I've been collecting Soviet medals for quite some time now but only since the beginning of this year I got highly interested in the Soviet campaign documents handed out to soldiers of the Great Patriotic War. When knowing where to search for information there is so much more to get out of these documents than just the name and medal the soldier earned.
Here's a few examples of the defence medal documents:
For the defence of Leningrad, second model award document with signatures of the Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Leningrad City Council of People's Deputies Popkov and the Secretary of the Board Bubnov.
For the defence of Stalingrad, first model document awarded to Vera Naumovna Kovalets.
For the defence of Moscow, second model document (with stiffer cardboard) awarded to Nikolay Shach(?), part of the 157th Infantry Division.
Here's some examples of the Victory medal documents:
Capture of Berlin, a few different ones. The second one is the 8th Guards Cavalry. The third one is also a Guards unit but I need to do more research.
A bit of a different one, a Certificate of Gratitude for capturing Berlin:
Furthermore some Victory over Germany documents. The first one is awarded to enlisted man Evgeniy Dmitrijevitch Tishenko, born in 1926 and joined the Red Army in 1943 in Kharkov as part of the 853 Artillery Regiment 263 Rifle Division.
Awarded Medal for Bravery on March 29 1945 and got the Order of the Great Patriotic War 2nd class on April 6 1985.
The next one is awarded to an artillerist of the 82nd Army, more research is needed however. The document is signed by a Guards General-Major.
The next document is awarded to technical Lieutnant Aleksei Nikitovich Panin of the 621st Aviation Attack Regiment (Assault Aviation Regiment). The document is signed by Colonel Sukhikh.
Since Russian is a difficult language and research is rather time consuming it will take some time before I have all of these completely researched. But that is part of the fun of collecting and bringing back alive history.
Feel free to share your documents here! In my opinion collecting these documents is still a small and underrated part of WW2 collecting and I would be interested to see more of these documents. We can learn from these and perhaps even complete research on individuals with the help from more documents related to the same regiments, divisions etc.
Thanks for watching
Marcel
Here's a few examples of the defence medal documents:
For the defence of Leningrad, second model award document with signatures of the Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Leningrad City Council of People's Deputies Popkov and the Secretary of the Board Bubnov.
For the defence of Stalingrad, first model document awarded to Vera Naumovna Kovalets.
For the defence of Moscow, second model document (with stiffer cardboard) awarded to Nikolay Shach(?), part of the 157th Infantry Division.
Here's some examples of the Victory medal documents:
Capture of Berlin, a few different ones. The second one is the 8th Guards Cavalry. The third one is also a Guards unit but I need to do more research.
A bit of a different one, a Certificate of Gratitude for capturing Berlin:
Furthermore some Victory over Germany documents. The first one is awarded to enlisted man Evgeniy Dmitrijevitch Tishenko, born in 1926 and joined the Red Army in 1943 in Kharkov as part of the 853 Artillery Regiment 263 Rifle Division.
Awarded Medal for Bravery on March 29 1945 and got the Order of the Great Patriotic War 2nd class on April 6 1985.
The next one is awarded to an artillerist of the 82nd Army, more research is needed however. The document is signed by a Guards General-Major.
The next document is awarded to technical Lieutnant Aleksei Nikitovich Panin of the 621st Aviation Attack Regiment (Assault Aviation Regiment). The document is signed by Colonel Sukhikh.
Since Russian is a difficult language and research is rather time consuming it will take some time before I have all of these completely researched. But that is part of the fun of collecting and bringing back alive history.
Feel free to share your documents here! In my opinion collecting these documents is still a small and underrated part of WW2 collecting and I would be interested to see more of these documents. We can learn from these and perhaps even complete research on individuals with the help from more documents related to the same regiments, divisions etc.
Thanks for watching
Marcel
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