free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Mikhail Frinovsky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mikhail Petrovich Frinovsky (Russian: Михаил Петрович Фриновский) (January of 1898 - 4 February 1940 served as a deputy head of the NKVD in the years of the Great Purge and, along with Nikolai Yezhov was responsible for setting in motion Stalin's mass-represions.

The official propaganda biographs claims that Mikhail Petrovich Frinovsky was born in 1898 into the family of a teacher in the village of Narovchat, Penza Guberniya. Prior to the First World War he studied in a religious school. In January of 1916, Frinovsky volunteered for the army. He served as a sergeant in the cavalry until his desertion in August of the same year. He found himself in an anarchist group and took part in the assassination of Major-General M. A Bem.

What is more close to the truth is, that Frinovsky began his career as a common criminal.

In March 1917 Frinovsky began work accountant in Moscow. In September he volunteered for the Red Guard. The unit under his command participated in the storming of the Kremlin, during which Frinovsky was severely wounded.

Between March and July of 1918, Frinovsky again returned to civilian life and worked as a deputy administrator of the Hodynskaya Clinic. In July of 1918 he joined the RKP(b) and volunteered for the Red Army. Frinovsky was made a comisar of a combat unit and is also made head of the Special Section (=the political supervisor and the representative of the secret police, ChK)of the 1st Cavalry Army.

In 1919 Frinovsky was transferred to the VChK. Later in the year he became a deputy of the Special Section for Moscow ChK. In this capacity he participated in many operations most vital for the survival of the bolshevik regime, including actions against the anarchists, as well as the destruction of anarchist and rebel militias in the Ukraine.

From December of 1919 until April of 1920, Frinovsky served in the Special Section for the Southern Front. In 1920, he was transferred to the South-Western Front, where he serves as chief of the Special Section, and as deputy to the Chief of the Special Section of the 1st Cavalry Army. Between 1921-1922, he was the deputy to the Chief of the Ukrainian ChK.

From 1922 to 1923, Frinovsky headed the administrative division of the Kiev GPU. From the June 23 he was also head of the OGPU of The South-East.

In November of 1923, Mikhail Frinovsky was transferred to the Northern Caucuses and given command of the Special Section for the region. In January of 1926, he become head of GPU forces.

In July, 1927, Frinovsky was again transferred to Moscow, this time as aide to the commander of the Special Section for the region. In 1927 he completed high-command courses at the Frunze Military Academy. From November 28, 1928 until September 1, 1930, he served as the commissar of the Special Forces division assigned to the Dzerjinsky College of the OGPU USSR.

On September 1, 1930, Mikhail Frinovsky was promoted and made chairman of the GPU of Azerbaijan. In April 1933, he was again promoted and became the commander of OGPU Border Guard. On July 10 1934, Frinovsky became head of Border and Internal Security for the NKVD.

After the fall of Genrikh Yagoda and the appointment of Yezhov to that post Frinovsky became deputy of the Narkom of Internal Affairs.

From April 15, 1937 to June 9, 1938, Frinovsky was head of State Security. From March 28 he was also head of the State Security of the NKVD. From 1937 Mikhail Frinovsky is a member of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. During this period he became a close ally of Yezhov and along with him was responsible for organizing the repressions which began that year. Frinovsky personally, without the authorization of a judge, signed numerous arrest warrants.

With the removal of Yezhov, Frinovsky was made the People’s Commissar of the Navy. This was a well known method of Stalin to ensure successful liquidation of a mighty rival. By this appointment, Frinovsky was uprooted from his devotees and the sources of power, being forced to travel to distant locations, being ever surrounded by new people of unknown loyalties.

On April 6, 1939, Mikhail Frinovsky was arrested. He was accused of “participating in conspiracy within the NKVD” and on February 4 of the following year he was sentenced to death and executed in Moscow.
 


Disclaimer:

This page was made by the students of bioinformatics, the OpenUniversity, BirZeit P.A., as a homework in the Survival in the iJungle. It has no intelectual value whatsoever.

If you think your copyright has been violated, we shall remove the offending content at once. Please eMail to: Abuse17@biochem-openu.cjb.net and start your SUBJECT field with the word Abuse17 (Case sensitive) that it might penetrate our spam protection.


HABASAR

Links of the YOLL itself
We must have at least 100 pages here.

  1. 17dmag

  2. 7aad

  3. actinomycin

  4. alfatoxin-b1

  5. aflatoxin-b2

  6. aflatoxin-g1

  7. aflatoxin-g2

  8. aflatoxin-m1

  9. aflatoxin-m2

  10. anisomycin

  11. ascomycin

  12. Blukher

  13. Bukharin

  14. dybenko

  15. frinovsky

  16. geldanamycin

  17. k252a

  18. k252b

  19. kt5720

  20. kt5823

  21. leptomycin

  22. Link-Exchange

  23. mithramycin

  24. mitomycin

  25. nonactin

  26. Ochratoxin

  27. parthenolide

  28. Snorring

  29. staurosporine

  30. tinnitus

  31. trichostatin

  32. tukhachevsky

  33. verruculogen

  34. vomitoxin

  35. wortmannin

  36. yakir

  37. yegorov

  38. yezhov

  39. zearalenone


Here come some links to top-rated hrefs, such as Microsoft, wikipedia, Google and Yahoo :google, microsoft, yahoo, wikipedia


Now come links to these of fermentek product pages, that are needy :  .the homepage of fermentek, FK506 or tacrolimus, products of Fermentek: staurosporine, K252A, aflatoxin, Sirolimus (Rapamycin)

And other link beggars:

Tinnitus. about some guys that had tinnitus

Nonactin at noneto. Some facts about nonactin. Why nobody needs it. Who is prof Nigel mister nonactin, and what is his role in promiliad