Vladimir Lenin
22 April, 1870
Full Name: Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (Lenin) Profession: Revolutionary Leader, Politician, Political Theorist, Founder and First Head of Government of Soviet Russia and the Soviet Union Nationality: Russian Born: April 22, 1870 Birthplace: Simbirsk, Russia (now Ulyanovsk, Russia) Generation: Lost Generation Chinese Zodiac: Horse Zodiac Sign: Taurus Age in 2026: 156 (deceased) Marital Status: Married (to Nadezhda Konstantinovna Krupskaya on July 22, 1898) Children: None Cause of Death: Cerebrovascular disease; died on January 21, 1924, at his country estate in Gorki, near Moscow, following a series of debilitating strokes—the final and fatal fourth stroke caused massive cerebral hemorrhage and complete circulatory failure of the brain. Description: Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, universally known by his revolutionary pseudonym Lenin, stands as one of the most transformative and controversial political figures in the entire history of the modern world, a man whose ideas, writings, and ruthless organizational genius permanently altered the course of the 20th century and whose legacy continues to provoke fierce debate more than a century after his death. Born on April 22, 1870, in the provincial Volga River city of Simbirsk — later renamed Ulyanovsk in his honor — Lenin was the third of six surviving children in a well-educated, upwardly mobile middle-class family; his father, Ilya Nikolaevich Ulyanov, was a regional schools inspector who had attained hereditary noble status through his service to the Tsar, while his mother, Maria Alexandrovna Blank, was a cultured woman of mixed Russian, German, Swedish, and Jewish ancestry who instilled in her children a love of literature and music. The defining trauma of Lenin's early life came in 1887 when his elder brother Alexander was arrested and executed by the Tsarist government for his involvement in a plot to assassinate Tsar Alexander III—an event that radicalized the young Vladimir and set him irrevocably on the path of revolutionary politics. Expelled from Kazan Imperial University that same year for participating in a student protest, Lenin completed his law degree as an external student in 1891 and briefly practiced law in Samara, but his true vocation was revolution; immersing himself in the works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, he became a dedicated Marxist and began organizing workers' circles in St. Petersburg in the early 1890s. He was arrested in 1895 and sentenced to three years of exile in Siberia, where he married fellow revolutionary Nadezhda Krupskaya in 1898—a partnership that was simultaneously a deep personal bond and an unbreakable political alliance that would last until his death. After his Siberian exile, Lenin spent most of the following fifteen years in Western Europe—in London, Geneva, Paris, and Zurich—writing prolifically; editing revolutionary newspapers such as Iskra ("The Spark"); and forging and leading the Bolshevik ("majority") faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party against the rival Menshevik faction, a split that would prove decisive for world history. His landmark 1902 pamphlet "What Is to Be Done?" outlined his theory of a tightly disciplined, professional vanguard party as the instrument of proletarian revolution — a departure from orthodox Marxism that became the ideological cornerstone of what the world would come to know as Leninism. When World War I broke out in 1914, Lenin took the unpopular position of "revolutionary defeatism," arguing that socialists should turn the imperialist war into a civil war and use the chaos to bring about revolution; he watched from exile as the February Revolution of 1917 toppled Tsar Nicholas II and established a provisional government. In April 1917, the German government—eager to destabilize Russia—allowed Lenin to travel in a sealed train from Switzerland through Germany and Finland to Petrograd, where he arrived to thunderous acclaim at the Finland Station and immediately issued his "April Theses," demanding that the Bolsheviks refuse to support the Provisional Government and prepare for a socialist revolution. On the night of October 25–26, 1917 (November 7 by the new calendar), the Bolsheviks seized power in the October Revolution—the most consequential political event of the 20th century—and Lenin became the head of the world's first Soviet government, the Council of People's Commissars, a position he would hold until his death. The early years of Bolshevik rule were characterized by extraordinary violence and upheaval: Lenin oversaw the dissolution of the democratically elected Constituent Assembly, the signing of the humiliating Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany in 1918, the brutal Red Terror campaign against perceived class enemies, and a devastating three-year civil war against the White Army and foreign interventionists that claimed millions of lives. He survived an assassination attempt in August 1918 when Socialist Revolutionary Fanny Kaplan shot him twice at close range—injuries that likely contributed to the strokes that would eventually kill him. Recognizing the catastrophic failure of the policy of War Communism, Lenin introduced the New Economic Policy (NEP) in 1921, a pragmatic retreat that allowed limited private enterprise to restore the shattered economy; in December 1922, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was formally established, the culmination of Lenin's revolutionary project. By late 1921, his health had begun to deteriorate rapidly; he suffered his first major stroke in May 1922, a second in December 1922, and a third in March 1923, which left him largely paralyzed and unable to speak. During this period, he dictated his famous "Testament," which expressed reservations about Stalin's fitness to lead and recommended his removal from the post of General Secretary. He died on January 21, 1924, at his country estate in Gorki, near Moscow, following a massive fourth and fatal stroke; he was 53 years old and left no children. Lenin was a voracious reader and prolific writer, producing more than 54 volumes of collected works covering Marxist theory, revolutionary strategy, philosophy, economics, and politics; his major works include "The Development of Capitalism in Russia" (1899), "What Is to Be Done?" (1902), "Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism" (1916), and "The State and Revolution" (1917). His embalmed body was placed on permanent public display in the Lenin Mausoleum on Red Square in Moscow — where it remains to this day — and he became the subject of one of history's most pervasive personality cults, with thousands of statues, streets, cities, and institutions named in his honor across the Soviet Union and the communist world. Ranked consistently by historians and political scientists as one of the most influential people who ever lived, Lenin's political legacy is profoundly ambivalent: admired by the left as the architect of the world's first workers' state and a champion of anti-imperialism and colonial liberation, he is condemned by others as the founder of a totalitarian system responsible for mass terror, forced labor camps, and untold human suffering—a tension that ensures Vladimir Lenin will remain one of the most debated figures in history for generations to come.