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1945 Moscow Victory Parade

The 1945 Moscow Victory Parade (Russian: Парад Победы, tr. Parad Pobedy) also known as the Parade of Victors (Russian: Парад победителей, tr. Parad pobediteley) was a victory parade held by the Soviet Armed Forces (with the Color Guard Company representing the First Polish Army) after the defeat of Nazi Germany. This, the longest and largest military parade ever held on Red Square in the Soviet capital Moscow, involved 40,000 Red Army soldiers and 1,850 military vehicles and other military hardware. The parade lasted just over two hours on a rainy June 24, 1945, over a month after May 9, the day of Germany's surrender to Soviet commanders.

Moscow Victory Parade of 1945, June 24.

Stalin's order for the observance of the parade

The parade itself was ordered by Joseph Stalin on June 22, 1945, by virtue of Order 370 of the Office of the Supreme Commander in Chief, Armed Forces of the USSR. This order is as follows:

Order #370 of the Supreme Commander in Chief, Armed Forces of the USSR and concurrent People's Commissar of State for Defense

To mark the victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War, I order a parade of troops of the Army, Navy and the Moscow Garrison, the Victory Parade, on June 24, 1945, at Moscow's Red Square.

Marching on parade shall be the combined regiments of all the fronts, a People's Commissariat of National Defense combined regiment, the Soviet Navy, military academies and schools, and troops of the Moscow Garrison and Military District.

My deputy, Marshal of the Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov will be the parade inspector. Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky will command the Victory Parade itself. I entrust to Col. Gen. Pavel Artemyev, the preparations and the supervision of the parade organization, due to his concurrent capacities as the Commanding General of the Moscow Military District and Commanding Officer in charge of the Moscow City Garrison.

June 22, 1945
(signed) MARSHAL OF THE SOVIET UNION JOSEPH V. STALIN
Supreme Commander-in-Chief, Armed Forces of the USSR
And concurrent People's Commissar of Defense of the USSR

This was preceded by another letter by General of the Army Aleksei Antonov, Chief of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces to all the participant fronts in attendance on the 24th of the previous month which is as follows:

Order to the Fronts who will participate in the Victory Parade

The Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces has ordered that:

1. In order for the front to participate in the Moscow City parade in honor of the victory over Germany, each front will be represented by a combined regiment which is to be raised among them.
2. The following pattern will form the combined front regiment as follows:

  • 5 two-company battalions with 100 men in the company (10 squads of 10 men each) will be the basis, accompanied by:
    • 19 command staff officers from the front
    • One regimental commander
    • Two deputy regimental commanders for drill and ceremony and political training respectively
    • One regimental chief of staff
    • 5 Battalion commanders
    • 10 company commanders
    • 36 color bearers and 4 escorting officers.

All in all the regiment will be composed of 1,059 male active personnel and 10 additional reserve personnel.
3. A combined regiment for the parade will have the following companies:

  • 6 infantry companies
  • 1 artillery company
  • 1 tank company
  • 1 air company
  • and 1 combined company (composed of cavalrymen, sappers and signalmen respectively).

4. The companies in attendance will be manned so as to have the middle-ranked officers commanding the squads, which are then composed of privates and sergeants.
5. The combined regiment will be armed in the following pattern on the parade:

  • 3 infantry companies with rifles,
  • 3 infantry companies with sub-machine guns,
  • the artillery company with slung carbines,
  • the tank company and the air company both armed with pistols,
  • and the combined cavalry, signals and sapper company also with slung carbines and with sabres for the cavalrymen in attendance.

6. The Front Commanders and all commanders including air and tank army commanders will arrive in Moscow for the Parade.
7. On June 10 of this year, the combined regiment of the front will arrive in Moscow having 36 combat colors from selected Front units that are the most distinguished in action, and all the captured enemy standards, whatever the number, selected to be carried in the parade proper.
8. The full dress uniform will be issued in Moscow for use on the parade by the regimental staff.

