Lists of those awarded the Order of Lenin. Characteristics and interesting facts about the Order of Lenin

Established by the Decree of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of April 6, 1930. The statute of the order was established by the Decree of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of May 5, 1930. By the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of March 28, 1980, the Statute of the Order was approved in a new edition.

The Order of Lenin is the highest award of the USSR for especially outstanding services in the revolutionary movement, labor activity, defense of the socialist fatherland, development of friendship and cooperation between peoples, strengthening of peace and other especially outstanding services to Soviet state and society. Persons whose selfless labor has previously been awarded by other orders may be presented for the award of the Order of Lenin for labor merits. The Order of Lenin is awarded to persons awarded the title of Hero Soviet Union, the title of Hero of Socialist Labor, as well as cities and fortresses, which were awarded the title “Hero City” and the title “ Fortress - Hero". The Order of Lenin is worn on the left side of the chest and is placed in front of other orders and medals.

The Order of Lenin is made of gold, the bas-relief of V.I. Lenin is made of platinum. Pure gold in the order is 28.604 ± 1.1 g, platinum - 2.75 g (as of September 18, 1975). The total weight of the order is 33.6±1.75 g.

The idea of ​​creating this order was proposed by Levichev V.N. July 8, 1926. The order was originally proposed to be called the “Order of Ilyich”. The artist I. Dubasov and the famous sculptor I.D. took part in the creation of the order project. Shadr. The basis for creating a relief image of the leader on the badge of the order was a photograph of Lenin, made in 1921 at the III Congress of the Comintern. In 1934, medalist A. Vasyutinskiy carried out work on changing the design of the order.

The Order of Lenin No. 1 was awarded the newspaper “ TVNZ”for active assistance in strengthening the pace of socialist construction and in connection with the fifth anniversary of its founding.

By a decree of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of November 23, 1930, Boris Anisimovich Roizenman was awarded the Order of Lenin "in commemoration of exceptional merits in improving and simplifying the state apparatus, adapting it to the tasks of a full-scale socialist offensive, in the fight against bureaucracy, mismanagement and irresponsibility in the Soviet and economic organizations, as well as his merits in the implementation of special, special national importance assignments for the cleansing of the state apparatus in the foreign missions of the USSR".

One of the first collective awards of the Order of Lenin took place on February 28, 1931. For special merits in socialist construction were awarded the head of the main electrical workshops of the Moscow-Kursk railway Sidorov S.S., master promoter of the mechanical workshops of the Moscow electrical plant Grachkov I.V., locksmith of the factory "Artificial fiber" Vysokolov A.S. and director of the plant "Samotochka" Padzhaev-Baranov I.K.

Among the first awarded with the order Lenin were major military leaders Blucher V.K., Budyonny S.M., Voroshilov K.E., Tukhachevsky M.N. and the heroes of the first five-year plans, miner Alexei Stakhanov, locomotive driver Pyotr Krivonos, workers Agriculture Maria Demchenko, Mamlakat Nakhangova, Mark Ozerny and others.

After the establishment on April 16, 1934 of the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, the Order of Lenin began to be awarded to everyone who received it. honorary title. Since the Gold Star medal was established only in 1939, the Order of Lenin was the only distinction for the GSS. After the establishment of the Golden Star of the Hero, the Order of Lenin automatically continued to be issued with it.

By a decree of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of September 10, 1934, foreigners were awarded the Order of Lenin for the first time. For participation in the search and rescue of the Chelyuskinites, US citizens flight mechanics Levari Williams and Clyde Armistet received a high award.

For distinction in the battles near Lake Khasan, 95 people received the Order of Lenin (Decree of October 25, 1938).

Many industrial enterprises were also awarded the highest order of the country. These are such giants as the Azneft and Grozneft oil-producing associations, tractor plants in Stalingrad, Kharkov and Chelyabinsk, Gorky and Minsk automobile plants and others.

In the 1930s, the orders of Lenin were awarded to military units and divisions. In 1932, the 25th Rifle Division named after V.I. was awarded the Order of Lenin. Chapaev "for heroic deeds in socialist construction and excellent successes in combat and political training." In the same year, the 23rd Rifle Division was awarded the Order of Lenin "for Active participation in the construction of the Kharkov Tractor Plant and the labor heroism of the personnel. In 1934, the 30th Irkutsk Rifle Division named after the All-Russian Central Executive Committee was awarded the Order of Lenin. The order was personally attached to the banner of the division by M.I. Kalinin. For participation in the defeat of the Japanese militarists on the Khalkhin Gol River in the summer of 1939, the Orders of Lenin were awarded to the 36th motorized rifle division of brigade commander Petrov, the 11th tank brigade commander Yakovlev, the 7th motorized armored brigade of Major Lesovoy, the 100th high-speed bomber aviation brigade of Colonel Shevchenko, the 24th motorized rifle regiment of Colonel Fedyuninsky, the 175th artillery regiment of Colonel Polyansky, a separate anti-tank division of the 36th motorized rifle division and a separate tank company special purpose. Before the war, the Order of Lenin was awarded to the N.E. Zhukovsky and the Military Academy named after M.V. Frunze. Total to the Great Patriotic War about 6,500 people became holders of the Order of Lenin.

