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Yuri Gagarin

Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin[a] (9 March 1934 – 27 March 1968) was a Soviet pilot and cosmonaut who became the first human to journey into outer space. Travelling in the Vostok 1 capsule, Gagarin completed one orbit of Earth on 12 April 1961. By achieving this major milestone in the Space Race he became an international celebrity, and was awarded many medals and titles, including Hero of the Soviet Union, his nation's highest honour.

Yuri Gagarin
Юрий Гагарин
Gagarin in Helsinki, 1961
Born
Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin

(1934-03-09)9 March 1934
Died27 March 1968(1968-03-27) (aged 34)
Novosyolovo, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Cause of deathPlane crash
Resting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis, Moscow
NationalityRussian
Occupation(s)Pilot, cosmonaut
Spouse
(m. 1957)
Awards
Space career
Soviet cosmonaut
RankColonel (Polkovnik), Air Forces
Time in space
1 hour, 48 minutes
SelectionSoviet Air Force Group 1
MissionsVostok 1
Signature

Gagarin was born in the Russian village of Klushino, and in his youth was a foundryman at a steel plant in Lyubertsy. He later joined the Soviet Air Forces as a pilot and was stationed at the Luostari Air Base, near the Norwegian border, before his selection for the Soviet space programme with five other cosmonauts. Following his spaceflight, Gagarin became deputy training director of the Cosmonaut Training Centre, which was later named after him. He was also elected as a deputy of the Soviet of the Union in 1962 and then to the Soviet of Nationalities, respectively the lower and upper chambers of the Supreme Soviet.

Vostok 1 was Gagarin's only spaceflight, but he served as the backup crew to the Soyuz 1 mission, which ended in a fatal crash, killing his friend and fellow cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov. Fearful that a national hero might be killed, Soviet officials banned Gagarin from further spaceflights. After completing training at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy in February 1968, he was again allowed to fly regular aircraft. Gagarin died five weeks later when the MiG-15 training jet he was piloting with flight instructor Vladimir Seryogin crashed near the town of Kirzhach.

Early life

 
Gagarin family home in Klushino

Gagarin was born 9 March 1934 in the village of Klushino,[1] in the Smolensk Oblast of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, near Gzhatsk (renamed Gagarin in 1968 after his death).[2] His parents worked on a sovkhoz[3]—Aleksey Ivanovich Gagarin as a carpenter and Anna Timofeyevna Gagarina as a dairy farmer.[4][b] Yuri was the third of four children. His older brother Valentin was born in 1924, and by the time Yuri was born he was already helping with the cattle on the farm. His sister Zoya, born in 1927, helped take care of "Yura" and their youngest brother Boris, born in 1936.[6][7]

Like millions of Soviet citizens, his family suffered during the German occupation during World War II.[8] During the German advance on Moscow, retreating Red Army soldiers seized the collective farm's livestock.[9] The Nazis captured Klushino on 18 October 1941. On their first day in the village, they burned down the school, ending Yuri's first year of education.[10] The Germans also burned down 27 houses in the village and forced the residents including the Gagarins to work the farms to feed the occupying soldiers. Those who refused were beaten or sent to the concentration camp set up at Gzhatsk.[10]

A Nazi officer took over the Gagarin residence. On the land behind their house, the family was allowed to build a mud hut measuring approximately 3 by 3 metres (10 by 10 ft), where they spent 21 months until the end of the occupation.[8] During this period, Yuri became a saboteur, especially after one of the German soldiers, who the children called "the Devil", tried to hang his younger brother Boris on an apple tree using the boy's scarf. In retaliation, Yuri sabotaged the soldier's work; he poured soil into the tank batteries gathered to be recharged and randomly mixed the different chemical supplies intended for the task.[11] In early 1943, his two older siblings were deported by the Germans to Poland for slave labour. They escaped and were found by Soviet soldiers who conscripted them into helping with the war effort. They did not return home until after the war, in 1945.[12][13]

The rest of the Gagarin family believed the two older children were dead, and Yuri became ill with "grief and hunger";[14] he was also beaten for refusing to work for the German forces and spent the remainder of the war at a hospital as a patient and later as an orderly. His mother was hospitalized during the same period, after a German soldier gashed her leg with a scythe. When the Germans were routed out of Klushino on 9 March 1944, Yuri helped the Red Army find mines buried in the roads by the fleeing German army.[14]

Education and early career

In 1946, the family moved to Gzhatsk, where Gagarin continued his education.[8] Yuri and Boris were enrolled at a crude school built in the town and run by a young woman who volunteered to be the teacher. They learned to read using a discarded Soviet military manual. A former Soviet airman later joined the school to teach maths and science,[15] Yuri's favourite subjects. Yuri was also part of a group of children that built model aeroplanes. He was fascinated with aircraft from a young age and his interest in aeroplanes was energized after a Yakovlev fighter plane crash landed in Klushino during the war.[16]

 
Gagarin as an air cadet in the Saratov flying club c. 1954

In 1950, aged 16, Gagarin began an apprenticeship as a foundryman at a steel plant in Lyubertsy, near Moscow,[12][13] and enrolled at a local "young workers" school for seventh-grade evening classes.[citation needed] After graduating in 1951 from both the seventh grade and the vocational school with honours in mouldmaking and foundry work,[citation needed] he was selected for further training at the Industrial Technical School in Saratov, where he studied tractors.[12][13][17] While in Saratov, Gagarin volunteered at a local flying club for weekend training as a Soviet air cadet, where he trained to fly a biplane, and later a Yakovlev Yak-18.[13][17] He earned extra money as a part-time dock labourer on the Volga River.[8]

Soviet Air Force service

In 1955, Gagarin was accepted to the First Chkalovsky Higher Air Force Pilots School in Orenburg.[18][19] He initially began training on the Yak-18 already familiar to him and later graduated to training on the MiG-15 in February 1956.[18] Gagarin twice struggled to land the two-seater trainer aircraft, and risked dismissal from pilot training. However, the commander of the regiment decided to give him another chance at landing. Gagarin's flight instructor gave him a cushion to sit on, which improved his view from the cockpit, and he landed successfully. Having completed his evaluation in a trainer aircraft,[20] Gagarin began flying solo in 1957.[12]

On 5 November 1957, Gagarin was commissioned a lieutenant in the Soviet Air Forces having accumulated 166 hours and 47 minutes of flight time. He graduated from flight school the next day and was posted to the Luostari Air Base close to the Norwegian border in Murmansk Oblast for a two-year assignment with the Northern Fleet.[21] On 7 July 1959, he was rated Military Pilot 3rd Class.[22] After expressing interest in space exploration following the launch of Luna 3 on 6 October 1959, his recommendation to the Soviet space programme was endorsed and forward by Lieutenant Colonel Babushkin.[21][23] By this point, he had accumulated 265 hours of flight time.[21] Gagarin was promoted to the rank of senior lieutenant on 6 November 1959,[22] three weeks after he was interviewed by a medical commission for qualification to the space programme.[21]

Soviet space programme

Selection and training

 
Gagarin's Vostok 3KA capsule and an effigy of him on display at the RKK Energiya museum in 2010
 
Gagarin's Vostok 1 spacesuit

Gagarin's selection for the Vostok programme was overseen by the Central Flight Medical Commission led by Major General Konstantin Fyodorovich Borodin of the Soviet Army Medical Service. He underwent physical and psychological testing conducted at Central Aviation Scientific-Research Hospital, in Moscow, commanded by Colonel A.S. Usanov, a member of the commission. The commission also included Colonel Yevgeniy Anatoliyevich Karpov, who later commanded the training centre, Colonel Vladimir Ivanovich Yazdovskiy, the head physician for Gagarin's flight, and Major-General Aleksandr Nikolayevich Babiychuk, a physician flag officer on the Soviet Air Force General Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Air Force.[24] The commission limited their selection to pilots between 25 and 30 years old. The chief engineer of the programme Sergei Korolev also specified that candidates, to fit in the limited space in the Vostok capsule, should weigh less than 72 kg (159 lb) and be no taller than 1.70 metres (5 ft 7 in);[25][26] Gagarin was 1.57 metres (5 ft 2 in) tall.[27]

From a pool of 154 qualified pilots short-listed by their Air Force units, the military physicians chose 29 cosmonaut candidates, of which 20 were approved by the Credential Committee of the Soviet government. The first twelve including Gagarin were approved on 7 March 1960 and eight more were added in a series of subsequent orders issued until June.[24][c] Gagarin began training at the Khodynka Airfield in central Moscow on 15 March 1960. The training regimen involved vigorous and repetitive physical exercises which Alexei Leonov, a member of the initial group of twelve, described as akin to training for the Olympic Games.[28] In April 1960, they began parachute training in Saratov Oblast and each completed about 40 to 50 jumps from both low and high altitude, over both land and water.[29]