May 24, 1945
(signed) GENERAL OF THE ARMY ALEKSEI ANTONOV
Chief of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces

Parade training

Intensive preparations for the parade took place in late May and early June in Moscow. The preliminary rehearsal of the Victory Parade took place at the Central Airfield, and the general rehearsal on Red Square on June 22.[1]

Marshals Georgy Zhukov, who had formally accepted the German surrender to the Soviet Union, and Konstantin Rokossovsky, rode through the parade ground on white and black stallions, respectively.[2] The fact is commemorated by the equestrian statue of Zhukov in front of the State Historical Museum, on Manege Square. Zhukov's stallion was called Кумир ("Idol") while Rokossovsky's was called Столб ("Pole"). The General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin, stood atop Lenin's Mausoleum and watched the parade alongside other dignitaries present.

According to certain editions of Zhukov's memoirs, Stalin had intended to ride through the parade himself, but he fell from the horse during the rehearsal and had to yield the honor to Zhukov, who used to be a cavalry officer. However, this story is disputed by former Soviet spy Viktor Suvorov. He claims that the story was inserted into Zhukov's memoirs as a counterargument to his theory, (although it apparently was in circulation earlier)[3] that Stalin didn't lead the parade because he considered the war's results not worthy of the effort invested.[4] Suvorov notes several inconsistencies in the story, along with numerous evidence that Zhukov was intended all along for the role of leading the parade; for example, the memoirs of Sergei Shtemenko, the man responsible at the time for the preparation of the parade, state that the roles were decided from the start,[5] and Igor Bobylev (who took part in the preparations) claims that the story never happened and that Stalin never visited the Manege at that time. Another planned part of the parade was the march of the Victory Banner, which was delivered to Moscow from Berlin on June 20 and was supposed to begin the procession of troops. Despite this, the weak drill training of Mikhail Yegorov, Meliton Kantaria and Stepan Neustroev forced Marshal Zhukov to not go ahead with this portion of the parade.[6]

The parade

 
NKVD soldiers carrying the German standards; the LSSAH standard staff is first from left

Displays of the Red Army vehicles were some of the focal points of the ceremony. It was one of the few times in which Cossacks took part in a victory parade, with personnel from the 4th Guards Cossacks Cavalry Corps taking part in the procession of troops as part of the 2nd Ukrainian Front's combined regiment.[7] One of the most famous moments at the end of the troops parade took place when soldiers from the Separate Operational Purpose Division of the NKVD carried the German standards and threw them down next to the mausoleum. One of the standards that was tossed down belonged to the LSSAH, Hitler's personal bodyguard.

The next day, a reception was held in the Grand Kremlin Palace in honor of the participants in the Victory Parade.[1] Due to the bad weather that day the flypast segment and the planned civil parade were cancelled; if the weather had improved, the flypast would have been led by Chief Marshals of Aviation Alexander Novikov and Alexander Golovanov. Nonetheless, this historic two-hour parade remains the longest and largest military parade in Red Square's history, and involved 40,000 soldiers and 1,850 military vehicles and other military hardware.

Band and music

The procession had musical accompaniment that was provided by the massed bands of the Moscow Garrison, led by Major General Semyon Tchernetsky, Senior Director of Music. The combined band consisted of 38 military bands coming from Moscow military schools, as well as military units of the Red Army and the NKVD. The combined band numbered 1,220 musicians under the direction of 50 bandmasters.[8] In total,the parade saw the participation of 1,313 musicians, the youngest of whom was 13 years old.[9]

The parade repertoire was finalized for approval on 5 June 1945. The final list included 36 tracks, including the Soviet anthem, fanfares and slow marches. Twenty works that were performed at the parade were written by Tchernetsky himself. The inspection part of the parade commenced with Tchernetsky's Jubilee Slow March "25 Years of the Red Army"[10] and ended with the performance of Slavsya.[11] The first song after the conclusion of the inspection was the Moscow ceremonial fanfare under the direction of conductor Vasily Agapkin. The parade was opened by the young drummers of the Corps of Drums from the Moscow School of Musicians, wearing uniforms similar to those of the Moscow Suvorov Military School and led by a bandmaster, which after marching past soon took its place behind the massed bands to provide additional support. The parade ended with the Glory to the Motherland march. Additional marches have included Jaeger March, March of the 92nd Pechersk Regiment, March of the Leningrad Guards Divisions, March "Joy of Victory", March "Hero".[12]

