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Flag of the Soviet Union

The State Flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (Russian: Госуда́рственный флаг Сою́за Сове́тских Социалисти́ческих Респу́блик Gosudárstvenny flag Soyúza Sovétskikh Sotsialistícheskikh Respúblik), or simply the Soviet flag (Russian: Сове́тский флаг Sovétsky flag), was a red banner with two communist symbols displayed in the canton: a gold hammer and sickle topped off by a red five-point star bordered in gold. The flag's design and symbolism are derived from several sources, but emerged during the Russian Revolution. It has also come to serve as the standard symbol representing communism as a whole, recognized as such in international circles, even after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Союз Советских Социалистических Республик
Красное Знамя (lit.'Red Banner')[1]
UseState flag, civil and state ensign [2]
Proportion1:2
AdoptedDecember 1922 (original)
19 August 1955 (last version)
Relinquished26 December 1991
DesignPlain red banner, with the canton consisting of a gold hammer and sickle topped off by a red five-point star bordered in gold

The plain red flag, which was a traditional revolutionary symbol long before 1917, was incorporated into the Soviet flag to pay tribute to the international aspect of the workers' revolution. On the other hand, the unique hammer-and-sickle design was a modern industrial touch adopted from the Russian Revolution; it represented the "victorious and enduring revolutionary alliance" by unifying the hammer (i.e., workers) and the sickle (i.e., peasants). The gold-bordered five-point star situated above the hammer and sickle was a representation of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

The first flag was adopted in December 1922. In 1923, 1924, 1936 and 1955, statutes were adopted that resulted in adjustments to the hammer's handle length and the sickle's shape. In 1980, an amendment was made to the 1955 decree that removed the hammer and sickle displayed on the flag's reverse side, though the legal description remained completely unchanged.[3] The design of the 1955 Soviet flag served as the basis for all of the flags of the Union Republics.

Symbolism and design edit

The flag of the Soviet Union consisted of a plain red flag with a gold hammer crossed with a gold sickle placed beneath a gold-bordered red star. This symbol is in the upper left canton of the red flag.

The colour red honours the red flag of the Paris Commune of 1871 and the red star and hammer and sickle are symbols of communism and socialism.

The hammer symbolises urban industrial workers while the sickle symbolises agricultural workers (peasants)—who together, as the Proletarian class, form the state. The red star represents the Communist Party, and its position over the hammer and sickle symbolises its leading role in socialist society to unify and enlighten the workers and peasants in the building of communism.

The flag's design was legislated in 1955, which gave a clear way to define and create the flag. This resulted in a change of the hammer's handle length and the shape of the sickle. The adopted statute stated that:[4]

  1. The ratio of width to length of the flag is 1:2.
  2. The hammer and sickle are in a square with sides equal to 14 of the flag's height. The sharp tip of the sickle lies in the center of the upper side of the square, and the handles of the hammer and sickle rest in the bottom corners of the square. The length of the hammer and its handle is 34 of the square diagonal.
  3. The five-pointed star is inscribed into a circle with a diameter of 18 of the flag's height, the circle being tangent to the upper side of the square.
  4. The distance of the vertical axis of the star, hammer and sickle from the hoist is 13 of the flag's height. The distance from the upper side of the flag to the center of the star is 18 of the flag's height.
 
Official Construction Sheet for the State Flag of the USSR (1955–1991).
 
The reverse side of the Soviet flag as it appeared from 1980 to 1991.
 
The vertical display of the Soviet flag as it appeared from 1980 to 1991.

Officially since 1980, the reverse side of the flag was a plain red field without the hammer and sickle. In practice, however, this was very commonly disregarded by flag makers as it was far easier and less costly to simply print the flag through and through, with the obverse design mirrored on the reverse.[5] It was also common to see the reverse of the flag bear the hammer and sickle in the obverse formation.[6] An example of the flag demonstrating its de jure status as being only one-sided is that of the Soviet flag atop the Moscow Kremlin which bore the single-side official design.

