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2nd World Congress of the Communist International

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that the Russian delegation "invariably spoke with a united voice," in sharp contrast to the contentious and divided delegations from Germany, France, Great Britain, Italy, and the United States. Therefore, "the Communist International which would make the world revolution was created in the image of the party which had made the Russian revolution," Carr observed.
377:(ECCI) voted to hold a 2nd World Congress of its member parties at some indefinite date in the near future. This was followed on June 14, 1920, by the formal publication by ECCI of a call for a 2nd World Congress to be held in Moscow one month hence. Political parties pledging allegiance to the organization were urged to send delegations at once. 599:
should be established and supported, arguing the 25 million workers participating in unions affiliated with the Amsterdam International had already made their basic organizational decision. Instead, Lenin and his co-thinkers argued, radical workers should remain within these established unions and to
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might be dominant. Particular attention was paid to formulating an alliance with the rural poor as a means of winning and holding power in a revolution. Russia's Bolsheviks did not apply any of this to non-Russian territories under Bolshevik control at the time—although non-Russian communist parties
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Voting delegates were provided with red cards, non-voting "consultative" delegates blue cards, and guests green cards, with votes taken by means of counting cards. Voting strength of each delegation was based upon the relative importance of each national party to the international communist movement
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Following the opening festivities in Petrograd, a three-day break followed, after which the Congress reconvened in Moscow in the former Vladimir Throne Room of the Kremlin. Four official languages were used at the convention — English, French, German, and Russian — with secretaries typing convention
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has argued that the 2nd World Congress — to some extent unintentionally and unconsciously — was the first to "establish Russian leadership of Comintern on an impregnable basis." In addition to the esteem accorded the Russians as practitioners of the first successful Marxist revolution, Carr noted
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On July 25, the Commission on Conditions for Admission voted 5–3 on a proposal by Lenin that only parties with a clear majority on their governing Central Committee favoring affiliation to the Comintern prior to the 2nd World Congress would be permitted membership in that organization. Subsequent
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It was at the 2nd World Congress that the nature of Communist parties was decided upon, the conditions for their admission to the Communist International set, and the relationship of the national organizations to their international directing center formally established for the first time.
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At the same time the Comintern leadership had already been working to establish a new revolutionary international union organization to compete with the Amsterdam International — a goal which the left-wing communists saw as contradictory with the policy of remaining within the established
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on the international situation and the tasks of the Comintern delivered by Lenin. Afterwards the delegates participated in a mass demonstration before gathering at the former stock exchange to see a costume drama called "Spectacle of the Two Worlds" performed by a cast of 3,000.
251:. The gathering is also significant for the level of participation of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin, who participated in the affairs of the gathering more intensely than at any other, preparing a host of key documents and actively helping to chart the gathering's course. 446: 698:
match between Moscow and an International XI. Willie Gallagher captained the International XI, which included John Reed. However, they lost heavily to Moscow in front of a crowd of 18,000 in the Red Stadium, located in the former Moscow River Yacht
604:"conservative" unions. Meetings between Comintern officials and trade union leaders in Moscow in the summer of 1920 had led to the establishment of the International Council of Trade and Industrial Unions (Mezhsovprof), forerunner of the 530:
of such organizations marked them as fundamentally different from the Communist movement and its orientation towards armed struggle and saw the Comintern as a mechanism for the centralized coordination of such efforts around the world.
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The 2nd World Congress began its actual work on July 23, 1920. Two sessions were dedicated to discussion of the structure and role of Communist parties, with a summary report and theses delivered to the body by Comintern Chairman
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The 2nd World Congress of the Communist International, held in the summer of 1920, has been regarded by scholars as "the first authentic international meeting of the new organization's members and supporters," owing to the
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debate by the Congress itself on July 29 and 30 urged against any concessions to so-called "Centrist" leaders. Following extended commission discussions, a set of 21 Conditions for admission to the Comintern was proposed.
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The Congress was scheduled to open on July 15, but owing to rampant transit difficulties, many delegates had not arrived in Soviet Russia by that date. ECCI decided to postpone the first working sessions by one week.
