Saturday, November 21, 2015

Gigla Berbichashvili’s and Iliko Imerlishvili’s relationship with Stalin


Tengliz Simashvili
This article was published by Police Academy Publisher the Archival Bulletin, #14 (2013)
This one and other interesting articles about Stalin are here - pages 72-99; 123-129

Gigla Berbichashvili’s and Iliko Imerlishvili’s relationship with Stalin
According to archival and other historical documents, four people participated in the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze. On August 30, 1907, the killers awaited Ilia Chavchavadze’s Phaeton on the road between Tsitsamuri and Saguramo, a few kilometers away from Saguramo. Ilia Chavchavadze and his servant were killed, and Ilia’s wife was beaten brutally.
The killers were Ivane Inashvili, Pavle Pshavlishvili (Aptsiauri), Gigla Berbichashvili, and “Imereli,” who is referred to as “One Imereli” in some documents, and “Imereli” in others. In one document he is called “the leader of Ilia Chavchavadze’s killers’ gang”. “Imereli” was also referred to as a member of Ilia Chavchavadze’s killers’ gang in the press of the time. According to the newspaper “Trans-Caucasia News,” issued on December 2, 1908, “a stranger named Imereli” was an accomplice of G. Berbichashvili, P. Pshavlishvili and V. Inashvili.
According to acceptable documents, the fourth killer of Ilia - “Imereli”, “One Imereli” or “a stranger named Imereli” - was Iliko Imerlishvili.
A document from 25 December, 1908, shows that Iliko Imerlishvili, Gigla Berbichashvili and Pavle Pshavlishvili were members of the Red Detachment of the Social Democratic Party in Dusheti mazra (administrative unit). The document is a protocol, in which Chief Constable of the Dusheti regional police Abesalom Giorgis dze Paghava, writes: “Pavle Pshavlishvili’s gang consisted of 1. Pavle Pshavlishvili, 2. Imerlishvili, 3. None Mchedlishvili, 4. Sandro Mchedlishvili, 5. Lazare Gabitashvili, 6. Giorgi Tsiklauri, 7. Basil Sighnagheli, 8. Lado from Telavi, 9. Vano Inashvili, 10. Tushetian Vano, 11. Ruassian Doroshenko, 12. Gigla Berbichashvili, 13. Giorgi Parkhanashvili”.
In other documents, Iliko Imerlishvili is referred to as the head of the regional Red Detachment, fifteen members strong, in Saguramo or Mtskheta. A photograph found by Mr. Nodar Grigalashvili supports this. The photo of Iliko Imerlishvili’s Red Detachment was taken in 1908-1909, and it is very likely that Gigla Berbichashvili is among those pictured.
Iliko Imerlishvili was born on February 25, 1886, in Mtskheta. In the late 1890s, he began working in the Tbilisi Printing House. There, he made friends with revolutionary employees, and became a terrorist as well as a member of the Social Democratic Party. According to a document preserved in the Party Archive of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, in 1906, one year before the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze, Iliko Imerlishvili had direct contact with the Tbilisi Committee of the Social Democratic Party. The following is from a biography written by the friends and comrades of famed Social-Democratic terrorist Romanoz (Ramana) Tarashvili, who was active in Dusheti mazra and Tbilisi: “In 1906 a big pig (last name not known – authors note) and Ramana Tarashvili killed agent Ghviniashvili in Tbilisi by the order of Tbilisi Committee. The same year, Tarashvili, Iliko Imerlishvili and a big pig disarmed the nobles and transferred the arm to Tbilisi Committee. [1] Participant of the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze Gigla Petres dze Berbichashvili - born on August 6, 1878; Resident of the village Akhatna, Dusheti mazra; Social status – peasant; for several years he had served in the Tsar’s army.
According to various archival documents, in 1904-1905 Gigla Berbichashvili became a member of the Social Democratic Party and the Red Detachment of Dusheti mazra. Preliminary interrogation protocols from 1941, from the case of Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination, offer much information about his revolutionary activities. Other documents from Berbichashvili’s trial (December 25, 1941 – January 5, 1942) offer even more.

