Paul Kellogg To students of twentieth-century Russian history, the name Vladimir Il’ich Lenin is a constant, and inevitable, presence. But the name Iulii Osipovich Tsederbaum better known through the pseudonym “Iulii Martov” is either entirely absent from view or present only as a mysterious, and often unsavoury, figure.
In the second of three articles marking the anniversary of the Russian Revolution, <strong>Jack Conrad</strong> explores the rival parties, class blocs and the differences that separated Trotsky from Lenin