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Whereas in 1919 no mass Socialist party had participated in the activities of the Founding Convention, the 1920 gathering saw the inclusion of credentialed delegates from several large European groups, including the
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The final resolution of the Congress directed communists in colonial countries to support the "national-revolutionary" movement in each, without regard to the fact that non-communist and non-
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Such so-called "Centrist" parties, with the German USPD in the first rank, sought a more inclusive and advisory role for the Comintern, in line with the model utilized by the ill-fated
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Stephen Velychenko, "Painting Imperialism and Nationalism Red. The Ukrainian Marxist Critique of Russian Communist rule in Ukraine (1918–1925)" TOronto, Univ of Toronto Press, 2015.
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Upon arriving at their hotel rooms, delegates were provided with an assortment of written reports, draft resolutions, and copies of two recently published books —
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documents in each. The primary languages spoken on the floor were French and German, with simultaneous translations taking place in various corners of the room.
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Some delegates were forced by circumstances to use false passports and identity documents or to travel without any legal documentation whatsoever, such as by
381: 118: 573:. The limited horizons of such organizations, limited to matters of daily concern as wages, hours, and working conditions, were seen as a manifestation of 311:
The official records of the 2nd World Congress indicate that a total of 218 delegates participated in the proceedings, including 54 representatives of
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Delegates participated a wide range of events, touring the country, attending shop meetings, watching theatrical performances, and participating in a
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ibid., "Russian Bolsheviks, Ukrainian Communists, and the Comintern: How Russian Bolsheviks Shaped Foreign Radical Leftist Views on Ukraine," <
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raged in the summer of 1920 and wrecked locomotives and derailed freight cars lined the tracks, further complicating the transportation situation.
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and that they, like the political parties of the Second International, had betrayed the working class by supporting their national governments in
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Ever since the founding of the Comintern in 1919, a number of political parties in the Social Democratic tradition — including the
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Lenin and other Comintern leaders disagreed sharply with the demand of the left-wing communists that new explicitly revolutionary
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The union question remained a matter of heated contention at the 2nd World Congress, with the representatives of the British
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https://krytyka.com/en/articles/russian-bolsheviks-ukrainian-communists-and-comintern-how-russian-bolsheviks-shaped-foreign
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Delegates were housed in Moscow at the Delevoi Dvor, a hotel a short walk from the Congress's sessions held at the
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were scornful of the "conservative" nature of the established union movement in many counties, exemplified by the
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seemed most certainly on the point of transforming itself into a European revolution, with the destinies of the
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Workers of the World and Oppressed Peoples, Unite!: Proceedings and Documents of the Second Congress, 1920.
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Workers of the World and Oppressed Peoples, Unite!: Proceedings and Documents of the Second Congress, 1920.
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from July 19 to August 7, 1920. The 2nd Congress is best remembered for formulating and implementing the
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conquest. Such unions were worthy only of expeditious destruction, the left-wing communists believed.
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delegates from Germany and the United States refusing to abandon their hostility to the strategy of "
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The 2nd World Congress took place at a time of heated world political passion, as British historian
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rather than the actual size of the membership of these groups. At no point in the Congress was a
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by land and sea, making travel extremely difficult. Legal passage was possible only through the
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of Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Theses on colonial issues were presented to the Congress by
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There were several cultural and sports activities arranged to accompany the second congress:
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Theses, Resolutions and Manifestos of the First Four Congresses of the Third International.
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The title of the Russian original of Lenin's polemic against the left-wing communists,
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taken; rather, a simple counting of cards raised on the floor determined all outcomes.
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The 2nd World Congress also for the first time paid serious attention to the national
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delegates lost their lives in transit, when a small fishing boat setting sail from
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was a gathering of approximately 220 voting and non-voting representatives of
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The Congress elected a Bureau (governing committee) to make decisions about
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The 2nd World Congress dealt extensively with the relationship between the
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A History of Soviet Russia: The Bolshevik Revolution, 1917–1923: Volume 3.
