「soviet」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)11ページ目
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Soviet Premier League winner: 1988. | |
He met | Soviet Premier Nikolai Tikhonov during his state visi |
Soviet Premier League runner-up: 1990. | |
The | Soviet premier, Alexei Kosygin, visits Kabul. |
He won a Pulitzer Prize for his interview with | Soviet premier, Nikita Khrushchev, and associated com |
Stonkus (born December 29, 1931) is a retired | Soviet present day Lithuanian basketball player who c |
" was a concept created and espoused by former | Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. |
He is a close personal friend of former | Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, advised former Pr |
Our countryman - the first | Soviet president. |
The election result was heralded by the | Soviet press as a victory for the Communist Party. |
s unsuccessful, it was not acknowledged in the | Soviet press at the time. |
formers had little hope of holding out against | Soviet pressure and ultimately were forced to accede |
hed in late 1970, submitted for publication to | Soviet printing houses, but turned down. |
eam enlisted testimonies from the survivors of | Soviet prison camps. |
troops of Army Group Courland began moving to | Soviet prison camps in the East. |
Rudolf Regner, murdered in | Soviet prison in June 1941, |
Bibrka was the site of a | Soviet prison and detention centre that detained Pole |
Profittlich, S.J. died in 1942 as a martyr in | Soviet prison. |
He was a | Soviet prisoner until 1955.) |
He became a | Soviet prisoner of war, however, and stayed until 194 |
He became a | Soviet prisoner of war on 10 May 1945 and was release |
Soviet Prisoners of War (David M. Glantz, Kharkov 194 | |
wis (Hilfswilliger), Ostbataillonen, and other | Soviet prisoners of war (POWs) or volunteers. |
While being there, the | Soviet prisoners rise up and take over the base. |
cluding peasants and intellectuals, as well as | Soviet prisoners-of-war. |
for anti-Soviet activities and served time in | Soviet prisons and labor camps, or lived under survei |
lt around himself, and was awarded numerous of | Soviet prizes for his literary works. |
Georgi Koshelev was a | Soviet production designer and set decorator. |
rn December 18, 1965 in Smolensk) is a retired | Soviet professional football player. |
Main article: | Soviet program of biological weapons |
a B3-34 (Электроника Б3-34) was a very popular | Soviet programmable calculator. |
Here you can download an emulator of all | Soviet Programmable Calculators |
The | Soviet programme for doing this was the Vostok progra |
Soviet propaganda poster. | |
ibed as the most powerful and effective of the | Soviet propaganda films produced during the war. |
The official | Soviet propaganda claimed that Kalanta was mentally i |
He was a target of anti-Lithuanian | Soviet propaganda in the days leading to the 1940 Sov |
A | Soviet propaganda poster presenting the Soviet engage |
In the days following the shelling, the | Soviet propaganda machine generated much noise about |
Virtually in line with the | Soviet propaganda, the series was not only screened b |
ory and cultural heritage, replacing them with | Soviet propaganda. |
It is also referred to as Document of the | Soviet Prosecution, Exhibit USSR 10. |
nything of real importance in exchange for his | Soviet protection. |
' | Soviet Psychiatry:An Exchange' (1989) |
One of her brothers, Isaac Spielrein, was a | Soviet psychologist, a pioneer of labor psychology. |
In | Soviet psychology, Winter, 1980-81, 19(2), 80-99. |
on is a typical example of the 1960s policy on | Soviet public architecture. |
He fled from the | Soviet puppet Sheng Shicai's regime in Xinjiang to th |
These penetrations were designed to test | Soviet radar vulnerability as well as demonstrate US |
om 1956 to 1970, he worked as a journalist for | Soviet radio and a Middle Eastern correspondent for P |
May 19, 1945) is a Russian and | Soviet radio engineer and astronomer from Fryazino. |
Meanwhile preparations for adjusting the | Soviet rail gauge to match the Western European were |
ted a deputy to the municipal raion council of | Soviet Raion of Kiev city and a deputy head of the So |
auspices" was interpreted to mean American or | Soviet rather than UN auspices. |
For instance, the | Soviet RBMK reactors were not housed in containment b |
Soviet realist and impressionist paintings. | |
s looking for treasure amidst the contemporary | Soviet reality. |
Yantar is a series of Russian (previously | Soviet) reconnaissance satellites, which supplemented |
on (GRAU index 17F12) is a Russian (previously | Soviet) reconnaissance satellite. |
He set 80 world records and 81 | Soviet records in weightlifting. |
ed in combat in Manchukuo against the invading | Soviet Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Manchur |
Soviet Red Army machinegunners with a M1910 in the Ba | |
le islands, where it was in combat against the | Soviet Red Army at Paramushir during Soviet invasion |
Palmnicken was conquered by the | Soviet Red Army at the beginning of April 1945 during |
For the military rank of the | Soviet Red Army, see Combat (military rank). |
The | Soviet Red Army liberated northern Korea from the Jap |
