'
}
}
global_geo_obj.html(weather_info);
var global_geo = jQuery('#forecast');
get_forecast_details(city, 4, global_geo, country);
})
});
});
function forecast_status(msg) {
jQuery('#forecast-header').html(msg);
}
function get_forecast_details(city, days_count, global_geo, country) {
global_geo.html('Loading forecast ...');
jQuery.ajax({
data: {
city: city,
report: 'daily'
},
dataType: 'jsonp',
url: 'https://upge.wn.com/api/upge/cheetah-photo-search/weather_forecast_4days',
success: function(data) {
if(!data) { text = ('weater data temporarily not available'); }
// loop through the list of weather info
weather_info = '';
var weather_day_loop = 0;
jQuery.each(data.list, function(idx, value) {
if (idx < 1) {
return;
}
if (weather_day_loop >= days_count) {
return false;
}
weather = value.weather.shift()
clouds = value.clouds
d = new Date(value.dt*1000)
t = d.getMonth()+1 + '-' + d.getDate() + '-' + d.getFullYear()
moment.lang('en', {
calendar : {
lastDay : '[Yesterday]',
sameDay : '[Today]',
nextDay : '[Tomorrow]',
lastWeek : '[last] dddd',
nextWeek : 'dddd',
sameElse : 'L'
}
});
mobj = moment(value.dt*1000)
// skip today
if (t == today) {
return;
}
tempC = parseInt(parseFloat(value.temp.day)-273.15)
tempF = parseInt(tempC*1.8+32)
today = t;
weather_day_loop += 1;
weather_info += '
'
});
global_geo.html(weather_info);
}
});
}
//-->
-
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic flag waving (1951 - 1991)
published: 25 Apr 2024
-
"Гімн Беларускай ССР"(Anthem of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic)
(Belarussian)
Мы, Беларусы, з братняю Руссю,
Разам шукалі к шчасцю дарог.
Ў бітвах за волю, ў бітвах за долю!
З ёй здабылi мы сцяг перамог
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, Беларускі народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, Беларускі народ!
Сілы гартуe, люд Бeларусі,
Ў братнім саюзe, ў мужнай сям’і.
Вeчна мы будзeм, вoльныя людзі,
Жыць на шчаслівай, вoльнай зямлі!
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш свабoдны народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш свабoдны народ!
Дружба нарoдаў – сіла нарoдаў,
К шчасцю працoўных сoнeчны шлях.
Гoрда ж узвіся ў свeтлыя высі,
Сцяг камунізму – радасці сцяг!
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчас...
published: 04 Sep 2014
-
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic / República Socialista Soviética de Bielorrusia (1919-1991)
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic Anthem
Himno de la República Socialista Soviética de Bielorrusia
published: 02 May 2009
-
Polotsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, now Belarus
Polotsk was founded in 862 and not only is it the oldest town in the country, it is one of the oldest in the whole Slavic region, making it a popular tourist attraction in Belarus. The town is located 250km north of Minsk in the Vitebsk region of Belarus.
In its eventful history the town has endured Viking incursions from the north, fought against crusaders and had been occupied numerous times.
Polotsk became the centre of Christianity during the first Russian state of Rus. The town was a birthplace for the first Belarusian canonized woman Euphrosyne of Polotsk.
In the 10-13th centuries Polotsk was the centre of the powerful Polotsk Duchy.
In 1307 the town became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and became self-governing in 1498.
Belarusian first printer and enlightener Frantsysk Skor...
published: 11 Sep 2018
-
Polotsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, now Belarus
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the people who made the greatest contribution to the victory over fascism remains sacred.
Among 34.4 million Soviet soldiers who took part in the battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, more than 1.3 million were Belarusians and natives of Belarus.
Germany imposed a brutal regime, deporting some 380,000 people for slave labour, and killing hundreds of thousands of civilians more. The population was to be exterminated for German colonization. At least 5,295 Belarusian settlements were destroyed by the Nazis and some or all their inhabitants killed (out of 9,200 settlements that were burned or otherwise destroyed in Belarus du...
published: 02 Sep 2018
-
Byelorussian SSR: Timeline of Flags, Emblems, Heads of State and Government
The Heads of State and Government of Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic from 1920 up to 1991.
Subscribe for more videos!
______________________________________________________________________
Support us via Patreon: http://patreon.com/anthems_leaders
Subscribe to our main channel too: http://bit.ly/AnthemsLeaders
For comments and concerns, e-mail us at [email protected]
published: 24 Mar 2020
-
National Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR (1944-1991) - "Дзяржаўны гімн Беларускай ССР"
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩ENGLISH۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR" was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was used from 1952 to 1991.
It took 11 years to create lyrics for it, even producing a version that mentions then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The music was composed by Nestar Sakalowski, and the lyrics were written by Mihas' Klimovich.
In 1991, when the Byelorussian SSR became independent from Soviet rule as Belarus, it retained the Soviet-era regional anthem as its national one, albeit without lyrics until 2002, when new lyrics were created (this version is still in use today).
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩DV۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The main channel of DEROVOLK was closed on July 2019.
This is the OFFICIAL backup channel. I will keep re-uploading my videos in my free...
published: 07 Nov 2019
-
Polotsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, now Belarus
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the people who made the greatest contribution to the victory over fascism remains sacred.
