Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Descendant traces Lenin's family to 13th century

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Descendant traces Lenin's family to 13th century

    Descendant traces Lenin's family to 13th century

    08/05/2007 15:20 ULYANOVSK, May 8 (RIA Novosti) - A German researcher,
    who is a distant relative of Russian Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin,
    said Tuesday he had traced the common Western European branch of their
    ancestral tree to the 13th century.

    Gunter Kruse, from the southern German city of Bayreuth, told a press
    conference in Ulyanovsk (formerly Simbirsk), Lenin's birthplace in
    eastern Russia, that he is a second cousin once removed to the
    revolutionary. He said that since embarking on his genealogical
    journey in 1970, he had discovered evidence about a further thousand
    family members, including leaders of the Hanseatic League, which
    brought together merchant guilds within the cities of northern Germany
    and the Baltic in the 12th century.

    The starting point for Gunter's research was a German translation of
    Soviet author Marietta Shaginian's novel about Lenin's family, which
    was drawn from rare archives.

    According to the book, Lenin's maternal grandmother, Anna Grosschopf,
    was the daughter of Johann Gottlieb Grosschopf, a German merchant from
    Lubeck, who emigrated to St. Petersburg in 1790.

    Kruse's own mother's maiden name was Grosschopf, and he decided to
    find out whether she was a relative to Lenin's German ancestors.

    Kruse made his first visit to Lenin's birthplace in 2002, hoping to
    learn more about the Bolshevik leader's roots at local museums. He is
    now collaborating with Ulyanovsk museum researchers on an
    international book project aiming to bring together all the
    genealogical data collected by himself and other descendants of the
    Russian revolutionary.

    The leader of the 1917 Bolshevik revolution and the founder of the
    Soviet state, Lenin is a controversial figure in modern-day Russia, as
    the reality of his Communist utopia brought civil war, leading to
    years of political repression and economic hardship.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X