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actually translates as "The Childhood Illness of 'Leftism' in Communism."
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The left-wing communists argued that these unions were a by-product of
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as distributed to delegates to the 2nd World Congress of the Comintern.
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attempt to work from within to move them onto a revolutionary course.
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and an impediment to the revolutionary transformation of society.
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In two volumes. New York: Pathfinder Press, 1991; vol. 1, pg. 6.
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movement and the emerging international communist movement.
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Introduction by Bertil Hessel. London: Ink Links, 1980.
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Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1972; pg. 271.
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New York: Pathfinder Press, 1991. 608:(Profintern) that was established the next year. 166:political parties from around the world, held in 156:2nd World Congress of the Communist International 48:2nd World Congress of the Communist International 51:Второй конгресс Коммунистического интернационала 734:List of delegates of the 2nd Comintern congress 270:merged in those of some broader European unit." 1246:Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1964. 1109: 1107: 1028: 1026: 1024: 1022: 995: 993: 991: 977: 975: 973: 971: 957: 955: 953: 951: 937: 935: 933: 931: 917: 915: 913: 277:Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany 1253:Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1972. 899: 897: 839: 837: 823: 821: 625:"Left-Wing" Communism: An Infantile Disorder. 8: 1249:Branko Lazitch and Milorad M. Drachkovitch, 857: 855: 853: 759:Branko Lazitch and Milorad M. Drachkovitch, 755: 753: 347:"Left-Wing" Communism: An Infantile Disorder 281:French Section of the Workers' International 119:Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic 1244:The Forming of the Communist International. 650:, formally a delegate from the fledgling 285:Social Democratic Party of Czechoslovakia 1235:Alix Holt and Barbara Holland (trans.), 707: 567:International Federation of Trade Unions 189:Delegates II Congress of the Comintern: 1099:Детская болезнь "левизны" в коммунизме, 749: 1256:John Riddell (editor and translator), 861:John Riddell (editor and translator), 493:Notable Topics and Decisions Discussed 461:Following a meal in the Great Hall of 429:blockade went down in stormy weather. 400:to radicals intending on traveling to 44: 506:Comintern Chairman Grigorii Zinoviev. 303:The first English edition of Lenin's 221:(thirteenth, hands behind his back), 7: 408:War between Soviet Russia and Poland 739:Congress of the Peoples of the East 1251:Lenin and the Comintern: Volume 1. 761:Lenin and the Comintern: Volume 1. 25: 776:London: Macmillan, 1953; pg. 196. 