Grigory Konstantinovich Ordzhonikidze (born October 12 [October 24, New Style], 1886, Goresha, Russia—died February 18, 1937, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) was a communist leader who played a major role in bringing Georgia under Soviet rule and in industrializing the Soviet Union.
Having joined the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party in 1903, Ordzhonikidze was active in the revolutionary movement, becoming a member of the party’s central committee (1912). In April 1912, however, he was arrested for the third time. He resumed his activities only after the imperial Russian government had been overthrown (February 1917) and he had returned from exile in Siberia.
Ordzhonikidze then became a member of both the executive committee of the Petrograd Soviet (the revolutionary council of workers and soldiers that rivaled the authority of the provisional government) and of the Bolshevik Party committee. After the Bolsheviks seized power (October 1917), he became commissar extraordinary for the Ukraine area (1918), a member of his party’s Central Committee (1921), and chairman of the Central Committee’s Caucasian bureau (1921). Despite Vladimir Lenin’s objections to his brutal methods (which were approved by Joseph Stalin) and the opposition of the local communist organizations, Ordzhonikidze helped the Red Army conquer Georgia, then merged Georgia with Armenia and Azerbaijan to create the Transcaucasian Federal Republic, which in turn, was compelled to join Russia, Belorussia, and Ukraine to form the Soviet Union (December 1922).
During the intraparty power struggles of the mid-1920s, Ordzhonikidze generally supported Stalin. Although he incurred the hostility of Lavrenty Beria, who as chief of the secret police in Transcaucasia forced him to transfer to the northern Caucasus (1926), Ordzhonikidze nevertheless advanced in 1926 to become a candidate member of the Central Committee’s Politburo, chairman of the party’s central control commission, which was responsible for eliminating dissension among party members, and commissar for worker-peasant inspection. In 1930 he became a full member of the Politburo.
Having helped organize the development of Soviet industry during the First Five-Year Plan (1928–32), Ordzhonikidze became commissar for heavy industry in 1932. During the mid-1930s he opposed Stalin’s industrial policy and displayed his disapproval of Stalin’s terroristic rule. Although Ordzhonikidze’s sudden death in 1937 was officially attributed to natural causes, Nikita Khrushchev later charged (1956) that Stalin had driven Ordzhonikidze to commit suicide.