The archival record shows that Iliko Imerlishvili participated in the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze with Gigla Berbichashvili, Ivane Inashvili and Pavle Pshavlishvili. One protocol, from Decvember 25-31, 1908, and signed by Regional Executor Oziev, of Bazaleti, Dusheti mazra, records the following comment about a man accused of having a close relationship to P. Pashavlishvili and his accomplices: “At the interrogatoin the detainee said that in May of 1908 he had joined Pshavlishvili’s gang by chance. The band consisted of thirteen members: head of the gang Pshavlishvili, Ilia Chavchavadze’s killers: Ivane Inashvili, Gigla Darchos dze Berbichashvili, resident of the village of Mtskheta Iliko Imerlishvili and many others”.
In this document, four people are described as participants in the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze.
In investigation documents concerning the assassination of Prince Nikoloz Khimshiashvili of Dusheti mazra (a prominent landlord), Iliko Imerlishvili, Gigla Berbichashvili, and Pavle Pshavlishvili are described as Ilia Chavchavadze’s killers. A friend of N. Khimshiashvili, the regional executor of Bazaleti Oziev, said the following: “Prince N. Khimshiashvili often said that he was afraid of being killed by Ilia Imerlishvili, Gigla Berbichashvili and Lado Peikrishvili because he (N. Khimshiashvili – author’s note) persecuted them for the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze.” This means that N. Khimshiashvili believed that Ilia (Iliko) Imerlishvili participated in the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze.
There are many documents in the Archive which attest to Iliko Imerlishvili’s and his accomplices’ direct participation the assassination of Ilia Chavchavadze – for example, a two-page report dated January 15, 1914, sent from the head of Tbilisi police by the head of the Tbilisi Detective Police Department. A second document – a three-page report - was sent to Tbilisi Investigator of Special Cases by the head of Tbilisi Detective Police Department on February 1, 1914. “Iliko Imerlishvili with the members of his group has committed many murders, including the murders of the officials, village headman, guards and landlord prince Ilia Chavchavadze (Georgian writer). The second report contains the additional information that these facts were provided by agents.
It is noteworthy that Iliko Imerlishvili is mentioned as head of the regional Social Democratic Party in another document from the same case. The document was sent to the head of police department of the Trans-Caucasus Railway, by the head of Tbilisi police on January 28, 1914.
For years, Soviet authorities concealed the party affiliations and personal relationships of those found guilty of Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination. The truth was covered up for decades. However, the documents bringing the truth to light are preserved in the Archive of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia.
According to archival documents, Gigla Berbichashvili, a resident of Saguramo community, was among the active revolutionaries. [2]
The leaders of the 1905-1907 revolution (and subsequent revolutionary movements in Saguramo) included Isidore Ramishvili, Lavrenti Asatiani, and Giorgi Tatishvili.
Giorgi Tatishvili’s autobiography, and his many letters, articles, memoirs, and essays, from before and after 1936, testify that facts about Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination were falsified by the Soviet authorities. Tatishvili was an activist of the Social Democratic Party, and head of the regional committee of the Social Democratic Party in Dusheti mazra (administrative unit) during 1908-1914.
According to Giorgi Tatishvili’s 1933 autobiography, Gigla Berbichashvili was an activist of the Social Democratic Party and a member of the “Red Detachment”: “On behalf of the committee, a few armed persons started to extort money from the peasantry in one of the villages of Dusheti mazra. Lavrenti Asatiani, Gigla Berbichashvili, Sandro Mamulishvili, and Sandro Odzishvili were ordered to arrest the expropriators by the local committee of the Social Democratic Party” [3]
Archive documents provide more information about the activities of Gigla Berbichashvili as an activist of “Red Detachment” of the Social Democratic Party. The author of one such document was Sandro Mamulishvili, a member of “Red Detachment” of the Social Democratic Party and one of the co-participants of Gigla Berbichashvili in arresting the expropriators. According to the document, “In 1906 Anika Zviadauri visited me from the village of Davo(a)tu. She told me that the following day three persons would come to their village to take 40 rubles for the unity committee from every family. These three persons visited the village yesterday and threatened villagers that if they did not give them money the whole village would be destroyed and those who opposed would be killed. They had bombs in their hands.
