- territories.
Early in 1906, the
SDPKiL sent him to
Belgium to buy weapons. In June, he and
Dzerzhinsky presided over the
Fifth SDPKiL congress, in Zakopane, where...
- 1902–13. In 1911, he
joined the rozlamovists, a
group of
mainly younger SDPKiL members, led by
Yakov Ganetsky, who
opposed Jogiches'
leadership methods...
- the
SDPKiL split, he
supported the
rozlamovist opposition, led by
Jacob Hanecki and Karl Radek, who were
closer to the
Bolsheviks than the old
SDPKiL leaders...
-
position was
further weakened by a
revolt against his
leadership of the
SDPKiL, led by
Hanecki and Karl Radek, who
formed a
separate faction that aligned...
- the
Kingdom of
Poland and
Lithuania (
SDPKiL), its main presidium, and the
Polish Socialist Party – Left (PPS–
L), respectively. The
British delegation...
-
during the
second congress of the
RSDLP in Brussels,
Warski pleaded for the
SDPKiL to be
recognised as the
autonomous Polish section of the
Russian party....
-
separate factions of the
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and the
SDPKiL.
Again arrested on his
return to Poland, he
spent two
years in prison. On...
-
nationalism of Józef Piłsudski, and
during World War I drew
closer to the
SDPKiL, led by Rosa Luxemburg.
Horwitz edited the faction's
newspaper Mysl Socjalistyczna...
-
joined the
Social Democracy of the
Kingdom of
Poland (SDPK -
later the
SDPKiL),
founded in
Zurich by Rosa
Luxemburg and Leo Jogiches.
Wesolowski returned...
- in February, he
moved to Warsaw, to work
first as a
propagandist for the
SDPKiL, then as a
member of the
Warsaw city
party committee. In 1906, he edited...