Early life and education Krylenko was born in
Bekhteyevo, in
Sychyovsky Uyezd of
Smolensk Governorate, the eldest of six children (two sons and four daughters) born to a
populist revolutionary and his wife. His father, needing income to support his growing family, became a tax collector for the Tsarist government. The young Krylenko joined the Bolshevik faction of the
Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (RSDLP) in 1904 while studying history and literature at
St. Petersburg University, where he was known to fellow students as Comrade Abram. He was a member of the short-lived
Saint Petersburg Soviet during the
Russian Revolution of 1905 and a member of the Bolshevik Saint Petersburg Committee. He had to flee Russia in June 1906, but returned later that year. Arrested by the
Tsar's secret police in 1907, Krylenko was released for lack of evidence, but soon exiled to
Lublin (present-day Poland) without trial. Krylenko returned to Saint Petersburg in 1909 and finished his degree. He left the RSDLP in 1911, but soon rejoined it. He was drafted in 1912 and was promoted to
second lieutenant before being discharged in 1913. After working as an assistant editor of
Pravda and a liaison to the Bolshevik faction in the
Duma for a few months, Krylenko was arrested again in 1913 and exiled to
Kharkiv. There he studied and earned a law degree. In early 1914, Krylenko learned that he might be re-arrested and fled to
Austria. At the outbreak of
the Great War in August 1914, he moved to neutral
Switzerland as a Russian national. In mid-1915,
Vladimir Lenin sent Krylenko back to Russia to help rebuild the Bolshevik underground organization. In November 1915, Krylenko was arrested in Moscow as a
draft dodger and, after a few months in prison, sent to the South West Front in April 1916.
1917 revolutions After the
February Revolution of 1917 and the introduction of elected committees in the Russian armed forces, Krylenko was elected chairman of his regiment's and then division's committee. On 15 April, he was elected chairman of the 11th Army's committee. After Lenin's return to Russia in April 1917, Krylenko adopted the new Bolshevik policy of irreconcilable opposition to the
Provisional Government. He had to resign his post on 26 May 1917 for lack of support from non-Bolshevik members of the Army committee. In June 1917, Krylenko was made a member of the Bolshevik Military Organization and was elected to the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets. At the Congress, he was elected to the permanent
All-Russian Central Executive Committee from the Bolshevik faction. Krylenko left Petrograd for the High Command HQ in
Mogilev on 2 July, but was arrested there by the
Provisional government after the Bolsheviks staged an abortive uprising on 4 July. He was kept in prison in Petrograd, but was released in mid-September after the
Kornilov Affair. Krylenko took an active part in preparing the
October Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd as newly elected chairman of the Congress of Northern Region Soviets and a leading member of the
Military Revolutionary Committee. On 16 October, ten days before the uprising, he reported to the Bolshevik Central Committee that the Petrograd military would support the Bolsheviks in case of an uprising. During the Bolshevik takeover on 24–25 October, Krylenko was one of the uprising's leaders, along with
Leon Trotsky,
Adolph Joffe, and
Vladimir Antonov-Ovseenko.
