Born in
Kaluga in 1897, Glebov-Avilov was the son of a
cobbler who started work in a printshop in Kaluga. He became a
Bolshevik in 1904, and during the
1905 Revolution he was active in Moscow, Kaluga and the
Urals working in underground printshops, being hidden by the
All-Russian Union of Railway Workers. From 1908, he was a professional revolutionary, working for the Bolsheviks in Moscow and the Urals. He founded the illegal newspaper
The Kaluga Worker (Калужский рабочий). After the Kaluga Bolshevik committee was infiltrated by the police, he was arrested and sentenced to a year and eight months imprisonment in a fortress. Released in 1910, he moved to Moscow, and then enrolled as a student at the party school in
Bologna., which was run by the
Vpered group, Bolsheviks who followed the lead of
Alexander Bogdanov, rather than
Vladimir Lenin. Returning to Russia in 1912, Glebov-Avilov was arrested and deported to
Tobolsk, but he escaped, moved to Ukraine, and joined the underground party organisation in
Kherson. Arrested again, he was deported to
Tara, in Siberia. In 1913 he was released under an amnesty to celebrate 300 years of the
Romanov dynasty and moved to St Petersburg to work for
Pravda (Правда). Early in 1914, the Bolshevik faction in the state Duma sent him abroad to help organise a party congress, and he met Lenin in Poronin, near Cracow. On his return to Ukraine, he was again arrested and exiled. He escaped again, returned to Moscow, but rearrested and deported to
Narym. == Career from 1917 ==