606:Red International of Labor Unions 450:Lenin delivers an address at the 111: 686:Cultural and sports activities 392:port of Revel (known today as 1: 562:in the United States and the 148:218 delegates from 54 parties 560:American Federation of Labor 1221:A History of Soviet Russia, 1208:A History of Soviet Russia, 1195:A History of Soviet Russia, 1047:A History of Soviet Russia, 213:(tenth, hands in pockets), 60:February 19, 1920 1338: 785:Lazitch and Drachkovitch, 682:in those territories did. 524:Socialist Party of America 1174:10.1080/09668139408412191 652:Communist Party of Mexico 425:in an attempt to run the 225:(nineteen white blouse), 223:Maria Ilyinichna Ulyanova 217:(eleventh with the hat), 787:Lenin and the Comintern, 546:The trade union question 384:was subject to an armed 249:1919 Founding Convention 50: 438:Opening of the Congress 373:On April 22, 1920, the 336:Terrorism and Communism 180:Communist International 164:revolutionary socialist 75:March 7, 1920 34:Infobox recurring event 716: 662:, and Pak Chin-sun of 613:Shop Stewards Movement 507: 458: 308: 305:"Left Wing" Communism, 272: 234: 178:for membership in the 39:considered for merging 1153:Riordan, Jim (1994). 711: 673:elements such as the 630:The colonial question 505: 449: 302: 260: 188: 1223:vol. 3, pp. 198-199. 636:liberation movements 556:Left-wing communists 536:Second International 295:Delegate composition 193:(second from left), 1162:Europe-Asia Studies 588:— seen as a war of 575:class collaboration 454:; 1924 painting by 380:During this period 1075:vol. 1, pp. 48-49. 1062:vol. 1, pp. 46-47. 717: 656:Avetis Sultan-Zade 621:boring from within 508: 459: 309: 264:Russian revolution 235: 197:(third, smoking), 18:2nd World Congress 513:Grigorii Zinoviev 498:The 21 Conditions 417:on a ship. Three 317:Social Democratic 229:(with beard) and 209:(ninth, shaved), 205:(seventh, form), 203:Mikhail Lashevich 152: 151: 16:(Redirected from 1329: 1322:Events in Moscow 1317:1920 conferences 1312:1920 in politics 1302:Marxism–Leninism 1242:James W. Hulse, 1224: 1217: 1211: 1210:vol. 3, pg. 198. 1204: 1198: 1197:vol. 3, pg. 197. 1191: 1185: 1184: 1182: 1180: 1159: 1150: 1144: 1137: 1131: 1124: 1118: 1111: 1102: 1095: 1089: 1082: 1076: 1069: 1063: 1056: 1050: 1049:vol. 3, pg. 201. 1043: 1037: 1030: 1017: 1010: 1004: 997: 986: 979: 966: 959: 946: 939: 926: 919: 908: 901: 892: 885: 879: 878:vol. 1, pp. 5-6. 872: 866: 859: 848: 841: 832: 825: 816: 809: 803: 796: 790: 783: 777: 770: 764: 757: 713:Boris Kustodiyev 398:travel passports 283:(SFIO), and the 258:later recalled: 219:Grigory Zinoviev 199:Nikolai Bukharin 117: 115: 114: 82: 80: 67: 65: 45: 42: 21: 1337: 1336: 1332: 1331: 1330: 1328: 1327: 1326: 1287: 1286: 1277: 1232: 1230:Further reading 1227: 1218: 1214: 1205: 1201: 1192: 1188: 1178: 1176: 1157: 1152: 1151: 1147: 1143:vol. 1, pg. 55. 1138: 1134: 1130:vol. 1, pg. 52. 1125: 1121: 1117:vol. 1, pg. 51. 1112: 1105: 1096: 1092: 1088:vol. 1, pg. 48. 1083: 1079: 1070: 1066: 1057: 1053: 1044: 1040: 1036:vol. 1, pg. 46. 1031: 1020: 1016:vol. 1, pg. 44. 1011: 1007: 1003:vol. 1, pg. 43. 998: 989: 985:vol. 1, pg. 42. 980: 969: 965:vol. 1, pg. 16. 960: 949: 945:vol. 1, pg. 15. 940: 929: 925:vol. 1, pg. 14. 920: 911: 902: 895: 891:vol. 1, pg. 10. 886: 882: 873: 869: 860: 851: 847:vol. 1, pg. 12. 842: 835: 831:vol. 1, pg. 11. 