Английская Википедия:Aleksandre Tarsaidze
Alexander Tarsaidze (Шаблон:Lang-ka, Alek'sandre Tarsaidze; Шаблон:Lang-ru, Aleksandr Georgievich Tarsaidze) (1901–1978) was a Georgian-American writer and historian who authored several works on the life in Imperial Russia, the Romanov family, the history of Georgia and the Russian Imperial Naval officers.
Born into a noble family in Tiflis (Tbilisi), Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire, Tarsaidze was a student of the Imperial Naval Academy in Petrograd at the time of the 1917 revolutions. In 1918, he returned to his native Georgia, which declared independence on May 26, 1918, and worked with the Allied High Commissioner, Colonel William N. Haskell in Tiflis until being forced into exile by the Red Army invasion of Georgia. He then worked for the Istanbul-based American Relief Administration and emigrated to the United States in 1923.
He was employed by several cosmetic and jewelry enterprises including the Matchabelli Perfumes run by the émigré Georgian Prince Georges V. Matchabelli.[1] During World War II, he served in the United States Army Military Intelligence. He then was associated with Prince Serge Obolensky in the hotel business in New York and worked as a freelancer and public relations agent until his death in New York in 1978.[2]
Tarsaidze's main works are: Морской корпус за четверть века, 1901-1925 (The Naval Corps for a Quarter of the Century, 1901-1925; NYC, 1944), Czars and Presidents. The Story of a Forgotten Friendship (NYC, 1958), Четыре мифа о Первой мировой (Four Myths about the First World War; NYC, 1969), Katia: Wife before God (NYC, 1977).[3]
References
Шаблон:Authority control Шаблон:Georgia-noble-stub Шаблон:Georgia-historian-stub Шаблон:US-historian-stub
- ↑ William Seabrook (2006), Americans All: A Human Study of America's Citizens from Europe, p. 263. Шаблон:ISBN
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Register of the Alexandre Georgievich Tarsaidze Papers, 1648-1977 Hoover Institution. Accessed on May 3, 2008.
- Английская Википедия
- 1901 births
- 1978 deaths
- Soviet emigrants to the United States
- Writers from Tbilisi
- 20th-century American historians
- American male non-fiction writers
- 20th-century American male writers
- 20th-century historians from Georgia (country)
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- Википедия
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