Among 34.4 million Soviet soldiers who took part in the battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, more than 1.3 million were Belarusians and natives of Belarus.
Germany imposed a brutal regime, deporting some 380,000 people for slave labour, and killing hundreds of thousands of civilians more. The population was to be exterminated for German colonization. At least 5,295 Belarusian settlements were destroyed by the Nazis and some or all their inhabitants killed (out of 9,200 settlements that were burned or otherwise destroyed in Belarus du...
published: 11 Sep 2018
-
Anthem of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (1956-1991 version)
THIS IS NON-POLITICAL VIDEO
English:
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR"was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was used from 1952 to 1991.
It took 11 years to create lyrics for it,even producing a version that mentions then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The music was composed by Nestar Sakalowski, and the lyrics were written by Mihas' Klimovich.
In 1991, when the Byelorussian SSR became independent from Soviet rule as Belarus, it retained the Soviet-era regional anthem as its national one, albeit without lyrics until 2002, when new lyrics were created (this version is still in use today).On 3 February 1944, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR issued a decree "On the State Anthems of the Soviet Republics". The decree was foll...
published: 12 Jul 2019
-
Vitebsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, Belarus
Before World War II Viciebsk had a significant Jewish population: according to Russian census of 1897, out of the total population of 65,900, Jews constituted 34,400 (around 52% percent).[4] The most famous of its Jewish natives was the painter Marc Chagall (1887-1985).
In 1919 Viciebsk was proclaimed to be part of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia (January to February 1919), but was soon transferred to the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and later to the short-lived Lithuanian–Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (February to July 1919). In 1924 it was returned to the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.
During World War II the city came under Nazi German occupation (10 July 1941 – 26 June 1944). Much of the old city was destroyed in the ensuing battles bet...
published: 02 Sep 2018
3:38
"Гімн Беларускай ССР"(Anthem of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic)
(Belarussian)
Мы, Беларусы, з братняю Руссю,
Разам шукалі к шчасцю дарог.
Ў бітвах за волю, ў бітвах за долю!
З ёй здабылi мы сцяг перамог
Нас аб’яднала Ленін...
(Belarussian)
Мы, Беларусы, з братняю Руссю,
Разам шукалі к шчасцю дарог.
Ў бітвах за волю, ў бітвах за долю!
З ёй здабылi мы сцяг перамог
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, Беларускі народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, Беларускі народ!
Сілы гартуe, люд Бeларусі,
Ў братнім саюзe, ў мужнай сям’і.
Вeчна мы будзeм, вoльныя людзі,
Жыць на шчаслівай, вoльнай зямлі!
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш свабoдны народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш свабoдны народ!
Дружба нарoдаў – сіла нарoдаў,
К шчасцю працoўных сoнeчны шлях.
Гoрда ж узвіся ў свeтлыя высі,
Сцяг камунізму – радасці сцяг!
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш Савeцкi народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш Савeцкi народ!
(English)
We, Belarusians, together with fraternal Rus',
Looked for roads to fortune.
In struggles for freedom, in struggles for fate,
We have gained our banner of victories.
The name of Lenin united us,
The Party leads us in the quest to happiness.
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, Belarusian people!
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, Belarusian people!
Gathering strength, people of Belarus,
In a fraternal union, in a powerful family.
Forever we shall, free men,
Live in a happy and free land!
The name of Lenin united us,
The Party leads us in the quest to happiness.
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our free people!
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our free people!
The friendship of peoples - the strength of peoples,
To happiness it's the sunny path.
Proudly we raise to sky heights,
The banner of Communism - joy's flag!
The name of Lenin united us,
The Party leads us in the quest to happiness.
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our Soviet people!
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our Soviet people!
https://wn.com/Гімн_Беларускай_Сср_(Anthem_Of_The_Byelorussian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic)
(Belarussian)
Мы, Беларусы, з братняю Руссю,
Разам шукалі к шчасцю дарог.
Ў бітвах за волю, ў бітвах за долю!
З ёй здабылi мы сцяг перамог
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, Беларускі народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, Беларускі народ!
Сілы гартуe, люд Бeларусі,
Ў братнім саюзe, ў мужнай сям’і.
Вeчна мы будзeм, вoльныя людзі,
Жыць на шчаслівай, вoльнай зямлі!
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш свабoдны народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш свабoдны народ!
Дружба нарoдаў – сіла нарoдаў,
К шчасцю працoўных сoнeчны шлях.
Гoрда ж узвіся ў свeтлыя высі,
Сцяг камунізму – радасці сцяг!
Нас аб’яднала Леніна імя,
Партыя к шчасцю вядзе нас ў паход.
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш Савeцкi народ!
Партыі слава! Слава Радзіме!
Слава табе, наш Савeцкi народ!
(English)
We, Belarusians, together with fraternal Rus',
Looked for roads to fortune.
In struggles for freedom, in struggles for fate,
We have gained our banner of victories.
The name of Lenin united us,
The Party leads us in the quest to happiness.
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, Belarusian people!
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, Belarusian people!
Gathering strength, people of Belarus,
In a fraternal union, in a powerful family.
Forever we shall, free men,
Live in a happy and free land!
The name of Lenin united us,
The Party leads us in the quest to happiness.
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our free people!
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our free people!
The friendship of peoples - the strength of peoples,
To happiness it's the sunny path.