I told everything to Lavrenti Asatiani, Gigla Berbichashvili and Sandro Odziashvili. We took our arms and went to the village of Dovo(a)ti on a fixed day. We arrived just in time as the villagers were being gathered and, money being taken from their houses. Sandro Odziashvili shot at the ground. People scattered. We ran around the crowd and seized dis-armored attackers. I kept the detainees in my cattle-shed for two days and nights”.[4] The following extract from Sandro Mamulishvili’s autobiography, written by Giorgi Tatishvili in 1933, testifies that Giorgi Berbichashvili was a member of the Social Democratic Party: “At nights we gathered in the forest and learned how to fight for the independence. The following revolutionaries were among us: Isidore Ramishvili, Shakro Uznadze, Lavrenti Asatiani, Giorgi Tatishvili, Arsen Tsitladze; from local village: Kola Odziashvili, Gigla Berbichashvili, Sandro Odziashvili, Vano Gharibashvili and others. We followed the instructions of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party”.[5]
Gigla Berbichashvili was a member of the “Red Detachment” of the Social Democratic Party, which is why the village police tried to arrest him: “The meeting of centurions and party leaders of Saguramo was convened at school in the village of Tsinamdzghvriantkari. The next day, village police constable Vasil came to our village with the Cossacks from Dusheti. He seized me and began looking for Gigla Berbichashvili and Sandro Odziashvili. He said that we had attended the meeting in Tsinamdzghvriantkari”. [6]
Giorgi Tatishvili kept the participation of Gigla Berbichashvili in Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination a secret until 1936. The following document testifies to this: “I asked Lado Peikrishvili about Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination. He said that neither he nor any of his friends took part in Ilia’s assassination. I only know what Pavle Pshavlishvili told me when he was my friend and did not keep secrets from me. He told me that Ilia had been killed by four people: Vano Inashvili, Pavle Pshavlishvili, Loma Khizanishvili, and he did not say who had been the fourth one.” [7]
Mikheil Klimiashvili, a member of the Social Democratic Party, confirmed that Gigla Berbichashvili was a member of the “Red Detachment”. He said the following: “As soon as Ilia was killed and people started to speak about the involvement of Social Democratic Party members, the committee of the Social Democratic Party ordered the village committee and its head Vaso Tsabadze to form a commission. It would be tasked with investigating the case. I was surprised when I learnt that Gigla Berbichashvili had participated in this case. Gigla Berbichashvili and Kola Odziashvili (one of the activists of the local Social Democratic Party organization – author’s note) escaped the villagers’ aggression and moved to Tbilisi. Gigla Berbichashvili spent all his time with Sandro Gedevanishvili in Tbilisi or with Pavle Tusishvili in Avchala”.
Documents preserved in the Archive of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia testify that Giorgi Berbichashvili was a member of the Social Democratic Party. On October 9, 1940, he was questioned as a suspected person. According to his testimony, “I have been a member of the Party since 1905. I was enrolled in the Party by the Dusheti regional organization. When I became a party member its name was “The Social Democratic Workers’ Party”
According to testimony given by Gigla Berbichashvili on October 10, 1940, “In the previous testimony I made a mistake about the Party. I said as if in 1905 there had not been Bolshevik and Menshevik wings in the Social Democratic Workers’ Party. But actually, the party had these two wings and I was an activist of the Bolshevik wing.”
Ivane Inashvili, Pavle Pshavlishvili and Gigla Berbichashvili are mentioned in negative context in Giorgi Tatishvili’s autobiography, written sometime after 1936. At the trial of Gigla Berbichashvili in 1941-1942 concerning Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination, Giorgi Tatishvili gave many testimonies against the convicted.
