Georgios Skliros

Georgios Konstantinides (b. Trebizond, 1878 - d. Alexandria, 1919, nome-de-plume Skliros, Greek: Γεώργιος Κωνσταντινίδης, «Σκλήρος») was an early Greek socialist, who published realist writing on the common reality of his time [1] on the basis of the class structure of society and in order to analyse Greek society with Marxist tools, provoking discussions and struggles among the progressive circles of the day.[2]

Biography

Skleros was born to a middle-class family of Trebizond in Ottoman Pontus, and took a typical education and cosmopolitan outlook for the city and its Greek quarter of that age, and in his younger years travelled to Odessa in Russia to work as a merchant. Later he left for Moscow, where he engaged in medical studies, in 1904, at the University of Moscow. The following year he got involved in the revolutionary movement, under the influence of Georgi Plekhanov,[3] taking up the pseudonym of "Skliros" ("Severe"). A series of problems with the Tzarist establishment drove him to Estonia and then to Jena in Germany. There, as representative of Marxist theory he met with Dimitris Glinos in the "Filiki Prodevtiki Enosi" ("Friendly Progressive Unity"), a student society oriented in a socialist direction.[4]

Skleros then moved to and lived in Alexandria, where he died in 1919.

Works

References

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