2. Fanny Kaplan
Originating from Ukraine, Fanny Kaplan was one of the most representative figures in the revolutionary movement. She spent almost her entire youth wandering around with social-revolutionary groups and anarchists. In 1906, she was arrested for the first time under the accusation of terrorism and then spent an entire decade in Siberian labor camps.
Eleven years later, after the Russian government fell apart, Kaplan was released, but she wasn’t exactly pleased with the world around her. She wasn’t a supporter of Lenin; in fact, she saw him as a treat to Russia, which is why, in 1918, she tried to kill him, but the attempt failed and the wounds weren’t that serious.