When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Moscow Bolshevik Uprising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_Bolshevik_Uprising

    The Moscow Bolshevik Uprising was the armed uprising of the Bolsheviks in Moscow, from 25 October (7 November) to 2 (15) November 1917 during the October Revolution of Russia. It was in Moscow in October where the most prolonged and bitter fighting unfolded. [1] Some historians consider the fighting in Moscow as the beginning of the Russian ...

  3. Murder of the Romanov family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_the_Romanov_family

    Prior to his death, he donated the guns he used in the murders to the Museum of the Revolution in Moscow, [68] and left behind three important, though contradictory, accounts of the event. A British war correspondent, Francis McCullagh, who met Yurovsky in 1920 alleged that he was remorseful over his role in the execution of the Romanovs. [153]

  4. October Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_Revolution

    Red Guard unit of the Vulkan factory in Petrograd, October 1917 Bolshevik (1920) by Boris Kustodiev The New York Times headline from 9 November 1917. The October Revolution, [b] also known as the Great October Socialist Revolution [c] (in Soviet historiography), October coup, [4] [5] Bolshevik coup, [5] or Bolshevik revolution, [6] [7] was the second of two revolutions in Russia in 1917.

  5. Red Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Square

    The tradition of burying revolutionaries on Red Square, the ultimate symbol of the Bolshevik Revolution, continued immediately: as early as the spring of 1919, Lenin's leading comrade Yakov Sverdlov was buried on the Kremlin wall and received with Lenin's Mausoleum, which was completed in 1930 the burial place is its central element. Since then ...

  6. Kremlin Wall Necropolis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kremlin_Wall_Necropolis

    The Kremlin Wall Necropolis is the former national cemetery of the Soviet Union, located in Red Square in Moscow beside the Kremlin Wall. [1] Burials there began in November 1917, when 240 pro-Bolsheviks who died during the Moscow Bolshevik Uprising were buried in mass graves.

  7. Nikolay Bauman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolay_Bauman

    According to records of the CPSU, Bauman was the first member of Central Committee of the Bolshevik party to die a violent death. Mikhalin voluntarily gave himself up to the police within an hour of the incident and was sentenced by the Moscow District Court to 18 months of imprisonment for disproportional use of force causing death to the victim.

  8. Death and state funeral of Vladimir Lenin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_and_state_funeral_of...

    On Monday, 21 January 1924, at 18:50 EET, Vladimir Lenin, leader of the October Revolution and the first leader and founder of the Soviet Union, died in Gorki aged 53 after falling into a coma. [1] The official cause of death was recorded as an incurable disease of the blood vessels. [2]

  9. List of mass graves from Soviet mass executions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mass_graves_from...

    People of Vinnytsia searching for relatives among the victims of the Vinnytsia massacre exhumed from a mass grave in 1943.. In the final years of the USSR and after its dissolution in 1991, killing fields and burial sites were uncovered and memorialised across the countries of the former Soviet Union. [5]