Serhiy Oleksandrovych Yefremov (Ukrainian: Сергій Олександрович Єфремов; October 18, 1876 – March 31, 1939) was a Ukrainian literary journalist, historian, critic, political activist, statesman, and academician. He was a member of the Ukrainian Academy of Science (1919) and Shevchenko Scientific Society in Lviv.

Serhiy Yefremov
Сергій Єфремов
Serhiy Oleksandrovych Yefremov
Secretary of Nationalities[1]
In office
June 28, 1917 – July 17, 1917
Prime MinisterVolodymyr Vynnychenko
Preceded byposition created
Succeeded byOleksandr Shulhyn
Personal details
Born
Сергій Олександрович Єфремов
Serhiy Oleksandrovych Yefremov

(1876-10-18)October 18, 1876
Kyiv Governorate, Russian Empire (now Kyiv Oblast, Ukraine)
DiedMarch 31, 1939(1939-03-31) (aged 62) (speculative)
Vladimir, Soviet Union
Political partyUkrainian Party of Socialists-Federalists
SpouseHalyna Yefremova
Occupationpublic and political activist, statesman, literal critic, historian of literature, academician
Signature

Early years

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The family of Serhii Oleksandrovich Yefremov belonged to the clergy. One of the ancestors of the family, after the destruction of the autonomy of the Cossack Hetmanate in 1764, to receive a parish, had to change his original Ukrainian surname Okhrimenko to the Russian Yefremov (Okhrim – Yefrem).[2]

Serhiy Yefremov was born in the village of Palchik, Petrykivka Volost Zvenigorodka uezd of the Kyiv Governorate. Today the village still stands, but in Cherkasy Raion of the Cherkasy Oblast, in central Ukraine. He was born in an Eastern Orthodox priest family. He studied from 1891–1896 at the Kyiv Theological Academy. Later he graduated from the Faculty of Law at Saint Vladimir Imperial University of Kyiv.

Political start

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Political activity started during student years becoming the member of the Ukrainian Universal non-Party Democratic Organization. In 1904 became co-founder of the Ukrainian Radical Party, which in 1905 out of his initiative united together with the Ukrainian Democratic Party and establishing the Ukrainian Democratic Radical Party. In 1905 became the leader of the Ukrainian Social Union (USU) Peasant Union. In 1908 became the co-founder of the Society of Ukrainian Progressionists. He worked in the variety of Ukrainian periodicals such as Zoria, Pravda, Kyivan Past, Ukraina etc. In 1885–1918 he was the head of publishing Vik.

Secretariat

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He was arrested numerous times by the Russian authorities for pressing public speeches in defense of national culture and political freedoms in pre-revolutionary period. In March 1917 Yefremov entered the staff of the Central Rada. In April 1917, at the Ukrainian National Congress was elected as the deputy of the Head of the Rada and the member of the Mala Rada. On June 15, 1917 became the general secretary of the International Affairs in the newly formed Ukrainian government, General Secretary of the Ukrainian People's Republic.[3] On July 17, 1917 he was replaced by Oleksandr Shulhyn from the same political party. From September 1917 heads the Ukrainian Party of Socialists-Federalists. From April 1918 and until 1920 he did not hold any official positions.

Soviet Ukraine

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With the installation of Soviet power in Ukraine he was forced to go into hiding. In spring 1919, at the request of the Ukrainian Academy of Science, he was amnestied. From 1922 until 1928, he was one of the leaders of the Ukrainian Academy of Science. He was the chief defendant in the 1929 public show trial of the leaders of the supposed Union for the Liberation of Ukraine. In 1930, he was sentenced to death, but the sentence was later commuted to ten years in prison. He died in 1939 while in Vladimir Central Prison.[4]

References

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  1. ^ encyclopediaofukraine.com
  2. ^ Агатангел Кримський. Життєпис і літературна діяльність С. О. Єфремова // Записки історико-філологічного факультету відділу ВУАН. Книги II—III (1920—1922). Частина офіційна — Київ, 1923. — С. 42. (in Ukrainian)
  3. ^ M. Mintz, "The Secretariat of Internationality Affairs (Sekretariiat mizhnatsional’nykh spray) of the Ukrainian General Secretariat 1917–1918", Harvard Ukrainian Studies, Volume VI Number 1 March 1982, pp.25-42
  4. ^ Volodymyr Panchenko (October 26, 2011). "Life Without Illusions | the Ukrainian Week". ukrainianweek.com. Retrieved March 11, 2024.

Further reading

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