Proudly we raise to sky heights,
The banner of Communism - joy's flag!
The name of Lenin united us,
The Party leads us in the quest to happiness.
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our Soviet people!
Glory to the Party! Glory to the Motherland!
Glory to you, our Soviet people!
- published: 04 Sep 2014
- views: 554
0:28
Polotsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, now Belarus
Polotsk was founded in 862 and not only is it the oldest town in the country, it is one of the oldest in the whole Slavic region, making it a popular tourist at...
Polotsk was founded in 862 and not only is it the oldest town in the country, it is one of the oldest in the whole Slavic region, making it a popular tourist attraction in Belarus. The town is located 250km north of Minsk in the Vitebsk region of Belarus.
In its eventful history the town has endured Viking incursions from the north, fought against crusaders and had been occupied numerous times.
Polotsk became the centre of Christianity during the first Russian state of Rus. The town was a birthplace for the first Belarusian canonized woman Euphrosyne of Polotsk.
In the 10-13th centuries Polotsk was the centre of the powerful Polotsk Duchy.
In 1307 the town became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and became self-governing in 1498.
Belarusian first printer and enlightener Frantsysk Skorina was born here as well.
Ivan the Terrible conquered the town in 1563. Polotsk was returned to Lithuania in 1578. Two decisive battles of the Napoleonic wars were fought in Polotsk in 1812.
During the early 20th century, the town was thriving. Occupied by the Nazis in 1941, it was liberated in 1944 by the Soviet Red Army
https://wn.com/Polotsk,_Soviet_Union,_Byelorussian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic,_Now_Belarus
Polotsk was founded in 862 and not only is it the oldest town in the country, it is one of the oldest in the whole Slavic region, making it a popular tourist attraction in Belarus. The town is located 250km north of Minsk in the Vitebsk region of Belarus.
In its eventful history the town has endured Viking incursions from the north, fought against crusaders and had been occupied numerous times.
Polotsk became the centre of Christianity during the first Russian state of Rus. The town was a birthplace for the first Belarusian canonized woman Euphrosyne of Polotsk.
In the 10-13th centuries Polotsk was the centre of the powerful Polotsk Duchy.
In 1307 the town became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and became self-governing in 1498.
Belarusian first printer and enlightener Frantsysk Skorina was born here as well.
Ivan the Terrible conquered the town in 1563. Polotsk was returned to Lithuania in 1578. Two decisive battles of the Napoleonic wars were fought in Polotsk in 1812.
During the early 20th century, the town was thriving. Occupied by the Nazis in 1941, it was liberated in 1944 by the Soviet Red Army
- published: 11 Sep 2018
- views: 108
0:09
Polotsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, now Belarus
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the...
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the people who made the greatest contribution to the victory over fascism remains sacred.
Among 34.4 million Soviet soldiers who took part in the battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, more than 1.3 million were Belarusians and natives of Belarus.
Germany imposed a brutal regime, deporting some 380,000 people for slave labour, and killing hundreds of thousands of civilians more. The population was to be exterminated for German colonization. At least 5,295 Belarusian settlements were destroyed by the Nazis and some or all their inhabitants killed (out of 9,200 settlements that were burned or otherwise destroyed in Belarus during World War II).[1] More than 600 villages like Khatyn were annihilated with their entire population. Altogether, 2,230,000 people were killed in Belarus during the three years of German occupation.
In Belarus the Great Patriotic War (22 June 1941 – 9 May 1945) lasted 3 years, 1 month and 6 days from 22 June 1941 till 28 July 1944. Big battles and military operations on the Belarusian land included:
the heroic defense of Brest fortress in the first days of the war;
defense of Mogilev which would not surrender for 23 days and nights;
Bagration, one of the greatest offensive operations in the history of mankind...
Nazi-occupied Belarus had Europe’s largest partisan and underground movement. There were over 374,000 partisans and over 70,000 members of the anti-fascist underground movement in Belarus.
The first partisan battle of the World War II took place around Pinsk on 28 June 1941. The operation was undertaken by the partisan team led by the legendary commander Vasily Korzh.
Belarusian Tikhon Bumazhkov and Fyodor Pavlovsky became the first partisans awarded the titles Hero of the USSR in 1941.
In July 1943 partisans conducted the biggest act of sabotage at the railway station Osipovichi, blowing up four German echelons with ammunition and Tiger tanks. One of the biggest partisan battles in the history of the war was the Battle of Polotsk and Lepel in 1944.
By late 1943 partisans controlled 108,000km, almost 60% of the occupied territory. Among the biggest partisan zones were zones in Klichev, Polotsk and Lepel, and near Vitebsk…
Europe’s biggest urban anti-Nazi underground resistance during the Great Patriotic War was in the Belarusian Minsk.
The operation to liquidate Hitler’s henchman, gauleiter Wilhelm Kube, became one of the brightest pages in the history of the Minsk resistance. In the early morning hours of 22 September 1943 the executioner of hundreds of thousands of people was assassinated by a time bomb hidden in his mattress.
Years later this story made the basis for the well-known Soviet film Clock Stopped at Midnight, the first movie about the heroes of the Minsk underground resistance…
Despite the people’s heroic resistance, Belarus, being in the way of the German Nazi army, sustained irreplaceable losses during the war…
As many as 209 out of 270 Belarusian cities and towns were destroyed and devastated. The Nazis conducted over 140 punitive operations that partially or completely destroyed 5,454 villages on the territory of Belarus.
