Augustina Stanislavovna Gabel (Ukrainian: Августина Станіславівна Габель, romanizedAugustyna Stanislavivna Habel; née Sinkevich; born 30 August 1853 – 29 March 1907) was a librarian and revolutionary from the Russian Empire. Orphaned at an early age, she was raised by her older sister and her husband. After receiving her education, she became involved in revolutionary activities, joining the Narodnik movement, which aimed to promote socialist ideas among the Russian peasantry.

Augustina Gabel
A photograph of Gabel, taken in the photo studio of the Blum brothers
Born
Augustina Sinkevich[a]

(1863-08-30)30 August 1863
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died29 March 1907(1907-03-29) (aged 43)
Kharkiv, Russian Empire
SpouseOrest Gabel
ChildrenLudmila, Elena, Valeria [uk],
Maria, Yuri, Margarita

She later became a member a revolutionary group led by Orest Gabel, whom she later married. She participated in efforts to support the movement, including planning the escape of imprisoned comrades. She was arrested in 1876 and spent several months in prison, where she gave birth to her first child. After her release, she voluntarily went into exile in Siberia with her husband. The couple had five children during their time in exile and later moved to Kharkiv, where she became active in the cultural life of the city.

She worked at the Kharkiv Public Library from 1893 to 1903. As organiser of one of its branches, corresponded with writers in order to raise funds and acquire books for the library.

Augustina Gabel died on March 29, 1907, in Kharkiv, modern-day Ukraine.

Biography

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Early life

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Augustina as a child

Augustina Sinkevich[b] was born on 30 August 1853 in Saint Petersburg into the family of a Russified Pole, Titular Councillor [ru] Stanislav Vikentiyovych Sinkevych. At an early age, she was orphaned and raised in the family of her older sister Elena and her husband, a dentist, Samuel Linbek. She received her primary education at the Vasileostrovsky Girls' Gymnasium, from which she graduated in 1869.[1][4][5]

Revolutionary activities and exile

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Gabel gave private lessons. In the mid-1870s, she ran a cobbler's workshop on Poshtamtska Street [ru] with Sofia Smitten,[c] based on co-operative principles. Meetings were held in the workshop, at which Mikhail Ovchinnikov spread revolutionary propaganda. It was here that the Finnish-born Johannes Pelkonen [fi], later one of the figures in the Trial of the 193, was acquainted with the ideas of the Narodnik movement, which aimed to promote socialist ideas among the Russian peasantry.[6][7]

In 1874, Sinkevich was under unofficial surveillance, living with relatives in Kharkiv. In Kharkiv, Augustina met the Narodnik Porfiry Voinaralskiy [uk] and promoted revolutionary ideas, particularly among students. She became a participant in the Going to the People movement in Chuhuiv. Researcher Sofia Sholomova [uk] suggested that Augustina provided financial assistance to people in Chuhuiv, including the artist Ilya Repin, whom she had known since childhood.[2][8]

Upon returning to the capital, she met the student Orest Gabel. He often visited her home as a tutor for his nephew, Samuel Limbek. Having bonded over their Narodnik worldview, Augustina Sinkevich and Orest Gabel got married in 1875. In the same year, they set off to Bosnia and Herzegovina to participate in the anti-Ottoman uprising, but they did not stay there for long.[1][9]

In Saint Petersburg, Augustina Gabel joined the Narodnik circle organised by her husband, whose members were preparing the escape of Narodniks Sergei Kovalik [ru] and Porfiry Voinaralsky from the pre-trial detention centre in the city [ru]. At the suggestion of the circle member Grigori Machtet, on 15 August 1876, Gabel, Nadezhda Bantle and Alexander Klushin [ru] took compromising materials from the apartment of the recently arrested Yevhenia Bartoshevich. That day, Augustina was searched and arrested. From 25 September to 2 October 1876, she was in the Petropavlovsk Fortress prison, and then in the hospital of the Lithuanian Castle [ru], a prison castle in Saint Petersburg. There, in December, she gave birth to her first child, a daughter named Ludmila. Augustina was interrogated on charges of "having relations with those held in the pre-trial detention centre with a view to their release". She spent a total of four and a half months in custody. Augustina Gabel's case was closed administratively by the Supreme Command [ru] on 2 October 1877. The period of her imprisonment took into account her previous detention. Gabel was placed under police supervision.[10][11][1]

