Razhden Arsenidze

Razhden Arsenidze (Georgian: რაჟდენ არსენიძე) (October 1, 1880 – May 24, 1965) was a Georgian jurist, journalist, and politician.

He was involved with the Georgian Social Democratic Labour Party, branch of Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and sided with its Menshevik wing in 1903. He later engaged in revolutionary journalism and was exiled by the Imperial Russian administration to Siberia whence he was able to return only after the 1917 February Revolution toppled down the Tsar’s government.

Arsenidze was one of the authors of the May 26, 1918 Act of Independence of Georgia[1] and was elected to the Constituent Assembly of Georgia in 1919. The same year, he became a Minister of Justice in the cabinet of Noe Zhordania, and held this post until being briefly succeeded by Evgeni Gegechkori in 1921. At the same time, he functioned as a secretary of the Central Committee of Georgian Social Democratic Labour Party.

The Red Army invasion of Georgia of 1921 forced him into exile to France[2] where he published his memoirs about Joseph Stalin (frequently cited in the works of a prominent U.S. Sovietologist Robert C. Tucker) and produced a study of the 18th-century Georgian code of King Vakhtang VI (both works published in Paris, 1963).

Arsenidze[3]died in Paris and was buried at the Leuville Cemetery.

Works

Sources

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Razhden Arsenidze.
Preceded by
Shalva Aleksi-Meskhishvili
Minister of Justice of Georgia
1919-1921
Succeeded by
Evgeni Gegechkori
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.