Sven Linderot

Sven Linderot
Sven Linderot c. 1955
Chairman of the Communist Party of Sweden
In office
1929–1951
Preceded byNils Flyg
Succeeded byHilding Hagberg
Member of the Riksdag's First Chamber
for Stockholm County
In office
1939–1949
ConstituencyVästerbotten County and Norrbotten County
Personal details
Born(1889-10-08)8 October 1889
Skedevi parish, Finspång Municipality, Östergötland County, Sweden
Died7 April 1956(1956-04-07) (aged 66)
Stockholm, Sweden
Resting placeSkogskyrkogården
Political partySocial Democrats (1907-1917)
Swedish Social Democratic Left Party (1917-1921)
Communist Party (1921-1956)
SpouseGerda Linderot
ChildrenIna Linnéa Linderot
ProfessionJournalist, politician
Sven Linderot c. 1935

Sven Harald Linderot (8 October 1889, in Skedevi, Finspång, Östergötland County – 7 April 1956) was a Swedish Communist leader. He was born Sven Harald Larsson but changed his surname to Linderot in 1918. Among party members he was also known as Sven-Lasse.[1]

Linderot became active in the Swedish Social Democratic Party in 1914 and he joined the left opposition at the party split in 1917, which soon became the Communist Party of Sweden. During the Finnish Civil War he was active in Committee against the Finnish White Terror. Linderot was one of the leaders of the party's youth organization and in late 1921 he was sent to Moscow to work for the Communist International (Comintern). He was also editor of the party newspaper Norrskensflamman from 1925 to 1927.

When the party split in 1929, Linderot emerged as one of the main figures in the pro-Comintern faction together with Hugo Sillén, which by orders of Moscow expelled a majority of the party's members, including the leadership. Linderot replaced the expelled Nils Flyg as leader of the party, a position he held from 1929 to 1951.

In 1939, Sven Linderot was elected to the upper house (Swedish: första kammaren) of the Parliament of Sweden, where he had a seat until 1949.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Sven, "Sven-Lasse" Linderot in Nationalencyklopedin, accessed 2013-08-13 (in Swedish)
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Communist Party of Sweden
1929 – 1951
Succeeded by