「Comintern」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Comintern

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:103件

  • of mainly Marxist literature and worked for Comintern, a publisher of foreign-language texts for t
  • y Organization entered negotiations with the Comintern about collaboration between the communists a
  • 33, Bo Gu arrived in Jiangxi with the German Comintern adviser Otto Braun (Li De) and took control
  • the march of the Nanchang mutineers, led by ComIntern advisors and Communist Party of China member
  • ow in Moscow until February 1942, working on Comintern affairs and writing for its publication.
  • May 1952 to support an uprising organised by COMINTERN agents.
  • ited front tactic was first developed by the Comintern, an international communist organisation cre
  • He was at that time working on behalf of the Comintern and as an agent of the Loyalist Government's
  • munist movement since the dissolution of the Comintern, and confirmed the new realities after World
  • comes from coded correspondence between the Comintern and the party in Russia's RTsKhIDNI archive
  • hich Ballam reported his capitulation to the Comintern and urged the group to go back into the offi
  • xist political theories were anathema to the Comintern and its Soviet leaders, who believed all com
  • neevliet broke all ties with the CPH and the Comintern and formed his own party, the Revolutionair
  • The SKP was a section of Comintern and illegal in Finland until 1944.
  • Russky Golos was funded by the Comintern and by advertising, commercial newsstand and
  • He was a former member of the Comintern and the Balkan Communist Federation.
  • the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the Comintern, and the political police, or CHEKA.
  • ow refused to accept the admonishment of the Comintern and were subsequently expelled.
  • Upon the decision of the Comintern and Joseph Stalin himself the Macedonian Com
  • He was one of the first Japanese members of Comintern, and a pioneer in the Proletarian Literature
  • y was founded as the Canadian section of the Comintern, and was thus similar to Communist parties a
  • rance where she became an instructor for the Comintern and was also involved in the Communist movem
  • He was a member of the Comintern and often considered a covert Moscow-appoint
  • his return to Moscow, Lukanov worked at the Comintern and from 1941 on at the Hristo Botev Bulgari
  • links between the Moscow headquarters of the Comintern and the GRU and the Berlin group of the Red
  • ted a background report on Bachrach from the Comintern and received a positive report.
  • the vice director of Far East Department of Comintern and played an important role in the major de
  • us line of the KPO and was supportive of the Comintern and of the Stalinist regime in the Soviet un
  • Labour Unions and the Fifth Congress of the Comintern and in 1927 was elected to the Executive of
  • Helen Barrett Tenney worked for the Comintern apparatus in the 1930s and funnelled informa
  • ll under FBI scrutiny in connection with its Comintern Apparatus investigation.
  • f had denounced him as a Trotskyist traitor; Comintern archival documents reveal, however, that she
  • Documents from the Comintern Archive in Moscow reveal the relationship be
  • Comintern Archives in Moscow in the 1990s appear to co
  • conference of the Executive Committee of the Comintern, at which it was decided to reorganise the p
  • I took out the mention of the Comintern because the source cited a Comintern (Revise
  • She worked for the Comintern between 1918 and 1940, and was a member of t
  • rned to Russia and became a secretary of the Comintern but his influence decreased and he lost his
  • act was supposedly directed only against the Comintern, but in fact contained a secret agreement th
  • The CPI was dissolved in 1924 by the Comintern but in 1926, Connolly helped set up a second
  • He was a delegate at the Sixth Comintern Congress in 1928, and in 1929 he was elected
  • year he was a member of a delegation to the Comintern Congress in Moscow, where he met Lenin.
  • l Korsch, the book was attacked at the Fifth Comintern Congress in July 1924 by Grigory Zinoviev.
  • headed the Romanian delegation to the Third Comintern Congress, and was elected member of the Exec
  • only female Norwegian delegate to the Second Comintern Congress.
  • In 1922 Torp was a delegate at the Fourth Comintern Congress.
  • aldemokratiske Ungdomsforbund) at the Second Comintern Congress.
  • hey could present their case before the next Comintern Congress.
  • tion to Joseph Stalin, and the leadership of Comintern; consequently, he was expelled from the PCI.