In mid-June 1878, she voluntarily went into exile with her husband to Eastern Siberia, having previously obtained permission from Alexander Timashev, the Minister of the Interior. She lived with her husband in Balagansk in the Irkutsk Governorate, managing the household. During their exile, three daughters were born to the couple: Elena, Valeria, and Maria. On 3 May 1882, Augustina Gabel was released from police supervision by the decision of the Special Council.[12][1]

Librarian work

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Photograph taken by Alfred Fedetsky in 1895

At the end of Orest Gabel's exile, he and Augustina left Siberia and arrived in Kharkiv in August 1887, where the couple were placed under secret surveillance.[12] During their time in Kharkiv, the couple had two additional children, Yuri and Margarita. Augustina actively engaged in the cultural life of the city, and alongside her husband, contributed to the initiatives of the Kharkiv Society for the Promotion of Literacy among the People [uk].[13]

In 1890, she became a member of the Kharkiv Public Library and from 1893 to 1903, she worked in the library.[14][15] She attended library members' meetings, worked at the circulation desk, and assisted readers in selecting books. When the question arose about the creation of library branches in industrial areas, Gabel was a member of the organising committee and actively participated in the opening of the first and second branches, including collecting donations. After the creation of the Branch Committee, which was responsible for the operation of the library branches, Gabel was elected its member, in which capacity she corresponded to various writers with the intention of including their books in the library collections.[1][5] Among her correspondents were the writers Anton Chekhov and Leo Tolstoy. Her letter to Chekhov, sent in 1902, has been preserved and was included the catalogue of Evgeny Leitnecker. Researcher Sofia Sholomova indicated that there were many books by Chekhov in the catalog of the first branch office, and perhaps some of them were sent by the author in response to Augustina's letter.[16][9][17][1]

Gabel died on 29 March 1907, in Kharkiv.[1] She was a Catholic.[18]

Notes

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  1. ^ Various spellings of the surname include: Sinkevych,[1] Sinkievich[2] and Senkevich[3]
  2. ^ Various spellings of the surname include: Sinkevych,[1] Sinkievich[2] and Senkevich[3]
  3. ^ Daughter of General Gustav Smitten [ru]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Telegina 2020.
  2. ^ a b c Nikolaenko 2017, p. 230.
  3. ^ a b Tunakova 1972, p. 31.
  4. ^ "Выпускницы Василеостровской женской гимназии" [Graduates of the Vasileostrovsky Girls' Gymnasium]. petergen.com (in Russian). Archived from the original on 18 November 2021. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b Goff 2011, p. 35.
  6. ^ Gabel 1932, pp. 1503, 1540.
  7. ^ Nikolaenko 2017, p. 231.
  8. ^ Sholomova 1986, pp. 188–189.
  9. ^ a b Sholomova 1986, p. 189.
  10. ^ Gabel 1932, pp. 1503–1504.
  11. ^ Tunakova 1972, pp. 31–33.
  12. ^ a b Gabel 1932, p. 1504.
  13. ^ Vovk 2016, p. 134.
  14. ^ Shalyganova 2016, p. 302.
  15. ^ Gabel 2017, p. 89.
  16. ^ Leitnecker 1939, p. 21.
  17. ^ Nikipelova 2011, p. 19.
  18. ^ Gabel 1932, p. 1503.