Gagarin was a candidate favoured by his peers; when they were asked to vote anonymously for a candidate besides themselves they would like to be the first to fly, all but three chose Gagarin.[30] One of these candidates, Yevgeny Khrunov, believed that Gagarin was very focused and was demanding of himself and others when necessary.[31] On 30 May 1960, Gagarin was further selected for an accelerated training group, known as the Vanguard Six or Sochi Six,[32][d] from which the first cosmonauts of the Vostok programme would be chosen. The other members of the group were Anatoly Kartashov, Andriyan Nikolayev, Pavel Popovich, Gherman Titov, and Valentin Varlamov. However, Kartashov and Varlamov were injured and replaced by Khrunov and Grigory Nelyubov.[34]

As several of the candidates selected for the programme including Gagarin did not have higher education degrees, they were enrolled into a correspondence course programme at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy. Gagarin enrolled in the programme in September 1960 and did not earn his specialist diploma until early 1968.[35][36] Gagarin was also subjected to experiments that were designed to test physical and psychological endurance including oxygen starvation tests in which the cosmonauts were locked in an isolation chamber and the air slowly pumped out. He also trained for the upcoming flight by experiencing g-forces in a centrifuge.[34][37] Psychological tests included placing the candidates in an anechoic chamber in complete isolation; Gagarin was in the chamber on 26 July – 5 August.[38][29] In August 1960, a Soviet Air Force doctor evaluated his personality as follows:

Modest; embarrasses when his humour gets a little too racy; high degree of intellectual development evident in Yuriy; fantastic memory; distinguishes himself from his colleagues by his sharp and far-ranging sense of attention to his surroundings; a well-developed imagination; quick reactions; persevering, prepares himself painstakingly for his activities and training exercises, handles celestial mechanics and mathematical formulae with ease as well as excels in higher mathematics; does not feel constrained when he has to defend his point of view if he considers himself right; appears that he understands life better than a lot of his friends.[30]

The Vanguard Six were given the title of pilot-cosmonaut in January 1961[34] and entered a two-day examination conducted by a special interdepartmental commission led by Lieutenant-General Nikolai Kamanin, the overseer of the Vostok programme. The commission was tasked with ranking the candidates based on their mission readiness for the first human Vostok mission. On 17 January, they were tested in a simulator at the M. M. Gromov Flight-Research Institute on a full-size mockup of the Vostok capsule. Gagarin, Nikolayev, Popovich, and Titov all received excellent marks on the first day of testing in which they were required to describe the various phases of the mission followed by questions from the commission.[31] On the second day, they were given a written examination following which the special commission ranked Gagarin as the best candidate for the first mission. He and the next two highest-ranked cosmonauts, Titov and Nelyubov, were sent to Tyuratam for final preparations.[31] Gagarin and Titov were selected to train in the flight-ready spacecraft on 7 April. Historian Asif Azam Siddiqi writes of the final selection:[39]

In the end, at the State Commission meeting on April 8, Kamanin stood up and formally nominated Gagarin as the primary pilot and Titov as his backup. Without much discussion, the commission approved the proposal and moved on to other last-minute logistical issues. It was assumed that in the event Gagarin developed health problems prior to liftoff, Titov would take his place, with Nelyubov acting as his backup.

Vostok 1

On 12 April 1961, at 6:07 am UTC, the Vostok 3KA-3 (Vostok 1) spacecraft was launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome. Aboard was Gagarin, the first human to travel into space, using the call sign Kedr (Кедр, Siberian pine or cedar).[40] The radio communication between the launch control room and Gagarin included the following dialogue at the moment of rocket launch:

Korolev: Preliminary stage ... intermediate... main... LIFT-OFF! We wish you a good flight. Everything's all right.
Gagarin: Off we go! Goodbye, until [we meet] soon, dear friends.[41][42]

Gagarin's farewell to Korolev using the informal phrase Poyekhali! (Поехали!, 'Off we go!')[e] later became a popular expression in the Eastern Bloc that was used to refer to the beginning of the Space Age.[45][46] The five first-stage engines fired until the first separation event, when the four side-boosters fell away, leaving the core engine. The core stage then separated while the rocket was in a suborbital trajectory, and the upper stage carried it to orbit. Once the upper stage finished firing, it separated from the spacecraft, which orbited for 108 minutes before returning to Earth in Kazakhstan.[47] Gagarin became the first human to orbit the Earth.[48]

An April 1961 newsreel of Gagarin arriving in Moscow to be greeted by First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev

"The feeling of weightlessness was somewhat unfamiliar compared with Earth conditions. Here, you feel as if you were hanging in a horizontal position in straps. You feel as if you are suspended", Gagarin wrote in his post-flight report.[49] He also wrote in his autobiography released the same year that he sang the tune "The Motherland Hears, The Motherland Knows" ("Родина слышит, Родина знает") during re-entry.[50] Gagarin was recognised as a qualified Military Pilot 1st Class and promoted to the rank of major in a special order given during his flight.[22][50]

At about 7,000 metres (23,000 ft), Gagarin ejected from the descending capsule as planned and landed using a parachute.[51] There were concerns Gagarin's orbital spaceflight records for duration, altitude and lifted mass would not be recognized by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI), the world governing body for setting standards and keeping records in the field, which at the time required that the pilot land with the craft.[52] Gagarin and Soviet officials initially refused to admit that he had not landed with his spacecraft,[53] an omission which became apparent after Titov's flight on Vostok 2 four months later. Gagarin's spaceflight records were nonetheless certified and reaffirmed by the FAI, which revised its rules, and acknowledged that the crucial steps of the safe launch, orbit, and return of the pilot had been accomplished.[54] Gagarin is internationally recognised as the first human in space and first to orbit the Earth.[55]

After the Vostok 1 flight

 
Gagarin in Warsaw, 1961

Gagarin's flight was a triumph for the Soviet space programme and he became a national hero of the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc, as well as a worldwide celebrity. Newspapers around the globe published his biography and details of his flight. He was escorted in a long motorcade of high-ranking officials through the streets of Moscow to the Kremlin where, in a lavish ceremony, Nikita Khrushchev awarded him the title Hero of the Soviet Union. Other cities in the Soviet Union also held mass demonstrations, the scale of which were second only to the World War II Victory Parades.[56]

 
Gagarin and Valentina Tereshkova (seated to his right) signing autographs at a youth forum in 1964

Gagarin gained a reputation as an adept public figure and was noted for his charismatic smile.[57][58][59] On 15 April 1961, accompanied by officials from the Soviet Academy of Sciences, he answered questions at a press conference in Moscow reportedly attended by 1,000 reporters.[60] Gagarin visited the United Kingdom three months after the Vostok 1 mission, going to London and Manchester.[57][61] While in Manchester, despite heavy rain, he refused an umbrella, insisted that the roof of the convertible car he was riding in remain open, and stood so the cheering crowds could see him.[57][62] Gagarin toured widely abroad, accepting the invitation of about 30 countries in the years following his flight.[63] In just the first four months, he also went to Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Hungary, and Iceland.[64] Because of his popularity, US president John F. Kennedy barred Gagarin from visiting the United States.[44]

In 1962, Gagarin began serving as a deputy to the Soviet of the Union,[65] and was elected to the Central Committee of the Young Communist League. He later returned to Star City, the cosmonaut facility, where he spent several years working on designs for a reusable spacecraft. He became a lieutenant colonel of the Soviet Air Forces on 12 June 1962, and received the rank of colonel on 6 November 1963.[22] On 20 December, Gagarin became Deputy Training Director of the cosmonaut training facility.[66] Soviet officials, including Kamanin, tried to keep Gagarin away from any flights, being worried about losing their hero in an accident noting that he was "too dear to mankind to risk his life for the sake of an ordinary space flight".[67] Kamanin was also concerned by Gagarin's drinking and believed the sudden rise to fame had taken its toll on the cosmonaut. While acquaintances say Gagarin had been a "sensible drinker", his touring schedule placed him in social situations in which he was increasingly expected to drink alcohol.[12][17]

 
Gagarin with U.S. Vice President Hubert Humphrey, French Prime Minister Georges Pompidou and the Gemini 4 astronauts at the 1965 Paris Air Show

Two years later, he was re-elected as a deputy of the Soviet Union but this time to the Soviet of Nationalities, the upper chamber of legislature.[65] The following year, he began to re-qualify as a fighter pilot[68] and was backup pilot for his friend Vladimir Komarov on the Soyuz 1 flight after five years without piloting duty. Kamanin had opposed Gagarin's reassignment to cosmonaut training; he had gained weight and his flying skills had deteriorated. Despite this, he remained a strong contender for Soyuz 1 until he was replaced by Komarov in April 1966 and reassigned to Soyuz 3.[69]

The Soyuz 1 launch was rushed due to implicit political pressures[70] and despite Gagarin's protests that additional safety precautions were necessary.[71] Gagarin accompanied Komarov to the rocket before launch and relayed instructions to Komarov from ground control following multiple system failures aboard the spacecraft.[72] Despite their best efforts, Soyuz 1 crash landed after its parachutes failed to open, killing Komarov instantly.[73] After the Soyuz 1 crash, Gagarin was permanently banned from training for and participating in further spaceflights.[74] He was also grounded from flying aircraft solo, a demotion he worked hard to lift. He was temporarily relieved of duties to focus on academics with the promise that he would be able to resume flight training.[75] On 17 February 1968, Gagarin successfully defended his aerospace engineering thesis on the subject of spaceplane aerodynamic configuration and graduated cum laude from the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy.[36][75][76]

Personal life

 
Gagarin and Göran Sedvall at the 1964 Swedish bandy final
 
Gagarin and his wife Valentina at a concert in Moscow in 1964.

