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139:. Chkheidze's memoirs are a valuable first-hand account of the 1917-1955 events in Russia and the Soviet Union. He committed suicide in Prague in 1974.
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camp from where he was not able to return until 1955. He was a follower of
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Russians outside Russia: The Emigre
Community in Czechoslovakia, 1918-1938
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in the 1920s and emerged as one of their leaders in the 1930s. During
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military service and fought on the side of White armies during the
131:’s philosophy and wrote on Russian society and culture as well as
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72:Born to a Georgian father, of the noble family of
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116:underground in Prague, but was arrested by the
76:, and a Russian mother, Chkheidze entered the
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241:White Russian emigrants to Czechoslovakia
88:. In 1921, as part of the defeated White
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112:, Chkheidze was active in Russian anti-
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92:forces, Chkheidze was evacuated to
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251:Russian people of Georgian descent
25:Konstantin Alexandrovich Chkheidze
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261:20th-century Russian philosophers
236:Nobility from the Russian Empire
51:Константин Александрович Чхеидзе
33:Konstantin Alexandrovič Čcheidze
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231:Nobility of Georgia (country)
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137:Soviet nationalities policy
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266:Suicides in Czechoslovakia
172:Chinyaeva, Elena (2001),
65:writer, philosopher, and
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123:in 1945 and placed in a
256:20th-century memoirists
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221:Russian male writers
20:Konstantin Chkheidze
155:Stepanov, Nikolay.
96:whence he moved to
226:Russian memoirists
161:Russkiy Arkhipelag
42:კონსტანტინე ჩხეიძე
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78:Imperial Russian
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86:North Caucasus
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216:Eurasianists
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135:legends and
110:World War II
106:Eurasianists
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67:White émigré
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211:1974 deaths
201:1897 births
195:Categories
143:References
133:Caucasian
82:civil war
74:Chkheidze
129:Fyodorov
59:Georgian
37:Georgian
90:Cossack
84:in the
63:Russian
47:Russian
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121:SMERSH
118:Soviet
98:Prague
94:Lemnos
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125:Gulag
55:Czech
29:Czech
178:ISBN
114:Nazi
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