Peter the Painter, also
known as Peter Piaktow (or
Piatkov, Pjatkov,
Piaktoff), was the leader of a gang of Latvian
revolutionary criminals in the early 20th
Century. After supposedly fighting in and escaping the
Sidney Street
Siege
in 1911, he became an anti-hero in London's East End
. He was never caught, and there is some
question as to whether or not he actually ever existed.
In the wake of the
Houndsditch
Murders on 16 December 1910, one of the revolutionary gang
involved was found dead at a flat at which Peter Piatkow had lived
with
Fritz Svaars aka Fricis Svars,
both of whom were believed to be members of a Latvian radical
group. Svaars was the cousin of
Jacob
Peters, another Latvian revolutionary. The Siege of Sidney
Street was triggered when the police were informed that Svaars and
his comrades were hiding out at 100 Sidney Street in January
1911.
There are a number of candidates for the true identity of Peter the
Painter. He was frequently identified with Jacob Peters, who was
tried but acquitted for his involvement in the affair and later
became a
Cheka agent after the Russian
Revolution.
Donald Rumbelow, for
example, identifies Peters with the Painter.
In 1988,
based on research in the KGB
archives, the historian Philip Ruff suggested Peter
the Painter might in fact be Gederts
Eliass[64122], a Latvian artist involved in the 1905 Revolution and living in exile during
the time of the Siege, returning to Riga after the 1917 Revolution. More recently, Ruff
has identified Peter the Painter with
Janis Zhaklis, or Zhakles, another Latvian
revolutionary. Like Peters, Zhaklis was a member of the
Latvian Social
Democratic Workers' Party in 1905; among his revolutionary
exploits was the liberation of Fritz Svaars from prison in Riga.
Zhaklis associated with Eliass in exile in Finland, where they were
involved together in the expropriation of a bank. He broke with the
Social Democrats and became an anarchist. It is unclear what fate
befell him after 1911.
The type
of gun Peter the Painter allegedly used at Sidney Street, a
German
Mauser C96 pistol, was
also sometimes called a Peter the Painter after
him, particularly in Ireland
during the
War of Independence and
later.
A social housing development built in 2006 by
Tower Hamlets Community
Housing on the corner of Sidney Street and Commercial Road has
been called Peter House and Painter House, after Peter the Painter,
provoking condemnation from a
local councillor and the
Metropolitan Police
Federation.
The song "Peter the Painter", by
Ian Dury
and the Blockheads, is unrelated, referring instead to the artist
Peter Blake.
Notes
- Rumbelow The Siege of Sidney Street 1974 St Martins
Press
- "Peter the Painter (Janis Zhaklis) and the Siege of
Sidney Street", Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley
Library 50/51 2007, p.6
- "Peter the Painter (Janis Zhaklis) and the Siege of
Sidney Street", Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley
Library 50/51 2007, p.6-7
- The Independent, 17 February 2004
-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1061719/Honouring-anarchist-Fury-Siege-Sidney-Street-killer-gets-tower-block-plaque.html
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