In 1957, while a cadet in flight school, Gagarin met Valentina Goryacheva at the May Day celebrations at the Red Square in Moscow.[77] She was a medical technician who had graduated from Orenburg Medical School.[13][17][78] They were married on 7 November of the same year,[13] the same day Gagarin graduated from his flight school, and they had two daughters.[79][80] Yelena Yurievna Gagarina, born 1959,[80] is an art historian who has worked as the director general of the Moscow Kremlin Museums since 2001;[81][82] and Galina Yurievna Gagarina, born 1961,[80] is a professor of economics and the department chair at Plekhanov Russian University of Economics in Moscow.[81][83] Following his rise to fame, at a Black Sea resort in September 1961, he was reportedly caught by his wife during a liaison with a nurse who had aided him after a boating incident. He attempted to escape through a window and jumped off a second floor balcony. The resulting injury left a permanent scar above his left eyebrow.[12][17]

In his youth Gagarin was a keen sportsman and played ice hockey as a goalkeeper.[84] He was also a basketball fan and coached the Saratov Industrial Technical School team, as well as being a referee.[85]

Some Soviet sources have said that Gagarin commented during his space flight, "I don't see any God up here," though no such words appear in the verbatim record of his conversations with Earth stations during the spaceflight.[86] In a 2006 interview, Gagarin's friend Colonel Valentin Petrov stated that Gagarin never said these words and that the quote originated from Khrushchev's speech at the plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU about the state's anti-religion campaign, saying "Gagarin flew into space, but didn't see any god there".[87] Petrov also said Gagarin had been baptised into the Russian Orthodox Church as a child, and a 2011 Foma magazine article quoted the rector of the Orthodox Church in Star City saying, "Gagarin baptized his elder daughter Yelena shortly before his space flight; and his family used to celebrate Christmas and Easter and keep icons in the house".[88]

Death

 
Plaque indicating Gagarin's interment in the Kremlin Wall

On 27 March 1968, while on a routine training flight from Chkalovsky Air Base, Gagarin and flight instructor Vladimir Seryogin died when their MiG-15UTI crashed near the town of Kirzhach. The bodies of Gagarin and Seryogin were cremated and their ashes interred in the walls of the Kremlin.[89] Wrapped in secrecy, the cause of the crash that killed Gagarin is uncertain and became the subject of several theories, including several conspiracy theories.[90][91] At least three investigations into the crash were conducted separately by the Air Force, official government commissions, and the KGB.[92][93] According to a biography of Gagarin by Jamie Doran and Piers Bizony, Starman: The Truth Behind the Legend of Yuri Gagarin, the KGB worked "not just alongside the Air Force and the official commission members but against them."[92]

The KGB's report, declassified in March 2003, claimed that the actions of airbase personnel contributed to the crash. The report states that an air-traffic controller provided Gagarin with outdated weather information and that by the time of his flight, conditions had deteriorated significantly. Ground crew also left external fuel tanks attached to the aircraft. Gagarin's planned flight activities needed clear weather and no outboard tanks. The investigation concluded Gagarin's aircraft entered a spin, either due to a bird strike or because of a sudden move to avoid another aircraft. Because of the out-of-date weather report, the crew believed their altitude was higher than it was and could not react properly to bring the MiG-15 out of its spin.[93] Another theory, advanced in 2005 by the original crash investigator, hypothesizes that a cabin air vent was accidentally left open by the crew or the previous pilot, leading to oxygen deprivation and leaving the crew incapable of controlling the aircraft.[90] A similar theory, published in Air & Space magazine, is that the crew detected the open vent and followed procedure by executing a rapid dive to a lower altitude. This dive caused them to lose consciousness and crash.[91]

On 12 April 2007, the Kremlin vetoed a new investigation into the death of Gagarin. Government officials said they saw no reason to begin a new investigation.[94] In April 2011, documents from a 1968 commission set up by the Central Committee of the Communist Party to investigate the accident were declassified. The documents revealed that the commission's original conclusion was that Gagarin or Seryogin had manoeuvred sharply, either to avoid a weather balloon or to avoid "entry into the upper limit of the first layer of cloud cover", leading the jet into a "super-critical flight regime and to its stalling in complex meteorological conditions".[95]

 
A MiG-15UTI, the same type as Gagarin was flying when he was killed

Alexei Leonov, who was also a member of a state commission established to investigate Gagarin's death, was conducting parachute training sessions that day and heard "two loud booms in the distance". He believes that a Sukhoi Su-15 was flying below its minimum altitude and, "without realizing it because of the terrible weather conditions, he passed within 10 or 20 meters (33 or 66 ft) of Yuri and Seregin's plane while breaking the sound barrier". The resulting turbulence would have sent the MiG-15UTI into an uncontrolled spin. Leonov said the first boom he heard was that of the jet breaking the sound barrier and the second was Gagarin's plane crashing.[96]

Awards and honours

Medals and orders of merit

On 14 April 1961, Gagarin was honoured with a 12-mile (19 km) parade attended by millions of people that concluded at the Red Square. After a short speech, he was bestowed the Hero of the Soviet Union,[97][98] Order of Lenin,[97] Merited Master of Sports of the Soviet Union[99] and the first Pilot-Cosmonaut of the USSR.[98] On 15 April, the Soviet Academy of Sciences awarded him with the Konstantin Tsiolkovsky Gold Medal, named after the Russian pioneer of space aeronautics.[100] Gagarin had also been awarded four Soviet commemorative medals over the course of his career.[22]

He was honoured as a Hero of Socialist Labour from Czechoslovakia on 29 April 1961,[101][102] and Hero of Socialist Labour (Bulgaria, including the Order of Georgi Dimitrov) the same year.[22] On the eighth anniversary of the beginning of the Cuban Revolution (26 July), President Osvaldo Dorticos of Cuba presented him with the first Commander of the Order of Playa Girón, a newly created medal.[103]

Gagarin was also awarded the 1960 Gold Air Medal and the 1961 De la Vaulx Medal from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale in Switzerland.[104] He received numerous awards from other nations that year, including the Star of the Republic of Indonesia (2nd Class), the Order of the Cross of Grunwald (1st Degree) in Poland, the Order of the Flag of the Republic of Hungary, the Hero of Labour award from Democratic Republic of Vietnam,[22] the Italian Columbus Day Medal,[105] and a Gold Medal from the British Interplanetary Society.[106][107] President Jânio Quadros of Brazil decorated Gagarin on 2 August 1961 with the Order of Aeronautical Merit, Commander grade.[108] During a tour of Egypt in late January 1962, Gagarin received the Order of the Nile[109] and the golden keys to the gates of Cairo.[63] On 22 October 1963, Gagarin and Valentina Tereshkova were honoured with the Order of Karl Marx from the German Democratic Republic.[110]

Tributes

The date of Gagarin's space flight, 12 April, has been commemorated. Since 1962, it has been celebrated first in the USSR and since 1991 in Russia and some other former Soviet republics as Cosmonautics Day.[111][112] Since 2000, Yuri's Night, an international celebration, is held annually to commemorate milestones in space exploration.[113] In 2011, it was declared the International Day of Human Space Flight by the United Nations.[114]

A number of buildings and locations have been named for Gagarin, mostly in Russia but also in other Soviet republics. The Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City was named on 30 April 1968.[115] The launch pad at Baikonur Cosmodrome from which Sputnik 1 and Vostok 1 were launched is now known as Gagarin's Start. Gagarin Raion in Sevastopol was named after him during the period of the Soviet Union. The Russian Air Force Academy was renamed the Gagarin Air Force Academy in 1968.[116] The town of Gzhatsk where he lived in Smolensk Oblast was renamed Gagarin after his death in 1968, and has since become home to numerous museums and monuments to him.[117] A street in Warsaw, Poland, is called Yuri Gagarin Street.[118] The town of Gagarin, Armenia was renamed in his honour in 1961.[119]

Gagarin has been honoured on the Moon by astronauts and astronomers. During the American space programme's Apollo 11 mission in 1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin left a memorial satchel containing medals commemorating Gagarin and Komarov on the Moon's surface.[120][121] In 1971, Apollo 15 astronauts David Scott and James Irwin left the small Fallen Astronaut sculpture at their landing site as a memorial to the American astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts who died in the Space Race; the names on its plaque included Yuri Gagarin and 14 others.[122][123] In 1970, a 262 km (163 mi) wide crater on the far side was named after him.[124] Gagarin was inducted as a member of the 1976 inaugural class of the International Space Hall of Fame in New Mexico.[125]