During the summer of 1944, the | Soviet Red Army advanced to the outskirts of Vilnius. |
One brother, Asael, had been drafted into the | Soviet Red Army and was killed in action at Marlbork |
The 3rd Army was a | Soviet Red Army field army during World War II. |
р Ильич Родимцев) was a Colonel-General in the | Soviet Red Army during World War II and twice won the |
On 2 April 1919, the | Soviet Red Army occupied Simferopol and the second Cr |
0% destroyed by fighting and occupation by the | Soviet Red Army. |
he was killed in a skirmish with the advancing | Soviet Red Army. |
It was thus unprepared for the massive | Soviet Red Army armored assault at the end of World W |
Eastern martial arts expert and served in the | Soviet Red Army as a physical training instructor. |
The Schlochau district was conquered by the | Soviet Red Army in 1945 during World War II. |
Its equipment was looted by the | Soviet Red Army and Masahiko Amakasu committed suicid |
The | Soviet Red Army's 29th Army was a field army of the R |
There was a | Soviet Red Army Artillery School (a military academy) |
gthy trials, the new vehicle was accepted into | Soviet Red Army service in 1929. |
In 1945, it was the | Soviet Red Army that liberated Prague from the Nazis. |
r Emperor of China), Puyi, was captured by the | Soviet Red Army. |
d in 1945 when East Prussia was overrun by the | Soviet Red Army. |
u|Александр Яковлевич Лернер}}), scientist and | Soviet refusenik. |
opularize Marxism and encourage loyalty to the | Soviet regime among Russian Jews. |
deological pressure from the newly established | Soviet regime which forced him to make a conciliatory |
Since June 22, 1941, the | Soviet regime discontinued when Germany had occupied |
ant and forceful personality even in the harsh | Soviet regime of a prison camp meant he was held capt |
ween the Jewish theme and protests against the | Soviet regime was most pronounced in the Thirteenth S |
ad their own mosques and schools; however, the | Soviet regime quickly closed them. |
Still, Reagan remained a critic of the | Soviet regime for its absence of democratic instituti |
inefficiencies and under-production which the | Soviet regime never fully rectified. |
In 1946 the | Soviet regime liquidated the Ukrainian Greek Catholic |
The | Soviet regime that was established on November 7, 191 |
most represented a symbol of resistance of the | Soviet regime, it was almost like a window on the Wes |
After 1945, under the | Soviet regime, the synagogue was used as a warehouse. |
Because of his opposition to the | Soviet regime, Mindszenty was arrested and tortured. |
other officers and soldiers hostile to the new | Soviet regime. |
as very popular and variously supported by the | Soviet regime. |
nd became an active critic and opponent of the | Soviet regime. |
l people and waged a small warfare against the | Soviet regime. |
Darges then found himself surrounded by | Soviet reinforcements and was forced to repel several |
pics in Grenoble, he won a gold medal with the | Soviet relay team. |
mpics in Sapporo, he won a gold medal with the | Soviet relay team. |
hed in Transcarpathia, following the easing of | Soviet religious persecution. |
Mass amnesty of the victims of | Soviet repressions started after the death of Joseph |
He was killed in 1942 in a | Soviet reprisal raid. |
lies hid there several months, fearing further | Soviet reprisals. |
During the Bavarian | Soviet Republic in 1919, Levine was the organizer of |
It was created by merging Black Sea | Soviet Republic and Kuban Soviet Republic and later m |
It was merged into the Kuban-Black Sea | Soviet Republic on May 30, 1918. |
February 1 of 1932, National Bank of Chinese | Soviet Republic was established with Mao Zemin as its |
Hungarian | Soviet Republic (1919): Hungarian Communist Party. |
After the establishment of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic he demobilized. |
Territory controlled by the Hungarian | Soviet Republic |
In December 1917, it was proclaimed a | Soviet Republic of Soldiers and Fortress-Builders of |
Soviet Republic of Naissaar, on an island in the Balt | |
After the fall of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic he emigrated to Austria. |
mmunists, and, after the fall of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic in 1919, the family fled to South Ame |
It is named after the | Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan (now the independent Re |
It was important in creating the Belorussian | Soviet Republic in January 1919. |
During the Hungarian | Soviet Republic he served in the National Army. |
The Crimean Socialist | Soviet Republic was then established only to be retak |
Kuban-Black Sea | Soviet Republic (May 30-July 6, 1918) was part of the |
Terek | Soviet Republic (Терская Советская Республика) (March |
of nuclear weapons inside the fictional former | Soviet republic of Arkistan. |
In the | Soviet Republic of Moldova the earthquake destroyed a |
The Kuban | Soviet Republic (April 13-May 30, 1918) was part of t |
When the Bavarian | Soviet Republic was crushed, Levine was captured and |
nister of finance in the short-lived Hungarian | Soviet Republic of 1919. |
After the overthrow of the | Soviet Republic he fled to Vienna. |
