Dzhughashvili, Yakob (Stalin’s son by Ketevan): birth, ref1; fostered by inlaws at mother’s death, ref2, ref3; Stalin’s separation from, ref4; Stalin visits as youth, ref5; home life with Stalin and Nadya, ref6; attempted suicide, ref7, ref8; as prisoner-of-war, ref9; shot by Germans, ref10
Dzhugheli, Severian
Dzierzyński, Felix: Stalin attacks on national question, ref1; employs state terror methods; co-writes report with Stalin on party/ state institutions, ref4; in Lenin’s Testament, ref5; and Lenin’s health decline, ref6; at Lenin’s funeral, ref7; as head of GPU, ref8; and threat of rival parties; relations with Stalin, ref10; and Stalin’s vengefulness, ref11
Eastman, Max
Eden, Anthony,
Egnatashvili, Yakob
Ehrenburg, Ilya
Eisenhower, General Dwight D.,
Eismont, Nikolai,
Eizenshtein, Sergei
El-Registan, Garold
Emancipation Edict (1861)
Engels, Friedrich,
Enukidze, Abel,
Eristavi, Count Rapael
Eshba, Yefrem
Estonia: revolutionary unrest in, ref1; resists Soviet expansionism, ref2; as Soviet republic, ref3, ref4; reclaims independence, ref5; Stalin demands and occupies, ref6; Germans conquer, ref7; reannexed by USSR; Stalin’s post-war aims in, ref11; armed resistance in, ref12, ref13; deportations from, ref14;
Ethiopia
Europe: post-war settlement negotiated,; east under Soviet control, ref5, ref6, ref7; Marshall Aid for, ref11; economic policy in east, ref12; national independence in east, ref13; effect of Khrushchëv’s Stalin denunciation in east, ref14
Fadeev, Alexander,;
famines,
Fascism
Finland: hostility to Russia, ref1; self-rule proposed for, ref2; secedes from Russia (1918), ref3; as potential invader of USSR, ref4, ref5, ref6; Soviet war with (1939–40), ref7, ref8
Five-Year Plans: First,, ref11; Second, ref12, ref13, ref14
forced labour,;
Fotieva, Lidia
France: Politburo perceives as threat, ref1; attitude to USSR, ref2, ref3; Stalin woos, ref4; neutrality in Spanish Civil War, ref5; pre-war relations with USSR, ref6; Germans defeat (1940), ref7, ref8; Stalin’s concern for, ref9
Franco, General Francisco,
Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria
French Communist Party,
Fried, Eugen
Galperin, Lev
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand (Mahatma)
Gegechkori, Yevgeni
Genghis Khan
Georgia: under Russian control, ref1; social life, ref2; traditions and culture, ref3, ref4; Marxism in, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9; unrest in, ref10, ref11; peasants in, ref12, ref13; nationalism in, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19; Bolshevik-Menshevik differences in, ref20, ref21, ref22; Stalin’s preoccupation with, ref23, ref24; in Stalin’s
Georgiu-Dej, Gheorghe
Germans (ethnic): killed in Great Terror
Germany: Soviet post-war policy in, ref1; in First World War, ref2; allows Lenin to return to Russia, ref3; peace ultimatum to Russia, ref4; Lenin plans intervention in, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8; Lenin favours understanding with, ref9, ref10; military cooperation with Soviet Union, ref11, ref12; Kautsky’s influence in, ref13; economic development, ref14; Communist Party in, ref15, ref16, ref17; prospective war with USSR, ref18; and Nazi repressions, ref19; finds Soviet collaborators after invasion, ref20; economic disruption in, ref21; Stalin’s pre-war policy on, ref22, ref23, ref24; as threat, ref25, ref26; intervenes in Spanish Civil War, ref27; annexes Austria and Czechoslovakia, ref28; signs Anti-Comintern Pact, ref29; expansionism, ref30; non-aggression pact with USSR (1939), ref31, ref32; invades and conquers Poland, ref33; advance in West (1940), ref34, ref35; invades USSR (Operation Barbarossa), ref36; conquests and advance in USSR, ref37, ref38; wartime atrocities, ref39, ref40, ref41; advance halted, ref42; successes in North Africa, ref43; casualties at Stalingrad, ref44; retreats before Red Army, ref45; antipathy to Panslavism, ref46; post-war treatment by Allies, ref47, ref48; USSR demands reparations from, ref49, ref50, ref51, ref52; Allied advances against, ref53; defeat and surrender (1945), ref54, ref55; postwar denazification policy on, ref56; occupation zones, ref57; Democratic Republic (East Germany) formed, ref58; Federal Republic (West Germany) formed, ref59; Stalin proposes united government in, ref60;
Germogen (Rector of Tiflis Spiritual Seminary),
Getty, J. Arch,
Gio, Artëm
Glavlit
Glurzhidze, Grigol
Goebbels, Josef,
Gogebashvili, Yakob,
Golovanov, General A.E.
Gomułka, Władysław,
Gorbachëv, Mikhail,
Gorbatov, Boris
Gori, Georgia,
Gorki, Maxim,