Head of the Red Army At the Second All Russian Congress of Soviets on 25 October, Krylenko was made a People's Commissar (minister) and member of the triumvirate (with
Pavel Dybenko and
Nikolai Podvoisky) responsible for military affairs. In early November (
Old Style) 1917, immediately after the Bolshevik seizure of power, Krylenko helped
Leon Trotsky suppress an attempt by Provisional Government loyalists, led by
Alexander Kerensky and General
Peter Krasnov, to
retake Petrograd. After the Provisional
Commander in Chief (and Chief of
General Staff), General
Nikolai Dukhonin, refused to open peace negotiations with the Germans, Krylenko (an Ensign at this point) was appointed as Commander in Chief on 9 November. He started negotiations with representatives of the German army on 12–13 November. Krylenko arrived at the High Command HQ in Mogilev on 20 November and arrested General Dukhonin, who was bayoneted and shot to death by
Red Guards answering to Krylenko. After the formation of the
Red Army on , Krylenko was a member of the All-Russian Collegium that oversaw its buildup. He proved to be an excellent public speaker, able to win over hostile mobs with words alone. His organizational talents, however, lagged far behind his oratorical ones. Krylenko supported the policy of democratization of the Russian military, including abolishing subordination, providing for election of officers by enlisted men, and using propaganda to win over enemy units. Although the Red Army had some successes in early 1918 against small and poorly armed
anti-Bolshevik detachments, the policy proved unsuccessful when Soviet forces were
roundly defeated by the
Imperial German Army in late February 1918 after the breakdown of the
Brest-Litovsk negotiations. In his 1918 essay
Scythians?,
Yevgeny Zamyatin, an
Old Bolshevik who is now considered the first
Soviet dissident cited Krylenko as an example of the ugliness and repression within the new
Soviet Union. Zamyatin wrote, "
Christ on
Golgotha, between two thieves, bleeding to death drop by drop, is the victor – because he has been crucified, because, in practical terms, he has been vanquished. But Christ victorious in practical terms is the
Grand Inquisitor. And worse, Christ victorious in practical terms is a paunchy priest in a silk-lined purple robe, who dispenses benedictions with his right hand and collects donations with his left. The Fair Lady, in legal marriage, is simply Mrs. So-and-So, with hair curlers at night and a migraine in the morning. And
Marx, having come down to earth, is simply a Krylenko. Such is the irony and such is the wisdom of fate. Wisdom because this ironic law holds the pledge of eternal movement forward. The realization, materialisation, practical victory of an idea immediately gives it a
philistine hue. And the true
Scythian will smell from a mile away the odor of dwellings, the odor of cabbage soup, the odor of the priest in his purple cassock, the odor of Krylenko – and will hasten away from the dwellings, into the
steppe, to freedom." Later in the same essay, Zamyatin quoted a recent poem by
Andrei Bely and used it to further criticize Krylenko and those like him, for having, "covered Russia with a pile of carcasses," and for, "dreaming of
socialist–
Napoleonic wars in
Europe – throughout the world, throughout the universe! But let us not jest incautiously. Bely is honest, and did not
intend to speak about the Krylenkos." In the wake of the defeats, Trotsky pushed for the formation of a military council of former Russian generals that would function as a Red Army advisory body. Lenin and the Bolshevik Central Committee agreed to create a Supreme Military Council on 4 March, appointing
Mikhail Bonch-Bruyevich, former chief of the imperial General Staff, as its head. At that point the entire Bolshevik leadership of the Red Army, including People's Commissar (defense minister) Nikolai Podvoisky and Krylenko, protested vigorously and eventually resigned. The office of the "Commander in Chief" was formally abolished by the Soviet government on 13 March, and Krylenko was reassigned to the Collegium of the
Commissariat for Justice.
Legal career (1918–1934) From May 1918 and until 1922, Krylenko was Chairman of the
Revolutionary Tribunal of the
All-Russian Central Executive Committee. He simultaneously served as a member of the Collegium of Prosecutors of the Revolutionary Tribunal. In May 1918, Leon Trotsky ordered that
Soviet Navy Admiral
Alexei Shchastny be put on trial for having refused to scuttle the Baltic Fleet. After a trial prosecuted by Krylenko, the presiding judge, Karklin, sentenced the Admiral, "To be shot within twenty four hours." Attendees reacted with dismay as Lenin had abolished the
death penalty on 28 October 1917. Krylenko said to those present, "What are you worrying about? Executions have been abolished. But Shchastny is not being executed; he is being shot." The sentence was carried out soon after. Krylenko was an enthusiastic proponent of the
Red Terror, whatever his differences with the
Cheka (the Soviet secret police), exclaiming, "We must execute not only the guilty. Execution of the innocent will impress the masses even more." In early 1919, Krylenko was involved in a dispute with the
Cheka and was instrumental in taking away its right to execute people without a trial. In 1922, Krylenko became Deputy Commissar of Justice and assistant
Prosecutor General of the
RSFSR, in which capacity he served as the chief prosecutor at the Moscow
show trials of the 1920s. ==Cieplak Trial==