1. Victor E. Marsden

    Victor Emile Marsden (1866 - 1920) was a journalist and translator. He is known primarily for the translation of the most widespread English language version of "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion". The first English language publication of this text was in London in 1920. However, prior to its publication, the "Morning Post", in 1920, utilized the text as a basis of 17, or 18 (depending on which authority is cited), …

  2. Nesta Webster

    Nesta Helen Webster (Mrs Arthur Webster) (August 24, 1876 - May 16, 1960) was a controversial historian, occultist, and aristocratic author who revived conspiracy theories about the Illuminati.. She argued that the secret society’s members were occultists, plotting communist world domination, using the idea of a Jewish cabal, the Masons and Jesuits as a smokescreen. According to her, their international subversion included the French Revolution, 1848 Revolution, …

  3. Hadassa Ben-Itto

    Hadassa Ben-Itto (born 1926, Poland) is an author and a jurist. She is best known for her scholarly work, "The Lie That Would Not Die", "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" (2005), …

  4. Boris Brasol

    Boris Leo Brasol (or Brazol) (b. 1885 - d.?), a White Russian, Russian immigrant to the United States, and formerly a Lieutenant in the Tsar's military, is the person primarily responsible, together with Natalie de Bogory, for the first, annotated, USA edition, in book or booklet form, of the notorious Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, published in Boston, in 1920, by the prestigious publishing house of Small, …

  5. George Shanks

    George Shanks. The true first translator--identified in only 1978--of the Protocols of Zion into the English language for publication by The Britons. Victor E. Marsden's name only came to be associated with the British English language translation of the Protocols in pamphlet or book form only one or two years after he died in 1920. Shanks was the son of a well-known English merchant who resided in Moscow.

  6. Cesare G. de Michelis

    Cesare G. De Michelis, scholar and professor of Russian Literature at the University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy — "not to be confused with his omonimous cousin, Cesare De Michelis, professor of Italian Literature at the University of Padua, Italy." He is also an authority on the notorious plagiarism known as Protocols of Zion.

  7. Natalie de Bogory

    Natalie de Bogory, (also deBogory), is primarily known for her notorious work in translating from the Russian language into the English language, and subsequently distributing and participating in having published the first or second American edition in the United State of the infamous Plagiarism known as the Protocols of Zion. There were two different editions printed in the United States in 1920.

  8. Clyde J. Wright

    Clyde J. Wright, infamous antisemite, editor/publisher of a 1934 imprint of the notorious Protocols of Zion. He is responsible for the following imprint: <blockquote&gt; LC Control No.: 34018166 Type of Material: Book (Print, Microform, Electronic, etc.) Uniform Title: "Protocols of the wise men of Zion." Main Title: Protocols of the meetings of the learned elders of Zion; Victor E. Marsden’s translation of the Nilus documents, edited by Clyde J. Wright.

  9. Colin Holmes

    Colin Holmes (b. 1938) is a British scholar and author. He has done much research on the subject of anti-Semitism. He has also done original research on the English language British editions of the notorious plagiarism known as the "Protocols of Zion". His original, archival, research on the subject has been published in 1977 and 1978 in the journal, "Patterns of Prejudice".

  10. Harris A. Houghton

    Harris Ayers Houghton was a professional physician and military officer of the United State during and shortly after World War I. But his fame derives primarily in the role he played in bringing about the translation and publication in the English language of the infamous plagiarism, in the United States in 1920 known by the brief title as the Protocols of Zion. On or about February 1, 1918, his personal assistant, Miss Natalie de Bogory, …

  11. Mikhail Raslovlev

    Mikhail Raslovlev was a Russian monarchist emigre who met Philip Graves and gave him a copy of Maurice Joly's book, "Dialogue aux Enfers entre Montesquieu et Machiavel", thereby demonstrating that the infamous "Protocols of Zion" was a forgery. At the time, Raslovlev was employed by the American Red Cross in the capital of Turkey, and Graves was a journalist, the Constantinople correspondent for "The Times" (London).

  12. Arthur Cherep-Spiridovich

    Arthur Cherep-Spiridovitch (1858-October 22, 1926). Count, Major General in Imperial Russian Army, author. He was also a publicist for, and promoter of, the notorious Protocols of Zion, early advocate of conspiracy theory, of the secret "world government," and the notion of the "hidden hand." He is the author of the 1926 notorious text, "The Secret World Government: or, "The Hidden Hand"

  13. Piotr Shabelsky-Bork

    Piotr Nikolaevich Shabelsky-Bork (1893-1952). He was one of the two assassins responsible for the death of Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov. The intended target was Pavel Miliukov, a leader of the "Kadets." But when Nabokov attempted to stop the assassination, Nabokov was shot twice and died instantly. For the crime, Shabelsky-Bork received a sentence of fourteen years imprisonment, but was released shortly after commencing his sentence. He was born in the Caucasus.

  14. Jeff Herr
  15. Jennifer Tuft