Background
Zabugin was born into a family of civil servants.
Zabugin was born into a family of civil servants.
In 1903, he graduated with honors from Saint St. Petersburg State University.
He was then sent to Italy to do scientific work. In 1911, he completed his doctoral thesis. After that, he worked as a professor at the University of Rome, where he taught the history of the Italian Renaissance.
From 1910 to 1919, he worked as an editor of the journal Roma e l"Oriente (Rome and the East), which was published in the monastery of Grottaferrata.
Zabugin actively participated in the church and in the social lives of Russian Catholics in Europe, and he worked with Metropolitan Archbishop Andrey Sheptytsky. Zabugin was the author of the Russian Catholic catechism.
In June 1917, Zabugin was sent to Russia by the Italian government as a special envoy to strengthen bilateral ties. After the October Revolution, he returned to Italy, where he published Mad Giant: The Documentary Chronicles the Russian Revolution, a book about his impressions of the recent events in Russia.
Vladimir Zabugin died on 14 September 1923 in a mountaineering accident in the Alps.