Parade participants

Ground column

Mounted column

Mobile column

Legacy

 
The historical part of the 2020 parade dressed in uniforms dating back to the 1945 parade.
  • Outside the 1945 parade, the only parade to be held on 24 June was organized on in 2020 in honor of the 75th anniversary of the victory.[14][15] Elements of the 1945 parade were included in the 2020 parade, the most notable of which being the bands playing the Jubilee Slow March "25 Years of the Red Army" at the outset of the inspection stage.[16]
  • A statue of Zhukov on his parade horse is located near the State Historical Museum on Manezhnaya Square.[17] There was an original debate over where to place the statue, with many saying that it should be located at the site of the parade, Red Square.[18]
  • During the 2010 Moscow Victory Day Parade, the contingent from Turkmenistan, upon request from the government of Turkmenistan, was led by an officer riding on horseback, with the horse being a descendant of the horse used during the 1945 parade.[19]
  • In 2008, during the celebrations of the Independence Day of South Ossetia, the annual military parade in Tskhinvali saw Georgian flags being thrown to the ground by South Ossetian militiamen, resembling how Soviet soldiers threw German flags on Red Square during the parade of 1945.[20]
  • In 2020, during a Victory Parade in the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinval, equestrian team from the Russian FSB took part, with the equestrian ranks being led by an officer on a stallion called Brilliant, a direct descendant of Idol.[21]
  • In the 2017 Moscow Victory Day Parade, officers wore the new standing-collar tunic for the first time, which was supposed to resemble the uniforms officer corps in the 1945 Parade of Victors.[22] At the 2020 parade, the Mongolian contingent wore a modified version of those uniforms[23] and later that year, officers of the Korean People's Army wore uniforms based on those worn at the 1945 parade at a military parade on Kim Il-sung Square.[24]
  • In June 1994, the Union of Participants of the Parade on Red Square on 24 June was registered, chaired by retired Colonel Valentin Privalov. The same year, a competition was announced to create a badge for the participant of the parade. As attributes of the union, the breastplate and certificate of a participant in the parade were approved.
  • In the Kazakh city of Almaty, there is a street near Abay Avenue on called 24 June Street, named in honor of the first Victory Parade.[25]
  • At different times, postage stamps depicting the parade on Red Square were issued.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Состоялся Парад Победы на Красной площади". Президентская библиотека имени Б.Н. Ельцина.
  2. ^ Movie about Victory Parade, 1945 on YouTube
  3. ^ Святое Дело (in Russian). Viktor Surorov. Retrieved 2011-07-17.
  4. ^ Последняя Республика (in Russian). Militera.lib.ru. Retrieved 2011-07-17.
  5. ^ "ВОЕННАЯ ЛИТЕРАТУРА --[ Мемуары ]-- Штеменко С.М. Генеральный штаб в годы войны". militera.lib.ru.
  6. ^ "The first victory parade of the year. Victory Parade History: How It Was". pnisintek.ru.
  7. ^ "Кубанские казаки - участники парада Победы в Москве 24 июня 1945 года". www.slavakubani.ru.
  8. ^ Черток 2015, p. 1.
  9. ^ Черток 2015, p. 2.
  10. ^ Кузнецов, Дмитрий (June 2, 2020). "Парад Победы в Москве начнется с исполнения «Юбилейного встречного марша»". Daily Storm.
  11. ^ Черток 2015, pp. 3–4.
  12. ^ "Музыка : Министерство обороны Российской Федерации". Главная (in Russian). 2016-09-05. Retrieved 2021-02-04.
  13. ^ "Дука Михаил Ильич". www.warheroes.ru.
  14. ^ "Russia to hold Victory Day Parade on June 24 — Putin". TASS. 2020-05-26. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  15. ^ "Putin Orders June 24 Victory Day Parade as Russia Flattens Virus Curve". The Moscow Times. 2020-05-26. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  16. ^ Кузнецов, Дмитрий (June 2, 2020). "Парад Победы в Москве начнется с исполнения «Юбилейного встречного марша»". Daily Storm.
  17. ^ "Marshal Zhukov monument". izi.TRAVEL. 1945-06-24. Retrieved 2021-02-04.
  18. ^ "Fifty Years Later, Russia Finally Honoring World War II Hero". AP NEWS.
  19. ^ "Гундогар :: Россия-Туркменистан: 65-летию Победы в Великой Отечественной войне посвящается". gundogar.org.
  20. ^ Georgia, Civil. "Civil.Ge | Tskhinvali Celebrated 'Independence Day'". www.civil.ge. Retrieved 2017-08-08.
  21. ^ "В Цхинвале в параде примут участие более тысячи военнослужащих". Яндекс.Новости. June 23, 2020.
  22. ^ Степовой, Александр Круглов, Богдан (2018-06-22). "Парадная стойка". Известия (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-03-07.
  23. ^ "ТЭД УЛААН ТАЛБАЙД ..." gsmaf.gov.mn. 19 June 2020.
  24. ^ Rogoway, Tyler (10 October 2020). "Kim Jong Un Just Showed The World The War Machine He Built While Feinting Diplomacy". The Drive.
  25. ^ "Казахстан, Алматы, улица 24 Июня". Яндекс.Карты.

