Category
page 1Tolstoyans

Mahatma Gandhi
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was an Indian lawyer, anti-colonial nationalist and political ethicist who employed nonviolent resistance to lead the successful campaign for India's independence from British rule, and to later inspire movements for civil rights and freedom across the world. The honorific Mahātmā, first applied to him in 1914 in South Africa, is now used throughout the world.

Leo Tolstoy
Russian author (1828–1910)
Boris Pasternak
Russian writer (1890–1960)

Georgy Gapon
Russian priest (1870-1906)

Leonid Pasternak
Russian artist (1862-1945)
Takeo Arishima
Japanese writer (1878-1923)
Kenjirō Tokutomi
Japanese writer (1868–1927)
Saneatsu Mushanokōji
Japanese artist (1885-1976)
Vladimir Chertkov
Russian editor (1854–1936)
Arvid Järnefelt
Finnish jurist and writer (1861–1932)
Adin Ballou
American minister (1803–1890)
Anna Chertkova
children's writer, social leader and Peredvizhniki's model
Harold Williams
New Zealand journalist, editor and polyglot (1876–1928)
Alexandra Tolstaya
Russian writer (1884-1979)
Leopold Sulerzhitsky
Russian writer (1872-1916)
Ernest Howard Crosby
American politician and author
James Bevel
1960s Civil Rights Movement strategist (1936–2008)

Scott Nearing
American activist (1883–1983)
Valentin Bulgakov
Russian writer (1886–1966)
Sergey Tolstoy
Russian writer, musicologist and composer (1863–1947)
Jaime de Magalhães Lima
Poet and writer (1859–1936)
Jean Boldt
Finnish journalist, lawyer and anarchist
Q1403708
Dutch writer and reformer (1866–1959)
Emil Cedercreutz
Finnish Baron, sculptor and silhouette artist (1879–1949)
Abraham Yehudah Khein
Rabbi and pacifist (1877–1957)
Dmitry Khilkov
Russian aristocrat (1857-1914)