Boris Ponomarev
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21 February 1957 – 25 February 1986
(himself as Department for Relations with Foreign Communist Parties head)
9 December 1955 – 21 February 1957
(himself as International Department head and Yuri Andropov as Department for Relations with the Communist and Workers' Parties of the Socialist Countries head)
19 May 1972 – 25 February 1986
31 October 1961 – 25 February 1985
Zaraysk, Ryazan Governorate, Russian Empire
Moscow, Russia
Boris Nikolayevich Ponomarev (Russian: Бори́с Никола́евич Пономарёв; 17 January 1905 – 21 December 1995) was a Soviet politician, ideologist, historian and member of the Secretariat of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. His patron in his rise to the Politburo was Mikhail Suslov.
His name would more accurately be transliterated as "Ponomaryov," though the form "Ponomarev" has become more frequent.
Career
From 1955 to 1986, Ponomarev was chief of the International Department of the CPSU Central Committee. He occupied an office within Central Committee headquarters until the 1991 August coup, which he is said to have supported.
In 1962, Ponomarev wrote an updated state history of the CPSU to replace Stalin's 1938 History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks) as part of the Khrushchev Thaw.[1]
His December 1962 speech at the All-Union Conference of Historians was a major turning point in the development of Soviet historiography.[2]
Publications
- Plot against the Soviet Union and world peace (1938)
- Soviet Foreign Policy Vol. 1 1917 - 1945, edited with Anatoly Gromyko, Progress Publishers, 1980
- History of Soviet Foreign Policy 1945-1970, edited with Anatoly Gromyko, Progress Publishers, 1974
References
External links
- Media related to Boris Ponomarev at Wikimedia Commons
- Russian Academy of Sciences: Profile
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- Yuri Andropov
- Leonid Brezhnev
- Mikhail Gorbachev
- Viktor Grishin
- Andrei Gromyko
- Andrei Kirilenko
- Dinmukhamed Kunaev
- Arvīds Pelše
- Grigory Romanov
- Mikhail Suslov
- Nikolai Tikhonov
- Dmitry Ustinov
- Heydar Aliyev
- Konstantin Chernenko
- Volodymyr Shcherbytsky
- Vitaly Vorotnikov
- Mikhail Solomentsev
- Viktor Chebrikov
- Yegor Ligachyov
- Nikolai Ryzhkov
- Eduard Shevardnadze
- Heydar Aliyev
- Pyotr Demichev
- Tikhon Kiselyov
- Vasili Kuznetsov
- Boris Ponomarev
- Sharof Rashidov
- Mikhail Solomentsev
- Eduard Shevardnadze
- Vladimir Dolgikh
- Vitaly Vorotnikov
- Viktor Chebrikov
- Sergey Sokolov
- Nikolai Talyzin
- Boris Yeltsin
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