According to Giorgi Tatishvili, he, together with other members of the local Social Democratic Party, conducted an investigation of Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination throughout the region, on the Party’s orders. However, they were not able to find out which local organization had planned to kill Ilia Chavchavadze and his steward Mose Memarnishvili. He said: “There was not any evidence ascertaining which regional party organization Vano Inashvili and Gigla Berbichashvili belonged to. We could not affirm that they were members of the regional “Red Detachment” of the Social Democratic Party in Saguramo. Inashvili was the village headman when “Red Detachments” were formed in the regions of Gori and Dusheti. Gigla Berbichashvili had friendly relations with the robbers. Thus, nobody would have welcomed him either in the Party or the “Red Detachment” [8] Soviet authorities not only concealed the fact that Ilia Chavchavadze was killed by the Party, but also the fact that they had relations with other Party members of various ranks. For example, they concealed the relationship between Gigla Berbichashvili and Maro Nikalaevna Khutsishvili. During the 1905-1907 revolution, Maro, with famous Bolsheviks Kamo (Ter-Petrosyan), Vano Tarkhnishvili, Giorgi Elisabedashvili and others, was active in illegal meetings of the Social Democratic Party.
We now present an extract from Mariam Nikolaevna Khutsishvili’s autobiography, written in 1934. This work, which has never been published, is preserved in the Archive. The extract reads: “I served as watchman of illegal meetings in Tbilisi. The head of the meetings were Kolia Lomtatidze from Batumi and Theophile Chichua from Tbilisi. Vano Bolkvadze and Kamo Petrosyan often came there. The members were as follows: Triphon Ramishvili, Solomon Dolidze, Justin Vadachkoria, Makara Goguadze, Beso Maisuradze, Varlam Simonishvili, Vaso Zakariashvili, Mikha Chodriashvili, Gigo Khechuashvili, Giorgi Kuchishvili, Gigla Berbichashvili, Andro Dolidze, Tedore Dolidze, Vano Gagua, Evgeni Dvali, Kosta Gamkhitashvili from Kaspi, Arsena Jorjiashvili from Tbilisi, Koba Jughashvili, also known as Stalin from Batumi” [9] The inscription on this document, written by Gigla Berbichashvili, testifies that Giorgi Berbichashvili and Joseph Jughashvili participated together in illegal meetings of the Bolsheviks. It reads as follows: “I confirm that comrade Maro Nikolaevna Khutsishvili took an active part in the 1905-1907 revolution against Tsar Nichollas. She has been wounded twice. In 1907 I went to Persia. Berbichashvili: Length of Party service – from 1905; Party book 0856831; Red Detachment book 188. [10]
According to Maro Khutsishvili, Gigla Berbichashvili and Joseph Jughashvili knew each other, as they both participated in illegal meetings in Tbilisi. Giorgi Elisabedashvili’s signature on this document also testifies to this fact. Elisabedashvili was Joseph Jughashvili’s best friend, after Giorgi Berbichashvili from the Gori seminary. He held various top posts in Georgia during the Soviet period. [11]
According to the testimony of Social Democratic Party member (and former head of Dusheti region) Giorgi Tatishvili, Karaman Paghava, and others, the convicted was not a member of the Social Democratic Party. He was just an ordinal criminal. Their goal was to hide any trace of the Social Democratic Party in Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination.
Documents preserved in the Archive of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia show that during and after the 1905-1907 revolution, the Social Democratic Party (Bolsheviks and Mensheviks) actively used terrorist methods of attack against the Tsar’s authority.
Testimony to such methods can be found in the memoirs of Bachua (Samuel) Kuprashvili, a well-known Bolshevik, terrorist, thief, and Joseph Jughashvili’s (Stalin’s) companion-in-arms. In 1907 he stole 250,000 rubles from Yerevan Square): “In 1906, a partisan detachment of revolutionaries was active throughout Georgia. It included the following: Mtatsminda group, Vera group, Kharpukhi group and others – in Tbilisi; Merkviladze’s detachment - in Imereti; Tsitelashvili’s detachment  - in Samtredia and Vani; Giorgi Tereteli’s detachment – in Kartli; Taguna’s (little Gogia) detachment, Poria and other. [12]
According to Kuprashvili, “In 1906, on Stalin’s initiative, the Bolshevik “Military Group” Voevaya Druzhina was formed, and co-existed with the Bolshevik Party’s Caucasus Bureau. The group was tasked with gathering and keeping weapons, which were dispersed among people after the uprising; taking care of partisans; converting their partisan activities into revolutionary (Bolshevik) activities; selecting the best among them and bringing them into the Bolshevik organization; planning the Bolsheviks’ prison breaks; stealing arms; expropriating treasury money; and others” [13]
“We have studied the membership of anarchist groups throughout the villages and cities. According to the order, we were to choose the best members. The strongest anarchist groups from Tbilisi were groups of Mtatsminda and Vera. From Mtatsminda group we chose Datiko Chiaberashvili, Arkadi Elbakidze (Agordia), Samson Tomaradze and Chikovani” [14]