Gagarin is memorialised in music; a cycle of Soviet patriotic songs titled The Constellation Gagarin (Созвездье Гагарина, Sozvezdie Gagarina) was written by Aleksandra Pakhmutova and Nikolai Dobronravov in 1970–1971.[126] The most famous of these songs refers to Gagarin's poyekhali!: in the lyrics, "He said 'let's go!' He waved his hand".[45][126] He was the inspiration for the pieces "Hey Gagarin" by Jean-Michel Jarre on Métamorphoses, "Gagarin" by Public Service Broadcasting, and "Gagarin, I loved you" by Undervud.[127]

 
Russian ten-rouble coin commemorating Gagarin in 2001

Vessels have been named for Gagarin; Soviet tracking ship Kosmonavt Yuriy Gagarin was built in 1971[128] and the Armenian airline Armavia named their first Sukhoi Superjet 100 in his honour in 2011.[129]

Two commemorative coins were issued in the Soviet Union to honour the 20th and 30th anniversaries of his flight: a one-rouble coin in copper-nickel (1981) and a three-rouble coin in silver (1991). In 2001, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Gagarin's flight, a series of four coins bearing his likeness was issued in Russia; it consisted of a two-rouble coin in copper-nickel, a three-rouble coin in silver, a ten-rouble coin in brass-copper and nickel, and a 100-rouble coin in silver.[130] In 2011, Russia issued a 1,000-rouble coin in gold and a three-rouble coin in silver to mark the 50th anniversary of his flight.[131]

In 2008, the Russia-based Kontinental Hockey League named their championship trophy the Gagarin Cup.[132] In a 2010 Space Foundation survey, Gagarin was ranked as the sixth-most-popular space hero, tied with the fictional character James T. Kirk from Star Trek.[133] A Russian docudrama titled Gagarin: First in Space was released in 2013. Previous attempts at portraying Gagarin were disallowed; his family took legal action over his portrayal in a fictional drama and vetoed a musical.[134]

Statues, monuments and murals

 
Bust of Gagarin at Birla Planetarium in Kolkata, India
 
Mural of Gagarin by Jorit in Odintsovo, Russia

There are statues of Gagarin and monuments to him located in the town named after him as well as in Orenburg, Cheboksary, Irkutsk, Izhevsk, Komsomolsk-on-Amur, and Yoshkar-Ola in Russia, as well as in Nicosia, Cyprus, Druzhkivka, Ukraine, Karaganda, Kazakhstan, and Tiraspol, Moldova. On 4 June 1980, Monument to Yuri Gagarin in Gagarin Square, Leninsky Avenue, Moscow, was opened.[135] The monument is mounted to a 38 m (125 ft) tall pedestal and is constructed of titanium. Beside the column is a replica of the descent module used during his spaceflight.[136]

In 2011, a statue of Gagarin was unveiled at Admiralty Arch in The Mall in London, opposite the permanent sculpture of James Cook. It is a copy of the statue outside Gagarin's former school in Lyubertsy.[137] In 2013, the statue was moved to a permanent location outside the Royal Observatory, Greenwich.[138]

In 2012, a statue was unveiled at the site of NASA's original spaceflight headquarters on South Wayside Drive in Houston. The sculpture was completed in 2011 by Leonov, who is also an artist, and was a gift to Houston commissioned by various Russian organisations. Houston Mayor Annise Parker, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak were present for the dedication.[139][140] The Russian Federation presented a bust of Gagarin to several cities in India including one that was unveiled at the Birla Planetarium in Kolkata in February 2012.[141]

In April 2018, a bust of Gagarin erected on the street in Belgrade, Serbia, that bears his name was removed, after less than a week. A new work was commissioned following the outcry over the disproportionately small size of its head which locals said was an "insult" to Gagarin.[142][143] Belgrade City Manager Goran Vesic stated that neither the city, the Serbian Ministry of Culture, nor the foundation that financed it had prior knowledge of the design.[144]

In August 2019, the Italian artist Jorit painted Gagarin's face on the facade of a twenty-story building in the district of Odintsovo, Russia.[145][146] The mural is the largest portrait of Gagarin in the world.[147]

In March 2021, a statue of Gagarin was unveiled at Mataram Park (Taman Mataram) in Jakarta, Indonesia in celebration of the 70th anniversary of Indonesia–Russia diplomatic relations as well as the 60th anniversary of the first human space flight. The statue, sculpted by Russian artist A.D. Leonov and presented by Russian embassy in Jakarta, is considered as "a sign of strengthening relations" between Moscow and Jakarta, which have been sister cities since 2006.[148][149]

50th anniversary

 
50th anniversary stamp of Ukraine, 2011

The 50th anniversary of Gagarin's journey into space was marked in 2011 by tributes around the world. A documentary film titled First Orbit was shot from the International Space Station, combining sound recordings from the original flight with footage of the route taken by Gagarin.[150] The Russian, American, and Italian crew of Expedition 27 aboard the ISS sent a special video message to wish the people of the world a "Happy Yuri's Night", wearing shirts with an image of Gagarin.[151]

The Central Bank of the Russian Federation released gold and silver coins to commemorate the anniversary.[131] The Soyuz TMA-21 spacecraft was named Gagarin with the launch in April 2011 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of his mission.[152][153]

Notes

  1. ^ Russian: Юрий Алексеевич Гагарин, IPA: [ˈjʉrʲɪj ɐlʲɪkˈsʲejɪvʲɪdʑ ɡɐˈɡarʲɪn]; Gagarin's first name is sometimes transliterated as Yuriy, Youri, or Yury.
  2. ^ Alexey and Anna's names are sometimes transliterated as Aleksei Ivanovich and Anna Timofeevna, respectively.[5]
  3. ^ The first twelve announced on 7 March 1960 were Lieutenant Alexei Leonov, Senior Lieutenants Ivan Anikeyev, Valery Bykovsky, Yuri Gagarin, Viktor Gorbatko, Grigori Nelyubov, Andriyan Nikolayev, German Titov, Boris Volynov, and Georgy Shonin, Captain Pavel Popovich and Engineer Captain Vladimir Komarov. On 9 March 1960, Senior Lieutenant Yevgeny Khrunov was added. Senior Lieutenants Dmitri Zaikin and Valentin Filatyev joined the group on 25 March. They were followed by Major Pavel Belyayev and Senior Lieutenants Valentin Bondarenko, Valentin Varlamov and Mars Rafikov who joined on 28 April 1960. Captain Anatoly Kartashov was the last to join in June 1960.[24]
  4. ^ The group was also nicknamed the "Lilies" by their fellow cosmonauts, a reference to "Lilies of the Valley", a song by composer Oscar Feltsman.[33][34]
  5. ^ Some sources translate this phrase as "Let's go!"[43][44]

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  • Jenks, Andrew (2012a). "Conquering space: the cult of Yuri Gagarin". In Bassin, Mark; Kelly, Catriona (eds.). Soviet and Post-Soviet Identities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 129–150. ISBN 978-1-107-01117-5. from the original on 30 April 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  • Jenks, Andrew L (2013). The Cosmonaut Who Couldn't Stop Smiling: The Life and Legend of Yuri Gagarin. DeKalb, IL: Northern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-87580-699-0.
  • Leonov, Alexei & Scott, David (2004). Two Sides of the Moon. New York: Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 978-0-312-30866-7. LCCN 2004059381. OCLC 56587777.
  • Lindsay, Hamish (11 November 2013). Tracking Apollo to the Moon. London: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4471-0255-7. from the original on 6 January 2021. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
  • Louis, Victor E & Louis, Jennifer M. (1980). Sport in the Soviet Union. Oxford: Pergamon. ISBN 0-08-024506-4.
  • Norberg, Carol (18 November 2013). Human Spaceflight and Exploration. Chichester, UK: Praxis Publishing. ISBN 978-3-642-23725-6.
  • Pervushin, Аnton (2011). 108 минут, изменившие мир: вся правда о полете Юрия Гагарина [108 minutes that changed the world: the whole truth about the flight of Yuri Gagarin] (in Russian). Moscow: Eksmo. ISBN 9785457022300.
  • Pocock, Philip (2012). "Look up! Art in the age of orbitization". In Geppert, Alexander C. T. (ed.). Imagining Outer Space: European Astroculture in the Twentieth Century. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-23172-6.
  • Polmar, Norman & Breyer, Siegfried (1984). Guide to the Soviet Navy (3rd ed.). Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-239-0. OCLC 317097201.
  • Sheldon, Charles; et al. (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, World Spaceflight News, and the United States Congress) (18 May 2013). Histories of the Soviet / Russian Space Program. Vol. 1. Progressive Management Publications. ISBN 978-1-5496-9658-9. OCLC 1019250543.
  • Siddiqi, Asif A (2000). Challenge to Apollo: The Soviet Union and the Space Race, 1945–1974. Washington, DC: NASA. ISBN 978-1-78039-301-8. LCCN 00038684. OCLC 48909645. SP-2000-4408. Part 1 (pages 1–499) 16 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Part 2 (pages 500–1011) 14 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine.

Further reading

  • Cole, Michael D. (1995). Vostok 1: First Human in Space. Springfield, NJ: Enslow. ISBN 0-89490-541-4.
  • Jenks, A. L. (2019). The Cosmonaut Who Couldn’t Stop Smiling: The Life and Legend of Yuri Gagarin (NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies). DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press.

