The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to English Wikipedia articles about the Great Purges.
About
The Great Purge was a mass campaign of political repression in the Soviet Union from 1936 to 1938, orchestrated by Joseph Stalin and carried out by the NKVD under Genrikh Yagoda and later Nikolai Yezhov. Triggered by the 1934 Assassination of Sergei Kirov, it included show trials, executions, and the persecution of Old Bolsheviks, Red Army officers, intellectuals, and ethnic minorities such as Soviet Poles and Volga Germans.
The campaign peaked during 1937âÂÂ1938, targeting alleged "enemies of the people" including supposed wreckers, kulaks, and political rivals. Torture, forced confessions, and mass executions became standard. An estimated 700,000 to 1.2 million people were killed, and many more were imprisoned or sent to the Gulag. Stalin nevertheless, was forced to stop the purge in 1938, denouncing the NKVDâÂÂs excesses and executing both Yagoda and Yezhov. Though the purge formally ended, state repression continued until around 1952. Leon Trotsky, a key Stalin rival who had been in exile since 1929, survived the purge but was assassinated in 1940 by the NKVD in Mexico.
Background
Main articles
Nationalities
Show trials
- Moscow trials â Series of public show trials, including the First Moscow Trial (Trial of the Sixteen).
Case of the Anti-Soviet "Bloc of Rightists and Trotskyites"
Case of the Trotskyist Anti-Soviet Military Organization
The 1937 secret trial of top Red Army commanders.
Trial of the Seventeen
1937 show trial targeting former Trotskyists and economic planners.
- Yakov Drobnis â Defendant and former Bolshevik; confessed and executed.
- Nikolay Muralov â Veteran revolutionary; refused to recant Trotskyism, executed.
- Georgy Pyatakov â Deputy PeopleâÂÂs Commissar; confessed and executed in 1937.
- Karl Radek â Soviet journalist and propagandist; sentenced to labor camp, later killed.
- Leonid Serebryakov â High-ranking party official; confessed and executed.
- Grigory Sokolnikov â Former finance commissar; sentenced to prison, later murdered.
Trial of the Sixteen
1936 show trial of prominent Bolsheviks accused of plotting against Stalin.
Union for the Freedom of Ukraine trial
1930 show trial of Ukrainian intellectuals accused of nationalist conspiracy.
- Yulian Bachynsky â Ukrainian diplomat and political thinker; linked to nationalist activities.
- Volodymyr Chekhivskyi â Former Ukrainian prime minister; accused in the 1930 trial.
- Mikhail Mikhailik â Ukrainian publicist and political figure; defendant in the trial.
- Anton Prykhodko â Ukrainian historian and accused conspirator; sentenced during the trial.
- Serhiy Yefremov â Prominent Ukrainian academic and politician; key defendant, sentenced to labor camps.
Genocide of the Ingrian Finns
Ethnic purge in 1937âÂÂ38 targeting Finns, including Ingrians, as part of larger NKVD operations.
Latvian Operation of the NKVD
1937âÂÂ38 mass purge targeting ethnic Latvians.
- Yakov Alksnis â Latvian-born Red Army commander executed in the purge.
- Juris Aploks â Latvian military officer purged during the operation.
- Ernest Appoga â Soviet Latvian politician arrested and shot.
- Karl Bauman â Soviet functionary of Latvian descent executed.
- Jan Antonovich Berzin â Former military-political leader executed.
- Yan Karlovich Berzin â Soviet intelligence chief of Latvian origin, purged.
- JÃ
«lijs DaniÃ
¡evskis â Member of Latvian Communist Party killed in the purge.
- Robert Eikhe â Soviet official of Latvian heritage, arrested and shot.
- Gustav Klutsis â Renowned Latvian avant-garde artist executed during the purge.
- Vilhelm Knorin â Latvian Bolshevik and Soviet official purged and executed.
- Martin Latsis â Prominent Latvian Cheka leader later shot.
- Marija Leiko â Actress of Latvian origin executed in the operation.
- Ivan Strod â Latvian-born Red Army officer arrested and executed.
Polish Operation of the NKVD
1937âÂÂ1938 mass execution and imprisonment of ethnic Poles in the USSR.
Documents and orders
People
Perpetrators
Major figures involved in the Great Purge, including NKVD officials
- Joseph Stalin â Soviet leader who directed the Great Purge.
- Genrikh Yagoda â NKVD chief before Yezhov; executed after show trial.
- Nikolai Yezhov â Head of the NKVD during the height of the Purge; executed in 1940.
- Lavrentiy Beria â Succeeded Yezhov; continued purges and oversaw later repression.
