Ivan Yuvachov
Ivan Pavlovich Yuvachev (1860–1940) was a Russian writer and Narodovolets, i.e., a member of The People's Will (Narodnaya Volya) revolutionary organization that assassinated Tsar Alexander II, after seven failed assassination attempts.[1] He was a defendant at the Trial of the Fourteen in 1884, where he was found guilty of "terrorist activities".[1]
Ivan Yuvachev | |
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![]() Ivan Yuvachev after 1900 | |
Born | Ivan Pavlovich Yuvachev 1860 St. Petersburg, Russia |
Died | 1940 (aged 79–80) Leningrad, USSR |
Occupation | Revolutionary, writer |
Known for | Member of The People's Will |
Children | Daniil Kharms |
Yuvachev served four years at Peter and Paul Fortress on the Neva River, and at the Schlusselburg Fortress.[1] He was imprisoned with fellow narodovolets Alexander Ulyanov, brother of Vladimir Lenin, who was hanged there. In this period he experienced a religious awakening, or perhaps a mental breakdown.[1] Rejecting an offer to be released to a monastery, Yuvachev served eight additional years of hard labor on Sakhalin island.[1] Anton Chekhov came to know Yuvachev well in this period, and later wrote about Yuvachev in a text recalling his time on Sakhalin.[2] Yuvachev emerged from prison a vocal pacifist, and he authored two memoirs and several religious-mystical tracts.[1]
Yuvachev is the father of Russian poet Daniil Kharms. A popular account of Kharm's birth has Yuvachev predicting the precise day of his son's birth in advance, and, from a telephone on Leo Tolstoy's estate, ordering his wife to adhere to the date.[1] She gave birth to her son on the date named by Yuvachev.
References
- Kharms, Daniil. Today I Wrote Nothing. 2009, p18-9
- Soviet literature, Issues 7–12. 1975, page 155