External links

External images
Memorial to Gagarin and Seregin at crash location
  Memorial obelisk photo
  Memorial obelisk closeup photo
  Coordinates 56°02′48″N 39°01′35″E / 56.04664°N 39.0265°E / 56.04664; 39.0265
  • by Associated Press, published on The New York Times, 28 March 1968
  • "Gagarin, Yuri Alekseyevich". Astronautix.com. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  • Caterina, Gianfranco (9 March 2020). "Gagarin in Brazil: reassessing the terms of the Cold War domestic political debate in 1961". Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional. 63 (1): 16. doi:10.1590/0034-7329202000104.
Multimedia
  • Newsreel footage of Yuri Gagarin at Net-Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive
  • First Orbit, 2011 feature film on YouTube by First Orbit
  • First Man in Space: Yuri Gagarin, short film on YouTube by Roscosmos
  • Soviet Man in Space (1961) is available for free download at the Internet Archive
  • Soviets Hail Space Hero (1961) is available for free download at the Internet Archive
  • Photo gallery by KP.ru

yuri, gagarin, gagarin, redirects, here, other, uses, gagarin, disambiguation, band, band, first, space, redirects, here, 1959, film, first, into, space, 1999, song, space, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, alekseyevi. Gagarin redirects here For other uses see Gagarin disambiguation For the band see Yuri Gagarin band First man in space redirects here For the 1959 film see First Man into Space For the 1999 song see 1st Man in Space In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Alekseyevich and the family name is Gagarin Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin a 9 March 1934 27 March 1968 was a Soviet pilot and cosmonaut who became the first human to journey into outer space Travelling in the Vostok 1 capsule Gagarin completed one orbit of Earth on 12 April 1961 By achieving this major milestone in the Space Race he became an international celebrity and was awarded many medals and titles including Hero of the Soviet Union his nation s highest honour Yuri GagarinYurij GagarinGagarin in Helsinki 1961BornYuri Alekseyevich Gagarin 1934 03 09 9 March 1934Klushino Russian SFSR Soviet UnionDied27 March 1968 1968 03 27 aged 34 Novosyolovo Russian SFSR Soviet UnionCause of deathPlane crashResting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis MoscowNationalityRussianOccupation s Pilot cosmonautSpouseValentina Goryacheva m 1957 wbr AwardsHero of the Soviet Union Order of Lenin Pilot Cosmonaut of the USSRSpace careerSoviet cosmonautRankColonel Polkovnik Air ForcesTime in space1 hour 48 minutesSelectionSoviet Air Force Group 1MissionsVostok 1SignatureGagarin was born in the Russian village of Klushino and in his youth was a foundryman at a steel plant in Lyubertsy He later joined the Soviet Air Forces as a pilot and was stationed at the Luostari Air Base near the Norwegian border before his selection for the Soviet space programme with five other cosmonauts Following his spaceflight Gagarin became deputy training director of the Cosmonaut Training Centre which was later named after him He was also elected as a deputy of the Soviet of the Union in 1962 and then to the Soviet of Nationalities respectively the lower and upper chambers of the Supreme Soviet Vostok 1 was Gagarin s only spaceflight but he served as the backup crew to the Soyuz 1 mission which ended in a fatal crash killing his friend and fellow cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov Fearful that a national hero might be killed Soviet officials banned Gagarin from further spaceflights After completing training at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy in February 1968 he was again allowed to fly regular aircraft Gagarin died five weeks later when the MiG 15 training jet he was piloting with flight instructor Vladimir Seryogin crashed near the town of Kirzhach Contents 1 Early life 2 Education and early career 3 Soviet Air Force service 4 Soviet space programme 4 1 Selection and training 4 2 Vostok 1 5 After the Vostok 1 flight 6 Personal life 7 Death 8 Awards and honours 8 1 Medals and orders of merit 8 2 Tributes 8 3 Statues monuments and murals 8 4 50th anniversary 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life Gagarin family home in Klushino Gagarin was born 9 March 1934 in the village of Klushino 1 in the Smolensk Oblast of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic near Gzhatsk renamed Gagarin in 1968 after his death 2 His parents worked on a sovkhoz 3 Aleksey Ivanovich Gagarin as a carpenter and Anna Timofeyevna Gagarina as a dairy farmer 4 b Yuri was the third of four children His older brother Valentin was born in 1924 and by the time Yuri was born he was already helping with the cattle on the farm His sister Zoya born in 1927 helped take care of Yura and their youngest brother Boris born in 1936 6 7 Like millions of Soviet citizens his family suffered during the German occupation during World War II 8 During the German advance on Moscow retreating Red Army soldiers seized the collective farm s livestock 9 The Nazis captured Klushino on 18 October 1941 On their first day in the village they burned down the school ending Yuri s first year of education 10 The Germans also burned down 27 houses in the village and forced the residents including the Gagarins to work the farms to feed the occupying soldiers Those who refused were beaten or sent to the concentration camp set up at Gzhatsk 10 A Nazi officer took over the Gagarin residence On the land behind their house the family was allowed to build a mud hut measuring approximately 3 by 3 metres 10 by 10 ft where they spent 21 months until the end of the occupation 8 During this period Yuri became a saboteur especially after one of the German soldiers who the children called the Devil tried to hang his younger brother Boris on an apple tree using the boy s scarf In retaliation Yuri sabotaged the soldier s work he poured soil into the tank batteries gathered to be recharged and randomly mixed the different chemical supplies intended for the task 11 In early 1943 his two older siblings were deported by the Germans to Poland for slave labour They escaped and were found by Soviet soldiers who conscripted them into helping with the war effort They did not return home until after the war in 1945 12 13 The rest of the Gagarin family believed the two older children were dead and Yuri became ill with grief and hunger 14 he was also beaten for refusing to work for the German forces and spent the remainder of the war at a hospital as a patient and later as an orderly His mother was hospitalized during the same period after a German soldier gashed her leg with a scythe When the Germans were routed out of Klushino on 9 March 1944 Yuri helped the Red Army find mines buried in the roads by the fleeing German army 14 Education and early careerIn 1946 the family moved to Gzhatsk where Gagarin continued his education 8 Yuri and Boris were enrolled at a crude school built in the town and run by a young woman who volunteered to be the teacher They learned to read using a discarded Soviet military manual A former Soviet airman later joined the school to teach maths and science 15 Yuri s favourite subjects Yuri was also part of a group of children that built model aeroplanes He was fascinated with aircraft from a young age and his interest in aeroplanes was energized after a Yakovlev fighter plane crash landed in Klushino during the war 16 Gagarin as an air cadet in the Saratov flying club c 1954 In 1950 aged 16 Gagarin began an apprenticeship as a foundryman at a steel plant in Lyubertsy near Moscow 12 13 and enrolled at a local young workers school for seventh grade evening classes citation needed After graduating in 1951 from both the seventh grade and the vocational school with honours in mouldmaking and foundry work citation needed he was selected for further training at the Industrial Technical School in Saratov where he studied tractors 12 13 17 While in Saratov Gagarin volunteered at a local flying club for weekend training as a Soviet air cadet where he trained to fly a biplane and later a Yakovlev Yak 18 13 17 He earned extra money as a part time dock labourer on the Volga River 8 Soviet Air Force serviceIn 1955 Gagarin was accepted to the First Chkalovsky Higher Air Force Pilots School in Orenburg 18 19 He initially began training on the Yak 18 already familiar to him and later graduated to training on the MiG 15 in February 1956 18 Gagarin twice struggled to land the two seater trainer aircraft and risked dismissal from pilot training However the commander of the regiment decided to give him another chance at landing Gagarin s flight instructor gave him a cushion to sit on which improved his view from the cockpit and he landed successfully Having completed his evaluation in a trainer aircraft 20 Gagarin began flying solo in 1957 12 On 5 November 1957 Gagarin was commissioned a lieutenant in the Soviet Air Forces having accumulated 166 hours and 47 minutes of flight time He graduated from flight school the next day and was posted to the Luostari Air Base close to the Norwegian border in Murmansk Oblast for a two year assignment with the Northern Fleet 21 On 7 July 1959 he was rated Military Pilot 3rd Class 22 After expressing interest in space exploration following the launch of Luna 3 on 6 October 1959 his recommendation to the Soviet space programme was endorsed and forward by Lieutenant Colonel Babushkin 21 23 By this point he had accumulated 265 hours of flight time 21 Gagarin was promoted to the rank of senior lieutenant on 6 November 1959 22 three weeks after he was interviewed by a medical commission for qualification to the space programme 21 Soviet space programmeSelection and training See also Vostok programme Gagarin s Vostok 3KA capsule and an effigy of him on display at the RKK Energiya museum in 2010 Gagarin s Vostok 1 spacesuit Gagarin s selection for the Vostok programme was overseen by the Central Flight Medical Commission led by Major General Konstantin Fyodorovich Borodin of the Soviet Army Medical Service He underwent physical and psychological testing conducted at Central Aviation Scientific Research Hospital in Moscow commanded by Colonel A S Usanov a member of the commission The commission also included Colonel Yevgeniy Anatoliyevich