Alexander Ilyich UlyanovAlexander Ilyich UlyanovHave you ever heard of Alexander Ilyich Ulyanov? Probably not, but you are not the only one. Most people have heard of Alexanders brother, Vladimir, more commonly known as the great Russian revolutionary Lenin. Vladimir is credited as the man responsible for the Russian Revolution, but his revolutionary cause may have been sparked because of his older brothers death. Therefore Alexander may be just as responsible for the Russian Revolution as Vladimir.
Alexander was born in 1866. His father, Iyla Nikolaeyich Ulyanov, was an inspector of public schools, credited with the construction of 450 schoolhouses. His mother, Maria, was the daughter of surgeon and landowner. Alexander, nicknamed Sasha, was the oldest of six children. Vladimir was the third of the six, and four years younger than Alexander. Vladimir looked up to his older brother from a young age. When Alexander came home from school in a new students uniform, Vladimir asked his brother for the same type of uniform.
The two brothers differed in personalities. Alexander was very serious, reserved, and rather quiet. On the other hand, Vladimir was noisy, boisterous, sharp of the tongue, and a player of practical jokes.
Both Alexander and Vladimir were top students in their classes. Each won gold medals for being the best student. Alexander excelled at science while his younger brother excelled at Latin, History, and Literature. Alexanders favorite author was Dostoevsky while Vladimir preferred Turneniev and Tolstoy. In 1883, Alexander went to St. Petersburg to attend the university. At the school, he was initially absorbed in scientific research. He won a gold medal for his zoological study of earthworms.
In January 1886, Alexanders father died of cerebral hemourage. A few months after his fathers death, Alexander began to get involved in student causes. Alexander participated in illegal meetings, demonstrations and ran propaganda activities among other students and working class people. He joined his fellow students at a memorial service for officials who had brought about the peasant emancipation. Shortly thereafter, he took part in a student demonstration and some of his fellow students were expelled for their participation in the act. Alexander was deeply upset by their expulsion, and he felt very guilty.
In the laboratory, Alexander began experimenting with explosives along with doing research on sea spiders and worms. Because of his knowledge of explosives, he was drawn into a terrorist plot to assassinate Alexander III. He was one of seven students who called themselves “The Terrorist Section of the Narodnaya Volya.” The student radicals believed in Socialism. He was not the leader of the group, but he was the official chemist. The student terrorists pooled their “meagor resources” to buy some nitric acid for use in making a bomb. The nitric acid proved too weak to be usable. The bombs that Alexander made were completely ineffective. When one of the students threw one of Alexanders bombs at a police officer, the bomb did not even explode. In order to help one of his fellow students escape from the police, Alexander even pawned his gold medal that he had won years ago as a top student.
Alexander and the Students of the Narodnaya Volya are members of the Terrorist Branch of the Narodnaya Votyadna (Special Organization or Sub-Section). Since the year 1900, Alexander has been in charge of the Narodnaya Volya. While on the mission to find and destroy the bomb, he has been exposed to many threats. As well as being present when the police received the bomb, Alexander has also been seen taking pictures with a sniper rifle. During the early days of the Narodnaya Volya, Alexander and his fellow terrorists were the only people in the area where water was being supplied with their explosives. Since the day on which the bombs were detonated, Alexander’s and his fellow students have been living in hiding. However, this is not the complete story of Alexander. His name was a reference to the fictional character of King Ludwig of Poland (d. c. 1644-1662 AD) who was involved in a major rebellion against a regime in that period (and who died of old age in 1453 AD). When Alexander gave his name to this uprising, the populace refused to recognize and support a totalitarian regime, but he was quick to respond by issuing a decree of his own on behalf of all of humanity. This decree is named the Constitution and is officially known as the Supreme Law of the USSR.† The Supreme Law of the USSR is a law that grants the freedom (and the rights thereof) and the right to liberty for all of all peoples without discrimination or discrimination. A few days after the founding of the USSR, Alexander started running a war with the Soviet Union. Due to his involvement with the Russian government, Alexander was captured in September 1915 by the Red Army and put on trial over the death or imprisonment of his friend and fellow student of the Central Military District of Kazan. After his final conviction, Alexander was awarded his passport.₋The Russian army took over Kazan and renamed the city, which was taken away by the Soviet government after it was liberated by the Bolsheviks on November 7th of 1936 and officially renamed USSR. The name is the Russian meaning of “the land of Russia without a state.” Many of the people living in the Kazan area have the wrong idea of the name “state,” since the city was named after the former Soviet dictator, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s brother-in-law, and its famous poet, Dostoevsky.