Iliko Iordanovich Imerlishvili was a member of the Mtatsminda group. His biography, written by his brother, the revolutionary and terrorist Giorgi Imerlishvili, supports this fact. An extract from the biography reads: “He joined the Mtatsminda group after the revolutionaries had been defeated. In 1906 he participated in the theft of treasury money from Kojori, which was organized by Oboladze. Afterwards, he took part in a few terrorist acts. In 1907, after this group had been dismissed and he was under investigation by police, he was forced to hide in the forest” [15]
The information about Iliko Imerlishvili’s membership in the Bolshevik party is confirmed by his group members and “comrades,” in Iliako Imerlishvili’s January 1934. “At the end of 1904, although he was young and not ready for “a big deal”, he was on the Bolsheviks’ side instinctively. He did his best to prove that the Bolshevik faction was better. Iliko was involved in the Bolshevik faction. Sasha Oboladze helped him in practical work. In 1906, Iliko Imerlishvili and his two friends, Dmitri Batsankalishvili and Vaso Paresishvili, temporarily joined the Mtatsminda group, which was led by Sasha Oboladze” [16]
The following document testifies to the close relationship between Mtatsminda group members and Bolshevik outlaws Bachua Kuprashvili, Kamo (Ter-Petrosyan) (and others): “On January 12, 1906 Sasha Oboladze, Datiko Chiabrishvili, Arkadi Elbakidze, Kamo, Iliko Imerlishvili, Vaso Paresishvili, Tarashvili, and Dmitri Batsankalishvili went to Kakheti to hold negotiations with Khunkhuz Vano Guruli – head of the regional “Red Detachment” of Kartli and Kakheti” [17]
According to the memoirs of revolutionary Kote Gurgenishvili, besides the aforementioned persons, Joseph Vissarionovich Jughashvili (Stalin) also participated in the meetings of “Red Detachments”. “On January 12, under comrade Stalin’s leadership, a meeting at the headquarters of the regional Red Detachment of Kartli-Kakheti was held in Sagarejo” [18]
Archive documents indicate that Stalin organized the activities of the Red Detachment in Tbilisi province, and that he knew Iliko Imerlishvili. An extract from one Archive document reads: “In late October, under Stalin’s orders, all members of Tbilisi province “Red Detachment” were gathered, and the members of staff were selected. While Vano Alikhanashvili (Vano Guruli, Khunkhuza) became the staff head, Akvsenti Sidamonidze and Sandro Kavlashvili from Telavi, Vano Kristesiashvili and Giorgi Machabeli from Gori mazra (region), Niko Kadagishvili from Gori mazra, and Iliko Imerlishvili from Dusheti mazra became its members.” [19]
The following document suggests that Iliko Imerlishvili was a member of the Bolshevik party: “Unfortunately, besides Alikhanashvili (Khunkhuzasi), Vano Kristesashvili and Iliko Imerli, all members of the Red Detachment were Mensheviks” [20] The memoirs of Alexander (Sasha) Oboladze suggest that the members of Mtatsminda group had close relations with Joseph Jughashvili. The following was written on October 13, 1922, when Oboladze returned from a special mission in Khevsureti: “As our faction worked in alliance with the Mensheviks, I did not consent to being disarmed, and formed a separate group. The group consisted of 60 armed personnel, and a printing-house. Comrade Dato Chiaberovi was one of us. Stalin (Koba) himself supported us. At one of the conferences, he appealed with a resolution to take us back”  [21]
On May 11, 1908, Bolshevik terrorist Giorgi Maisuradze together with Iliko Imerlishvili and Pavle Pshavlishvili escaped from Metekhi prison.
In 1905-1907, Vano Maisuradze, a Kakheti terrorist and revolutionary, confirmed a close relationship between members of the regional Red Detachment in Kakheti and Mtatsminda group members: “The members of the Kakhetian Red Detachment got the arms from Mtatsminda. Those arms had been taken away from the citizens by Avaliani’s group” [22]
According to V. Maisuradze, the Social-Democrat terrorists committed acts of theft and extortion. “The following persons participated: K. Lortkipanidze, V. Maisuradze (Tucha), Imerlishvili, Koridze, Elbakidze, the Mamatsashvilis, Buchashvili and Chikchikelashvili”.
In 1935, V. Maisuradze composed memoirs concerning the 1905-1907 revolution. According to these memoirs, Iliko Imerlishvili had a close relationship with Social-Democratic terrorists, and took part in the thefts. An extract reads: “We decided to attack the state posts in different regions. While some went to Tsinandali, we attacked the post in Kachreti twice. (We wanted to involve the villagers in the revolution. Those people were from nearby villages and supported the old regime. We took care of our district because of the repressions.) The following participated in the attacking on the post: 1. Vano Alikhanashvili from Outer Kakheti; 2. Vano Maisuradze “Tura” (“Jackal”); 3. Kolia Lortkipanidze from the outside; 4. Sergia Koridze; 5. Arto Mikelov; 6. Iliko Imerlishvili (Mtskheteli); 7. Zhghenti and Jashi; 8. The brothers – Vaso, Garso and Grisha Mamatsashvilis.” [23] Maisuradze and the other witnesses (except Daria Jashi) did not refer to Gigla Berbichashvili as a Social Democratic Party member in Dusheti, or as a famous terrorist.