Works cited

External links

  • Moscow Victory Parade Video // Net-Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive
  • German Flags at the 1945 Soviet Victory Parade
  • Official site of the 2005 Russian 60th celebration of the 1945 Victory Parade
  • Russian site from where the short video of the parade can be downloaded
  • Video of the parade
  • 1945 Moscow Victory Parade at IMDb

1945, moscow, victory, parade, russian, Парад, Победы, parad, pobedy, also, known, parade, victors, russian, Парад, победителей, parad, pobediteley, victory, parade, held, soviet, armed, forces, with, color, guard, company, representing, first, polish, army, a. The 1945 Moscow Victory Parade Russian Parad Pobedy tr Parad Pobedy also known as the Parade of Victors Russian Parad pobeditelej tr Parad pobediteley was a victory parade held by the Soviet Armed Forces with the Color Guard Company representing the First Polish Army after the defeat of Nazi Germany This the longest and largest military parade ever held on Red Square in the Soviet capital Moscow involved 40 000 Red Army soldiers and 1 850 military vehicles and other military hardware The parade lasted just over two hours on a rainy June 24 1945 over a month after May 9 the day of Germany s surrender to Soviet commanders source source source source source source track Moscow Victory Parade of 1945 June 24 Contents 1 Stalin s order for the observance of the parade 1 1 Parade training 2 The parade 2 1 Band and music 3 Parade participants 3 1 Ground column 3 2 Mounted column 3 3 Mobile column 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Works cited 7 External linksStalin s order for the observance of the parade EditThe parade itself was ordered by Joseph Stalin on June 22 1945 by virtue of Order 370 of the Office of the Supreme Commander in Chief Armed Forces of the USSR This order is as follows Order 370 of the Supreme Commander in Chief Armed Forces of the USSR and concurrent People s Commissar of State for DefenseTo mark the victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War I order a parade of troops of the Army Navy and the Moscow Garrison the Victory Parade on June 24 1945 at Moscow s Red Square Marching on parade shall be the combined regiments of all the fronts a People s Commissariat of National Defense combined regiment the Soviet Navy military academies and schools and troops of the Moscow Garrison and Military District My deputy Marshal of the Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov will be the parade inspector Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky will command the Victory Parade itself I entrust to Col Gen Pavel Artemyev the preparations and the supervision of the parade organization due to his concurrent capacities as the Commanding General of the Moscow Military District and Commanding Officer in charge of the Moscow City Garrison June 22 1945 signed MARSHAL OF THE SOVIET UNION JOSEPH V STALIN Supreme Commander in Chief Armed Forces of the USSR And concurrent People s Commissar of Defense of the USSR This was preceded by another letter by General of the Army Aleksei Antonov Chief of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces to all the participant fronts in attendance on the 24th of the previous month which is as follows Order to the Fronts who will participate in the Victory ParadeThe Supreme Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces has ordered that 1 In order for the front to participate in the Moscow City parade in honor of the victory over Germany each front will be represented by a combined regiment which is to be raised among them 2 The following pattern will form the combined front regiment as follows 5 two company battalions with 100 men in the company 10 squads of 10 men each will be the basis accompanied by 19 command staff officers from the front One regimental commander Two deputy regimental commanders for drill and ceremony and political training respectively One regimental chief of staff 5 Battalion commanders 10 company commanders 36 color bearers and 4 escorting