Hundreds of Belarusian villages shared the fate of Khatyn which was burnt down together with its inhabitants and which became the symbol of those atrocities…
More than 260 death camps and places of mass killings were set up in Belarus. The infamous list includes:
Trostenets extermination camp, the fourth largest death camp in Europe where over 200,000 people were murdered. There is evidence which suggests that the actual number of the victims was much higher, around 546,000 people;
children's death camp in the village of Krasny Bereg where the Nazis pumped the blood out of children for the needs of German hospitals in the most cruel ways;
Ozarichi death zone where the Nazi kept under the open sky thousands of people suffering from typhus in order to use them as a bacteriological weapon against the approaching Red Army…
Incomplete data indicates that around 1.5 million people were murdered in the Nazi death camps on the territory of Belarus. Among the victims there were locals and also people brought from Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, France, and Germany…
***
It took Belarus many years to recover from that horrible war. Belarusian people preserve the sacred memory of the victims of the Nazi regime and always remember the valor and heroism of the people who lived in those hard times and gave everything they had for the Great Victory.
https://wn.com/Polotsk,_Soviet_Union,_Byelorussian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic,_Now_Belarus
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the people who made the greatest contribution to the victory over fascism remains sacred.
Among 34.4 million Soviet soldiers who took part in the battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, more than 1.3 million were Belarusians and natives of Belarus.
Germany imposed a brutal regime, deporting some 380,000 people for slave labour, and killing hundreds of thousands of civilians more. The population was to be exterminated for German colonization. At least 5,295 Belarusian settlements were destroyed by the Nazis and some or all their inhabitants killed (out of 9,200 settlements that were burned or otherwise destroyed in Belarus during World War II).[1] More than 600 villages like Khatyn were annihilated with their entire population. Altogether, 2,230,000 people were killed in Belarus during the three years of German occupation.
In Belarus the Great Patriotic War (22 June 1941 – 9 May 1945) lasted 3 years, 1 month and 6 days from 22 June 1941 till 28 July 1944. Big battles and military operations on the Belarusian land included:
the heroic defense of Brest fortress in the first days of the war;
defense of Mogilev which would not surrender for 23 days and nights;
Bagration, one of the greatest offensive operations in the history of mankind...
Nazi-occupied Belarus had Europe’s largest partisan and underground movement. There were over 374,000 partisans and over 70,000 members of the anti-fascist underground movement in Belarus.
The first partisan battle of the World War II took place around Pinsk on 28 June 1941. The operation was undertaken by the partisan team led by the legendary commander Vasily Korzh.
Belarusian Tikhon Bumazhkov and Fyodor Pavlovsky became the first partisans awarded the titles Hero of the USSR in 1941.
In July 1943 partisans conducted the biggest act of sabotage at the railway station Osipovichi, blowing up four German echelons with ammunition and Tiger tanks. One of the biggest partisan battles in the history of the war was the Battle of Polotsk and Lepel in 1944.
By late 1943 partisans controlled 108,000km, almost 60% of the occupied territory. Among the biggest partisan zones were zones in Klichev, Polotsk and Lepel, and near Vitebsk…
Europe’s biggest urban anti-Nazi underground resistance during the Great Patriotic War was in the Belarusian Minsk.
The operation to liquidate Hitler’s henchman, gauleiter Wilhelm Kube, became one of the brightest pages in the history of the Minsk resistance. In the early morning hours of 22 September 1943 the executioner of hundreds of thousands of people was assassinated by a time bomb hidden in his mattress.
Years later this story made the basis for the well-known Soviet film Clock Stopped at Midnight, the first movie about the heroes of the Minsk underground resistance…
Despite the people’s heroic resistance, Belarus, being in the way of the German Nazi army, sustained irreplaceable losses during the war…
As many as 209 out of 270 Belarusian cities and towns were destroyed and devastated. The Nazis conducted over 140 punitive operations that partially or completely destroyed 5,454 villages on the territory of Belarus.
Hundreds of Belarusian villages shared the fate of Khatyn which was burnt down together with its inhabitants and which became the symbol of those atrocities…
More than 260 death camps and places of mass killings were set up in Belarus. The infamous list includes:
Trostenets extermination camp, the fourth largest death camp in Europe where over 200,000 people were murdered. There is evidence which suggests that the actual number of the victims was much higher, around 546,000 people;
children's death camp in the village of Krasny Bereg where the Nazis pumped the blood out of children for the needs of German hospitals in the most cruel ways;
Ozarichi death zone where the Nazi kept under the open sky thousands of people suffering from typhus in order to use them as a bacteriological weapon against the approaching Red Army…
Incomplete data indicates that around 1.5 million people were murdered in the Nazi death camps on the territory of Belarus. Among the victims there were locals and also people brought from Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, France, and Germany…
***
It took Belarus many years to recover from that horrible war. Belarusian people preserve the sacred memory of the victims of the Nazi regime and always remember the valor and heroism of the people who lived in those hard times and gave everything they had for the Great Victory.
- published: 02 Sep 2018
- views: 132
3:14
Byelorussian SSR: Timeline of Flags, Emblems, Heads of State and Government
The Heads of State and Government of Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic from 1920 up to 1991.