For vertical display, the flag was made with the distinct difference of having the hammer and sickle rotated 90 degrees in order to compensate for the change in dimensions. Although common in official practice, a typical flag owner would simply turn a standard design flag 90 degrees to the right and hang it by the hoist (not flipped like the US flag).[7]

History edit

During the establishment of the Russian Soviet Republic, Vladimir Lenin and his followers had considered the inclusion of a sword symbol in addition to the hammer and sickle as part of the state seal on which the flag was eventually based. The idea was dismissed as too visually aggressive, with Lenin apparently affirming, "A sword is not one of our symbols."[8]

The first official flag was adopted in December 1922 at the First Congress of Soviets of the USSR. It was agreed that the red banner "was transformed from the symbol of the Party to the symbol of a state, and around that flag gathered the peoples of the soviet republics to unite into one state — the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics". On 30 December 1922, the Congress adopted a Declaration and Agreement on the establishment of the USSR. Article 22 of the Agreement states: "The USSR has a flag, coat of arms and a state seal." The description of the first flag was given in the 1924 Soviet Constitution, accepted in the second session of the executive committee (CIK) of the USSR on 6 July 1923. The text of article 71 states: "The state flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics consists of a red or scarlet field with the state's coat of arms." It was ordered with the unusual ratio of 4:1 in proportion and consisted of a red flag with the state coat of arms in the center. However, such a flag was never mass-produced. This flag was the official flag for four months, and was replaced as the official flag by the more familiar hammer and sickle design during the third session of the CIK of the USSR on 12 November 1923.

In the third session of the CIK of the USSR, the description of Soviet flag in the Constitution was changed, and article 71 was edited to read: "The state flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics consists of a red or scarlet field, and in the canton a golden sickle and hammer, and a red five-pointed star bordered in gold above them. The ratio of width to length is 1:2." On 19 August 1955, the Statute on the State Flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was adopted by a decision of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. This resulted in a change of the hammer's handle length and the shape of the sickle. On 15 August 1980, a new edition of the Statute on the State Flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was adopted, which did not make any changes to the flag's description aside from removing the hammer and sickle on the reverse side of the flag.[9] From this point on, the flag stayed in use with this design until the disintegration of the USSR on 26 December 1991, at which time it ceased to be a national flag and replaced by national flags of the post-Soviet republics.

On 15 April 1996 Boris Yeltsin signed a presidential decree giving the Soviet flag (called the Victory Banner, after the banner that was raised above the Reichstag on 1 May 1945) status similar to that of the national flag. The hammer and sickle were removed from the flag, leaving only the star, but they were reinstated later. On certain holidays, the Victory Banner is flown along with the Russian flag.

Contemporary usage edit

In current times, the Soviet national flag (and similar flags) are widely used by those on the political far left, most often by those who support Marxism–Leninism, although the earlier (pre-Stalinist) flags are occasionally used by Trotskyists and those on the modern communist left.

The Soviet flag is also actively promoted in Russia as a symbol of nostalgia for the Soviet Union. Various politicians frequently utilize it as a symbol of the superpower status Russia lost in 1991.[10]

Amidst the backdrop of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation proposed to the State Duma the adoption of the Soviet flag as the official flag of Russia on April 19, 2022.[11] The use of Soviet symbols including its flag became very extensive by invading Russian forces over the course of the war along with the letter "Z".[12]

On June 17, 2023, during the celebration for the 300th anniversary of Saint Petersburg, the flags of the Russian Empire (Black-yellow-white flag [ru]), Soviet Union and Russian Federation raised simultaneously at the Gulf of Finland.[13][14][15][16]

Derived flags edit

The flags of the Soviet republics that constituted the USSR and the Victory Banner were all defaced[note 1] or modified versions of the Soviet flag.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In vexillology, defacement is the addition of a symbol or charge to a flag.
  2. ^ The Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic or Transnistria, is an unrecognized breakaway republic formed in 1991 after the breakup of the Soviet Union from territory internationally recognized as part of Moldova after the Transnistria War.
  3. ^ The Karelo-Finnish SSR was a short-lived Union Republic formed in 1940 from the Karelian ASSR with territory ceded from Finland in the Winter War. In 1956, it was demoted back to an ASSR within the RSFSR.