rved as deputy prime minister of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic during July 1919. |
The | Soviet republic (system of government) implemented in |
Flag of the short-lived Donetsk-Krivoy Rog | Soviet Republic (1918). |
iguous and diplomatically unrecognised Chinese | Soviet Republic (CSR). |
or Nogin back to the Russian Socialist Federal | Soviet Republic, following the first stage of negotia |
After the fall of the Hungarian | Soviet Republic, he fled to Soviet Russia and became |
Chinese | Soviet Republic, also known as the "Jiangxi Soviet" ( |
nti-fascist, he has also written on the Alsace | Soviet Republic, on eugenicist Alexis Carrel, on Holo |
ipated in the government of the 1919 Hungarian | Soviet Republic. |
r July 1918 it was part of the North Caucasian | Soviet Republic. |
It was merged into the North Caucasian | Soviet Republic. |
ing Romanian troops to fight off the Hungarian | Soviet Republic. |
for the film, that closely resembles a former | Soviet Republic. |
organizations on Szeged against the Hungarian | Soviet Republic. |
It was merged into the Kuban-Black Sea | Soviet Republic. |
for Education during the short-lived Hungarian | Soviet Republic. |
n defence of the short-lived Latvian Socialist | Soviet Republic. |
l by Gary Shteyngart set in a fictional former | Soviet republic. |
sed to give their support to Lenin's idea of a | Soviet Republic. |
the Crimean SSR joined in military union with | soviet republics in Russia, Ukraine, Belorussia, Lith |
t legalized the creation of a union of several | Soviet republics in the form of the Union of Soviet S |
ricultural collectivization, land codes of the | Soviet republics lost their significance. |
The evolution of the force in other former | Soviet republics is unclear. |
ented to a council of defence officials of the | Soviet republics on 26-27 December 1991. |
rt time later, almost simultaneously with most | Soviet republics, rather suggests political reasons. |
arkets, especially regarding Russia and former | Soviet republics, as well as petroleum from the Middl |
In other former | Soviet republics, the use of the brand is not restric |
997 they visited Europe, Russia and the former | Soviet republics. |
gely of the government personnel of the former | Soviet republics. |
Soviet research on involuntary memory significantly i | |
It was the second | Soviet research spacecraft to successfully reach Venu |
as a part of the Mozhaisk Defence Line and the | Soviet Reserve Front. |
harkov River and Peiper's bridgehead, clearing | Soviet resistance block by block. |
r, deteriorating supply situation and stubborn | Soviet resistance. |
rn group consisting of two battalions soon met | Soviet resistance. |
ingrad and The Road to Berlin - dealt with the | Soviet response to the German invasion of the Soviet |
In 1990, Mikhail Gorbachev acknowledged | Soviet responsibility for the Katyn massacre for the |
tion and subsequent massacre of the village by | Soviet retaliation airstrike. |
During the | Soviet retreat in the early stages of the Operation B |
Since the | Soviet revolution it has been a Soviet kolhoz with fe |
This cooperation with the | Soviet revolutionaries was based on some conditions i |
8-1919) was a Ukrainian political activist and | Soviet revolutionary during the Russian Revolution. |
The | Soviet RGD-33 is an anti-personnel fragmentation stic |
He was the first | Soviet rider to appear in a World Final. |
as likely an attempt to boost the firepower of | Soviet rifle units. |
Тhe | Soviet Rifle Corps lost 73 men killed, of whom 57 had |
Each man was issued a captured | Soviet rifle; the platoon commanders had pistols. |
On the | Soviet right flank, the Soviet-Mongolian Cavalry-Mech |
e acclaimed Russian musicologist and the first | Soviet rock-critic Artemy Troitsky was also heavily i |
Soviet rock-opera and movie "Juno and Avos" composed | |
Kheysa was a former | Soviet rocket launching site located on Heiss Island, |
ussian: Вениамин Бут; born 1 August 1961) is a | Soviet rower. |
Анатолиевич Комаров; born 23 August 1961) is a | Soviet rower. |
sian: Андрей Васильев; born 27 June 1962) is a | Soviet rower. |
A | Soviet RRAB-3 "Molotov bread basket" from which bombs |
107,9 M | Soviet rubles |
ed at Dynamo in Tallinn when Estonia was under | Soviet rule in the late 1980s. |
Russian colonists in Tashkent made Tsarist and | Soviet rule appear identical. |
Soviet rule came to Zorokiv for the first time in 191 | |
Under | soviet rule the church remained open longer than most |
At the end of July, after a year of | Soviet rule, the region was once again under Romanian |
In 1924, under the | Soviet rule, the city's name was changed to Stalin. |
cality which was known as October Field during | Soviet Rule. |
cialist Revolutionaries in the Early Months of | Soviet Rule. |
s collectivization of farms was enforced under | Soviet rule. |
in World War II, the town came again under the | Soviet rule. |
sed as a school and then as storage during the | Soviet rule. |
e paperback edition of Malone's experiences in | Soviet Russia early in 1920. |
nator France....He told me how he came out for | Soviet Russia at large public meetings together with |
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