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Vladimir Lenin

BB07-0102
ID Number: BB07-0102 Description: 105th Birth Anniversary of Vladimir Lenin Country or State: Soviet Union (USSR) Year: 22.04.1975 Face Value: 4 Russian kopek Series: 105th Birth Anniversary of V.I. Lenin Subject/Theme: Painting by Victor Zyplakow (1947) ...Read more



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ID Number: BB07-0102
Description: 105th Birth Anniversary of Vladimir Lenin
Country or State: Soviet Union (USSR)
Year: 22.04.1975
Face Value: 4 Russian kopek
Series: 105th Birth Anniversary of V.I. Lenin
Subject/Theme: Painting by Victor Zyplakow (1947)
Designer: I. Martynov
Perforation: comb 12 x 12¼
Printing: Offset lithography
Paper: Coated with lacquer
Dimensions (B x H): 37 x 52 mm
Emission: 7,200,000
Catalog Number: Michel SU 4354
Stamp Number SU 4313
Yvert et Tellier SU 4134
Stanley Gibbons SU 4393
AFA number SU 4305
Zagorskiy SU 4404

Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known by the alias Lenin (22 April 1870 – 21 January 1924), was a Russian communist revolutionary, politician and political theorist. He served as head of government of Soviet Russia from 1917 to 1924 and of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1924. Under his administration, Russia and then the wider Soviet Union became a one-party communist state governed by the Russian Communist Party. Ideologically a Marxist, he developed political theories known as Leninism.

Born to a wealthy middle-class family in Simbirsk, Lenin embraced revolutionary socialist politics following his brother's 1887 execution. Expelled from Kazan Imperial University for participating in protests against the Russian Empire's Tsarist government, he devoted the following years to a law degree. He moved to Saint Petersburg in 1893 and became a senior Marxist activist. In 1897 he was arrested for sedition and exiled to Shushenskoye for three years where he married Nadezhda Krupskaya. After his exile he moved to Western Europe where he became a prominent theorist in the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP). In 1903 he took a key role in a RSDLP ideological split leading the Bolshevik faction against Julius Martov's Mensheviks. Encouraging insurrection during Russia's failed Revolution of 1905, he later campaigned for the First World War to be transformed into a Europe-wide proletarian revolution, which as a Marxist he believed would cause the overthrow of capitalism and its replacement with socialism. After the 1917 February Revolution ousted the Tsar and established a Provisional Government, he returned to Russia to play a leading role in the October Revolution in which the Bolsheviks overthrew the new regime.

Lenin's Bolshevik government initially shared power with the Left Socialist Revolutionaries elected soviets and a multi-party Constituent Assembly, although by 1918 it had centralised power in the new Communist Party. Lenin's administration redistributed land among the peasantry and nationalised banks and large-scale industry. It withdrew from the First World War by signing a treaty with the Central Powers and promoted world revolution through the Communist International. Opponents were suppressed in the Red Terror, a violent campaign administered by the state security services; tens of thousands were killed or interned in concentration camps. His administration defeated right and left-wing anti-Bolshevik armies in the Russian Civil War from 1917 to 1922 and oversaw the Polish–Soviet War of 1919–1921. Responding to wartime devastation, famine and popular uprisings, in 1921 Lenin encouraged economic growth through the market-orientated New Economic Policy. Several non-Russian nations secured independence after 1917, but three re-united with Russia through the formation of the Soviet Union in 1922. In increasingly poor health, Lenin expressed opposition to the growing power of his successor, Joseph Stalin, before dying at his dacha in Gorki.

Widely considered one of the most significant and influential figures of the 20th century, Lenin was the posthumous subject of a pervasive personality cult within the Soviet Union until its dissolution in 1991. He became an ideological figurehead behind Marxism–Leninism and thus a prominent influence over the international communist movement. A controversial and highly divisive individual, Lenin is viewed by supporters as a champion of socialism and the working class, while critics on both the left and right emphasize his role as founder and leader of an authoritarian regime responsible for political repression and mass killings.