officers All in all the regiment will be composed of 1 059 male active personnel and 10 additional reserve personnel 3 A combined regiment for the parade will have the following companies 6 infantry companies 1 artillery company 1 tank company 1 air company and 1 combined company composed of cavalrymen sappers and signalmen respectively 4 The companies in attendance will be manned so as to have the middle ranked officers commanding the squads which are then composed of privates and sergeants 5 The combined regiment will be armed in the following pattern on the parade 3 infantry companies with rifles 3 infantry companies with sub machine guns the artillery company with slung carbines the tank company and the air company both armed with pistols and the combined cavalry signals and sapper company also with slung carbines and with sabres for the cavalrymen in attendance 6 The Front Commanders and all commanders including air and tank army commanders will arrive in Moscow for the Parade 7 On June 10 of this year the combined regiment of the front will arrive in Moscow having 36 combat colors from selected Front units that are the most distinguished in action and all the captured enemy standards whatever the number selected to be carried in the parade proper 8 The full dress uniform will be issued in Moscow for use on the parade by the regimental staff May 24 1945 signed GENERAL OF THE ARMY ALEKSEI ANTONOV Chief of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces Parade training Edit Intensive preparations for the parade took place in late May and early June in Moscow The preliminary rehearsal of the Victory Parade took place at the Central Airfield and the general rehearsal on Red Square on June 22 1 Marshals Georgy Zhukov who had formally accepted the German surrender to the Soviet Union and Konstantin Rokossovsky rode through the parade ground on white and black stallions respectively 2 The fact is commemorated by the equestrian statue of Zhukov in front of the State Historical Museum on Manege Square Zhukov s stallion was called Kumir Idol while Rokossovsky s was called Stolb Pole The General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Joseph Stalin stood atop Lenin s Mausoleum and watched the parade alongside other dignitaries present According to certain editions of Zhukov s memoirs Stalin had intended to ride through the parade himself but he fell from the horse during the rehearsal and had to yield the honor to Zhukov who used to be a cavalry officer However this story is disputed by former Soviet spy Viktor Suvorov He claims that the story was inserted into Zhukov s memoirs as a counterargument to his theory although it apparently was in circulation earlier 3 that Stalin didn t lead the parade because he considered the war s results not worthy of the effort invested 4 Suvorov notes several inconsistencies in the story along with numerous evidence that Zhukov was intended all along for the role of leading the parade for example the memoirs of Sergei Shtemenko the man responsible at the time for the preparation of the parade state that the roles were decided from the start 5 and Igor Bobylev who took part in the preparations claims that the story never happened and that Stalin never visited the Manege at that time Another planned part of the parade was the march of the Victory Banner which was delivered to Moscow from Berlin on June 20 and was supposed to begin the procession of troops Despite this the weak drill training of Mikhail Yegorov Meliton Kantaria and Stepan Neustroev forced Marshal Zhukov to not go ahead with this portion of the parade 6 The parade Edit NKVD soldiers carrying the German standards the LSSAH standard staff is first from left Displays of the Red Army vehicles were some of the focal points of the ceremony It was one of the few times in which Cossacks took part in a victory parade with personnel from the 4th Guards Cossacks Cavalry Corps taking part in the procession of troops as part of the 2nd Ukrainian Front s combined regiment 7 One of the most famous moments at the