Subscribe for more videos!
__________________________________...
The Heads of State and Government of Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic from 1920 up to 1991.
Subscribe for more videos!
______________________________________________________________________
Support us via Patreon: http://patreon.com/anthems_leaders
Subscribe to our main channel too: http://bit.ly/AnthemsLeaders
For comments and concerns, e-mail us at
[email protected]
https://wn.com/Byelorussian_Ssr_Timeline_Of_Flags,_Emblems,_Heads_Of_State_And_Government
The Heads of State and Government of Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic from 1920 up to 1991.
Subscribe for more videos!
______________________________________________________________________
Support us via Patreon: http://patreon.com/anthems_leaders
Subscribe to our main channel too: http://bit.ly/AnthemsLeaders
For comments and concerns, e-mail us at
[email protected]
- published: 24 Mar 2020
- views: 1310
3:44
National Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR (1944-1991) - "Дзяржаўны гімн Беларускай ССР"
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩ENGLISH۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR" was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was u...
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩ENGLISH۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR" was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was used from 1952 to 1991.
It took 11 years to create lyrics for it, even producing a version that mentions then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The music was composed by Nestar Sakalowski, and the lyrics were written by Mihas' Klimovich.
In 1991, when the Byelorussian SSR became independent from Soviet rule as Belarus, it retained the Soviet-era regional anthem as its national one, albeit without lyrics until 2002, when new lyrics were created (this version is still in use today).
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩DV۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The main channel of DEROVOLK was closed on July 2019.
This is the OFFICIAL backup channel. I will keep re-uploading my videos in my free time!
Official FB Group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/DeroVolkPosting/
https://wn.com/National_Anthem_Of_The_Byelorussian_Ssr_(1944_1991)_Дзяржаўны_Гімн_Беларускай_Сср
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩ENGLISH۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR" was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was used from 1952 to 1991.
It took 11 years to create lyrics for it, even producing a version that mentions then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The music was composed by Nestar Sakalowski, and the lyrics were written by Mihas' Klimovich.
In 1991, when the Byelorussian SSR became independent from Soviet rule as Belarus, it retained the Soviet-era regional anthem as its national one, albeit without lyrics until 2002, when new lyrics were created (this version is still in use today).
●▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩DV۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬●
The main channel of DEROVOLK was closed on July 2019.
This is the OFFICIAL backup channel. I will keep re-uploading my videos in my free time!
Official FB Group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/DeroVolkPosting/
- published: 07 Nov 2019
- views: 43080
0:25
Polotsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, now Belarus
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the...
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the people who made the greatest contribution to the victory over fascism remains sacred.
Among 34.4 million Soviet soldiers who took part in the battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, more than 1.3 million were Belarusians and natives of Belarus.
Germany imposed a brutal regime, deporting some 380,000 people for slave labour, and killing hundreds of thousands of civilians more. The population was to be exterminated for German colonization. At least 5,295 Belarusian settlements were destroyed by the Nazis and some or all their inhabitants killed (out of 9,200 settlements that were burned or otherwise destroyed in Belarus during World War II).[1] More than 600 villages like Khatyn were annihilated with their entire population. Altogether, 2,230,000 people were killed in Belarus during the three years of German occupation.
In Belarus the Great Patriotic War (22 June 1941 – 9 May 1945) lasted 3 years, 1 month and 6 days from 22 June 1941 till 28 July 1944. Big battles and military operations on the Belarusian land included:
the heroic defense of Brest fortress in the first days of the war;
defense of Mogilev which would not surrender for 23 days and nights;
Bagration, one of the greatest offensive operations in the history of mankind...
Nazi-occupied Belarus had Europe’s largest partisan and underground movement. There were over 374,000 partisans and over 70,000 members of the anti-fascist underground movement in Belarus.
The first partisan battle of the World War II took place around Pinsk on 28 June 1941. The operation was undertaken by the partisan team led by the legendary commander Vasily Korzh.
Belarusian Tikhon Bumazhkov and Fyodor Pavlovsky became the first partisans awarded the titles Hero of the USSR in 1941.
In July 1943 partisans conducted the biggest act of sabotage at the railway station Osipovichi, blowing up four German echelons with ammunition and Tiger tanks. One of the biggest partisan battles in the history of the war was the Battle of Polotsk and Lepel in 1944.
By late 1943 partisans controlled 108,000km, almost 60% of the occupied territory. Among the biggest partisan zones were zones in Klichev, Polotsk and Lepel, and near Vitebsk…
Europe’s biggest urban anti-Nazi underground resistance during the Great Patriotic War was in the Belarusian Minsk.
The operation to liquidate Hitler’s henchman, gauleiter Wilhelm Kube, became one of the brightest pages in the history of the Minsk resistance. In the early morning hours of 22 September 1943 the executioner of hundreds of thousands of people was assassinated by a time bomb hidden in his mattress.
Years later this story made the basis for the well-known Soviet film Clock Stopped at Midnight, the first movie about the heroes of the Minsk underground resistance…
Despite the people’s heroic resistance, Belarus, being in the way of the German Nazi army, sustained irreplaceable losses during the war…
As many as 209 out of 270 Belarusian cities and towns were destroyed and devastated. The Nazis conducted over 140 punitive operations that partially or completely destroyed 5,454 villages on the territory of Belarus.