References edit

  1. ^ Whitney Smith (2008). "Flag of Flag of Union of Soviet Socialist Republics". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  2. ^ Whitney., Smith (1980). Flags and arms across the world. Smith, Whitney. New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 203. ISBN 9780070590946. OCLC 4957064.
  3. ^ "Положение о Государственном флаге Союза Советских Социалистических Республик | Геральдика.ру". geraldika.ru (in Russian). Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  4. ^ USSR Supreme Soviet Presidium (19 August 1955). Положение о государственном флаге СССР (in Russian). Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  5. ^ "Construction details of Soviet flags". flagspot.net. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  6. ^ "Reverse of the flag - Soviet Union". flagspot.net. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  7. ^ "Vertical hoisting – Soviet Union". flagspot.net. Retrieved 2017-12-05.
  8. ^ Konstantin AndreevichIvanov (1971). Flags of the states of the world (in Russian). Moscow: Izd-vo Transport. p. [page needed]. OCLC 20146023.
  9. ^ Russian Centre of Vexillology and Heraldry. . vexillographia.ru. Archived from the original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  10. ^ Hoffman, David (2000-12-05). "Putin Seeks Restoration Of Soviet Symbols". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2021-08-22.
  11. ^ "КПРФ внесла в Госдуму законопроект, предлагающий установить флаг СССР флагом России". kprf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  12. ^ Young, Pareisa (11 March 2022). "Ukraine: Russian troops flying Soviet flag, symbol of 're-establishing Russian domination'". The Observers - France 24. from the original on 27 April 2022. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  13. ^ "В Петербурге на высоту 179 метров торжественно подняли флаги трёх исторических эпох". Rossiyskaya Gazeta (in Russian). 2023-06-17. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  14. ^ "Путин принял участие в церемонии поднятия флагов РФ, СССР и Российской империи в Петербурге". Rossiyskaya Gazeta (in Russian). 2023-06-17. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  15. ^ "Путин с катера наблюдал за поднятием в Петербурге флагов РФ, СССР и Российской империи". TASS (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  16. ^ "В Санкт-Петербурге торжественно подняли флаги трёх исторических эпох". Moskovskij Komsomolets (in Russian). 2023-06-17. Retrieved 2023-06-20.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Flags of the Soviet Union at Wikimedia Commons
  • Soviet Union at Flags of the World

