- The
Sinyavino offensive (or
third Sinyavino offensive) was an
operation planned by the
Soviet Union in the
summer of 1942 with the aim of
breaking the...
- Igor
Sinyavin (Russian: Игорь Синявин;
October 10, 1937 –
February 15, 2000) was a
Soviet Nonconformist painter. His
artistic and
written work provides...
- Ladoga. However, on the day of his arrival, the Red Army
launched the
Sinyavin Offensive.
Originally planned as a
spoiling attack against Georg Lindemann's...
-
Alexei Naumovich Senyavin (also
spelled Sinyavin; Russian: Алексей Наумович Сенявин; 5
October 1716 – 10
August 1797) was an
admiral of the
Imperial Russian...
- (1932–1961),
Vsevolod Nekrasov (1934–2009),
Mikhail Eremin (1936–2022), Igor
Sinyavin (1937–2000),
Alexei Khvostenko (1940–2004),
Dmitry Prigov (1940–2007),...
- blockade, but all were unsuccessful. The last such
endeavour in 1942 was the
Sinyavin Offensive.
After the
defeat of that effort, the
front line
returned to...
-
corresponds to chief-of-staff of the battalion.
Lushev parti****ted to the
Sinyavin offensive operation in 1942,
during which he was wounded, the Leningrad-Novgorod...
-
Imperial Majesty the
Emperor Peter the Great,
written to Naum
Akimovich Sinyavin, who
continued his
service in the
Russian Navy Fleet, from the beginning...
- Alek Rapoport, Yuly Rybakov,
Evgeny Rukhin, Igor Sacharow-Ross, Igor
Sinyavin, Igor
Tulpanov and
Gennady Ustugov.
Abstract expressionism and Tachisme:...
- ("Selidor"),
creator of Slavic-Goritsa wrestling, the
artist and
publicist Igor
Sinyavin,
Gennady Grinevich, who
allegedly deciphered ancient texts as Slavic, the...