Karpov who later commanded the training centre Colonel Vladimir Ivanovich Yazdovskiy the head physician for Gagarin s flight and Major General Aleksandr Nikolayevich Babiychuk a physician flag officer on the Soviet Air Force General Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Air Force 24 The commission limited their selection to pilots between 25 and 30 years old The chief engineer of the programme Sergei Korolev also specified that candidates to fit in the limited space in the Vostok capsule should weigh less than 72 kg 159 lb and be no taller than 1 70 metres 5 ft 7 in 25 26 Gagarin was 1 57 metres 5 ft 2 in tall 27 From a pool of 154 qualified pilots short listed by their Air Force units the military physicians chose 29 cosmonaut candidates of which 20 were approved by the Credential Committee of the Soviet government The first twelve including Gagarin were approved on 7 March 1960 and eight more were added in a series of subsequent orders issued until June 24 c Gagarin began training at the Khodynka Airfield in central Moscow on 15 March 1960 The training regimen involved vigorous and repetitive physical exercises which Alexei Leonov a member of the initial group of twelve described as akin to training for the Olympic Games 28 In April 1960 they began parachute training in Saratov Oblast and each completed about 40 to 50 jumps from both low and high altitude over both land and water 29 Gagarin was a candidate favoured by his peers when they were asked to vote anonymously for a candidate besides themselves they would like to be the first to fly all but three chose Gagarin 30 One of these candidates Yevgeny Khrunov believed that Gagarin was very focused and was demanding of himself and others when necessary 31 On 30 May 1960 Gagarin was further selected for an accelerated training group known as the Vanguard Six or Sochi Six 32 d from which the first cosmonauts of the Vostok programme would be chosen The other members of the group were Anatoly Kartashov Andriyan Nikolayev Pavel Popovich Gherman Titov and Valentin Varlamov However Kartashov and Varlamov were injured and replaced by Khrunov and Grigory Nelyubov 34 As several of the candidates selected for the programme including Gagarin did not have higher education degrees they were enrolled into a correspondence course programme at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy Gagarin enrolled in the programme in September 1960 and did not earn his specialist diploma until early 1968 35 36 Gagarin was also subjected to experiments that were designed to test physical and psychological endurance including oxygen starvation tests in which the cosmonauts were locked in an isolation chamber and the air slowly pumped out He also trained for the upcoming flight by experiencing g forces in a centrifuge 34 37 Psychological tests included placing the candidates in an anechoic chamber in complete isolation Gagarin was in the chamber on 26 July 5 August 38 29 In August 1960 a Soviet Air Force doctor evaluated his personality as follows Modest embarrasses when his humour gets a little too racy high degree of intellectual development evident in Yuriy fantastic memory distinguishes himself from his colleagues by his sharp and far ranging sense of attention to his surroundings a well developed imagination quick reactions persevering prepares himself painstakingly for his activities and training exercises handles celestial mechanics and mathematical formulae with ease as well as excels in higher mathematics does not feel constrained when he has to defend his point of view if he considers himself right appears that he understands life better than a lot of his friends 30 The Vanguard Six were given the title of pilot cosmonaut in January 1961 34 and entered a two day examination conducted by a special interdepartmental commission led by Lieutenant General Nikolai Kamanin the overseer of the Vostok programme The commission was tasked with ranking the candidates based on their mission readiness for the first human Vostok mission On 17 January they were tested in a simulator at the M M Gromov Flight Research Institute on a full size mockup of the Vostok capsule Gagarin Nikolayev Popovich and Titov all received excellent marks on the first day of testing in which they were required to describe the various phases of the mission followed by questions from the commission 31 On the second day they were given a written examination following which the special commission ranked Gagarin as the best candidate for the first mission He and the next two highest ranked cosmonauts Titov and Nelyubov were sent to Tyuratam for final preparations 31 Gagarin and Titov were selected to train in the flight ready spacecraft on 7 April Historian Asif Azam Siddiqi writes of the final selection 39 In the end at the State Commission meeting on April 8 Kamanin stood up and formally nominated Gagarin as the primary pilot and Titov as his backup Without much discussion the commission approved the proposal and moved on to other last minute logistical issues It was assumed that in the event Gagarin developed health problems prior to liftoff Titov would take his place with Nelyubov acting as his backup Vostok 1 Main article Vostok 1 Poyekhali source source track track track Gagarin s voice Problems playing this file See media help On 12 April 1961 at 6 07 am UTC the Vostok 3KA 3 Vostok 1 spacecraft was launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome Aboard was Gagarin the first human to travel into space using the call sign Kedr Kedr Siberian pine or cedar 40 The radio communication between the launch control room and Gagarin included the following dialogue at the moment of rocket launch Korolev Preliminary stage intermediate main LIFT OFF We wish you a good flight Everything s all right Gagarin Off we go Goodbye until we meet soon dear friends 41 42 Gagarin s farewell to Korolev using the informal phrase Poyekhali Poehali Off we go e later became a popular expression in the Eastern Bloc that was used to refer to the beginning of the Space Age 45 46 The five first stage engines fired until the first separation event when the four side boosters fell away leaving the core engine The core stage then separated while the rocket was in a suborbital trajectory and the upper stage carried it to orbit Once the upper stage finished firing it separated from the spacecraft which orbited for 108 minutes before returning to Earth in Kazakhstan 47 Gagarin became the first human to orbit the Earth 48 source source source source source source source source source source track An April 1961 newsreel of Gagarin arriving in Moscow to be greeted by First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev The feeling of weightlessness was somewhat unfamiliar compared with Earth conditions Here you feel as if you were hanging in a horizontal position in straps You feel as if you are suspended Gagarin wrote in his post flight report 49 He also wrote in his autobiography released the same year that he sang the tune The Motherland Hears The Motherland Knows Rodina slyshit Rodina znaet during re entry 50 Gagarin was recognised as a qualified Military Pilot 1st Class and promoted to the rank of major in a special order given during his flight 22 50 At about 7 000 metres 23 000 ft Gagarin ejected from the descending capsule as planned and landed using a parachute 51 There were concerns Gagarin s orbital spaceflight records for duration altitude and lifted mass would not be recognized by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale FAI the world governing body for setting standards and keeping records in the field which at the time required that the pilot land with the craft 52 Gagarin and Soviet officials initially refused to admit that he had not landed with his spacecraft 53 an omission which became apparent after Titov s flight on Vostok 2 four months later Gagarin s spaceflight records were nonetheless certified and reaffirmed by the FAI which revised its rules and acknowledged that the crucial steps of the safe launch orbit and return of the pilot had been accomplished 54 Gagarin is internationally recognised as the first human in space and first to orbit the Earth 55 After the Vostok 1 flight Gagarin in Warsaw 1961 Gagarin s flight was a triumph for the Soviet space programme and he became a national hero of the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc as well as a worldwide celebrity Newspapers around the globe published his biography and details of his flight He was escorted in a long motorcade of high ranking officials through the streets of Moscow to the Kremlin where in a lavish ceremony Nikita Khrushchev awarded him the title Hero of the Soviet Union Other cities in the Soviet Union also held mass demonstrations the scale of which were second only to the World War II Victory Parades 56 Gagarin and Valentina Tereshkova seated to his right signing autographs at a youth forum in 1964 Gagarin gained a reputation as an adept public figure and was noted for his charismatic smile 57 58 59 On 15 April 1961 accompanied by officials from the Soviet Academy of Sciences he answered questions at a press conference in Moscow reportedly attended by 1 000 reporters 60 Gagarin visited the United Kingdom three months after the Vostok 1 mission going to London and Manchester 57 61 While in Manchester despite heavy rain he refused an umbrella insisted that the roof of the convertible car he was riding in remain open and stood so the cheering crowds could see him 57 62 Gagarin toured widely abroad accepting the invitation of about 30 countries in the years following his flight 63 In just the first four months he also went to Brazil Bulgaria Canada Cuba Czechoslovakia Finland Hungary and Iceland 64 Because of his popularity US president John F Kennedy barred Gagarin from visiting the United States 44 In 1962 Gagarin began serving as a deputy to the Soviet of the Union 65 and was elected to the Central Committee of the Young Communist League He later returned to Star City the cosmonaut facility where he spent several years working on designs for a reusable spacecraft He became a lieutenant colonel of the Soviet Air Forces on 12 June 1962 and received the rank of colonel on 6 November 1963 22 On 20 December Gagarin became Deputy Training Director of the cosmonaut training facility 66 