Abstract

The article is devoted to one of the tragic events in the history of our fatherland - the expulsion from Soviet Russia in the summer and autumn of 1922 of a large group of intellectuals - scientists, political and public figures. The authors of the article investigate the question of how today, a century later, the scientific community assesses the contribution of emigrant scientists to the development of Russian political and historical thought. The object of the study is the philosophers, historians, and lawyers who left Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution, as well as those deported from Russia in 1922, who in emigration showed considerable research interest in political and historical issues. The article uses comparative and expert methods and shows the undoubted contribution of the Russian post-October emigration to the development of domestic and world political and historical thought.

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