I studied Nina Maisuradze’s autobiography, which is preserved in the Archive of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia. The biography appears to have been written before 1934. It is noteworthy that the following inscription appears at the end of the documents: “Mtskheta Station, Aznepti, Matiashvili. Cite Nina Giorgevna Maisuradze”. The reason for the citation must have been recorded in the document. [24]
According to the following document, Nina Maisuradze and her husband Giorgi Maisuradze were revolutionaries, and knew Koba Jughashvili - Stalin - very well: “In 1905 my husband began carrying out revolutionary activities. In 1905, 1906, and 1907, he was allied with Vano Sturua, Ilia Imerlishvili (a typography worker), Vasil Pareshishvili, Chichuashvili, Valiko Guruli, Zaliko Svimonishvili, the same Kakheli, Koba Jughashvili and Chito Goreli”. According to various documents, Ilia (Iliko Imerlishvili), Valiko Guruli, Chito Goreli, and Chichuashvili (actually Chuguashvili) were members of Iliako Imerlishvili’s gang and participated in armed terrorist attacks.
The following confirms that Koba Jughashvili visited Giorgi Maisuradze’s family several times: “Koba Jughashvili has visited us in Mtskheta twice. He would come to my husband and give him instructions to gather revolutionary peasants. Nights, comrade Koba would come to the meetings, talk to the peasants, and then go to the forest to spend the night. Sometimes he would come with my husband. They would have dinner and go to the meeting. It happened once in summer of 1907, and once that autumn”.
It is difficult to tell what was decided at the revolutionary meeting in summer of 1907. Was it somehow connected with Ilia Chavchavadze’s assassination? Archive documents testify that Koba Jughashvili knew Iliko Imerlishvili very well. Moreover, they planned acts of theft together.
According to Nina Maisuradze, Koba Jughashvili was close with Giorgi Maisuradze’s family. She wrote: “In 1908 my family moved to the basement at 12 Kvirili Street. In autumn of 1908, my husband brought Jughashvili home with him. They would come in the evenings, have dinner and leave. Nobody else followed them. It was a time when my husband did not live in our house. He was hiding and would come home once in a week or a month”.
According to the same document, Nina Maisuradze and Iliko Imerlishvili’s wife Liza Imerlishvili knew each other well and were friendly. The also lived together, at 17 Parkopelnoe Street. Pareshishvili, Imerlishvili, Chuguashvili, Arsen (Arsen Tsitladze), and others visited them often.
“In winter of 1910, an underground meeting, under the pretense of christening of Imerlishvili’s child, was held in our flat. Comrade Koba came to the meeting. He was in a Georgian hat, “arkhalig” (a traditional Caucasus garment), and coat. I cooked lunch and dinner for them. Fifteen people spent the whole day and night in my flat until the meeting was over. Early in the morning they had their breakfast and left one by one. The revolutionary Varlam Guruli took my son Petre to his post. He took a ten-year-old boy with him in order to hide his real purpose.
In the evening, Imerlishvili, Pareshashvili, Gedevanishvili (a member of Iliko Imerlishvili’s detachment), and others, came to us and told us that the post had been attacked (the post was in front of the Alexandrov garden). Varlam Guruli and Zaliko Svimonishvili were killed during the attack. They were among the fifteen people who had attended the underground meeting.
As a result, the gendarmerie and “shpiks” (police spies) tried to pick up the trail in the streets. Imerlishvili insisted that we move to another place. Thus, in 1912, we moved to 15 Baseini Street. The following persons often visited us there: Vaso Pareshishvili, Iliko Imerlishvili, Malkhaz Gedevanishvili and Deacon Archil Iosebidze. The latter betrayed us. On January 13, 1914, the entire Nakhalovka was under siege. While Pareshishvili was killed, Imerlishvili managed to escape”.
On the basis of this document, the following can be concluded: First, Iliko Imerlishvili and Joseph (Koba) Jughashvili had close relations. Second, Joseph (Koba) Jughashvili was connected to the terrorists of the Social Democratic Party and Red Detachments. Third, Joseph (Koba) Jughashvili participated in acts of Bolshevik-organized terrorism and expropriation.
Iliko Imerlishvili died at the end of March, 1914. There are conflicting accounts of his death. According to one of them, a bomb blew up in his hand.


















