Who married Ekaterina Svanidzé?
Joseph Stalin married Ekaterina Svanidzé on . Ekaterina Svanidze was 21 years old on the wedding day (21 years, 3 months and 2 days). Joseph Stalin was 27 years old on the wedding day (27 years, 6 months and 28 days). The age gap was 6 years, 3 months and 27 days.
The marriage lasted 1 years, 5 months and 2 days (520 days ). The marriage ended on .
Ekaterina Svanidzé
Ekaterina « Kato » Svanidzé (en géorgien : ქეთევან სვანიძე), née le et morte le , géorgienne, est la première épouse de Joseph Staline. Le mariage a lieu à l'église, à la demande de Kato, le 16 juillet 1906.
Après un mariage parsemé des absences de « Koba », surnom que porte alors Staline, elle meurt, probablement du typhus, le 22 novembre 1907.
Le 31 mars 1907, Ekaterina donne naissance à un fils, Iakov Djougachvili, qui grandit jusqu'à l'âge de quatorze ans en Géorgie, élevé par sa tante et entouré de sa famille maternelle. Il doit ensuite vivre à Moscou auprès de son père avec qui il a une relation difficile, ce qui le pousse à commettre une tentative de suicide.
À la mort de son épouse, Staline aurait confié à un ami : « Cette créature adoucissait mon cœur de pierre ; elle est morte, et avec elle sont morts mes derniers sentiments tendres envers l'humanité ». Pendant les Grandes Purges, une partie de la belle-famille de Staline, après avoir partagé des années son quotidien au Kremlin, fut arrêtée, puis exécutée avec son accord. Son beau-frère, Aliocha Svanidzé, compagnon de séminaire de Staline et sa femme Maria Svanidzé étant notamment fusillés en 1941.
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Joseph Stalin
Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin (born Dzhugashvili; 18 December [O.S. 6 December] 1878 – 5 March 1953) was a Soviet politician and revolutionary who led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. He held office as General Secretary of the Communist Party from 1922 to 1952 and as premier from 1941 until his death. Despite initially governing the country as part of a collective leadership, he eventually consolidated power to become a dictator by the 1930s. Stalin codified the party's official interpretation of Marxism as Marxism–Leninism, and his version of it is referred to as Stalinism.
Born into a poor Georgian family in Gori, Russian Empire, Stalin attended the Tiflis Theological Seminary before joining the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. He raised funds for Vladimir Lenin's Bolshevik faction through bank robberies and other crimes, and edited the party's newspaper, Pravda. He was repeatedly arrested and underwent several exiles to Siberia. After the Bolsheviks seized power in the October Revolution of 1917, Stalin served as a member of the Politburo, and from 1922 used his position as General Secretary to gain control over the party bureaucracy. After Lenin's death in 1924, Stalin won the leadership struggle over rivals including Leon Trotsky. Stalin's doctrine of socialism in one country became central to the party's ideology, and his five-year plans starting in 1928 led to forced agricultural collectivisation, rapid industrialisation, and a centralised command economy. His policies contributed to a famine in 1932–1933 which killed millions, including in the Holodomor in Ukraine. Between 1936 and 1938, Stalin executed hundreds of thousands of his real and perceived political opponents in the Great Purge. Under his regime, an estimated 18 million people passed through the Gulag system of forced labour camps, and more than six million people, including kulaks and entire ethnic groups, were deported to remote areas of the country.
Stalin promoted Marxism–Leninism abroad through the Communist International and supported European anti-fascist movements. In 1939, his government signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact with Nazi Germany, enabling the Soviet invasion of Poland at the start of World War II. Germany broke the pact by invading the Soviet Union in 1941, leading Stalin to join the Allies. The Red Army, with Stalin as its commander-in-chief, repelled the German invasion and captured Berlin in 1945, ending the war in Europe. The Soviet Union established Soviet-aligned states in Eastern Europe, and with the United States emerged as a global superpower, with the two countries entering a period of rivalry known as the Cold War. Stalin presided over post-war reconstruction and the first Soviet atomic bomb test in 1949. During these years, the country experienced another famine and a state-sponsored antisemitic campaign culminating in the "doctors' plot". In 1953, Stalin died after a stroke. He was succeeded as leader by Georgy Malenkov and eventually Nikita Khrushchev, who in 1956 denounced Stalin's rule and began a campaign of "de-Stalinisation".
One of the 20th century's most significant figures, Stalin has a deeply contested legacy. During his rule, he was the subject of a pervasive personality cult within the international Marxist–Leninist movement, which revered him as a champion of socialism and the working class. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Stalin has retained a degree of popularity in some of the post-Soviet states (particularly Russia and Georgia) as an economic moderniser and victorious wartime leader who transformed the Soviet Union into an industrialised superpower. Conversely, his regime has been widely condemned for overseeing mass repression and man-made famine which resulted in the suffering and deaths of millions of Soviet citizens.
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