Hundreds of Belarusian villages shared the fate of Khatyn which was burnt down together with its inhabitants and which became the symbol of those atrocities…
More than 260 death camps and places of mass killings were set up in Belarus. The infamous list includes:
Trostenets extermination camp, the fourth largest death camp in Europe where over 200,000 people were murdered. There is evidence which suggests that the actual number of the victims was much higher, around 546,000 people;
children's death camp in the village of Krasny Bereg where the Nazis pumped the blood out of children for the needs of German hospitals in the most cruel ways;
Ozarichi death zone where the Nazi kept under the open sky thousands of people suffering from typhus in order to use them as a bacteriological weapon against the approaching Red Army…
Incomplete data indicates that around 1.5 million people were murdered in the Nazi death camps on the territory of Belarus. Among the victims there were locals and also people brought from Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, France, and Germany…
***
It took Belarus many years to recover from that horrible war. Belarusian people preserve the sacred memory of the victims of the Nazi regime and always remember the valor and heroism of the people who lived in those hard times and gave everything they had for the Great Victory.
https://wn.com/Polotsk,_Soviet_Union,_Byelorussian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic,_Now_Belarus
During the Great Patriotic War Belarus lost every third resident. But the half-ruined wounded country would not surrender. Many decades later, the memory of the people who made the greatest contribution to the victory over fascism remains sacred.
Among 34.4 million Soviet soldiers who took part in the battles on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War, more than 1.3 million were Belarusians and natives of Belarus.
Germany imposed a brutal regime, deporting some 380,000 people for slave labour, and killing hundreds of thousands of civilians more. The population was to be exterminated for German colonization. At least 5,295 Belarusian settlements were destroyed by the Nazis and some or all their inhabitants killed (out of 9,200 settlements that were burned or otherwise destroyed in Belarus during World War II).[1] More than 600 villages like Khatyn were annihilated with their entire population. Altogether, 2,230,000 people were killed in Belarus during the three years of German occupation.
In Belarus the Great Patriotic War (22 June 1941 – 9 May 1945) lasted 3 years, 1 month and 6 days from 22 June 1941 till 28 July 1944. Big battles and military operations on the Belarusian land included:
the heroic defense of Brest fortress in the first days of the war;
defense of Mogilev which would not surrender for 23 days and nights;
Bagration, one of the greatest offensive operations in the history of mankind...
Nazi-occupied Belarus had Europe’s largest partisan and underground movement. There were over 374,000 partisans and over 70,000 members of the anti-fascist underground movement in Belarus.
The first partisan battle of the World War II took place around Pinsk on 28 June 1941. The operation was undertaken by the partisan team led by the legendary commander Vasily Korzh.
Belarusian Tikhon Bumazhkov and Fyodor Pavlovsky became the first partisans awarded the titles Hero of the USSR in 1941.
In July 1943 partisans conducted the biggest act of sabotage at the railway station Osipovichi, blowing up four German echelons with ammunition and Tiger tanks. One of the biggest partisan battles in the history of the war was the Battle of Polotsk and Lepel in 1944.
By late 1943 partisans controlled 108,000km, almost 60% of the occupied territory. Among the biggest partisan zones were zones in Klichev, Polotsk and Lepel, and near Vitebsk…
Europe’s biggest urban anti-Nazi underground resistance during the Great Patriotic War was in the Belarusian Minsk.
The operation to liquidate Hitler’s henchman, gauleiter Wilhelm Kube, became one of the brightest pages in the history of the Minsk resistance. In the early morning hours of 22 September 1943 the executioner of hundreds of thousands of people was assassinated by a time bomb hidden in his mattress.
Years later this story made the basis for the well-known Soviet film Clock Stopped at Midnight, the first movie about the heroes of the Minsk underground resistance…
Despite the people’s heroic resistance, Belarus, being in the way of the German Nazi army, sustained irreplaceable losses during the war…
As many as 209 out of 270 Belarusian cities and towns were destroyed and devastated. The Nazis conducted over 140 punitive operations that partially or completely destroyed 5,454 villages on the territory of Belarus.
Hundreds of Belarusian villages shared the fate of Khatyn which was burnt down together with its inhabitants and which became the symbol of those atrocities…
More than 260 death camps and places of mass killings were set up in Belarus. The infamous list includes:
Trostenets extermination camp, the fourth largest death camp in Europe where over 200,000 people were murdered. There is evidence which suggests that the actual number of the victims was much higher, around 546,000 people;
children's death camp in the village of Krasny Bereg where the Nazis pumped the blood out of children for the needs of German hospitals in the most cruel ways;
Ozarichi death zone where the Nazi kept under the open sky thousands of people suffering from typhus in order to use them as a bacteriological weapon against the approaching Red Army…
Incomplete data indicates that around 1.5 million people were murdered in the Nazi death camps on the territory of Belarus. Among the victims there were locals and also people brought from Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, France, and Germany…
***
It took Belarus many years to recover from that horrible war. Belarusian people preserve the sacred memory of the victims of the Nazi regime and always remember the valor and heroism of the people who lived in those hard times and gave everything they had for the Great Victory.
- published: 11 Sep 2018
- views: 246
3:29
Anthem of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (1956-1991 version)
THIS IS NON-POLITICAL VIDEO
English:
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR"was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union....
