Table of contents:
- 1. The bombing of Stalingrad
- 2. German prisoner of war
- 3. Children sit on the ruins of their homes after the storming of the city
- 4. With the enemy
- 5. Commander of the Cossacks
- 6. Attitude towards prisoners of war in the USSR
- 7. Young soldier of the Wehrmacht
- 8. Parade in Odessa
- 9. Ruins of Stalingrad
- 10. Punitive operation
- 11. Before the start of the offensive
- 12. Forcing the river and changing positions
- 13. First aid courses
- 14. Tactical technique
- 15. Emaciated prisoner
- 16. Shooting of prisoners of war
- 17. Test prisoners
- 18. War criminal
- 19. Fourteen-year-old prisoner
Video: A unique collection of war photographs that were banned in the USSR
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
In the year of World War II, war correspondents from different countries also served shoulder to shoulder with soldiers on the Eastern Front. Risking, at times, their own lives, they found themselves in the midst of those terrible events and took unique photos. Over the years, many of these images were banned in the USSR for various reasons. This review contains the most interesting of them.
1. The bombing of Stalingrad
2. German prisoner of war
3. Children sit on the ruins of their homes after the storming of the city
4. With the enemy
5. Commander of the Cossacks
6. Attitude towards prisoners of war in the USSR
7. Young soldier of the Wehrmacht
8. Parade in Odessa
9. Ruins of Stalingrad
10. Punitive operation
11. Before the start of the offensive
12. Forcing the river and changing positions
13. First aid courses
14. Tactical technique
15. Emaciated prisoner
16. Shooting of prisoners of war
17. Test prisoners
18. War criminal
19. Fourteen-year-old prisoner
Today, after many decades, of particular interest is the story of why during World War II the German ace took pity on the enemy plane and saved 9 lives.
Recommended:
Why New Year trees were banned in the USSR
In the modern New Year, there is a huge number of Soviet traditions. It is not surprising, given that this is a time of miracles, they most often happen in childhood, many of us prefer to celebrate the change of the year the way our parents did, and therefore in the USSR. Why, even a drink, without which a New Year's table is impossible for many - "Soviet Champagne". And "The Irony of Fate …", which will invariably be included in the television network of many channels, "Blue Lights" also hails from the USSR. How did you create
How Soviet soldiers survived, who were carried into the ocean for 49 days, and How they were met in the USA and the USSR after they were rescued
In the early spring of 1960, the crew of the American aircraft carrier Kearsarge discovered a small barge in the middle of the ocean. On board were four emaciated Soviet soldiers. They survived by feeding on leather belts, tarpaulin boots and industrial water. But even after 49 days of extreme drift, the soldiers told the American sailors who found them something like this: help us only with fuel and food, and we will get home ourselves
The fading star of the 100-year-old queen of romance: Why Isabella Yuryeva's songs were banned in the USSR
September 7 marks the 121st anniversary of the birth of the famous singer, People's Artist of Russia Isabella Yurieva, who was called the "queen of romance" and "white gypsy". She was the same age as the century and during her long hundred-year life she witnessed all the cardinal changes in the life of her country. But these changes did not promise her happiness: at the beginning of the twentieth century. she was worshiped, then her songs were forbidden, and in the 1970s. they remembered her again. She received the title of People's Artist of the USSR only at the age of 95, and at
Under the yoke of censorship: 10 authors whose books were banned in the USSR
Censorship exists all over the world, and books, theatrical performances and films are often subjected to censorship. In Soviet times, literature, like many other spheres of culture, was under the total control of the party leadership. Works that did not correspond to the propagandized ideology were banned, and they could only be read in samizdat or by taking out a copy bought abroad and secretly brought to the Land of the Soviets
Painting by Vladimir Struzer: paintings that were banned by the Ministry of Culture of the USSR
Theater buildings, museums, aristocratic buildings, houses, pavements, squares, cobblestone streets decorated with ancient lampposts, small cafes, horse-drawn carts, ladies and gentlemen dressed in the latest fashion - all this and much more looks so casual, that I really want to see them with my own eyes. After all, the Russian artist Vladimir Struzer managed to convey not only the beauty of city landscapes, but also the atmosphere that they breathe