Vladimir Zeeler

Vladimir Zeeler
Born Владимир Феофилович Зеелер
(1874-06-06)June 6, 1874
Kiev, Russian Empire
Died December 27, 1954(1954-12-27) (aged 80)
Paris, France
Occupation lawyer • politician • journalist • editor

Vladimir Feofilovich Zeeler (Russian: Владимир Феофилович Зеелер, 6 June 1874, Kiev, Ukraine, then Russian Empire, – 27 December 1954, Paris, France) was a Russian lawyer, state official and political activist, the Interior Minister in the short-lived South Russian Government; since 1919 a journalist, editor, memoirist and philanthropist, the Secretary of the Paris-based Russian Union of Writers and Journalists for thirty years.[1][2]

Biography

A Kharkov University graduate, Zeeler started his career as a lawyer in Rostov-on-Don where he also worked for a City Duma. An avid art collector, in 1910—1918 he was the head of the Rostov and Nakhichevan Fine Arts Society.[3] Zeeler became involved in active politics in 1917 when, now as a prominent member of the Constitutional Democratic Party, he came to head its Don and Kuban regional Committee, which led to his being elected a Mayor of Rostov-on-Don. In his 28 October 1917 statement Zeeler condemned the Bolshevik-led October Revolution and on behalf of the Rostov Duma refused to sign the allegiance to those whom he referred to as 'bandits'.[4]

He took an active part in financing and forming the regular White Army units[5] and, after general Alexey Kaledin's suicide, supported his successor Ataman Anatoly Nazarov, serving for a while (according to Anton Denikin) as "an effective and zealous intermediary between the Volunteer Army on the one hand and the greedy Rostov plutocracy and our enemy, the revolutionary democracy, on the other."[6] In 1919—1920 Zeeler was the Interior Minister at the Denikin-formed South Russian Government. After the White Army defeat he left Russia and for the rest of his life resided in Paris. Zeeler's extensive art collection was nationalized and became part of the Don Regional Art Museum (later the Rostov Regional Art Museum).[7][8]

In France

In Paris, Vladimir Zeeler became a pivotal figure of the Russian emigration. In 1921 he joined the Russian Committee for Helping Russian Citizens abroad. He helped to organize and for thirty years was the secretary of the Union of Russian Writers and Journalists in Paris.[9] A treasurer of the Union of Russian Lawyers in France and (since 1927) a secretary of the central committee of the Days of Russian Culture event, Zeeler toured with lectures, actively contributed to Russkaya Mysl (the Pyotr Struve-revived 1921-1927 version of the originally Moscow-based magazine) and was one of the editors of the book Remembering the Perished (Памяти погибших, 1929), memorizing members of the Constitutional Democrats Party who died during the 1918-1920 Russian Civil War.[10][11]

References

  1. Зеелер, Владимир Феофилович at the Russians Abroad. The Biographical Dictionary // Российское зарубежье во Франции, 1919-2000: биографический словарь. Т. 1. М., 2008.
  2. Union of Russian Writers and Journalists in Paris. Russian Literary Dictionary
  3. The Russian Dictionary of Scientific Societies. Справочник научных обществ России. Авт.-сост. И. И. Комарова.
  4. Bugayev, A. The History of the Russian Civil War on Don. February 1917 - February 1918. // Бугаев А. Очерки истории гражданской войны на Дону (февраль 1917 г. — февраль 1918 г.), Ростов-на-Дону, 2010, стр. 106.
  5. Kanishcheva, N.I. The Cadet Party After the Bolshevist Coup. Russian Political Parties in the Past and Toda // Кадетская партия после большевистского переворота. Политические партии России: история и современность. М., 2000]
  6. А. Деникин. Очерки русской смуты. Vol. 2.
  7. Ростовский областной музей изобразительных искусств. The Rostov-on-Don Art Museum.
  8. Dolgusheva, G. Ростовский областной музей изобразительных искусств.
  9. Russian Paris (pdf). - www.bsu.by
  10. Памяти погибших / Ред. Н. И. Астров, В. Ф. Зеелер, П. Н. Милюков, кн. В. А. Оболенскнй, С. А. Смирнов, Л. Е. Эльяшев. Париж, 1929
  11. The Unforgotten Graves. Russian Abroad. 1917-1997 Obituaries. Vol. II. 1999 // Незабытые могилы. Российское зарубежье: некрологи 1917-1997. Сост. В.Н. Чуваков. Т. 2. М., 1999.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.