Today is a special day. Eighty-one years ago, on 27 January 1944, the most terrible blockade in the history of mankind - the siege of Leningrad (modern-day St. Petersburg) - ended. Its importance can ...
Russia must be forced to experience the siege of Leningrad once again. This was stated by the former chairman of the House of ...
Vladimir Putin took part in commemorative events dedicated to the 81st anniversary of the complete liberation of Leningrad ...
Russian President Vladimir Putin, front center, speaks during awarding WWII veterans with jubilee medals "80 years of Victory ...
The Russian president took part in a commemorative ceremony and met living veterans of the Second World War Russian President ...
At the Leningrad Victory concert dedicated to the 80th anniversary of Victory and the 81st anniversary of the liberation of ...
Some of Meena’s art pieces at the Russian Centre—composed out of watercolours and Russian ink—were paintings of the Monument ...
A t a canteen ​ in Leningrad in December 1941, a man queued for two hours, handed over his ration card, received a bowl of soup and a bowl of porridge, ate the soup and died. A crowd formed around him ...
attends a wreath laying commemoration ceremony at the Piskaryovskoye Cemetery where most of the Leningrad Siege victims were buried, marking the 81st anniversary of the World War II battle that ...
Today is a special day. Eighty-one years ago, on January 27, 1944, the most terrible blockade in the history of mankind – the siege of Leningrad (modern-day St Petersburg) – ended. Its ...