Alexander I. Pogrebetsky
Alexander Iliych Pogrebetsky (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ильи́ч Погребецкий) (1891–1952) was a Russian economist, financier, and businessman who was head of the board of directors of the Chinese Eastern Railway Company and an authority on numismatics.
Alexander Iliych Pogrebetsky | |
---|---|
Born | Alexander I. Pogrebetsky 1891 Irkutsk, Russian Empire |
Died | 1952 60–61) Tel-Aviv, Israel | (aged
Nationality | Russian |
Occupation | Economist & financier |
Early life and career
Alexander I. Pogrebetsky was born in Irkutsk, Russian Empire in 1891. He trained as an economist and financier.[2]
Early career
Pogrebetsky was director of the Department of Finance of "Centrosoyus" for the district of Irkutsk, Zabaikal, and Iakutsk provinces and Mongolia.[2]
Later he was the interim finance manager of the Office of the Government of the Far East and a member of the Finance Commission and the National Constituent Assembly of the Far Eastern Republic (existed April 1920 to November 1922).[2]
He was a member of the Irkutsk Political Centre[3] an independent political group in Irkutsk during the Russian Civil War (1917–1923).
China
Around 1920, he relocated to Harbin, China, where he became head of the board of directors of the Chinese Eastern Railway Company. He wrote financial articles for the Russian-language Vestnik Manʹchzhurii (Manchuria Monitor). Around 1935 he moved to Tianjin, where he was part owner of a private bank. He then moved to Shanghai, where he traded as the China Trading & Investment Company, Ltd.[2]
He was closely involved with Jewish organisations during his time in China. He was a council member of the Jewish People's Bank in Harbin (1925-34) and on the council of the Jewish Commercial Bank (Harbin, 1929-34). He was a member of the Tianjin Jewish Club "Kunst" and the Shanghai Jewish Club.[2]
Later life
Around 1948, Pogrebetsky emigrated to Palestine.[2] He died in Tel-Aviv in 1952[2] of liver cancer.
Banknote collection
Through his work and travels, Pogrebetsky was able to create an important collection of Chinese and Asian banknotes and coins. He wrote (in Russian) Denezhnoe obrashchenie i denezhnye znaki Dal'nego Vostoka za period vojny i revoljutsii (1914-1924) (1924) (Money and bank notes of the Far East during the period of war and revolution), one of the first books on Chinese banknotes. In the 1960s or 70s, part of the collection was donated to the Smithsonian Museum.[2] The rest of the collection remained in family hands until 2015 when it was sold in two sales by Archives International Auctions in May and December.[1][4][5][6]
Selected publications
- Denezhnoe obrashchenie i denezhnye znaki Dal'nego Vostoka za period vojny i revoljutsii (1914-1924), Harbin, 1924.
- Currency and finance of China, 1929. (Russian language)
- "Currency difficulties under the Kolchak government", Hoover Institution Archives, p. 3.
- "Foreign interests in China" in Manchuria Monitor, Harbin, October, 1931. (Russian with 300 word English summary)
- "Currency market of Manchuria in 1932" in Manchuria Monitor, Harbin, No. 8-9, 1933.
References
- Rare, circa 1900 Chinese Chefoo Bank $2 issued private banknote brings $8,430 at Hong Kong auction. ArtfixDaily, 10 June 2015. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
- The Alexander I. Pogrebetsky Family Archives of Rare Chinese and Asian Banknotes, Part 1, Archives International Auctions, Hong Kong, 2015.
- "White Gold: The Imperial Russian Gold Reserve in the Anti-Bolshevik East, 1918-? (An Unconcluded Chapter in the History of the Russian Civil War)" by J.D. Smele, Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 46, No. 8, Soviet and East European History (1994), pp. 1317-1347.
- Over 500 lots of rare Chinese and Asian banknotes and scripophily will be sold at auction May 24th in Hong Kong, China. ArtfixDaily, 7 May 2015. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
- Results From Archives International Auctions' Sale Held On May 24. Antiques & Auction News, 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2015. Archived here.
- You can bank on it: Highlights from Archives International Auctions December sale. Barnebys. Retrieved 30 December 2015.