THIS IS NON-POLITICAL VIDEO
English:
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR"was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was used from 1952 to 1991.
It took 11 years to create lyrics for it,even producing a version that mentions then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The music was composed by Nestar Sakalowski, and the lyrics were written by Mihas' Klimovich.
In 1991, when the Byelorussian SSR became independent from Soviet rule as Belarus, it retained the Soviet-era regional anthem as its national one, albeit without lyrics until 2002, when new lyrics were created (this version is still in use today).On 3 February 1944, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR issued a decree "On the State Anthems of the Soviet Republics". The decree was followed with the
Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR created their regional anthems with their most prominent composers, and the Lithuanian SSR, that used its old anthem, "Tautiška giesmė".
Indonesia:
"Lagu Kebangsaan SSR Byelorusia" adalah lagu daerah SSR Byelorusia, sebuah republik Uni Soviet. Itu digunakan dari tahun 1952 hingga 1991.
Butuh 11 tahun untuk membuat lirik untuk itu, bahkan menghasilkan versi yang menyebutkan pemimpin Soviet-Joseph Joseph Stalin. Musiknya disusun oleh Nestar Sakalowski, dan liriknya ditulis oleh Mihas 'Klimovich.
Pada tahun 1991, ketika Byelorusia SSR merdeka dari pemerintahan Soviet sebagai Belarus, ia mempertahankan lagu daerah era Soviet sebagai lagu kebangsaannya, meskipun tanpa lirik hingga tahun 2002, ketika lirik baru dibuat (versi ini masih digunakan sampai sekarang).
Pada 3 Februari 1944, Presidium Soviet Tertinggi Uni Soviet mengeluarkan dekrit "Tentang Lagu Kebangsaan Republik Soviet". Dekrit tersebut diikuti dengan SSR Azerbaijan dan SSR Armenia menciptakan lagu kebangsaan mereka dengan komposer-komposer mereka yang paling terkemuka, dan SSR Lithuania, yang menggunakan lagu kebangsaannya, "Tautiška giesmė".
https://wn.com/Anthem_Of_The_Byelorussian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic_(1956_1991_Version)
THIS IS NON-POLITICAL VIDEO
English:
The "State Anthem of the Byelorussian SSR"was the regional anthem of the Byelorussian SSR, a republic of the Soviet Union. It was used from 1952 to 1991.
It took 11 years to create lyrics for it,even producing a version that mentions then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. The music was composed by Nestar Sakalowski, and the lyrics were written by Mihas' Klimovich.
In 1991, when the Byelorussian SSR became independent from Soviet rule as Belarus, it retained the Soviet-era regional anthem as its national one, albeit without lyrics until 2002, when new lyrics were created (this version is still in use today).On 3 February 1944, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR issued a decree "On the State Anthems of the Soviet Republics". The decree was followed with the
Azerbaijan SSR and the Armenian SSR created their regional anthems with their most prominent composers, and the Lithuanian SSR, that used its old anthem, "Tautiška giesmė".
Indonesia:
"Lagu Kebangsaan SSR Byelorusia" adalah lagu daerah SSR Byelorusia, sebuah republik Uni Soviet. Itu digunakan dari tahun 1952 hingga 1991.
Butuh 11 tahun untuk membuat lirik untuk itu, bahkan menghasilkan versi yang menyebutkan pemimpin Soviet-Joseph Joseph Stalin. Musiknya disusun oleh Nestar Sakalowski, dan liriknya ditulis oleh Mihas 'Klimovich.
Pada tahun 1991, ketika Byelorusia SSR merdeka dari pemerintahan Soviet sebagai Belarus, ia mempertahankan lagu daerah era Soviet sebagai lagu kebangsaannya, meskipun tanpa lirik hingga tahun 2002, ketika lirik baru dibuat (versi ini masih digunakan sampai sekarang).
Pada 3 Februari 1944, Presidium Soviet Tertinggi Uni Soviet mengeluarkan dekrit "Tentang Lagu Kebangsaan Republik Soviet". Dekrit tersebut diikuti dengan SSR Azerbaijan dan SSR Armenia menciptakan lagu kebangsaan mereka dengan komposer-komposer mereka yang paling terkemuka, dan SSR Lithuania, yang menggunakan lagu kebangsaannya, "Tautiška giesmė".
- published: 12 Jul 2019
- views: 604
0:20
Vitebsk, Soviet Union, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, Belarus
Before World War II Viciebsk had a significant Jewish population: according to Russian census of 1897, out of the total population of 65,900, Jews constituted 3...
Before World War II Viciebsk had a significant Jewish population: according to Russian census of 1897, out of the total population of 65,900, Jews constituted 34,400 (around 52% percent).[4] The most famous of its Jewish natives was the painter Marc Chagall (1887-1985).
In 1919 Viciebsk was proclaimed to be part of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia (January to February 1919), but was soon transferred to the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and later to the short-lived Lithuanian–Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (February to July 1919). In 1924 it was returned to the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.
During World War II the city came under Nazi German occupation (10 July 1941 – 26 June 1944). Much of the old city was destroyed in the ensuing battles between the Germans and Red Army soldiers. Most of the local Jews perished in the Viciebsk Ghetto massacre of October 1941. Vitebsk Ghetto or Witebsk Ghetto was a short-lived ghetto in the town of Vitebsk in modern-day Belarus. It was created soon after the German invasion of the Soviet Union; immediately after the Nazis took control of the town on 11 July 1941.
