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  1. Natalia Sedova

    Natalia Sedova

    Russian revolutionary and second wife of Leon Trotsky

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  1. Natalia Ivanovna Sedova ( Russian: Ната́лья Ива́новна Седо́ва; 5 April 1882, in Romny, Russian Empire – 23 January 1962, in Corbeil-Essonnes, Paris, France) is best known as the second wife of Leon Trotsky, the Russian revolutionary. She was also an active revolutionary and wrote on cultural matters pertaining to Marxism.

  2. Natalia Sedova. Natalia Sedova, the daughter of a wealthy merchant, was born in Romny, Russia on 5th April, 1882. She became involved in revolutionary activity and met Leon Trotsky in the summer of 1902. At the time he was married to Alexandra Sokolovskaya and had just escaped from captivity in Siberia.

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  3. Aug 24, 2020 · Eighty years have passed since the assassination of Leon Trotsky at the hands of Stalinism, and as anti-capitalist feminists we cannot fail to remember his companion in life and struggle, Natalia Ivanovna Sedova, who brought Leon together, confronted the most powerful bureaucratic apparatus in history, and was also the cornerstone in keeping ...

  4. In Paris, he met Natalia Sedova, who became his second wife in 1903 and lifelong companion. Trotsky's first wife and their two daughters, Tina and Zina, suffered imprisonment or death at Stalin's hands. Natalia, who had two sons, Leon and Sergei, was in Mexico City with her husband when a Soviet agent buried an ice axe in his skull on August 21 ...

  5. Feb 3, 2022 · Natalia Trotsky Raps Fraud in Times Story (1948) New GPU Slander Drive Is in the Making (1948) (from Labor Action) Fabrication of a Trotsky ‘Testament’ (1948) (from The Militant) Resignation from the Fourth International (1951) Corrections to France-Soir Interview (1961) ‾ ‾ ‾. The Barta – Sedova Letters (1946–49)

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  7. Leon Trotsky, and his wife Natalia, arriving in Mexico in 1937 accompanied by Frida Kahlo. Trotsky’s exile. Trotsky was forced into exile outside the Soviet Union in February 1929 because of his criticism of Joseph Stalin's government. For the next eight years, Trotsky and his wife, Natalia Sedova, wandered among several countries under ...

  8. Mar 15, 2024 · After her husband's assassination in 1940, Natalia Sedova remained in Mexico and maintained contact with many exiled revolutionaries. Her best-known work in these last years was a biography of Trotsky, which she co-authored with fellow Russian revolutionary Victor Serge.

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