end of the troops parade took place when soldiers from the Separate Operational Purpose Division of the NKVD carried the German standards and threw them down next to the mausoleum One of the standards that was tossed down belonged to the LSSAH Hitler s personal bodyguard The next day a reception was held in the Grand Kremlin Palace in honor of the participants in the Victory Parade 1 Due to the bad weather that day the flypast segment and the planned civil parade were cancelled if the weather had improved the flypast would have been led by Chief Marshals of Aviation Alexander Novikov and Alexander Golovanov Nonetheless this historic two hour parade remains the longest and largest military parade in Red Square s history and involved 40 000 soldiers and 1 850 military vehicles and other military hardware Band and music Edit The procession had musical accompaniment that was provided by the massed bands of the Moscow Garrison led by Major General Semyon Tchernetsky Senior Director of Music The combined band consisted of 38 military bands coming from Moscow military schools as well as military units of the Red Army and the NKVD The combined band numbered 1 220 musicians under the direction of 50 bandmasters 8 In total the parade saw the participation of 1 313 musicians the youngest of whom was 13 years old 9 The parade repertoire was finalized for approval on 5 June 1945 The final list included 36 tracks including the Soviet anthem fanfares and slow marches Twenty works that were performed at the parade were written by Tchernetsky himself The inspection part of the parade commenced with Tchernetsky s Jubilee Slow March 25 Years of the Red Army 10 and ended with the performance of Slavsya 11 The first song after the conclusion of the inspection was the Moscow ceremonial fanfare under the direction of conductor Vasily Agapkin The parade was opened by the young drummers of the Corps of Drums from the Moscow School of Musicians wearing uniforms similar to those of the Moscow Suvorov Military School and led by a bandmaster which after marching past soon took its place behind the massed bands to provide additional support The parade ended with the Glory to the Motherland march Additional marches have included Jaeger March March of the 92nd Pechersk Regiment March of the Leningrad Guards Divisions March Joy of Victory March Hero 12 Parade participants EditMarshal of the Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov parade inspector Marshal of the Soviet Union Konstantin Rokossovsky parade commander Military bandsMassed military bands of the Moscow Military District Conductor Major Gen Semyon Tchernetsky Senior Director of Music of the Central Military Orchestra of the People s Commissariat of National Defense Moscow A Surovov Military Music School Corps of Drums dd Ground column Edit Fronts of the Soviet Army Navy Army Air Forces and Air Defense Forces composed of Ground Troops and Air Force officers and personnel of the following fronts Karelian led by Regimental Commanders Maj Gen Grigory Kalinovsky and Marshal Kirill Meretskov Leningrad led by Regimental Commanders Maj Gen Andrei Stuchenko and Marshal Leonid Govorov 1st Baltic led by Regimental Commanders Guards Lt Gen Anton Lopatin and General of the Army Ivan Bagramyan 1st Belorussian led by Regimental Commanders Maj Gen Ivan Rosly and Col Gen Vasili Chuikov 2nd Belorussian led by Regimental Commanders Lt Gen Kosntantin Erastov and General of the Army Vasily Sokolovsky 3rd Belorussian led by Regimental Commander Marshal Aleksandr Vasilevsky 1st Polish Army Color Guard Company led by Chief of the Army General Staff General Wladyslaw Korczyc the only foreign army squad invited for the parade 1st Ukrainian led by Regimental Commanders Maj Gen Gleb Baklanov and Marshal Ivan Konev 4th Ukrainian led by Regimental Commanders Guards Lt Gen Andrei Bonddarev and Marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin 2nd Ukrainian led by Regimental Commanders Lt Gen Ivan Afonin and General of the Army Andrei Yeremenko 3rd Ukrainian led by Regimental Commanders Guards