Soviet officials including Kamanin tried to keep Gagarin away from any flights being worried about losing their hero in an accident noting that he was too dear to mankind to risk his life for the sake of an ordinary space flight 67 Kamanin was also concerned by Gagarin s drinking and believed the sudden rise to fame had taken its toll on the cosmonaut While acquaintances say Gagarin had been a sensible drinker his touring schedule placed him in social situations in which he was increasingly expected to drink alcohol 12 17 Gagarin with U S Vice President Hubert Humphrey French Prime Minister Georges Pompidou and the Gemini 4 astronauts at the 1965 Paris Air Show Two years later he was re elected as a deputy of the Soviet Union but this time to the Soviet of Nationalities the upper chamber of legislature 65 The following year he began to re qualify as a fighter pilot 68 and was backup pilot for his friend Vladimir Komarov on the Soyuz 1 flight after five years without piloting duty Kamanin had opposed Gagarin s reassignment to cosmonaut training he had gained weight and his flying skills had deteriorated Despite this he remained a strong contender for Soyuz 1 until he was replaced by Komarov in April 1966 and reassigned to Soyuz 3 69 The Soyuz 1 launch was rushed due to implicit political pressures 70 and despite Gagarin s protests that additional safety precautions were necessary 71 Gagarin accompanied Komarov to the rocket before launch and relayed instructions to Komarov from ground control following multiple system failures aboard the spacecraft 72 Despite their best efforts Soyuz 1 crash landed after its parachutes failed to open killing Komarov instantly 73 After the Soyuz 1 crash Gagarin was permanently banned from training for and participating in further spaceflights 74 He was also grounded from flying aircraft solo a demotion he worked hard to lift He was temporarily relieved of duties to focus on academics with the promise that he would be able to resume flight training 75 On 17 February 1968 Gagarin successfully defended his aerospace engineering thesis on the subject of spaceplane aerodynamic configuration and graduated cum laude from the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy 36 75 76 Personal life Gagarin and Goran Sedvall at the 1964 Swedish bandy final Gagarin and his wife Valentina at a concert in Moscow in 1964 In 1957 while a cadet in flight school Gagarin met Valentina Goryacheva at the May Day celebrations at the Red Square in Moscow 77 She was a medical technician who had graduated from Orenburg Medical School 13 17 78 They were married on 7 November of the same year 13 the same day Gagarin graduated from his flight school and they had two daughters 79 80 Yelena Yurievna Gagarina born 1959 80 is an art historian who has worked as the director general of the Moscow Kremlin Museums since 2001 81 82 and Galina Yurievna Gagarina born 1961 80 is a professor of economics and the department chair at Plekhanov Russian University of Economics in Moscow 81 83 Following his rise to fame at a Black Sea resort in September 1961 he was reportedly caught by his wife during a liaison with a nurse who had aided him after a boating incident He attempted to escape through a window and jumped off a second floor balcony The resulting injury left a permanent scar above his left eyebrow 12 17 In his youth Gagarin was a keen sportsman and played ice hockey as a goalkeeper 84 He was also a basketball fan and coached the Saratov Industrial Technical School team as well as being a referee 85 Some Soviet sources have said that Gagarin commented during his space flight I don t see any God up here though no such words appear in the verbatim record of his conversations with Earth stations during the spaceflight 86 In a 2006 interview Gagarin s friend Colonel Valentin Petrov stated that Gagarin never said these words and that the quote originated from Khrushchev s speech at the plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU about the state s anti religion campaign saying Gagarin flew into space but didn t see any god there 87 Petrov also said Gagarin had been baptised into the Russian Orthodox Church as a child and a 2011 Foma magazine article quoted the rector of the Orthodox Church in Star City saying Gagarin baptized his elder daughter Yelena shortly before his space flight and his family used to celebrate Christmas and Easter and keep icons in the house 88 DeathMain article Death of Yuri Gagarin Plaque indicating Gagarin s interment in the Kremlin Wall On 27 March 1968 while on a routine training flight from Chkalovsky Air Base Gagarin and flight instructor Vladimir Seryogin died when their MiG 15UTI crashed near the town of Kirzhach The bodies of Gagarin and Seryogin were cremated and their ashes interred in the walls of the Kremlin 89 Wrapped in secrecy the cause of the crash that killed Gagarin is uncertain and became the subject of several theories including several conspiracy theories 90 91 At least three investigations into the crash were conducted separately by the Air Force official government commissions and the KGB 92 93 According to a biography of Gagarin by Jamie Doran and Piers Bizony Starman The Truth Behind the Legend of Yuri Gagarin the KGB worked not just alongside the Air Force and the official commission members but against them 92 The KGB s report declassified in March 2003 claimed that the actions of airbase personnel contributed to the crash The report states that an air traffic controller provided Gagarin with outdated weather information and that by the time of his flight conditions had deteriorated significantly Ground crew also left external fuel tanks attached to the aircraft Gagarin s planned flight activities needed clear weather and no outboard tanks The investigation concluded Gagarin s aircraft entered a spin either due to a bird strike or because of a sudden move to avoid another aircraft Because of the out of date weather report the crew believed their altitude was higher than it was and could not react properly to bring the MiG 15 out of its spin 93 Another theory advanced in 2005 by the original crash investigator hypothesizes that a cabin air vent was accidentally left open by the crew or the previous pilot leading to oxygen deprivation and leaving the crew incapable of controlling the aircraft 90 A similar theory published in Air amp Space magazine is that the crew detected the open vent and followed procedure by executing a rapid dive to a lower altitude This dive caused them to lose consciousness and crash 91 On 12 April 2007 the Kremlin vetoed a new investigation into the death of Gagarin Government officials said they saw no reason to begin a new investigation 94 In April 2011 documents from a 1968 commission set up by the Central Committee of the Communist Party to investigate the accident were declassified The documents revealed that the commission s original conclusion was that Gagarin or Seryogin had manoeuvred sharply either to avoid a weather balloon or to avoid entry into the upper limit of the first layer of cloud cover leading the jet into a super critical flight regime and to its stalling in complex meteorological conditions 95 A MiG 15UTI the same type as Gagarin was flying when he was killed Alexei Leonov who was also a member of a state commission established to investigate Gagarin s death was conducting parachute training sessions that day and heard two loud booms in the distance He believes that a Sukhoi Su 15 was flying below its minimum altitude and without realizing it because of the terrible weather conditions he passed within 10 or 20 meters 33 or 66 ft of Yuri and Seregin s plane while breaking the sound barrier The resulting turbulence would have sent the MiG 15UTI into an uncontrolled spin Leonov said the first boom he heard was that of the jet breaking the sound barrier and the second was Gagarin s plane crashing 96 Awards and honoursMedals and orders of merit On 14 April 1961 Gagarin was honoured with a 12 mile 19 km parade attended by millions of people that concluded at the Red Square After a short speech he was bestowed the Hero of the Soviet Union 97 98 Order of Lenin 97 Merited Master of Sports of the Soviet Union 99 and the first Pilot Cosmonaut of the USSR 98 On 15 April the Soviet Academy of Sciences awarded him with the Konstantin Tsiolkovsky Gold Medal named after the Russian pioneer of space aeronautics 100 Gagarin had also been awarded four Soviet commemorative medals over the course of his career 22 He was honoured as a Hero of Socialist Labour from Czechoslovakia on 29 April 1961 101 102 and Hero of Socialist Labour Bulgaria including the Order of Georgi Dimitrov the same year 22 On the eighth anniversary of the beginning of the Cuban Revolution 26 July President Osvaldo Dorticos of Cuba presented him with the first Commander of the Order of Playa Giron a newly created medal 103 Gagarin was also awarded the 1960 Gold Air Medal and the 1961 De la Vaulx Medal from the Federation Aeronautique Internationale in Switzerland 104 He received numerous awards from other nations that year including the Star of the Republic of Indonesia 2nd Class the Order of the Cross of Grunwald 1st Degree in Poland the Order of the Flag of the Republic of Hungary the Hero of Labour award from Democratic Republic of Vietnam 22 the Italian Columbus Day Medal 105 and a Gold Medal from the British Interplanetary Society 106 107 President Janio Quadros of Brazil decorated Gagarin on 2 August 1961 with the Order of Aeronautical Merit Commander grade 108 During a tour of Egypt in late January 1962 Gagarin received the Order of the Nile 109 and the golden keys to the gates of Cairo 63 On 22 October 1963 Gagarin and Valentina Tereshkova were honoured with the Order of Karl Marx from the German Democratic Republic 110 Tributes The date of Gagarin s space flight 12 April has been commemorated Since 1962 it has been celebrated first in the USSR and since 1991 in Russia and some other former Soviet republics as Cosmonautics Day 111 112 Since 2000 Yuri s Night an international celebration is held annually to commemorate milestones in space exploration 113 In 2011 it was declared the International Day of Human Space Flight by the United Nations 114 Yuri Gagarin statue at the Royal Greenwich Observatory in London England A number of buildings and