Red Terror – A campaign of mass arrests, executions, and repression by the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War (1918–1922).
White Terror (Russia) – A campaign of political repression, killings, and persecution carried out by anti-Bolshevik forces during the Russian Civil War, targeting communists, sympathizers, and civilians.
Yakov Sverdlov – Bolshevik party administrator and head of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee.
Joseph Stalin – Bolshevik revolutionary who later became the leader of the Soviet Union; involved in the Red Terror.
Pyotr Stuchka – Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet official.
Leon Trotsky – Bolshevik revolutionary, Lenin's number two, and Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs.
Yakov Tryapitsyn – Red Army commander responsible for the Nikolayevsk incident.
Moisei Uritsky – Head of the Petrograd Cheka, assassinated in 1918.
Varvara Yakovleva – Bolshevik revolutionary and deputy head of the Petrograd Cheka.
Genrikh Yagoda – Head of the NKVD who oversaw political repression and purges.
Leonid Zakovsky – Soviet security official involved in the Great Purge.
Rosalia Zemlyachka – Bolshevik revolutionary nicknamed "Demon" and "Bloody Rosa", who promisedWrangel's white troops amnesty in 1920 before massacring them.
Andrei Zhelyabov – Russian revolutionary and member of Narodnaya Volya.
Grigory Zinoviev – Bolshevik revolutionary and head of the Communist International.
Felix Dzerzhinsky – Bolshevik revolutionary and founder of the Cheka, the Soviet secret police.
Peter Ermakov – Bolshevik revolutionary who participated in the execution of the Romanov family.
Grigory Petrovich Nikulin – Bolshevik revolutionary who participated in the execution of the Romanov family.
Nikolay Tolmachyov – Bolshevik revolutionary and member of the Ural Regional Soviet.
Stepan Vaganov – Bolshevik revolutionary and member of the execution squad.
Pyotr Voykov – Bolshevik revolutionary who facilitated the disposal of the Romanov bodies.
Yakov Yurovsky – Bolshevik revolutionary and chief executioner of the Romanov family.
Alexander Beloborodov – Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet politician; played a key role in ordering the execution of Nicholas II and his family; executed during the Great Purge in 1938.
Boris Didkovsky – Soviet revolutionary and member of the Ural Regional Soviet; involved in the decision to execute the Romanovs; executed during the Great Purge.
Filipp Goloshchyokin – Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet official; instrumental in the execution of the Romanov family; executed during the Great Purge.
Gavril Myasnikov – Bolshevik revolutionary; participated in the execution of the Romanovs; later became a dissident and was executed in 1945.
Yevgeni Preobrazhensky – Bolshevik economist and politician; although not directly involved in the execution, he was associated with the regime; executed during the Great Purge.
Georgy Safarov – Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet official; involved in the early Soviet government; executed during the Great Purge.
The State and Revolution (1917) – Lenin's work justifying the use of violence and terror in the revolution.
Lenin's hanging order (1918) – A directive by Lenin authorizing mass executions of counter-revolutionaries.
Socialist Homeland is in Danger! (1918) – A proclamation by Lenin calling for intensified repression of counter-revolutionaries during the Russian Civil War.
Terrorism and Communism (1921) – Trotsky's work justifying the use of violence and terror in the revolution.[b]
^Hingley, Ronald (2021)."7. The Cheka: 1917–1922".The Russian Secret Police: Muscovite, Imperial Russian and Soviet Political Security Operations 1565–1970. Routledge.ISBN978-1-000-37135-2.
^Mayer, Arno J. (2000).The Furies: Violence and Terror in the French and Russian Revolutions. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
^Kline, George L (1992). "In Defence of Terrorism". In Brotherstone, Terence; Dukes, Paul (eds.).The Trotsky Reappraisal. Edinburgh University Press."In Defence of Terrorism" was the original English title for Trotsky's work later known as"Terrorism and Communism"