- Vyacheslav Molotov â Foreign Minister and Stalin's deputy who signed execution orders.
- Vasily Blokhin â NKVD executioner responsible for thousands of shootings.
- Lazar Kaganovich â Stalin loyalist who helped implement Purge policies.
- Kliment Voroshilov â Marshal of the Soviet Union and Stalin loyalist who endorsed military purges.
Other key NKVD officials and collaborators:
- Andrey Andreyevich Andreyev â Politburo member and organizer of repressive quotas.
- Mir Jafar Baghirov â Azerbaijani Communist leader; oversaw purges in the Caucasus.
- Lazar Berenzon â NKVD financial officer managing execution logistics.
- Matvei Berman â Head of the GULAG system; purged and executed.
- Boris Berman (chekist) â NKVD official involved in Belarusian purges; executed.
- Khorloogiin Choibalsan â Mongolian leader who mirrored Stalinist purges in Mongolia.
- Vladimir Dekanozov â NKVD official; executed in 1953 for political crimes.
- Semyon Dukelsky â NKVD official involved in cultural and political repression.
- Robert Eikhe â Central Committee member; executed in the 1939 purge.
- Mikhail Frinovsky â Deputy NKVD chief under Yezhov; executed in 1940 for conspiracy.
- Mark Gai â NKVD interrogator; executed during internal purges.
- Filipp Goloshchyokin â Soviet official involved in the Kazakh famine; executed.
- Mikhail Kalinin â Soviet head of state who signed off on execution lists.
- Nikolai Kashirin â Military commander complicit in purges; later executed.
- Bogdan Kobulov â NKVD officer and Beria ally; executed in 1953.
- Lazar Kogan â GULAG administrator; executed in 1939.
- Aleksandr Mikhaylovich Korotkov â NKVD officer active in espionage and repression.
- Dorjjavyn Luvsansharav â Mongolian official; helped carry out Stalinist purges in Mongolia.
- Genrikh Lyushkov â NKVD officer; defected to Japan in 1938, likely executed.
- Mikhail Rodionovich Matveyev â NKVD executioner active during mass shootings.
- Lev Mekhlis â Political commissar and press censor aligned with Purge efforts.
- Vsevolod Merkulov â NKGB chief under Beria; executed in 1953.
- Erich Mielke â German Communist and future Stasi head, involved in 1930s Soviet arrests.
- Anastas Mikoyan â Senior Soviet official who supported Purge decisions.
- Iosif Vareikis â Party leader in the Far East; arrested and executed.
- Karl Pauker â NKVD officer and Stalin's bodyguard; arrested and executed in 1937.
- Israel Pliner â GULAG official; purged and executed.
- Stanislav Redens â NKVD officer and relative of StalinâÂÂs wife; executed.
- Boris Rodos â NKVD interrogator notorious for torture; executed in 1956.
- Ivan Serov â NKVD official involved in later stages of repression.
- Efim Shchadenko â Military commissar complicit in Red Army purges.
- Lev Sheinin â NKVD interrogator and prosecutor during major show trials.
- Matvei Shkiryatov â Party control commission official who enforced ideological purges.
- Lev Shvartzman â NKVD interrogator known for brutality; executed in 1955.
- Andrey Vyshinsky â Chief prosecutor in show trials, known for vicious rhetoric.
- Viktor Yartsev â NKVD official involved in internal purges; executed in 1938.
- Yakov Yakovlev â Soviet official and press censor; executed in 1938.
- Yefim Yevdokimov â NKVD official; arrested and shot in 1939.
- Zinovy Ushakov â Military officer tried in the Tukhachevsky case; executed in 1937.
- Aleksandr Uspensky â NKVD official; purged and executed.
- Vasiliy Ulrikh â Chief judge who sentenced thousands to death during show trials.
- Lev Vlodzimirsky â Interrogator and senior NKVD official; executed in 1954.
- Andrei Zhdanov â Stalinist ideologue who helped justify and expand purges.
Victims
See also the operations and trials sections for specific groups.
Other
- Sergei Kirov â Popular Bolshevik leader and StalinâÂÂs potential rival; his 1934 murder triggered the Purge.
- Leonid Nikolaev â The assassin who shot Kirov.
- Ivan Zaporozhets â NKVD officer suspected of involvement.
- Vasiliy Ulrikh â Judge who oversaw the secret trial of Nikolaev.
Locations
- Benois House â Building where KirovâÂÂs assassin encountered him.
- Smolny Institute â KirovâÂÂs office where he was assassinated.
Execution and burial sites
Political conspiracies and propaganda
Repression-related institutions and bodies
Lists
Years
Related events
Related topics
See also
References
Notes
Citations
External links