[1] Section II,  MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 855, p. 2
[2]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 1116, pp. 3-5

[3] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 858, p. 8
         [4] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 166, pp. 7-8

[5]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp.2, c. 166, p. 6
         [6]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 166, p. 8
[7] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 931, p. 4
[8] The Department of Literature and Art of the Central Archive of Contemporary History, f. 303, opp. 1, c. 1059, p. 5

[9]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 948, p. 2
[10] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 948, p. 5
[11] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 948, p. 6

[12] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 8, opp. 2, Part I, c. 25, p. 52
[13]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 8, opp. 2, Part I, c. 25, p. 52
[14] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 8, opp. 2, Part I, c. 25, p. 69

[15]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 377, p. 1
         [16]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 376, p. 1, doc. 15
         [17]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 376, p. 3
         [18]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 8, opp. 2-I, c. 11, pp. 97-100

[19]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 8, opp. 2-I, c. 11, pp. 97-100
[20] Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 8, opp. 2-I, c. 11, pp. 97-100
[21] Section II,  MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 704, pp. 1 – 3
[22]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 555, pp. 2 – 4, doc. 17

         [23]  Section II, MIA Archive of Georgia, f. 93, opp. 2, c. 554, p. 10
[24] Section II,  MIA Archive of Georgia,  f. 93, opp. 2, c. 553

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