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Golubovskiĭ, M. (Mikhail Stepanovich), 1908-1979


  • URI(s)

  • Fuller Name

    • Mikhail Stepanovich
  • Variants

    • Голубовский, М. (Михаил Степанович), 1908-1979
  • Additional Information

    • Birth Date

        1908
    • Death Date

        1979-04-06
    • Birth Place

        Stavropolʹskiĭ kraĭ (Russia)
    • Associated Language

        Russian
    • Occupation

      War correspondents

      Editors

      (lcsh) World War, 1939-1945--Collaborationists--Belarus

      Authors, Russian

  • See Also

  • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Sources

    • found: Golubovskiĭ, M. Odinnadt︠s︡atʹ soi︠u︡znykh respublik, 1937:colophon (М. Голубовский = M. Golubovskiĭ)
    • found: Russian Wikipedia, May 29, 2018entry for Golubovskiĭ, Vasiliĭ Stepanovich (One of general Vasiliĭ Stepanovich Golubovskiĭ's brothers was Mikhail Stepanovich Golubovskiĭ, war correspondent for Izvestii︠a︡; during WWII taken prisoner by Germans and wrote in the collaborationist press under the pseudonyms Bobrov and Solovʹev, ended up in American camp near Munich, later lived in Paris and the US, where he wrote Kogda bogi molchat/When the Gods are silent under the name Mikhail Solovʹev/Mikhail Soloviev and died in 1979)
    • found: rus_vopros.live journal Website, viewed May 29, 2018posted 2013-08-04 (Mikhail Stepanovich Golubovskiĭ (Bobrov), active member of NSTPR, born 1908, journalist for Izvestii︠a︡, lieutenant in Red Army during WWII, taken prisoner in 1941, editor of Bobruisk newspaper Novyĭ putʹ on German-occupied territory under the pseudonym Mikhail Bobrov, which he continued to use as a contributor to the journal Vozrozhdenie after the war, later wrote several books under the pseudonym Mikhail Solovʹev)
    • found: Babicheva, M.E. Pisateli vtoroĭ volny russkoĭ emigrat︠s︡ii, 2005:page 245-248 (Михаил Степанович Соловьев = Mikhail Stepanovich Solovʹev. Born in 1908 in Stavropolʹskiĭ kraĭ, had two older brothers who became generals in the Red Army. After graduating from MGU with a degree in history became editor of sports section of Izvestii︠a︡, promoted to war correspondent by Bukharin in 1932, taken prisoner by Germans in 1941, eventually ended up in DP camp near Salzburg 1946-1950, where he published newspaper Plami︠a︡ and contributed to Kolumb, Pochta Kolumba, and Ogni; Soviet secret services twice tried to get him repatriated but he was allowed to move to the United States in 1951, where he wrote several autobiographical works, and died in Alexandria, Va., on April 6, 1979)
    • found: OCLC database, May 29, 2018(access point: Golubovskiĭ, M.; usage: M. Golubovskiĭ)
  • Editorial Notes

    • [Non-Latin script reference not evaluated.]
  • Instance Of

  • Scheme Membership(s)

  • Collection Membership(s)

  • Change Notes

    • 2018-06-05: new
    • 2018-06-06: revised
  • Alternate Formats