Category
page 1Comintern people

Vladimir Lenin
founding leader of the Soviet Union (1870–1924)

Joseph Stalin
Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin was a Soviet revolutionary and politician who led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. He held office as general secretary of the Communist Party from 1922 to 1952 and as premier from 1941 until his death. Despite initially governing the country as part of a collective leadership, he eventually consolidated power to become a dictator by the 1930s. Stalin codified the Communist Party's official interpretation of Marxism as Marxism–Leninism, and his version of it is referred to as Stalinism.
Leon Trotsky
Russian Marxist revolutionary (1879–1940)
Grigory Zinoviev
Ukrainian revolutionary (1883-1936)
Richard Sorge
Soviet spy in Germany and Japan (1895-1944)

Karl Radek
Russian revolutionary (1885-1939)
Elena Stasova
Soviet politician (1873-1966)
Victor Serge
Russian revolutionary and writer (1890-1947)

Egon Erwin Kisch
Austrian/Czech publicist and writer (1885-1948)

Hu Han-min
Chinese politician (1879-1936)
Mikhail Borodin
Comintern agent (1884-1951)
George Padmore
Trinidadian anti-colonial writer (1903-1959)
Jacques Duclos
French politician (1896–1975)
James Larkin
Irish socialist and trade union leader (1876–1947)
Jaan Anvelt
Estonian communist and writer (1884-1937)
Kullervo Manner
Finnish politician (1880-1939)
Osip Piatnitsky
Russian Bolshevik (1882-1938)
Eugen Varga
Hungarian economist (1879-1964)
Henk Sneevliet
20th-century Dutch communist politician (1883–1942)
Boris Souvarine
French politician and writer (1895-1984)
Fritz Platten
Swiss politician (1883-1942)
Boris Bazhanov
defected secretary of the Soviet Union's Politburo (1900-1982)
Sanzo Nosaka
Japanese politician (1892-1993)
Grigori Voitinsky
Russian communist official (1893-1953)
Johann Koplenig
Austrian politician (1891-1968)
Pavel Mif
Soviet politician (1901-1939)

Aaron Soltz
Soviet politician (1872-1945)

Musso
Munawar Musso (1897 – 31 October 1948), commonly known as Musso, was an Indonesian revolutionary and political figure who was the leader of the Communist Party of Indonesia and one of the key figures in the 1948 Madiun affair.
Zigmas Angarietis
Lithuanian communist, Russian revolutionary, one of the leaders of the Communist Party of Lithuania (1882-1940)
Marcel Pauker
Romanian activist (1896–1938)
Ivan Teodorovich
Soviet Russian politician (1875–1937)
Paul Marion
French journalist (1899–1954)
Henri Guilbeaux
French politician and writer (1885–1938)
Sebald Rutgers
Dutch Marxist engineer (1879–1961)

Alexander Abramov-Mirov
Soviet politician (1895–1937)
Paul Merker
East German politician (1894-1969)
Dāvids Beika
Latvian Communist politician (1885-1946)
Lazar Shatskin
Soviet communist functionary (1902–1937)
Ōmi Komaki
Japanese scholar and translator
Yan Sten
Soviet philosopher (1899-1937)
Vladimir Neyman
Soviet spy (1898–1943)
Olav Scheflo
Norwegian communist (1883-1943)
Victor Barthélemy
French political activist (1906–1985)
Pavel Tcacenco
Russian revolutionary (1892–1926)
Joseph Berger-Barzilai
Russian and Israel politician (1904-1978)

War van Overstraeten
Belgian politician and painter (1891-1981)
Viktor Stern
Czech publicist (1885-1958)
Vladimir Vilensky-Sibiryakov
Russian revolutionary
Aleksander Danieluk
Polish communist activist and politician (1897-1937)
Jean Jérome
French resistance member (1906-1990)