flag, soviet, union, flag, ussr, redirects, here, other, uses, flag, ussr, disambiguation, state, flag, union, soviet, socialist, republics, russian, Госуда, рственный, флаг, Сою, за, Сове, тских, Социалисти, ческих, Респу, блик, gosudárstvenny, flag, soyúza, . Flag of the USSR redirects here For other uses see Flag of the USSR disambiguation The State Flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Russian Gosuda rstvennyj flag Soyu za Sove tskih Socialisti cheskih Respu blik Gosudarstvenny flag Soyuza Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik or simply the Soviet flag Russian Sove tskij flag Sovetsky flag was a red banner with two communist symbols displayed in the canton a gold hammer and sickle topped off by a red five point star bordered in gold The flag s design and symbolism are derived from several sources but emerged during the Russian Revolution It has also come to serve as the standard symbol representing communism as a whole recognized as such in international circles even after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 Union of Soviet Socialist RepublicsSoyuz Sovetskih Socialisticheskih RespublikKrasnoe Znamya lit Red Banner 1 UseState flag civil and state ensign 2 Proportion1 2AdoptedDecember 1922 original 19 August 1955 last version Relinquished26 December 1991DesignPlain red banner with the canton consisting of a gold hammer and sickle topped off by a red five point star bordered in gold The plain red flag which was a traditional revolutionary symbol long before 1917 was incorporated into the Soviet flag to pay tribute to the international aspect of the workers revolution On the other hand the unique hammer and sickle design was a modern industrial touch adopted from the Russian Revolution it represented the victorious and enduring revolutionary alliance by unifying the hammer i e workers and the sickle i e peasants The gold bordered five point star situated above the hammer and sickle was a representation of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union The first flag was adopted in December 1922 In 1923 1924 1936 and 1955 statutes were adopted that resulted in adjustments to the hammer s handle length and the sickle s shape In 1980 an amendment was made to the 1955 decree that removed the hammer and sickle displayed on the flag s reverse side though the legal description remained completely unchanged 3 The design of the 1955 Soviet flag served as the basis for all of the flags of the Union Republics Contents 1 Symbolism and design 2 History 2 1 Contemporary usage 3 Derived flags 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksSymbolism and design editThe flag of the Soviet Union consisted of a plain red flag with a gold hammer crossed with a gold sickle placed beneath a gold bordered red star This symbol is in the upper left canton of the red flag The colour red honours the red flag of the Paris Commune of 1871 and the red star and hammer and sickle are symbols of communism and socialism The hammer symbolises urban industrial workers while the sickle symbolises agricultural workers peasants who together as the Proletarian class form the state The red star represents the Communist Party and its position over the hammer and sickle symbolises its leading role in socialist society to unify and enlighten the workers and peasants in the building of communism The flag s design was legislated in 1955 which gave a clear way to define and create the flag This resulted in a change of the hammer s handle length and the shape of the sickle The adopted statute stated that 4 The ratio of width to length of the flag is 1 2 The hammer and sickle are in a square with sides equal to 1 4 of the flag s height The sharp tip of the sickle lies in the center of the upper side of the square and the handles of the hammer and sickle rest in the bottom corners of the square The length of the hammer and its handle is 3 4 of the square diagonal The five pointed star is inscribed into a circle with a diameter of 1 8 of the flag s height the circle being tangent to the upper side of the square The distance of the vertical axis of the star hammer and sickle from the hoist is 1 3 of the flag s height The distance from the upper side of the flag to the center of the star is 1 8 of the flag s height nbsp Official Construction Sheet for the State Flag of the USSR 1955 1991 nbsp The reverse side of the Soviet flag as it appeared from 1980 to 1991 nbsp The vertical display of the Soviet flag as it appeared from 1980 to 1991 Officially since 1980 the reverse side of the flag was a plain red field without the hammer and sickle In practice however this was very commonly disregarded by flag makers as it was far easier and less costly to simply print the flag through and through with the obverse design mirrored on the reverse 5 It was also common to see the reverse of the flag bear the hammer and sickle in the obverse formation 6 An example of the flag demonstrating its de jure status as being only one sided is that of the Soviet flag atop the Moscow Kremlin which bore the single side official design For vertical display the flag was made with the distinct difference of having the hammer and sickle rotated 90 degrees in