Nikolai Serno-Solovyevich

Nikolai Serno-Solovyevich
Born Николай Александрович Серно-Соловьевич
(1834-12-13)December 13, 1834
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died February 14, 1866(1866-02-14) (aged 31)
Irkutsk, Russian Empire
Occupation publicist, revolutionary

Nikolai Alexandrovich Serno-Solovyevich (Russian: Николáй Алексáндрович Се́рно-Соловье́вич) (13 December 1834 in Saint Petersburg, Imperial Russia – 14 February 1866 in Irkutsk) was a Russian publicist and revolutionary who was one of the founders of the extreme left organisation Zemlya i Volya.

A radical who rejected both the 1861 reforms and capitalism, seeing revolution as the only way forward for Russia, he was a regular correspondent to different publications of the Free Russian Press. A friend of Alexander Hertzen and Nikolai Ogaryov, as well as Nikolai Chernyshevsky, he became a pivotal link between the Saint Petersburg and the London centres of the Russian revolutionary movement. Arrested on 7 July 1862 alongside Chernyshevsky and taken to the Petropavlovskaya Fortress where he remained until 1865, Serno was deported to Siberia and died in 1866 in Irkutsk.[1][2]

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