  • The negotiations with the Comintern developed into a political trial against Lar
  • In 1930 the Comintern did yet another sharp turn, urging its Pales
  • In 1934, following the Comintern directive, he helped form the Popular Front,
  • ang Tailei arrived from Hong Kong with a new ComIntern directive: there would be no arms shipment c
  • during that time that he became critical of Comintern directives regarding the dissolution of Grea
  • he change followed a letter in 1922 from the Comintern Executive which stated that no newspaper sho
  • ervice and Shipping Corporation, a CPUSA and Comintern front organization for Soviet espionage acti
  • he was appointed, by order of Stalin and the Comintern, General Secretary of KKE.
  • The Joseph Stalin-controlled Comintern had decided in 1935 that, in response to the
  • With the Comintern having been dissolved during the war, the "D
  • art moved to Moscow in early 1923 to work at Comintern headquarters.
  • achers Club to the 2nd World Congress of the Comintern, held in Petrograd and Moscow.
  • a prominent Communist and a secretary of the Comintern; her mother, Ruf, was a Jewish Communist act
  • ed to communism and highly suspicious of the Comintern in China, and his army was one of the few KM
  • o a signatory of the Letter of the 22 to the Comintern in 1922.
  • nvited to attend the first conference of the Comintern in 1919, but did not affiliate.
  • arian communist and General Secretary of the Comintern in that period.
  • ventually, Bukharin lost his position in the Comintern in April 1929 and editorship of Pravda, and
  • and was created mainly as a response to the Comintern in Eastern Europe.
  • was hampered from the beginning because the Comintern itself had ordered the creation of the legal
  • e real situation in America, and if only the Comintern leaders could be made aware of it, they woul
  • ding Agnes Smedley, and other members of the Comintern leadership based in Shanghai.
  • arty, declaring that the group that held the Comintern line was the rightful Communist Party even i
  • er with SLID, because the NSL, following the Comintern line after the Seventh World Congress in sum
  • However, when the Comintern made its ultra-left turn in 1928 and denounc
  • fter going to the 1921 Third Congress of the Comintern Masanchi battled the Basmachi movement.
  • Radek, together with the Comintern member Dmitry Manuilsky, made an unsuccessfu
  • plit into two wings, one for and one against Comintern membership.
  • Notably, all of the Comintern messages to SON were sent after Baker visite
  • here were only 5000 troops remaining to this ComIntern mission.
  • se, a workers state, they had no use for the Comintern or the Communist Party.
  • remove his nemesis Grigory Zinoviev from the Comintern Presidency.
  • he settled in Moscow, and was active in the Comintern press.
  • Comintern project on Balkan Federation.
  • Early in 1922 the Comintern ruled against the Central Caucus's parallel
  • During the World War II the Comintern sent him back to Vardar Macedonia (being the
  • im at the ECCI Presidium and in May 1929 the Comintern sent an open letter to the American Communis
  • viet Union, where he started working for the Comintern, specializing in international economic prob
  • In March 1920, after the Comintern suggested that its British section should at
  • owed to leave Moscow before he convinced the Comintern that he had to go home to look after his wif
  • ired for not following the directions of the Comintern, the superior organ of the Communist Party o
  • s, trusting Vitali Holostenco to enforce the Comintern thesis on the Romanian state's heterogeneous
  • Moscow as representatives of the CCP to the Comintern, they persecuted Li by every means available
  • ere much diminished and were directed by the ComIntern to lie low in the deep countryside and to av
  • nd published as The Communist Movement: From Comintern To Cominform in 1975.
  • wo volume study The Communist Movement: From Comintern to Cominform.
  • la left his position as a functionary of the Comintern to become People's Commissar of Public Educa
  • He was sent by the Comintern to many parts of Europe, because his British
  • acional as his cover, Vidali was sent by the Comintern to Mexico to discipline the Mexican Communis
  • president of the executive committee of the Comintern, urged the British working class to rise up
  • Ultimately, the proposition to join the Comintern was approved at a party convention in Halle
  • saying it's not true, just surprising - the comintern was an organization of communist parties.
  • The Popular Front policy of the Comintern was introduced in 1934, succeeding its ultra
  • Romanian delegation to the Fifth and Seventh Comintern World Congresses, after the formation of Pop