Pavel Feoktistovich Chernyshev (1854 – March 1876) was a Russian Empire medical student who died in custody after being arrested for his political views.

Pavel Feoktistovich Chernyshev
Bornsometime in/around 1854
DiedMarch 1876
EducationMedical and Surgical Academy, St. Petersburg
OccupationMedical student
Political partyNarodnik (Populist)[1]

Early life edit

Pavel Feoktistovich Chernyshev was born around 1854 in Samara, in the Empire of Russia, to noble parents.[1]

Arrest and death edit

By 1874, Chernyshev was a medical student at the Medical and Surgical Academy in St. Petersburg. While a student, he helped organize and served as treasurer for the Samartsy, a populist St. Petersburg student society.[1] He took part in the "Going to the People" movement, and it is for this participation that he was arrested by authorities on August 30, 1874 and incarcerated shortly thereafter. He was released on bail on March 11, 1876; having contracted tuberculosis while in prison, he died in a hospital soon after his release.[1]

Chernyshev's primary claims to fame are his imprisonment, death, and funeral, all of which occurred over about 18 months from his arrest to his funeral on March 30, 1876. The funeral at Volkovo Cemetery became the seed of a large populist anti-government demonstration,[2] and the composer Grigori A. Machtet wrote the poem "The Last Farewell" (literally "Succumbed to the ordeal of imprisonment") in his memory. The poem lives on as the lyrics to the song "Slavery and Suffering," (Esclavage et souffrance)[3] which has been performed by the Red Army Choir and was a popular revolutionary song.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Pavel Feoktistovich Chernyshev entry, The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 1979. [1]
  2. ^ "Rites of Protest: Populist Funerals in Imperial St. Petersburg, 1876-1878" [2]
  3. ^ "Esclavage et souffrance." Performed by Alexandrov Ensemble, (former) Red Army Choir. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4eA1IkCGEtM