According to William C. Fuller, The events building up to the Kiev pogrom included a country-wide wave of Jewish pogroms in a number of towns in southern Russian Empire. According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, "anti-Jewish riots (
Pogromy) broke out in
Elizabethgrad (April 27, 28),
Kiev (May 8–11),
Shpola (May 9),
Ananiv (May 9),
Wasilkov (May 10),
Konotop (May 10), and during the following six months, in one hundred and sixty other places of southern Russia...It was clear that the riots were premeditated. To give but one example—a week before the pogrom of Kiev broke out, Von Hubbenet, chief of police of Kiev, warned some of his Jewish friends of the coming riots." In the opinion of "a Russian from Kiev", published in Prince
Vladimir Meshchersky's journal,
Grazhdanin (The Citizen), as quoted by
Vladimir Lenin, Historian Shlomo Lambroza, not trusting the police sources, used data from opposition materials and counted 3,103 murdered Jews for the entire country of Russia during the 1905-1906 wave of pogroms. ==See also==