Maj Gen Nikolai Biryukov and Marshal Rodion Malinovsky and the Commander of Bulgarian 1 st Army Lt Gen Vladimir Stoychev Fleet Land and Air personnel of the Soviet Navy under Navy Contingent Commander Vice Adm Vladimir Fadeev Northern Fleet Baltic Fleet Dnieper Flotilla Danube Flotilla Caspian Flotilla Black Sea Fleet Naval Infantry Coastal Forces including naval artillery Combined battalion of the Corps of Cadets M V Frunze Naval College and Naval Engineering Academy Flag Disposal regiment of the 1st Internal Troops Division of the USSR NKVD Felix Dzerzhinsky composed of captured enemy standards and colors carried by the fronts Maj Gen Mikhail Duka was entrusted with carrying the symbolic key to the defeated city of Berlin 13 Moscow Military District Armed Forces of the Soviet Union contingent under Garrison and District Commander Col Gen Pavel Artemyev Military Schools and Academies Combined Joint Division Officers and other ranks of the People s Commisariat of Defense M V Frunze Military Academy Suvorov Military School Military Armored Troops Service School Military Engineering Academy F Dzerzhinsky Military Artillery School Lenin Military Political Academy Air Force Engineering Academy Moscow City Soviet Border Protection Superior College Moscow Military Infantry Training School Guards Mortars Training School Airborne Troops Officer Candidate School Technical Forces Officer School Infantry Units Kremlin Regiment OMSDON 1st NKVD Internal Troops Mechanized Rifle Division Special Duties Felix Dzerzhinsky 2nd NKVD Internal Troops Division Border Protection and Security Service of the NKVD K 9 Units engineering medical troops anti tank Mounted column Edit Army Cavalry regiments within the Moscow area Army Horse Artillery M1927 M1909 152 mm howitzer M1909 30 122 mm howitzer M1910 30 also used by the regular artillery Tachanka battalionMobile column Edit Soviet Air Defence Forces Anti aircraft guns towed and truck mounted 72 K 61 K 52 K Searchlight trucks Acoustic range finders Army Rocket Forces and Field Artillery Mortars 160mm Mortar M1943 120 PM 43 mortar Field guns 76 mm divisional gun M1942 ZiS 3 100 mm field gun M1944 BS 3 76 mm divisional gun M1936 F 22 76 mm regimental gun M1943 85 mm divisional gun D 44 Anti tank guns 53 K M 42 ZiS 2 Mountain guns 76 mm mountain gun M1938 also used by the Airborne Katyusha rocket launchers of the Army Rocket Forces and Artillery BM 8 BM 13 BM 30 BM 31 Howitzers D 1 M 10 ML 20 M 30 B 4 A 19 152 mm gun M1935 Br 2 203 mm howitzer M1931 B 4 122 mm howitzer M1910 30 Army Infantry joint regiment of motorized infantry formations Dnepr M 72 motorcycles BA 64 armored cars BA 20 Army Airborne Forces Army Tank Forces contingent T 34 Victory tanks T 34 85 IS 2 T 44 T 70 Army Artillery self propelled artillery contingent SU 76 SU 100 SU 152 ISU 152 ISU 122 SU 85 SU 122Legacy Edit The historical part of the 2020 parade dressed in uniforms dating back to the 1945 parade Outside the 1945 parade the only parade to be held on 24 June was organized on in 2020 in honor of the 75th anniversary of the victory 14 15 Elements of the 1945 parade were included in the 2020 parade the most notable of which being the bands playing the Jubilee Slow March 25 Years of the Red Army at the outset of the inspection stage 16 A statue of Zhukov on his parade horse is located near the State Historical Museum on Manezhnaya Square 17 There was an original debate over where to place the statue with many saying that it should be located at the site of the parade Red Square 18 During the 2010 Moscow Victory Day Parade the contingent from Turkmenistan upon request from the government of Turkmenistan was led by an officer riding on horseback with the horse being a descendant of the horse used during the 1945 parade 19 In 2008 during the celebrations of the Independence Day of South Ossetia the annual military parade in Tskhinvali saw Georgian flags being thrown to the ground by South Ossetian militiamen resembling how Soviet soldiers threw German flags on Red Square during the parade of 1945 20 In 2020 during a