Peter Struve
| Peter  Struve | |
|---|---|
| Struve between 1890 and 1910 | |
| Born | 7 February [O.S. 26 January] 1870 | 
| Died | 22 February 1944 (aged 74) | 
| Education | |
| Alma mater | Saint Petersburg State University | 
| Philosophical work | |
| Era | Contemporary philosophy | 
| Region | Russian philosophy | 
| School | Marxism, nationalism, liberalism, conservative liberalism | 
| Main interests | Russian nationalism, All-Russian nation, pan-Slavism, Legal Marxism, anti-communism | 
| Notable ideas | Legal Marxism, Russian nationalism, anti-Sovietism | 
Peter (or Pyotr or Petr) Berngardovich Struve (Russian: Пётр Бернга́рдович Стру́ве, IPA: [pʲɵtr bʲɪrnˈɡardəvʲɪtɕˈstruvʲɪ]; 7 February [O.S. 26 January] 1870 – 22 February 1944) was a Russian political economist, philosopher, historian and editor. He started his career as a Marxist, later became a liberal and after the Bolshevik Revolution, joined the White movement. From 1920, he lived in exile in Paris, where he was a prominent critic of Russian communism.