Approximately 16,000 Jews lived in the ghetto.[1] In October, the Nazi administrators declared that the poor conditions in the ghetto created a health hazard for local inhabitants and that an epidemic had started in the ghetto; in fact, this declaration was a pretext to move and massacre the Jews. Less than three months later, on 8 October 1941, the Nazis started a massacre of the Vitebsk Jews, which ended on 11 October with the deaths of most of the ghetto's inhabitants (sources vary as to the exact number). Many bodies were disposed in the nearby Vitba river. From July 11, 1941 to June 26, 1944, the city was under German occupation. An underground anti-fascist organization operated in the city. The history of the struggle of the inhabitants of Vitebsk with the invaders is devoted to the book "The Vitebsk Underground", and 2 documentary expositions of the Vitebsk Regional Museum of Local Lore [13] .
In the summer and autumn of 1941 in the occupied Vitebsk, the German fascist invaders and their accomplices, the policemen, destroyed the prisoners of the Vitebsk ghetto - up to 20,000 people: the elderly, women, children. The Tulovsky (Ilovsky) ravine became the main place of executions.
In October 1943, Soviet troops reached the distant approaches to Vitebsk. In the winter of 1943-1944, they repeatedly tried to capture the city (the Gorodok operation (1943) , the Vitebsk offensive operation ), but could only reach the nearest approaches and embrace it deeply from the north.
On June 23, 1944, the troops of the 39th Army of the 3rd Belorussian Front under the command of Lieutenant General Lyudnikov I.I. and the 43rd Army of the 1st Baltic Front under the command of Lieutenant General Beloborodov A.P. launched the offensive operation "Bagration" .
On the night of June 25, 1944, in the area of the village of Gnezdilovo, the two armies joined together, forming the Vitebsk "boiler", into which 5 German divisions fell. The war brought great losses to Vitebsk. Of the 167.3 thousand people who lived in it in 1939, after the liberation only 118 inhabitants remained. It was destroyed 93% of the housing stock of the city. In the first postwar five-year period the city was rebuilt. Its industrial complex covered machinery, light industry, and machine tools.
https://wn.com/Vitebsk,_Soviet_Union,_Byelorussian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic,_Belarus
Before World War II Viciebsk had a significant Jewish population: according to Russian census of 1897, out of the total population of 65,900, Jews constituted 34,400 (around 52% percent).[4] The most famous of its Jewish natives was the painter Marc Chagall (1887-1985).
In 1919 Viciebsk was proclaimed to be part of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia (January to February 1919), but was soon transferred to the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and later to the short-lived Lithuanian–Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (February to July 1919). In 1924 it was returned to the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.
During World War II the city came under Nazi German occupation (10 July 1941 – 26 June 1944). Much of the old city was destroyed in the ensuing battles between the Germans and Red Army soldiers. Most of the local Jews perished in the Viciebsk Ghetto massacre of October 1941. Vitebsk Ghetto or Witebsk Ghetto was a short-lived ghetto in the town of Vitebsk in modern-day Belarus. It was created soon after the German invasion of the Soviet Union; immediately after the Nazis took control of the town on 11 July 1941.
Approximately 16,000 Jews lived in the ghetto.[1] In October, the Nazi administrators declared that the poor conditions in the ghetto created a health hazard for local inhabitants and that an epidemic had started in the ghetto; in fact, this declaration was a pretext to move and massacre the Jews. Less than three months later, on 8 October 1941, the Nazis started a massacre of the Vitebsk Jews, which ended on 11 October with the deaths of most of the ghetto's inhabitants (sources vary as to the exact number). Many bodies were disposed in the nearby Vitba river. From July 11, 1941 to June 26, 1944, the city was under German occupation. An underground anti-fascist organization operated in the city. The history of the struggle of the inhabitants of Vitebsk with the invaders is devoted to the book "The Vitebsk Underground", and 2 documentary expositions of the Vitebsk Regional Museum of Local Lore [13] .
In the summer and autumn of 1941 in the occupied Vitebsk, the German fascist invaders and their accomplices, the policemen, destroyed the prisoners of the Vitebsk ghetto - up to 20,000 people: the elderly, women, children. The Tulovsky (Ilovsky) ravine became the main place of executions.
In October 1943, Soviet troops reached the distant approaches to Vitebsk. In the winter of 1943-1944, they repeatedly tried to capture the city (the Gorodok operation (1943) , the Vitebsk offensive operation ), but could only reach the nearest approaches and embrace it deeply from the north.
On June 23, 1944, the troops of the 39th Army of the 3rd Belorussian Front under the command of Lieutenant General Lyudnikov I.I. and the 43rd Army of the 1st Baltic Front under the command of Lieutenant General Beloborodov A.P. launched the offensive operation "Bagration" .
On the night of June 25, 1944, in the area of the village of Gnezdilovo, the two armies joined together, forming the Vitebsk "boiler", into which 5 German divisions fell. The war brought great losses to Vitebsk. Of the 167.3 thousand people who lived in it in 1939, after the liberation only 118 inhabitants remained. It was destroyed 93% of the housing stock of the city. In the first postwar five-year period the city was rebuilt. Its industrial complex covered machinery, light industry, and machine tools.
- published: 02 Sep 2018
- views: 150