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  1. Alexander Ivanovich Guchkov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ива́нович Гучко́в; 14 October 1862 – 14 February 1936) was a Russian politician, Chairman of the Third Duma and Minister of War in the Russian Provisional Government.

  2. Aleksandr Ivanovich Guchkov was a statesman and leader of the moderate liberal political movement in Russia between 1905 and 1917. The son of a wealthy Moscow merchant, Guchkov studied at the universities of Moscow and Berlin, traveled widely, fought against the British in the South African (Boer)

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Alexander Guchkov was war minister in the Provisional Government until May 1915, when he was replaced by Kerensky. Before his departure he delivered a speech on the fate of Russia and her government, suggesting that it was at the “edge of an abyss”:

  4. the Russian Empire was Alexander Ivanovich Guchkov (1862-'%....~ 1936). A political biography of Guchkov, whose career in the national limelight-in the legislature (the State Duma), in the war-indus-tries committees during World War I, and in 1917 in the Provisional Gov-ernment-was central to the story of the collapse of the old order, is long

  5. Aleksandr Ivanovich Guchkov (əlyĬksän´dər ēvä´nəvĬch gŏŏch´kôf), 1862–1936, Russian political leader. A prominent businessman, during the 1905 revolution he helped found the Octobrist party, which was based on acceptance of Czar Nicholas II's October Manifesto; the manifesto in effect made Russia a constitutional monarchy.

  6. Aug 25, 2017 · The Minister of War in the Provisional Government, Guchkov, is the former alter ago of Stolypin the “hangman”. The Foreign Minister, Milyukov , is an imperialist who supports continuing the war “to a victorious end”.

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  8. May 22, 2023 · Aleksandr Guchkov is a well-known figure of Russian politics from the first two decades of the 20 th century. However, his activities in exile have not been thoroughly studied. Among the myriad of engagements against the Soviet regime in the 1920s–1930s that Guchkov planned, the Conradi-Polunin Process (May–November 1923) in Lausanne stands out.