With the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, the first to repulse the Nazis were the border guards. Soldiers of the 98th border detachment, political instructor Babenko F.T. (8th outpost) and Lieutenant Gusev F.I. (commander of the 9th outpost) were among the first to accomplish feats, subsequently awarded the Orders of Lenin. In total, during the Great Patriotic War, about 41 thousand people and 207 military units were awarded the high award.

Starting from June 4, 1944 and until September 14, 1957, the Order of Lenin was awarded to officers for 25 years of impeccable service. Since the beginning of the 50s, civilians could also receive the Order of Lenin for long-term and fruitful work. This led to the fact that over the last 40 years of the existence of the USSR, the Order of Lenin was awarded more than 360 thousand times.

The Order of Lenin was awarded to almost all Soviet leaders of the highest rank. Many of the foreign figures communist movement such as Georgy Dimitrov, Gustav Husak, Janos Kadar, Dolores Ibarruri, Ho Chi Minh, Walter Ulbricht, Fidel Castro and others received the Order of Lenin.

A number of Soviet military personnel of the highest rank were awarded the Order of Lenin several times. So, marshals of the Soviet Union I.Kh. Bagramyan, L.I. Brezhnev, S.M. Budyonny, A.M. Vasilevsky, V.D. .N., Lysenko T.D., Ilyushin S.V.

Marshal of the Soviet Union V.I. Chuikov, polar explorer I.D. Papanin, Colonel-General-Engineers P.V. Dementyev had nine Orders of Lenin. (Minister of the Aviation Industry) and Ryabikov V.M. (1st Deputy Chairman of the State Planning Committee of the USSR), 1st Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Tajikistan Rasulov D.R., Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR Tikhonov N.A.

Ten orders of Lenin adorned the chest of the Minister of Medium Machine Building Slavsky E.P., the 1st Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan Sh.R. Rashidov, aircraft designer Yakovlev A.S. and academician Alexandrov A.P.

Marshal of the Soviet Union Ustinov D.F. awarded the Order of Lenin eleven times. The record holder for the number of orders of Lenin is the minister foreign trade USSR Patolichev N.S., who had twelve Orders of Lenin.

The Order of Lenin was awarded to all Soviet republics, some more than once. Thus, the Azerbaijan SSR, the Armenian SSR, the Kazakh SSR, and the Uzbek SSR had three Orders of Lenin.

Twenty autonomous republics, 8 autonomous regions, 6 territories, more than 100 regions and some cities have been awarded the Order of Lenin. Moscow, Leningrad, Kyiv and some other cities each have two Orders of Lenin. The Moscow region has three Orders of Lenin.

More than 380 industrial and construction enterprises and about 180 agricultural enterprises and organizations have received this award. Many enterprises were awarded the Order of Lenin more than once. For example, three Orders of Lenin were awarded to the Moscow Automobile Factory them. Likhachev - "ZIL".

The Order of Lenin was awarded to military units, formations and associations. The largest association military units, marked with this order, was the district (for example, Moscow, the Order of Lenin military district).

The Lenin Komsomol was awarded three Orders of Lenin.

One of the last Orders of Lenin in the history of the USSR was awarded by Decree of the President of the USSR to Aron Pinevich Shapiro - to CEO PA "Buryatmebel" (for the improvement of furniture and woodworking production) and Umirzak Makhmutovich Sultangazin - President of the Academy of Sciences of Kazakhstan (for the use of achievements in space in the interests of National economy and active participation in the preparation and implementation of the flight spaceship"Soyuz TM-13" with an international crew on board).

The last recipient of the Order of Lenin in the history of the USSR was the director of the Maslyaninsky brick factory Novosibirsk region Yakov Yakovlevich Mul. He was awarded this award by Decree of the President of the USSR No. UP-3143 of December 21, 1991 "for his great personal contribution to the reconstruction and technical re-equipment of the enterprise and the achievement of high performance in labor."

As of January 1, 1995, 431,417 awards of the Order of Lenin were made. Taking into account one award made in 1996, the total number of awards with the Order of Lenin amounted to 431,418.

Initially, in addition to a wreath of ears of corn framing the central round medallion, a hammer and sickle, the letters "USSR", the composition also included a triangle at the bottom of the order, symbolizing the union of workers, the working peasantry and the intelligentsia. This option the order was not approved.
It was also supposed, when repeatedly awarding the Order of Lenin to one person, to place in a special shield in the lower part of the obverse of the order badge the serial number of the award, as was already done with the Order of the Red Banner. However, this idea was rejected.

