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  1. Roman Vatslavovich Malinovsky (Russian: Рома́н Ва́цлавович Малино́вский; 18 March 1876 – 5 November 1918) was a prominent Bolshevik politician before the Russian revolution, while at the same time working as the best-paid agent for the Okhrana, the Tsarist secret police.

  2. Roman Malinovsky (1876 - 1918) foi um espião ao serviço da Okhrana, infiltrado no Partido Bolchevique nos anos que antecederam a Revolução Russa de 1917 . Participou da Revolução Russa de 1905. Foi preso em 1909 e expulso de São Petersburgo.

  3. Roman Malinovsky, the son of Roman Catholic peasants, was born in the Plotsk Province of Russian Poland, on 18th March, 1876. He was orphaned at an early age and was in trouble with the local police for getting involved in criminal activities. His third offense being that of robbery with breaking and entry, for which he had served a prison term ...

  4. Dicionário Político - Roman Malinovsky. Roman Malinovsky. (1876-1918): Traidor bolchevique participou da Revolução de 1905, foi preso em 1909 e expulso de São Petersburgo. Preso em Moscou em 1910, tornou-se agente da Okhrana recebendo 100 rublos por mês para delatar os membros do Partido Bolchevique e os locais em que guardavam literatura ilegal.

  5. 23 de jul. de 2019 · Roman Malinovsky, a life without a cause. by. Elwood, Ralph Carter, 1936-. Publication date. 1977. Topics. Malinovskiĭ, Roman Vat͡slavovich, 1876-1918, Spies -- Russia -- Biography, Russia -- History -- Revolution, 1917-1921 -- Secret service -- Biography. Publisher.

  6. The life and deeds of Roman Malinovsky and the political line pursued by the Tsarist Police Department in the Social Democratic Party is reconstructed here from the police archives and from the testimony before the Extraordinary Commis-sion of the Provisional government in I9I7. All the testimony before the main

  7. 16 de nov. de 2018 · Carter’s Roman Malinovsky: A Life without a Cause (Newtonville: ORP, 1977) had a typical origin. He noticed that both Menshevik and Bolshevik newspapers in 1914 spent a lot of time on the Malinovsky affair, although unsurprisingly from very different perspectives.