826: 819: 810: 806: 797: 793: 784: 780: 771: 767: 758: 751: 747: 730: 706: 688: 632: 548: 500: 495: 467:keynote address 452:Uritsky Theater 440: 435: 371: 297: 240: 227:Nicola Bombacci 112: 110: 78: 76: 63: 61: 52: 49: 43: 27: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 1335: 1333: 1325: 1324: 1319: 1314: 1309: 1307:1920 in Russia 1304: 1299: 1289: 1288: 1285: 1284: 1276: 1275:External links 1273: 1272: 1271: 1264: 1261: 1254: 1247: 1240: 1231: 1228: 1226: 1225: 1212: 1199: 1186: 1145: 1132: 1119: 1103: 1090: 1077: 1064: 1051: 1038: 1018: 1005: 987: 967: 947: 927: 909: 907:vol. 1, pg. 7. 893: 880: 867: 849: 833: 817: 815:vol. 1, pg. 9. 804: 791: 778: 765: 748: 746: 743: 742: 741: 736: 729: 726: 705: 702: 701: 700: 687: 684: 631: 628: 547: 544: 499: 496: 494: 491: 487:roll call vote 439: 436: 434: 431: 402:Central Europe 370: 367: 296: 293: 247:nature of the 239: 236: 211:Vladimir Lenin 150: 149: 146: 142: 141: 136: 132: 131: 126: 125:Previous event 122: 121: 108: 104: 103: 98: 94: 93: 88: 84: 83: 73: 69: 68: 58: 54: 53: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1334: 1323: 1320: 1318: 1315: 1313: 1310: 1308: 1305: 1303: 1300: 1298: 1295: 1294: 1292: 1282: 1279: 1278: 1274: 1269: 1265: 1262: 1259: 1255: 1252: 1248: 1245: 1241: 1238: 1234: 1233: 1229: 1222: 1216: 1213: 1209: 1203: 1200: 1196: 1190: 1187: 1175: 1171: 1167: 1163: 1156: 1149: 1146: 1142: 1136: 1133: 1129: 1123: 1120: 1116: 1110: 1108: 1104: 1100: 1094: 1091: 1087: 1081: 1078: 1074: 1068: 1065: 1061: 1055: 1052: 1048: 1042: 1039: 1035: 1029: 1027: 1025: 1023: 1019: 1015: 1009: 1006: 1002: 996: 994: 992: 988: 984: 978: 976: 974: 972: 968: 964: 958: 956: 954: 952: 948: 944: 938: 936: 934: 932: 928: 924: 918: 916: 914: 910: 906: 900: 898: 894: 890: 884: 881: 877: 871: 868: 864: 858: 856: 854: 850: 846: 840: 838: 834: 830: 824: 822: 818: 814: 808: 805: 802:vol. 1, pg. 8 801: 795: 792: 788: 782: 779: 775: 769: 766: 762: 756: 754: 750: 744: 740: 737: 735: 732: 731: 727: 725: 722: 714: 710: 703: 697: 693: 692: 691: 685: 683: 680: 676: 672: 671:working class 667: 665: 661: 657: 653: 649: 645: 641: 637: 629: 627: 626: 622: 618: 614: 609: 607: 601: 598: 593: 591: 587: 583: 578: 576: 572: 568: 565: 561: 557: 553: 545: 543: 539: 537: 532: 529: 525: 520: 518: 517:21 Conditions 514: 504: 497: 492: 490: 488: 482: 480: 475: 471: 468: 464: 457: 456:Isaak Brodsky 453: 448: 444: 437: 432: 430: 428: 424: 420: 416: 411: 409: 405: 403: 399: 395: 391: 387: 383: 382:Soviet Russia 378: 376: 368: 366: 364: 363:railroad ties 360: 355: 353: 349: 348: 342: 338: 337: 331: 329: 324: 322: 318: 314: 306: 301: 294: 292: 288: 286: 282: 278: 271: 269: 265: 259: 257: 252: 250: 246: 237: 233:(with a hat). 232: 231:Abram Belenky 228: 224: 220: 216: 212: 208: 204: 200: 196: 192: 187: 183: 181: 177: 176:21 Conditions 173: 169: 165: 161: 157: 147: 143: 140: 137: 133: 130: 127: 123: 120: 109: 105: 102: 99: 95: 92: 89: 85: 74: 70: 59: 55: 46: 40: 36: 35: 31: 19: 1257: 1250: 1243: 1236: 1220: 1215: 1207: 1202: 1194: 1189: 1177:. 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Index

2nd World Congress
template
Infobox recurring event
considered for merging
Kremlin
Moscow
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
1st Congress
3rd Congress
communist
revolutionary socialist
Petrograd
Moscow
21 Conditions
Communist International

Lev Karakhan
Karl Radek
Nikolai Bukharin
Mikhail Lashevich
Maxim Gorky
Vladimir Lenin
Sergey Zorin
Grigory Zinoviev
Maria Ilyinichna Ulyanova
Nicola Bombacci
Abram Belenky
ad hoc
1919 Founding Convention
E.H. Carr

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