- Boris Vladimirski - Wikipedia
Boris Vladimirski Vladimirski's Lenin in red dawn, Boris Eremeevich Vladimirski, (February 27, 1878 – February 12, 1950), was a Soviet painter of the Socialist Realism school
- The Red Army: Part 2 - Marxists Internet Archive
The Red Guards, who were known in Petrograd as the Workers’ Militia, became the official armed force of the Petrograd Soviet, in which the Bolshevists had now obtained a majority
- Russias Red Guards - Spartacus Educational
The Red Guards were armed factory workers They first appeared during the 1905 Revolution and they reformed in March 1917 in order to defend the government that replaced the overthrow of Nicholas II
- The October Revolution in Russia - Origins
That night, Bolshevik Red Guards broke into the palace and arrested the ministers, bringing the Provisional Government to an end Former Tsar Nicholas II in Tsarskoye Selo following his abdication in March 1917, (left) and Bolshevik forces marching on Red Square, 1917 (right)
- The October Revolution - bpb-ca-c1. wpmucdn. com
In the evening of October 25th, Bolshevik Red Guards moved on government positions around the city of Petrograd They then invaded the Winter Palace, where several government ministers were resident
- Boris Eremeevich Vladimirski - Virtual Museum of Political Art
"Our cover is based on the original painting 'Black Ravens' by Boris Vladimirsky (1878-1950, Collection Horvath, Austria), who often was commissioned to paint propagandistic scenes during Stalin's era
- The Red Guards in the Russian Revolution - Red Flag
A Bolshevik by the name of Vladimir Bonch-Bruevich suggested one in an article in Pravda on 18 March: the “Red Guard” By this time they had procured a large quantity of arms The Red Guards were quite coy about the number of weapons they had stockpiled, preferring to plead poor
- The Bolsheviks Storm the Winter Palace, 1917 - EyeWitness to History
By this time, in the light that streamed out of all the Winter Palace windows, I could see that the first two or three hundred men were Red Guards, with only a few scattered soldiers
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