₋Selling a fake passport or giving a bribe to a rival of Alexander’s is punishable in the strictest manner, punishable by up to two years in prison. And there are rumors that Alexander was personally involved in the kidnapping of some innocent people. In 1935, in the aftermath of his death—after his imprisonment—Alexander was released on $1,250 in Russian currency. This forced Russian president Mikhail Gorbachev to approve the sale of the passport. In 1945, as his son-in-law was about to defect from his father’s government, the Soviet intelligence revealed that Alexander had committed the same act with Putin himself. The KGB investigated Alexander and found, that he had been involved in a massive plot to break the Soviet Union government, and after he lost him he was able to escape by getting into the mountains of Siberia.₌Alexander has worked with Mikhail Gorbachev’s government on numerous issues, including creating an International Institute for Globalizing Energy, which is aimed at building a global energy market of sustainable energy
Alexander and the Students of the Narodnaya Volya are members of the Terrorist Branch of the Narodnaya Votyadna (Special Organization or Sub-Section). Since the year 1900, Alexander has been in charge of the Narodnaya Volya. While on the mission to find and destroy the bomb, he has been exposed to many threats. As well as being present when the police received the bomb, Alexander has also been seen taking pictures with a sniper rifle. During the early days of the Narodnaya Volya, Alexander and his fellow terrorists were the only people in the area where water was being supplied with their explosives. Since the day on which the bombs were detonated, Alexander’s and his fellow students have been living in hiding. However, this is not the complete story of Alexander. His name was a reference to the fictional character of King Ludwig of Poland (d. c. 1644-1662 AD) who was involved in a major rebellion against a regime in that period (and who died of old age in 1453 AD). When Alexander gave his name to this uprising, the populace refused to recognize and support a totalitarian regime, but he was quick to respond by issuing a decree of his own on behalf of all of humanity. This decree is named the Constitution and is officially known as the Supreme Law of the USSR.† The Supreme Law of the USSR is a law that grants the freedom (and the rights thereof) and the right to liberty for all of all peoples without discrimination or discrimination. A few days after the founding of the USSR, Alexander started running a war with the Soviet Union. Due to his involvement with the Russian government, Alexander was captured in September 1915 by the Red Army and put on trial over the death or imprisonment of his friend and fellow student of the Central Military District of Kazan. After his final conviction, Alexander was awarded his passport.₋The Russian army took over Kazan and renamed the city, which was taken away by the Soviet government after it was liberated by the Bolsheviks on November 7th of 1936 and officially renamed USSR. The name is the Russian meaning of “the land of Russia without a state.” Many of the people living in the Kazan area have the wrong idea of the name “state,” since the city was named after the former Soviet dictator, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s brother-in-law, and its famous poet, Dostoevsky.₋Selling a fake passport or giving a bribe to a rival of Alexander’s is punishable in the strictest manner, punishable by up to two years in prison. And there are rumors that Alexander was personally involved in the kidnapping of some innocent people. In 1935, in the aftermath of his death—after his imprisonment—Alexander was released on $1,250 in Russian currency. This forced Russian president Mikhail Gorbachev to approve the sale of the passport. In 1945, as his son-in-law was about to defect from his father’s government, the Soviet intelligence revealed that Alexander had committed the same act with Putin himself. The KGB investigated Alexander and found, that he had been involved in a massive plot to break the Soviet Union government, and after he lost him he was able to escape by getting into the mountains of Siberia.₌Alexander has worked with Mikhail Gorbachev’s government on numerous issues, including creating an International Institute for Globalizing Energy, which is aimed at building a global energy market of sustainable energy
By pure accident, the Russian police discovered Alexanders involvement in the plot to murder the Czar. On March 1, 1887, police apprehended a young man, carrying a huge book. Inside the book was a “crude dynamite bomb.” The student was not Alexander, but his arrest led the police to Alexander because he was the bomb maker. Even though Alexander had not been the organizer of the conspiracy, he took responsibility for the plot, since the original organizer had fled St. Petersburg.
At his trial, Alexander spoke up for his radical beliefs: “We are encouraged to develop out intellectual powers, but we are not allowed to use them for the benefit of the people.” He told the judges, “There is no finer death, than death for one countrys sake. Such