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Konkordiia Nikolavna Samoilova (née Gromova) (1876-June 3, 1921), a bolshevik, was a founding editor of the Russian newspaper, Pravda, in 1912. She was a revolutionary and activist for women workers both before and after the Bolshevik Revolution. She devoted her life to the cause of proletarian women. Feeling strongly as a Communist, she sometimes used the name "Natasha Bolshevikova".

Early years
Samoilova's father was a priest in Irkutsk, Siberia, and she had a sister, Kaleriia. Samoilova graduated with a gold medal from gymnasium in Irkutsk. She took part in her first demonstration in February 1897 while a university student, studying Bestuzhev Courses in St. Petersburg, protesting the death of a student who was in prison. The demonstration turned violent and a women was killed. While in St. Petersburg, Samoilova took interest in social issues and read the works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. In 1901, she took part in another demonstration protesting the hardships on the urban poor and the imprisonment of students in Kiev, at this demonstration she was arrested and spent 3 months in prison. Her time in prison caused her to be expelled from the university because she was deemed "politically undesirable." She returned home to Irkutsk until early 1902. While home in Irkutsk, she spent time listening to people who had been exiled to Siberia for political offenses and revolutionary thought. She then received a passport and left for Paris to study Marxism at the Vol'naaia Russkaia shkola obshchestvennykh nauk (Free Russian School of Social Sciences) where the lecturers included Vladimir Lenin and Julius Martov.

Career
In 1903, she joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (bolsheviks) or RSDLP(b). She was arrested four times between 1902 and 1913, and spent a year in prison. At the First All-Russian Women's Congress in November 1918, she sat on the podium with Inessa Armand, Alexandra Kollontai, and Klavdiia Nikolaeva. In 1912, she was a founding editor, along with Praskoviia Kudelli, of the newspaper Rabotnitsa meaning "Woman worker". While back in Russia, she was a propagandist often working under the pseudonym Natasha Bolshevikova pushing for revolutionary cause.

In 1917 Konkordiia Samoilova worked with Alexandra Kollontai to establish the First Conference of Women Workers in Petrograd, Russia. She then went on to help organize the First All-Russian Congress of Women's Workers. This congress became a platform for women of different backgrounds to voice their complaints and debate a course of action for women workers. It also lead to decrees for the legal equality of men and women during the onset of the October Revolution. Samoilova was also involved with the Zhenotdel and had a focus on working with Ukrainian women.

During the years of 1920-1921 Samoilova worked on a ship, as a top party representative and head of the political department, named the Krasnaia zvezda which is translated as Red Star. This ship was tasked with propagandizing the Bolshevik ideas in cities along the Vol'ga. It would bring skilled orators and live performances to speak to the public on social issues.

International Women's Day 1913
Samoilova played a role in the organization of one of the largest International Women's Day celebrations held in St. Petersburg in 1913. This event was organized by the special holiday committee established by the Petersburg Committee of the Social Democratic Party. The event gathered a large crowd of over 1,000 people with a significant police presence, it also saw many speakers present for the first time in their careers such as Alexander Grigor'eva-Alekseeva. Other topics spoken about were prostitution by Anna Gurevich, and the assembly of female workers by Maria Ianchevskaia.

Personal life
She met Arkadi A. Samoilov in 1906 and they married in 1913. They had two children. Her husband died in 1919 of typhoid fever. While on her journeys with the Krasnaia zvezda, Samoilova searched for her husband's grave. On a different journey, Konkordiia contracted cholera and died at the age of 45 in 1921 in Astrakhan.