About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 83. Chapters: N. D. Cocea, Christian Rakovsky, Zamfir Arbore, Constantin Stere, Nestor Makhno, Maria Nikiforova, Alexander Parvus, Mikhail Frunze, Mikhail Sholokhov, Magaza Masanchi, Nikifor Grigoriev, Pinhas Rutenberg, Semyon Timoshenko, Mikhail Liber, Aliheydar Garayev, Vasily Blucher, Vladimir Bobrovsky, Arkadi Kremer, Ivan Kamera, Chingiz Ildyrym, Mir Jafar Baghirov, Raphael Abramovitch, Fyodor Sergeyev, Mehmet Niyazi, Vasily Chapayev, Mark Natanson, Ion Incule, Cecilia Bobrovskaya, Georgy Lvov, Yakov Yurovsky, Lev Zadov, Eugen Levine, Nikolai Rusanov, Tapa Tchermoeff, Venedikt Miakotin, Vladimir Zenzinov, Viktor Chernov, Peter Ermakov, Aleksa Dundi, Avram Gots, Timofei Sapronov, Yakov Ganetsky, Osip Minor, Grigory Kotovsky, Nikolay Chkheidze, Gordey Levchenko, Nadejda Grinfeld, Catherine Breshkovsky, Sergey Lazo, Vladimir Woytinsky, Konstantin Gey, Nikolai Avksentiev, Anatoly Lamanov, Fyodor Funtikov. Excerpt: N. D. Cocea (common rendition of Nicolae Dumitru Cocea, Romanian pronunciation: , also known as Niculae, Niculici or Nicu Cocea; November 29, 1880-February 1, 1949) was a Romanian journalist, novelist, critic and left-wing political activist, known as a major but controversial figure in the field of political satire. The founder of many newspapers and magazines, including Via a Social, Rampa, Facla and Chemarea, collaborating with writer friends such as Tudor Arghezi, Gala Galaction and Ion Vinea, he fostered and directed the development of early modernist literature in Romania. Cocea later made his name as a republican and anticlerical agitator, was arrested as an instigator during the 1907 peasant revolt, and played a leading role in regrouping the scattered socialist clubs. His allegiances however switched between parties: during World War I, he supported the Entente Powers and, as a personal witness of the Octob...