Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at eitingon.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Eitingon.

Examples

  • Georges [Georgi] Agabekov, OGPU (1931): This book tells us nothing about the issues here discussed, except that one "Eitingon," clearly Leonid, used the pseudonym "Naumoff."

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • Letter to Max Eitingon, Sept. 8, 1932, in Jones, Life and Work of Sigmund Freud, vol.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Letter to Max Eitingon, Sept. 8, 1932, in Jones, Life and Work of Sigmund Freud, vol.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • However, the mysteries of the Eitingon family and its relationships have yet to be fully resolved.

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • Finally, there is the matter of the Eitingon fur business, its relations with the Soviet Union, and the funds derived from it by Dr. Max Eitingon.

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • Mr. Dr.per has assailed the description by Vitaly Rapoport and Yury Alexeev, Dr. J.hn J. Dziak, and myself, as well as Pierre Broue, whom I also cited and whom Mr. Dr.per ignores, of Dr. Max Eitingon as the brother of Leonid (Naum) Eitingon, the high KGB official.

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • These are: the role of Nikolai Skoblin and Nadyezhda Plevitskaya in KGB activities and their relationship with Dr. Eitingon; the relationship between Dr. Eitingon and Leonid (Naum) Eitingon, the overall commander of the mobile terror squad operating in Western Europe and the Americas against enemies of Stalin, and the relations between the Eitingon family fur business and the Soviet regime.

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • It will clarify the issues raised in Theodore Draper's article, "The Mystery of Max Eitingon," in The New York Review of Books of April 14, 1988, for me to summarize the purpose of my article, titled "Intellectuals and Assassins: Annals of Stalin's Killerati," in The New York Times Book Review for January 24, 1988.

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • Max Eitingon was no mystery figure and there are no secrets; had Mr. Schwartz only tried, he would have found that members of Eitingon's closest family are still alive, so is his secretary, so are some friends and pupils and patients and a great deal of documentation is also available.

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

  • Schwartz wants us to believe that the Eitingon companies "provided business cover for GPU operations."

    'The Mystery of Max Eitingon': An Exchange Laqueur, Walter 1988

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.