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Peter Vladimirov

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Pyotr Parfenovich Vladimirov
Pyotr Vlasov c. 1946
Born1905
Died10 September 1953 (aged c. 1948)
Alma materMoscow Institute of Oriental Studies
Occupation(s)Diplomat and journalist
Known forThe Vladimirov Diaries

Peter or Pyotr Parfenovich Vlasov, better known under his pen name Vladimirov, (Russian: Пётр Парфёнович Влади́миров/Влáсов; 1905 – 10 September 1953) was a Soviet diplomat and journalist. He is best known for The Vladimirov Diaries, in which he recounted the events in Yan'an during the Second World War, particularly information on Mao Zedong.[1][2]

From May 1938 through to November 1945, he served as a correspondent for the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union (TASS). At the same time, from May 1942 to 1945, Vladimirov also acted as a liaison officer for Comintern to the headquarters of the Communist Party of China in Yan'an, the capital of the so-called Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia Border Region.

In The Vladimirov Diaries, he recounted events in Yan'an during the Second World War. The diary criticized Mao's government and has been heavily edited for Soviet propaganda purposes.

Vladimirov's last appointment was as a Soviet ambassador to Burma (1952); but, due to illness and death, he was unable to start working at that position.

Vlasov was married to Maria Danilovna Vlasova; they had two sons, Boris and Yury (born 1935). Yury became an Olympic champion in weightlifting and a prominent writer, he published his father's diaries in 1973, twenty years after his death.[3]

References

  1. ^ Петр Парфенович Владимиров. hrono.ru
  2. ^ В. М. Лурье; Валерий Яковлевич Кочик (2002). ГРУ: дела и люди. ОЛМА Медиа Групп. p. 365. ISBN 978-5-7654-1499-6.
  3. ^ "ВЛАСОВ Юрий Петрович". biograph.comstar.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 18 November 2007.