Victory Parade in the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinval equestrian team from the Russian FSB took part with the equestrian ranks being led by an officer on a stallion called Brilliant a direct descendant of Idol 21 In the 2017 Moscow Victory Day Parade officers wore the new standing collar tunic for the first time which was supposed to resemble the uniforms officer corps in the 1945 Parade of Victors 22 At the 2020 parade the Mongolian contingent wore a modified version of those uniforms 23 and later that year officers of the Korean People s Army wore uniforms based on those worn at the 1945 parade at a military parade on Kim Il sung Square 24 In June 1994 the Union of Participants of the Parade on Red Square on 24 June was registered chaired by retired Colonel Valentin Privalov The same year a competition was announced to create a badge for the participant of the parade As attributes of the union the breastplate and certificate of a participant in the parade were approved In the Kazakh city of Almaty there is a street near Abay Avenue on called 24 June Street named in honor of the first Victory Parade 25 At different times postage stamps depicting the parade on Red Square were issued See also EditList of German standards at the Moscow Victory Parade of 1945 Berlin Victory Parade of 1945 London Victory Celebrations of 1946References Edit a b Sostoyalsya Parad Pobedy na Krasnoj ploshadi Prezidentskaya biblioteka imeni B N Elcina Movie about Victory Parade 1945 on YouTube Svyatoe Delo in Russian Viktor Surorov Retrieved 2011 07 17 Poslednyaya Respublika in Russian Militera lib ru Retrieved 2011 07 17 VOENNAYa LITERATURA Memuary Shtemenko S M Generalnyj shtab v gody vojny militera lib ru The first victory parade of the year Victory Parade History How It Was pnisintek ru Kubanskie kazaki uchastniki parada Pobedy v Moskve 24 iyunya 1945 goda www slavakubani ru Chertok 2015 p 1 Chertok 2015 p 2 Kuznecov Dmitrij June 2 2020 Parad Pobedy v Moskve nachnetsya s ispolneniya Yubilejnogo vstrechnogo marsha Daily Storm Chertok 2015 pp 3 4 Muzyka Ministerstvo oborony Rossijskoj Federacii Glavnaya in Russian 2016 09 05 Retrieved 2021 02 04 Duka Mihail Ilich www warheroes ru Russia to hold Victory Day Parade on June 24 Putin TASS 2020 05 26 Retrieved 2020 05 26 Putin Orders June 24 Victory Day Parade as Russia Flattens Virus Curve The Moscow Times 2020 05 26 Retrieved 2020 05 26 Kuznecov Dmitrij June 2 2020 Parad Pobedy v Moskve nachnetsya s ispolneniya Yubilejnogo vstrechnogo marsha Daily Storm Marshal Zhukov monument izi TRAVEL 1945 06 24 Retrieved 2021 02 04 Fifty Years Later Russia Finally Honoring World War II Hero AP NEWS Gundogar Rossiya Turkmenistan 65 letiyu Pobedy v Velikoj Otechestvennoj vojne posvyashaetsya gundogar org Georgia Civil Civil Ge Tskhinvali Celebrated Independence Day www civil ge Retrieved 2017 08 08 V Chinvale v parade primut uchastie bolee tysyachi voennosluzhashih Yandeks Novosti June 23 2020 Stepovoj Aleksandr Kruglov Bogdan 2018 06 22 Paradnaya stojka Izvestiya in Russian Retrieved 2020 03 07 TED ULAAN TALBAJD gsmaf gov mn 19 June 2020 Rogoway Tyler 10 October 2020 Kim Jong Un Just Showed The World The War Machine He Built While Feinting Diplomacy The Drive Kazahstan Almaty ulica 24 Iyunya Yandeks Karty Works cited Edit Chertok M 2015 Muzyka parada pobedy Muzykalnaya akademiya 2 1 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1945 Moscow Victory Parade Moscow Victory Parade Video Net Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive Official site for the 65th anniversary of the original Victory Parade of June 24 1945 German Flags at the 1945 Soviet Victory Parade Official site of the 2005 Russian 60th celebration of the 1945 Victory Parade Russian site from where the short video of the parade can be downloaded Video of the parade 1945 Moscow Victory Parade at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1945 Moscow Victory Parade amp oldid 1131687933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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