Nadia Symonivna Smyrnytska (; 1852 – 7 November 1889) was a Ukrainian Narodniks revolutionary. The daughter of a priest killed by Cossacks, she joined the Narodniks during the 1870s and was arrested for her activities. She escaped enforced exile, going on to work for Narodnaya Volya, but was rearrested and imprisoned in Kara katorga. There, along with other imprisoned revolutionary women, she committed suicide in protest against their abuse by the prison authorities.
In 1876, Smyrnytska joined a Narodniks circle in Kiev. She was arrested for her activities in May 1879 and exiled to Solvychegodsk, in the Russian North, where she married . She managed to escape in March 1880, together with her new husband. She then went to Moscow where she joined Narodnaya Volya, setting up a passport office for the organisation in her flat.
She was arrested again in March 1882 and tried in the , in which she was sentenced to 15 years of penal labour in Kara katorga. In protest against the abuse of imprisoned women in Kara, she committed suicide in November 1889, alongside Nadezhda Sigida and fellow Ukrainian revolutionaries Maria Kovalevska and Maria Kalyuzhnaya.
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