Sources

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  • Vovk, O. I. (2016). "Ilya Repin and Kharkiv University". V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University Bulletin 'History of Ukraine. Ukrainian Studies: Historical and Philosophical Sciences'. 23: 132–137. ISSN 2524-2288.
  • Goff, Inna Anatoliyivna [in Ukrainian] (2011). "Friends of my mother". In Kaganov, M. I.; Kontorovich, V. M.; Frisman, L. G. (eds.). 25th entrance (in Russian). Kharkiv. pp. 32–39.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Kamchatnyy, Valeriy Hryhorovych [in Ukrainian] (2018). Scientific and educational work of Professor I. P. Osypov (1855–1918) in the field of chemistry. Kharkiv: Golden Pages. p. 232. ISBN 978-966-400-465-4.
  • Mamon, Viacheslav (2020). "The life path of librarian Valeria Hasselbrink-Gabel". Proceedings of the XXII All-Ukrainian Scientific-Practical Conference. Kharkiv: V. G. Korolenko Kharkiv State Scientific Library: 184–191.
  • Mizgina, Valentyna Vasylivna [in Ukrainian]; Buchasta, S. I.; Sevchenko, O. O. (2019). Ilya Repin and Kharkiv Region. Kharkiv: Zoloti storinky. p. 104. ISBN 978-966-400-497-5.
  • Nikolaenko, O. O. (2017). Polish women of the Dnieper region in the second half of the 19th and early 20th centuries: public and private life. Kharkiv: Qualifying scientific work on manuscript rights. p. 479.
  • Nikipelova, N. A. (2011). "'... In memory of the guests...' or the lessons of Margarita Orestovna". In Kaganov, M. I.; Kontorovich, V. M.; Frisman, L. G. (eds.). 25th entrance (in Russian). Kharkiv: V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University. pp. 17–22.
  • Telegina, S. V. (2020). "Gabel Avgustina Stanislavivna". Library encyclopedia of the Kharkiv region. Kharkiv State Scientific Library named after V. G. Korolenko.
  • Tunakova, K. S. (1972). "G. A. Machtet and revolutionary movement of the 70s". Russian literature and liberation movement (in Russian): 17–43.
  • Chernova, Maryana Volodymyrivna [in Ukrainian] (31 October 1980). "With the autograph of the great master". Soviet Culture (in Russian) (88 (5408)). ISSN 1562-0379.
  • Shalyganova, A. L. (2016). Administration of the Kharkiv public library, 1885—1918: bio-bibliographical dictionary (in Russian). Kharkiv: Fedorko. p. 328. ISBN 978-617-7298-43-3.
  • Sholomova, Sofiya Bohdanivna [in Ukrainian] (1986). "Kharkiv public". Fatherland (article). No. 9. pp. 188–190.
  • Leitnecker, Sostavitelʹ Yevgeny Yemiliyovich (1939). Archive of A.P. Chekhov: Annotated description of letters to A.P. Chekhov: (in Russian). Moscow, Russia: Sotsekgiz. Compiled by E.E. Leitnecker.
  • Gabel, Augustina (2017), Garbar, L. V.; Boryak, H. V.; Dubrovina, L. A.; Popyk, V. I. (eds.), Istoriya ukrayinsʹkoyi bibliotechnoyi spravy v imenakh (kinetsʹ XIX st. — 1941 r.): materialy do biobibliohrafichnoho slovnyka [History of the Ukrainian library business in names (end of the 19th century — 1941): materials for the bio-bibliographic dictionary], Kyiv: Natsionalʹna biblioteka Ukrayiny imeni V. I. Vernadsʹkoho, p. 616, ISBN 978-966-02-8536-1
  • "Repin's drawing — Rypin" (in Ukrainian). No. 139. Svoboda. 24 July 1971. ISSN 0274-6964.
  • Gabel, Augustina (1932), Shilov, Oleksiy Oleksiyovych [in Ukrainian]; Karnaukhova, M. G. (eds.), Deyateli revolyutsionnogo dvizheniya v Rossii: bio-bibliograficheskiy slovarʹ [Figures of the revolutionary movement in Russia: bio-bibliographic dictionary - Sinkevich (Gabel) Augustina Stanislavovna] (in Russian), Moscow, Russia{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)