order to compensate for the change in dimensions Although common in official practice a typical flag owner would simply turn a standard design flag 90 degrees to the right and hang it by the hoist not flipped like the US flag 7 History editDuring the establishment of the Russian Soviet Republic Vladimir Lenin and his followers had considered the inclusion of a sword symbol in addition to the hammer and sickle as part of the state seal on which the flag was eventually based The idea was dismissed as too visually aggressive with Lenin apparently affirming A sword is not one of our symbols 8 The first official flag was adopted in December 1922 at the First Congress of Soviets of the USSR It was agreed that the red banner was transformed from the symbol of the Party to the symbol of a state and around that flag gathered the peoples of the soviet republics to unite into one state the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics On 30 December 1922 the Congress adopted a Declaration and Agreement on the establishment of the USSR Article 22 of the Agreement states The USSR has a flag coat of arms and a state seal The description of the first flag was given in the 1924 Soviet Constitution accepted in the second session of the executive committee CIK of the USSR on 6 July 1923 The text of article 71 states The state flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics consists of a red or scarlet field with the state s coat of arms It was ordered with the unusual ratio of 4 1 in proportion and consisted of a red flag with the state coat of arms in the center However such a flag was never mass produced This flag was the official flag for four months and was replaced as the official flag by the more familiar hammer and sickle design during the third session of the CIK of the USSR on 12 November 1923 In the third session of the CIK of the USSR the description of Soviet flag in the Constitution was changed and article 71 was edited to read The state flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics consists of a red or scarlet field and in the canton a golden sickle and hammer and a red five pointed star bordered in gold above them The ratio of width to length is 1 2 On 19 August 1955 the Statute on the State Flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was adopted by a decision of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR This resulted in a change of the hammer s handle length and the shape of the sickle On 15 August 1980 a new edition of the Statute on the State Flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was adopted which did not make any changes to the flag s description aside from removing the hammer and sickle on the reverse side of the flag 9 From this point on the flag stayed in use with this design until the disintegration of the USSR on 26 December 1991 at which time it ceased to be a national flag and replaced by national flags of the post Soviet republics On 15 April 1996 Boris Yeltsin signed a presidential decree giving the Soviet flag called the Victory Banner after the banner that was raised above the Reichstag on 1 May 1945 status similar to that of the national flag The hammer and sickle were removed from the flag leaving only the star but they were reinstated later On certain holidays the Victory Banner is flown along with the Russian flag Contemporary usage edit In current times the Soviet national flag and similar flags are widely used by those on the political far left most often by those who support Marxism Leninism although the earlier pre Stalinist flags are occasionally used by Trotskyists and those on the modern communist left The Soviet flag is also actively promoted in Russia as a symbol of nostalgia for the Soviet Union Various politicians frequently utilize it as a symbol of the superpower status Russia lost in 1991 10 Amidst the backdrop of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine the Communist Party of the Russian Federation proposed to the State Duma the adoption of the Soviet flag as the official flag of Russia on April 19 2022 11 The use of Soviet symbols including its flag became very extensive by invading Russian forces over the course of the war along with the letter Z 12 On June 17 2023 during the celebration for the 300th anniversary of Saint Petersburg the flags of the Russian Empire Black yellow white flag ru Soviet Union and Russian Federation raised simultaneously at the Gulf of Finland 13 14 15 16 Historical evolution of the flag of the Soviet Union nbsp 30 December 1922 12 November 1923 nbsp 12 November 1923 18 April 1924 nbsp 18 April 1924 5 December 1936 nbsp 5 December 1936 19 August 1955 nbsp 19 August 1955 26 December 1991 Derived flags editThe flags of the Soviet republics that constituted the USSR and the Victory Banner were all defaced note 1 or modified versions of the Soviet flag nbsp Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic 1954 91 nbsp Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic 1937 50 nbsp Ukrainian SSR 1950 91 nbsp Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic 1937 51 nbsp Byelorussian SSR 1951 91 served as an inspiration for the flag of Belarus since 1995 nbsp Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic 