Prokofy Dzhaparidze was born in Schardometi village of Racha, Kutais Governorate in the Russian Empire to a Georgian family of landowners. His father died early. He went to a village school and learnt the profession of bootmaker. He was educated at the Alexandrovsk Teachers Institute in Tbilisi, Dzhaparidze joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1898. He participated in the preparation of the May Day demonstration in 1900. He was arrested and held in jail 11 months, and then was sent home. In 1901, he led a strike of tobacco workers in Kutaisi. In 1904 he moved to Baku, became one of the founders of Gummet organization, set up to do political work amongst Muslims, which grew into a mass organisation, drawing large masses of Muslim people behind the Bolsheviks. Some of its most known members included Meshadi Azizbekov, Nariman Narimanov and Sultan Majid Afandiyev. He led delegate of the Caucasian Union of the RSDLP at the 3rd Congress of the RSDLP in London. He was one of the leaders of the December strike of the workers in Baku, also actively participated in the publishment of the Bolshevik journals and magazines Bakisnkie Rabochi, Gudok and Bakinski prolitari. In 1909 he was arrested and exiled to the North Caucasus for five years. He lived in Rostov-on-Don. In 1913 he returned to Tbilisi, present-day capital of Georgia. In preparation for the 1915 May Day demonstration was exiled to Vologda Province, where in 1916 he fled to Petrograd, and then to Tbilisi.
Baku Commune
After the February Revolution of 1917, Dzhaparidze was a member of the Baku Committee of the Bolshevik Party ; as a delegate to the 6th congress of the Bolshevik Party, he was selected as a candidate member of its Central Committee, and became a member of Caucasian Border Committee. From December 1917Deputy Chairman, during January–July 1918 the chairman of the Executive Committee of the Baku Soviet. During March, Dzhaparidze was the member of the Committee of Revolutionary Defense in Baku; from April, he was the Commissar for Internal Affairs in Baku, and, from June, he also served as Commissar for Food. During this time, he was actively involved in March Events, as he tried to spread the communist ideology to Azerbaijan and the whole South Caucasus in general. After the fall of Baku to the Azerbaijani-Turkish Army of Islam as result of the Battle of Baku, he fled to Krasnovodsk. On September 20, 1918, he was one of the 26 Baku Commissars shot by the local government of the Socialist Revolutionary Party. His legacy appreciated highly in the Soviet Union as well as in the Soviet republics of Caucasus. However, after the collapse of the Soviet Union the places named after Dzhaparidze in Azerbaijan were renamed and his monument was demolished. His grave was also relocated along with the other commissars in Baku, which was strongly opposed by the Azerbaijan Communist Party and other local left-wing politicians. In his native Georgia, the name of Dzhaparidze is also almost removed from everywhere.