locations have been named for Gagarin mostly in Russia but also in other Soviet republics The Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City was named on 30 April 1968 115 The launch pad at Baikonur Cosmodrome from which Sputnik 1 and Vostok 1 were launched is now known as Gagarin s Start Gagarin Raion in Sevastopol was named after him during the period of the Soviet Union The Russian Air Force Academy was renamed the Gagarin Air Force Academy in 1968 116 The town of Gzhatsk where he lived in Smolensk Oblast was renamed Gagarin after his death in 1968 and has since become home to numerous museums and monuments to him 117 A street in Warsaw Poland is called Yuri Gagarin Street 118 The town of Gagarin Armenia was renamed in his honour in 1961 119 Gagarin has been honoured on the Moon by astronauts and astronomers During the American space programme s Apollo 11 mission in 1969 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin left a memorial satchel containing medals commemorating Gagarin and Komarov on the Moon s surface 120 121 In 1971 Apollo 15 astronauts David Scott and James Irwin left the small Fallen Astronaut sculpture at their landing site as a memorial to the American astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts who died in the Space Race the names on its plaque included Yuri Gagarin and 14 others 122 123 In 1970 a 262 km 163 mi wide crater on the far side was named after him 124 Gagarin was inducted as a member of the 1976 inaugural class of the International Space Hall of Fame in New Mexico 125 Gagarin is memorialised in music a cycle of Soviet patriotic songs titled The Constellation Gagarin Sozvezde Gagarina Sozvezdie Gagarina was written by Aleksandra Pakhmutova and Nikolai Dobronravov in 1970 1971 126 The most famous of these songs refers to Gagarin s poyekhali in the lyrics He said let s go He waved his hand 45 126 He was the inspiration for the pieces Hey Gagarin by Jean Michel Jarre on Metamorphoses Gagarin by Public Service Broadcasting and Gagarin I loved you by Undervud 127 Russian ten rouble coin commemorating Gagarin in 2001 Vessels have been named for Gagarin Soviet tracking ship Kosmonavt Yuriy Gagarin was built in 1971 128 and the Armenian airline Armavia named their first Sukhoi Superjet 100 in his honour in 2011 129 Two commemorative coins were issued in the Soviet Union to honour the 20th and 30th anniversaries of his flight a one rouble coin in copper nickel 1981 and a three rouble coin in silver 1991 In 2001 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Gagarin s flight a series of four coins bearing his likeness was issued in Russia it consisted of a two rouble coin in copper nickel a three rouble coin in silver a ten rouble coin in brass copper and nickel and a 100 rouble coin in silver 130 In 2011 Russia issued a 1 000 rouble coin in gold and a three rouble coin in silver to mark the 50th anniversary of his flight 131 In 2008 the Russia based Kontinental Hockey League named their championship trophy the Gagarin Cup 132 In a 2010 Space Foundation survey Gagarin was ranked as the sixth most popular space hero tied with the fictional character James T Kirk from Star Trek 133 A Russian docudrama titled Gagarin First in Space was released in 2013 Previous attempts at portraying Gagarin were disallowed his family took legal action over his portrayal in a fictional drama and vetoed a musical 134 Statues monuments and murals Bust of Gagarin at Birla Planetarium in Kolkata India Mural of Gagarin by Jorit in Odintsovo Russia There are statues of Gagarin and monuments to him located in the town named after him as well as in Orenburg Cheboksary Irkutsk Izhevsk Komsomolsk on Amur and Yoshkar Ola in Russia as well as in Nicosia Cyprus Druzhkivka Ukraine Karaganda Kazakhstan and Tiraspol Moldova On 4 June 1980 Monument to Yuri Gagarin in Gagarin Square Leninsky Avenue Moscow was opened 135 The monument is mounted to a 38 m 125 ft tall pedestal and is constructed of titanium Beside the column is a replica of the descent module used during his spaceflight 136 In 2011 a statue of Gagarin was unveiled at Admiralty Arch in The Mall in London opposite the permanent sculpture of James Cook It is a copy of the statue outside Gagarin s former school in Lyubertsy 137 In 2013 the statue was moved to a permanent location outside the Royal Observatory Greenwich 138 In 2012 a statue was unveiled at the site of NASA s original spaceflight headquarters on South Wayside Drive in Houston The sculpture was completed in 2011 by Leonov who is also an artist and was a gift to Houston commissioned by various Russian organisations Houston Mayor Annise Parker NASA Administrator Charles Bolden and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak were present for the dedication 139 140 The Russian Federation presented a bust of Gagarin to several cities in India including one that was unveiled at the Birla Planetarium in Kolkata in February 2012 141 In April 2018 a bust of Gagarin erected on the street in Belgrade Serbia that bears his name was removed after less than a week A new work was commissioned following the outcry over the disproportionately small size of its head which locals said was an insult to Gagarin 142 143 Belgrade City Manager Goran Vesic stated that neither the city the Serbian Ministry of Culture nor the foundation that financed it had prior knowledge of the design 144 In August 2019 the Italian artist Jorit painted Gagarin s face on the facade of a twenty story building in the district of Odintsovo Russia 145 146 The mural is the largest portrait of Gagarin in the world 147 In March 2021 a statue of Gagarin was unveiled at Mataram Park Taman Mataram in Jakarta Indonesia in celebration of the 70th anniversary of Indonesia Russia diplomatic relations as well as the 60th anniversary of the first human space flight The statue sculpted by Russian artist A D Leonov and presented by Russian embassy in Jakarta is considered as a sign of strengthening relations between Moscow and Jakarta which have been sister cities since 2006 148 149 50th anniversary 50th anniversary stamp of Ukraine 2011 The 50th anniversary of Gagarin s journey into space was marked in 2011 by tributes around the world A documentary film titled First Orbit was shot from the International Space Station combining sound recordings from the original flight with footage of the route taken by Gagarin 150 The Russian American and Italian crew of Expedition 27 aboard the ISS sent a special video message to wish the people of the world a Happy Yuri s Night wearing shirts with an image of Gagarin 151 The Central Bank of the Russian Federation released gold and silver coins to commemorate the anniversary 131 The Soyuz TMA 21 spacecraft was named Gagarin with the launch in April 2011 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of his mission 152 153 Notes Russian Yurij Alekseevich Gagarin IPA ˈjʉrʲɪj ɐlʲɪkˈsʲejɪvʲɪdʑ ɡɐˈɡarʲɪn Gagarin s first name is sometimes transliterated as Yuriy Youri or Yury Alexey and Anna s names are sometimes transliterated as Aleksei Ivanovich and Anna Timofeevna respectively 5 The first twelve announced on 7 March 1960 were Lieutenant Alexei Leonov Senior Lieutenants Ivan Anikeyev Valery Bykovsky Yuri Gagarin Viktor Gorbatko Grigori Nelyubov Andriyan Nikolayev German Titov Boris Volynov and Georgy Shonin Captain Pavel Popovich and Engineer Captain Vladimir Komarov On 9 March 1960 Senior Lieutenant Yevgeny Khrunov was added Senior Lieutenants Dmitri Zaikin and Valentin Filatyev joined the group on 25 March They were followed by Major Pavel Belyayev and Senior Lieutenants Valentin Bondarenko Valentin Varlamov and Mars Rafikov who joined on 28 April 1960 Captain Anatoly Kartashov was the last to join in June 1960 24 The group was also nicknamed the Lilies by their fellow cosmonauts a reference to Lilies of the Valley a song by composer Oscar Feltsman 33 34 Some sources translate this phrase as Let s go 43 44 References Hall Shayler amp Vis 2007 p 332 French 2010 p 270 Tito Dennis 13 November 2006 Yuri Gagarin Time Europe Archived from the original on 26 March 2008 Burgess amp Hall 2009 pp 41 42 Jenks 2012a pp 140 41 Doran amp Bizony 2011 pp 11 12 Burgess amp Hall 2009 p 42 a b c d Moskvitch Katia 3 April 2011 Yuri Gagarin s Klushino 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1019250543 Siddiqi Asif A 2000 Challenge to Apollo The Soviet Union and the Space Race 1945 1974 Washington DC NASA ISBN 978 1 78039 301 8 LCCN 00038684 OCLC 48909645 SP 2000 4408 Part 1 pages 1 499 Archived 16 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Part 2 pages 500 1011 Archived 14 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Further readingCole Michael D 1995 Vostok 1 First Human in Space Springfield NJ Enslow ISBN 0 89490 541 4 Jenks A L 2019 The Cosmonaut Who Couldn t Stop Smiling The Life and Legend of Yuri Gagarin NIU Series in Slavic East European and Eurasian Studies DeKalb Northern Illinois University Press External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Yuri Gagarin Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yuri Gagarin External imagesMemorial to Gagarin and Seregin at crash location Memorial obelisk photo Memorial obelisk closeup photo Coordinates 56 02 48 N 39 01 35 E 56 04664 N 39 0265 E 56 04664 39 0265Obituary by Associated Press published on The New York Times 28 March 1968 Gagarin Yuri Alekseyevich Astronautix com Retrieved 2 January 2023 Caterina Gianfranco 9 March 2020 Gagarin in Brazil reassessing the terms of the Cold War domestic political debate in 1961 Revista Brasileira de Politica Internacional 63 1 16 doi 10 1590 0034 7329202000104 MultimediaNewsreel footage of Yuri Gagarin at Net Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive First Orbit 2011 feature film on YouTube by First Orbit First Man in Space Yuri Gagarin short film on YouTube by Roscosmos Soviet Man in Space 1961 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Soviets Hail Space Hero 1961 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Photo gallery by KP ru Portals Biography Spaceflight Space exploration Soviet Union Outer space Astronomy Russia Countries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yuri Gagarin amp oldid 1142068537, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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