Lydia Mikhailovna Knipovich (; ; 1857–1920) was a Finnish-Russian revolutionary socialist. A member of Narodnaya Volya, she later joined the League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class and was arrested for illegally printing the group's publications. While in internal exile, she helped establish the socialist newspaper Iskra and joined the Bolsheviks of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP).
Together with Nadezhda Krupskaya and Apollinariya Yakubova, she became a leader of the Saint Petersburg workers' movement during its early stages. She also became a close confindant of Vladimir Lenin. With them, she joined the League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class and clandestinely printed the group's publications.
In the summer of 1896, Knipovich was arrested and imprisoned for her revolutionary activities. According to Krupskaya, Knipovich had been given up by a typesetter she had worked with to print the group's publications. Knipovich requested that she be exiled to Ufa. She spent her years in internal exile in Astrakhan, Tver and Samara, where she remained active in the socialist movement, helping to establish the socialist newspaper Iskra. Knipovich was one of five women, out of twelve total contributors, who worked on the paper.
In 1905, Knipovich attended the Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP), where the party split into two factions. Knipovich herself joined Lenin's Bolsheviks. She then moved to Odesa, where she was secretary of the local RSDLP committee and contributed to the publication Proletariat. In 1911, she was internally exiled to the Poltava Governorate and withdrew from political activity in 1914. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, she moved to Crimea, where she died in 1920.
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