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  2. Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1943–1955) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    The Soviet state – and party administration – responded to these challenges by the introduction of additional higher ranks, as well as by reintroducing the traditional Russian rank insignia. A new rank group at OF-9 level (equivalent to the general of the branch in the Wehrmacht and the Imperial Russian Army ) was introduced, named marshal ...

  3. Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1940–1943) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    The ranks and rank insignia of the Red Army and Red Navy between 1940 and 1943 were characterised by continuing reforms to the Soviet armed forces in the period immediately before Operation Barbarossa and the war of national survival following it. The Soviet suspicion of rank and rank badges as a bourgeois institution remained, but the ...

  4. Military ranks of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    These ranks also became the basic ranks for the Soviet Air Forces in 1918 and the Soviet Air Defense Forces (from 1932 to 1949 part of the Soviet Air Force and the Red Army, 1949 independent branch, and from 1954 a full-service arm of the Soviet Armed Forces), and from 1991 onward became the basis for the present ranks of the Russian Air Force ...

  5. Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1935–1940) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    Soviet tankers with visible insignia of Starshy leytenant during the Nazi-Soviet joint military parade in Brest-Livosk, Poland, on September 22, 1939. In addition to individual ranks the establishment of defined rank insignia was made in December 1935 as well.

  6. Comparative officer ranks of World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_officer_ranks...

    Red Army Uniforms of World War II in Colour Photographs. London: Windrow & Greene. ISBN 978-1872004594. Rosignoli, Guido (1972). Army badges and insignia of World War 2: Book 1. MacMillan Colour Series. New York: Blandford Press Ltd. ISBN 9780026050807. LCCN 72-85765. Rosignoli, Guido (1980). Naval and Marine Badges and Insignia of World War 2 ...

  7. Soviet Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Army

    Ranks of the Soviet Military; ... At the end of World War II the Red Army had over 500 rifle divisions and about a tenth ... A total of 50,000 personnel were to come ...

  8. Military ranks and insignia of the Soviet Union (1918–1935)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_and_insignia...

    On 8 November, the day after the October Revolution, the Committee on Military and Naval Affairs (later renamed to the Soviet of People's Commissars on Military and Naval Affairs) was formed with the goal of creating the new "People's Army" where the revolutionary ideals of equality and liberty were to be implemented. [7]

  9. Soviet Armed Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Armed_Forces

    The Soviet Armed Forces, [a] also known as the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union, [b] the Red Army (1918–1946) and the Soviet Army (1946–1991), were the armed forces of the Russian SFSR (1917–1922) and the Soviet Union (1922–1991) from their beginnings in the Russian Civil War of 1917–1923 to the collapse of the USSR in 1991.