Antonina Pirozhkova

Antonina Pirozhkova
Born July 1, 1909
Krasny Yar, Siberia
Died September 12, 2010
Sarasota, Florida
Nationality Russian
Citizenship Soviet, American
Education Tomsk Polytechnic University
Spouse(s) Isaac Babel

Engineering career

Engineering discipline Civil Engineering
Institution memberships Moscow State University of Railway Engineering
Significant projects Moscow Metro

Antonina Pirozhkova (1 July 1909 -12 September 2010) was a Russian civil engineer and writer, best known for her contributions to the construction of the Moscow Metro and the preservation of the literary legacy of her husband Isaac Babel.

Biography

Antonina Nikolaevna Pirozhkova was born on 1 July 1909 in the village of Krasny Yar, Siberia. Her father died when she was fourteen, and she helped support her family by tutoring children at mathematics.[1] In 1926, she joined Tomsk Polytechnic University to study construction and engineering, graduating four years later.[2]

In 1932, Pirozhkova met the writer Isaac Babel. They began to live together in 1934 and had a daughter Lidiya in 1937. Babel was separated from his wife, and he did not enter into a formal marriage with Pirozhkova. However, following his death, the Soviet authorities recognised her as his heir.[1]

Babel was executed at the Lubyanka on 27 January 1940. Neither his mother nor Pirozhkova was informed that he was in a Siberian gulag. Pirozhkova received confirmation of his death only in 1954, and even then was told that he had died in 1941 during the Second World War. Babel's papers including manuscripts, notebooks and his letters to her, were confiscated by the NKVD. Their fate remains unknown.[1]

Pirozhkova and her daughter were evacuated during the war to Abkhazia.[1]

She retired in 1965, whereupon she began her struggle to rehabilitate Babel and to restore his literary legacy.[2]

In 1996, she emigrated with Lidiya to the US. She died on 12 September 2010, aged 101, in Sarasota, Florida.[2]

Career

In 1930, Pirozhkova was assigned to work at Kuznetskstroi, a metallurgical factory being built near Novokuznetsk. Her talents were so valued that the stationmaster of the local railway station was forbidden from selling her a ticket home.[3] Following its construction, she transferred in 1934 to Moscow where she joined the Metroproekt, the institute responsible for the design and construction of the Moscow Metro.[2] She rose to the rank of chief designer, and was responsible for some of the major stations in the network: Mayakovskaya, Revolution Square, Paveletskaya, Kievskaya, and Arbatskaya.[4]

During the Second World War, Pirozhkova headed an engineering team building railway tunnels in the Caucasus.[5] In the 1950s, she was involved in the design and construction of palatial houses in the resorts of Caucasus.[6]

Pirozhkova then joined the faculty of the Moscow State University of Railway Engineering. Here she taught subway engineers, and in 1964 wrote the definitive textbook Tunnels and Subways.[1]

Following her retirement, she began to compile and edit extant literary material from Isaac Babel. In 1972, she published the recollections about him by, among others, Ilya Ehrenburg and Konstantin Paustovsky. In 1990, she published the two-volume edition of Babel's collected works, the only one available in the Russian language.[1]

Pirozhkova's transcription of Babel's 1920 Diary was published in the US in 1995.[7]

Pirozhkova's memoir of Babel titled By His Side was published in 1996, while a second volume which covered the rest of her remarkable life appeared posthumously in 2013.[1]

Works

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.