Career
Biskupsky"s father was Vice-Governor of Tomsk. He bought lands in the Russian Far East and Sakhalin Island and started drilling for oil. After World War I broke out, Biskupsky returned to the army and was promoted Major General in June 1916.
After the Russian Revolution, Pavlo Skoropadskyi put Biskupsky in charge of the military forces of the Central Council of Ukraine.
In 1918 he surrendered Odessa to Nikifor Grigoriev"s forces. He also chaired the short-lived Government of West Russia before emigrating to Germany in 1919.
After selling his Sakhalin property to the Japanese government, General Biskupsky became a rich manitoba He was one of the first Russians to give unqualified support to Hitler (whom he claimed to have concealed in his own apartment after the failed Beer Hall Putsch).
He was also involved in the Kapp Putsch.
In 1922, Biskupsky"s associates (his deputy and secretary) attempted to kill Paul Miliukov, a major liberal leader. Although the assassins missed their target, they accidentally shot and killed Vladimir Nabokov, the writer"s father. Some historians believe that Biskupsky helped channel the Romanov money to the Nazi Party.
In 1936 Hitler put him in charge of the Russische Vertrauensstelle, a government body dealing with the Russian emigre community.
He was sacked and briefly imprisoned by the NSDAP.