the next 30 years mainly as a scholar and writer developing a coherent anarchist theory. In his most famous book, Mutual Aid (1902), he attacked T. H. Huxley and the Social Darwinists for their picture of nature and human society as essentially competitive. He insisted that cooperation and mutual aid were the norms in both the natural and social worlds. From this perspective he developed a theory of social organization—in Fields, Factories and Workshops (1898) and elsewhere—that was based upon communes of producers linked with each other through common custom and free contract. Returning to Russia following the February Revolution of 1917, he attempted to engender support for a continued Russian effort in World War I and to combat the rising influence of Bolshevism. Following the Bolshevik triumph in the October Revolution (1917), he retired from active politics. Consistently nonviolent in his anarchist beliefs, Kropotkin, as both thinker and man, was admired and acclaimed by many far removed from anarchist circles.

See his Memoirs of a Revolutionist (1899, repr. 1989).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT BY PRINCE KROPOTKIN AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION FROM...sociological views of Peter Alekseyevich Kropotkin, at which he arrived...Morgan says: "And this question Prince Kropotkin, in common with Darwin and...
...the Center of International Studies, Princeton University. A list of other books written...the Center of International Studies, Princeton University, 1952-1981 337...1977 : 138-148. Richard Falk Princeton, New Jersey PART ONE Overview CHAPTER...
...humanity avail us any thing, unless we possess a spirit of virtuous ____________________ and the kings thereof, and the princes thereof, to make them a desolation, an astonishment, an hissing, and a curse, as it is this day" Jer. 25:18 . 12...
...temples: The plough and the yoke he directed The great prince Enki Opened the holy furrows Made grain grow in the perennial...Donation differed very much from what is usually granted to other Princes, because it was not in prejudice of any man , and because...
...College A. C. Americo Castro, Princeton University A. C. L. Andre C. Leveque...A. T. M. Archibald T. MacAllister, Princeton University A. V. R. Alphonse V...W. H.-T. Harvey W. Hewett-Thayer, Princeton University H. W. L. D. Henry Wadsworth...
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KROPOTKIN, PIOTR ALEKSEYEVICH, PRINCE pyo t r lyiksya ivich kr pot kin...anarchist. He came from a wealthy princely family and as a boy was a page to...nonviolent in his anarchist beliefs, Kropotkin, as both thinker and man, was admired...


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