Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents

The study examines the historical experience of interaction between the gendarmerie railway police of the Russian Empire and covert informants in political organizations. It explores the establishment of intelligence work on railways, the monitoring of its effectiveness, the verification of the reli...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R. A. Arslanov, P. A. Kolpakov
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Tsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektov 2023-10-01
Series:Научный диалог
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.nauka-dialog.ru/jour/article/view/4806
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1839585097917923328
author R. A. Arslanov
P. A. Kolpakov
author_facet R. A. Arslanov
P. A. Kolpakov
author_sort R. A. Arslanov
collection DOAJ
description The study examines the historical experience of interaction between the gendarmerie railway police of the Russian Empire and covert informants in political organizations. It explores the establishment of intelligence work on railways, the monitoring of its effectiveness, the verification of the reliability of secret agents, and the identification of provocateurs and blackmailers among them. The materials for analysis are extracted from previously unpublished secret and top-secret case files of the gendarmerie police departments of the railways. The authors provide their own definition of intelligence work. It is emphasized that priority was given to recruiting informants who had a financial interest in collaborating with the police. The study demonstrates that the value of information obtained by secret agents was the main criterion for evaluating the effectiveness of financial resources allocated to intelligence work. The authors highlight the need for caution in establishing relationships between railway gendarmes and informants due to the possibility of assassination attempts against handlers or the provision of misinformation. The study concludes that assigning the duty of recruiting political agents and obtaining information through them was justified by the need to suppress revolutionary movements, but inertia in acquiring informants and the scale of crises in the empire prevented the achievement of the set goal.
format Article
id doaj-art-d0c80e1b49b14f1bbbb940d5a04e7ecd
institution Matheson Library
issn 2225-756X
2227-1295
language Russian
publishDate 2023-10-01
publisher Tsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektov
record_format Article
series Научный диалог
spelling doaj-art-d0c80e1b49b14f1bbbb940d5a04e7ecd2025-08-03T19:36:37ZrusTsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektovНаучный диалог2225-756X2227-12952023-10-0112721823510.24224/2227-1295-2023-12-7-218-2352550Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political AgentsR. A. Arslanov0P. A. Kolpakov1Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia named after Patrice LumumbaPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia named after Patrice LumumbaThe study examines the historical experience of interaction between the gendarmerie railway police of the Russian Empire and covert informants in political organizations. It explores the establishment of intelligence work on railways, the monitoring of its effectiveness, the verification of the reliability of secret agents, and the identification of provocateurs and blackmailers among them. The materials for analysis are extracted from previously unpublished secret and top-secret case files of the gendarmerie police departments of the railways. The authors provide their own definition of intelligence work. It is emphasized that priority was given to recruiting informants who had a financial interest in collaborating with the police. The study demonstrates that the value of information obtained by secret agents was the main criterion for evaluating the effectiveness of financial resources allocated to intelligence work. The authors highlight the need for caution in establishing relationships between railway gendarmes and informants due to the possibility of assassination attempts against handlers or the provision of misinformation. The study concludes that assigning the duty of recruiting political agents and obtaining information through them was justified by the need to suppress revolutionary movements, but inertia in acquiring informants and the scale of crises in the empire prevented the achievement of the set goal.https://www.nauka-dialog.ru/jour/article/view/4806gendarmerie railway policepolitical agentsundercover workinformantprovocateurrevolutionary movement
spellingShingle R. A. Arslanov
P. A. Kolpakov
Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents
Научный диалог
gendarmerie railway police
political agents
undercover work
informant
provocateur
revolutionary movement
title Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents
title_full Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents
title_fullStr Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents
title_full_unstemmed Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents
title_short Gendarmerie Railway Police of Russian Empire in Early 20th Century: Working with Political Agents
title_sort gendarmerie railway police of russian empire in early 20th century working with political agents
topic gendarmerie railway police
political agents
undercover work
informant
provocateur
revolutionary movement
url https://www.nauka-dialog.ru/jour/article/view/4806
work_keys_str_mv AT raarslanov gendarmerierailwaypoliceofrussianempireinearly20thcenturyworkingwithpoliticalagents
AT pakolpakov gendarmerierailwaypoliceofrussianempireinearly20thcenturyworkingwithpoliticalagents