Anna Vasilevna Korvin-Krukovskaya came from a respectable, wealthy military family of aristocratic status. Her father was General Vasily Korvin-Krukovsky. Anna and her sister, the future mathematician Sophia Kovalevskaya, were raised in an enlightened household. As young women they read the materialist literature then popular—books by
Ludwig Büchner,
Carl Vogt and others—and the writings of nihilist and
Narodnik social critics like
Nikolai Chernyshevsky and
Peter Lavrov. Both women became associated with radical
Narodnik circles. In the 1860s, Anna was courted by the famous writer
Fyodor Dostoyevsky. She met him in 1864, after publishing two stories in his literary journal,
The Epoch, unbeknownst to her family. Dostoyevsky respected her talent and encouraged her writing. However, the two were not politically compatible. Although Dostoyevsky had sympathised with utopian socialist ideas in his youth and had even been banished to Siberia for his involvement in the Petrashevsky circle, by the 1860s he was becoming increasingly religious and conservative. She rejected his proposal in April 1865, but they remained on friendly terms for the rest of her life. It is thought that Dostoyevsky based the character of Aglaya Epanchina in
The Idiot on Anna. In 1866 Anna Korvin-Krukovskaya went with her mother and sister to Geneva, Switzerland, where she associated with exiled radicals from Russia and elsewhere. In 1869, she left Russia under the pretext of being chaperoned by her younger sister, Sofia, who had undertaken a nominal marriage with a young Russian radical,
Vladimir Onufryevich Kovalevsky, together with her husband. But, in fact, Anna went to Paris, and there met
Victor Jaclard, a Blanquiste leader of the Montmartre contingent of the National Guard during the
Paris Commune. ==The Paris Commune==