1952 91 nbsp Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic 1937 40 nbsp Kazakh SSR 1940 53 nbsp Kazakh SSR and Kazakhstan 1953 92 nbsp Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic 1951 90 nbsp Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic 1924 27 nbsp Azerbaijan SSR 1927 31 nbsp Azerbaijan SSR 1931 37 nbsp Azerbaijan SSR 1937 40 nbsp Azerbaijan SSR 1940 52 nbsp Azerbaijan SSR 1952 56 nbsp Azerbaijan SSR 1956 91 nbsp Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic 1940 53 nbsp Lithuanian SSR 1953 88 nbsp Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1925 32 nbsp Moldavian ASSR 1937 38 nbsp Moldavian ASSR 1938 40 nbsp Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic 1940 52 nbsp Moldavian SSR 1952 1990 nbsp Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic note 2 1991 present nbsp Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic 1940 53 nbsp Latvian SSR 1953 67 nbsp Latvian SSR 1967 90 nbsp Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic and Kyrgyzstan 1952 92 nbsp Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic 1936 38 nbsp Tajik SSR 1938 40 nbsp Tajik SSR 1940 53 nbsp Tajik SSR 1953 91 nbsp Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic 1936 40 nbsp Armenian SSR 1940 52 nbsp Armenian SSR 1952 90 nbsp Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic 1926 37 nbsp Turkmen SSR 1953 73 nbsp Turkmen SSR and Turkmenistan 1973 92 nbsp Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic 1940 53 nbsp Estonian SSR 1953 90 nbsp Karelo Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic note 3 1940 53 nbsp Karelo Finnish SSR 1953 56 nbsp Victory Banner of the Great Patriotic War 1945 nbsp Flag of Vladimir Oblast 1999 2017 nbsp Flag of Vladimir Oblast 2017 present Gallery edit nbsp Raising a Flag over the Reichstag nbsp The Soviet flag along with an assortment of Russian and Soviet military flags nbsp Flags of the Soviet Republics flown during a parade in Chișinău the capital of the Moldavian SSR nbsp One of the last Soviet flags flown on the Kremlin displayed at the Checkpoint Charlie Museum in Berlin nbsp Member of the Armed Forces of Belarus pays tribute to the Victory Day in 2014 in front of a Soviet flagSee also editCommunist symbolism Flag of Russia Flags of the Soviet Republics Flags whose reverse differs from the obverse Hammer and sickle Red flag Red star State Emblem of the Soviet UnionNotes edit In vexillology defacement is the addition of a symbol or charge to a flag The Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic or Transnistria is an unrecognized breakaway republic formed in 1991 after the breakup of the Soviet Union from territory internationally recognized as part of Moldova after the Transnistria War The Karelo Finnish SSR was a short lived Union Republic formed in 1940 from the Karelian ASSR with territory ceded from Finland in the Winter War In 1956 it was demoted back to an ASSR within the RSFSR References edit Whitney Smith 2008 Flag of Flag of Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2008 11 05 Whitney Smith 1980 Flags and arms across the world Smith Whitney New York McGraw Hill pp 203 ISBN 9780070590946 OCLC 4957064 Polozhenie o Gosudarstvennom flage Soyuza Sovetskih Socialisticheskih Respublik Geraldika ru geraldika ru in Russian Retrieved May 8 2022 USSR Supreme Soviet Presidium 19 August 1955 Polozhenie o gosudarstvennom flage SSSR in Russian Retrieved 2008 11 05 Construction details of Soviet flags flagspot net Retrieved 2017 11 18 Reverse of the flag Soviet Union flagspot net Retrieved 2017 11 18 Vertical hoisting Soviet Union flagspot net Retrieved 2017 12 05 Konstantin AndreevichIvanov 1971 Flags of the states of the world in Russian Moscow Izd vo Transport p page needed OCLC 20146023 Russian Centre of Vexillology and Heraldry Flagi SSSR vexillographia ru Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Hoffman David 2000 12 05 Putin Seeks Restoration Of Soviet Symbols The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2021 08 22 KPRF vnesla v Gosdumu zakonoproekt predlagayushij ustanovit flag SSSR flagom Rossii kprf ru in Russian Retrieved 2022 04 19 Young Pareisa 11 March 2022 Ukraine Russian troops flying Soviet flag symbol of re establishing Russian domination The Observers France 24 Archived from the original on 27 April 2022 Retrieved 4 May 2022 V Peterburge na vysotu 179 metrov torzhestvenno podnyali flagi tryoh istoricheskih epoh Rossiyskaya Gazeta in Russian 2023 06 17 Retrieved 2023 06 20 Putin prinyal uchastie v ceremonii podnyatiya flagov RF SSSR i Rossijskoj imperii v Peterburge Rossiyskaya Gazeta in Russian 2023 06 17 Retrieved 2023 06 20 Putin s katera nablyudal za podnyatiem v Peterburge flagov RF SSSR i Rossijskoj imperii TASS in Russian Retrieved 2023 06 20 V Sankt Peterburge torzhestvenno podnyali flagi tryoh istoricheskih epoh Moskovskij Komsomolets in Russian 2023 06 17 Retrieved 2023 06 20 External links edit nbsp Media related to Flags of the Soviet Union at Wikimedia Commons Soviet Union at Flags of the World Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flag of the Soviet Union amp oldid 1215725250, wikipedia, 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