The badge of the Order of Lenin, model 1930, was a round medallion portrait with a bas-relief of Lenin in the center and an industrial landscape in the background. An image of a tractor was placed under the bas-relief of Lenin (because of this given type received the nickname "Tractor" from collectors). The medallion was surrounded by an applied gold rim, which was fastened by soldering. On the front side, the gold rim had a groove filled with ruby ​​red enamel. Around the medallion, outside the gold rim, there were ears of wheat, on which a gilded hammer and sickle were superimposed in the upper part of the badge, and the inscription “USSR” in the lower part. The letters of the inscription are made of gold and covered with red enamel. Each letter was a separate element and was fastened by soldering. The badge itself was made of 925 sterling silver. Orders of the first type are made of two parts. The front part of the order was made and, separately from it, the back part. Then both halves were carefully connected to each other by soldering. The sign is hollow inside. On the reverse of the order, in the central part, there was a two-stage flange into which a threaded pin was inserted. The clamping nut is made of silver. On inside the nut has a brazed threaded bronze washer.

About 700 orders of the first type were issued.

Since the first type of the Order of Lenin lacked images of the main proletarian symbols - the Red Star and the Red Banner, it was decided to change appearance sign. The new statute of the Order of Lenin was approved by the Decree of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of September 27, 1934. The Order of Lenin was now made not from silver, but from 650 gold. From the obverse of the order, the images of the tractor and the industrial landscape disappeared, and the inscription of the USSR also disappeared. On the new type of order appeared the Red Banner with the inscription LENIN and the Red Star. The Hammer and Sickle moved from the top of the Order to the bottom. The Red Banner, the Red Star, the Hammer and Sickle on the badge of the second type are covered with ruby-red enamel. The central round portrait-medallion with the image of the leader is silver-plated. The surface of the ears around the medallion has a natural golden surface.

A decree of June 19, 1943 established the procedure for wearing orders that had the shape of a star on pins on the right side of the chest, and orders that had an oval or round shape- on the left side of the chest on pentagonal blocks covered with the ribbon of the order. The Order of Lenin acquired an eyelet in the upper part of the badge of the order, into which a ring was threaded, connected to a pentagonal block. By the time this Decree was issued, the Krasnokamsk Mint still had a certain number of orders already made with screw fastening. It was decided to remake these signs for wearing on a block, in accordance with the text of the Decree. The alteration was carried out by removing a segment of the reverse surface and replacing it with a segment of the same shape, having an eyelet for attaching a suspension block. The eyelet segment was attached by soldering. This option is called "dovetail".

The Order named after Lenin became the highest award of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics for especially outstanding services for rewarding both individuals and enterprises, institutions, organizations.

History of the Order of Lenin

By 1930, there were only two orders in the award system of the USSR, these were the orders of the Red Banner and the Red Banner of Labor, which led to a large number of awards of these orders. Back in 1926, the idea of ​​a higher award, then called the "Order of Ilyich", was proposed. The project was in limbo for 4 years, until at the beginning of 1930 it was decided, in addition to the existing ones, to create another, higher award - the Order of Lenin.

The award was established on April 6, 1930, on May 5 of the same year the statute of the Order of Lenin was approved, changes were made to the charter and description: 09/27/1934; 06/19/1943; December 16, 1947

The bas-relief of Lenin was created from a photograph by Viktor Bulla in 1921, from the III Congress of the Comintern. The artist Ivan Dubasov and sculptors Ivan Shadr and Pyotr Taezhny worked on the creation of the first version of the Order of Lenin, the second version of the order was created by the medalist A. Vasyutinskiy.

Knights of the Order of Lenin

The first Order of Lenin was received not by a person, but by the publication Komsomolskaya Pravda, the image of the order still flaunts on the title page of Komsomolskaya Pravda.

The first soldiers of the 98th border detachment Babenko F.T. were awarded the Order of Lenin during the Great Patriotic War. and Lieutenant Gusev F.I.

The youngest holder of the Order of Lenin was Mamlakat Nakhangova, a cotton picker from Tajikistan, who was 11 years old at the time of the award.

The oldest gentleman was the Polish-Ukrainian composer S. F. Lyudkevich (01/23/1979). He was awarded in connection with the 100th anniversary.

There are two 11-fold holders of the Order of Lenin. These are the Minister of Foreign Trade of the USSR Nikolai Patolichev and the Soviet military leader and statesman Dmitry Ustinov. In addition, three people are 10 times holders of the Order of Lenin, and 8 more, nine times.

Prior to the establishment of the Gold Star of the Hero of the USSR and the Hammer and Sickle medals, along with the titles of Hero of the Soviet Union and Hero of Socialist Labor, the Order of Lenin was awarded. After the establishment of medals, this tradition was not broken, and the Order of Lenin automatically continued to be issued to all persons awarded the title of Hero, as well as to cities and fortresses that were awarded the corresponding title of "Hero City" or "Hero Fortress".

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, there were two cases of awarding the Order of Lenin for merit committed before 1991. Taking into account these two awards, over the years of its existence, the Order of Lenin has made 431,418 awards.

Only 51 cases of deprivation of this award are known. Among the deprived: Nikolai Yezhov, Lavrenty Beria, Nikolai Shchelokov, Heinrich Yagoda, Nicolae Ceausescu.

Description of other awards of the Second World War of the USSR: The Order of the Red Star is the second exclusively military order in the USSR, the Order of Kutuzov for awarding officers ground forces Soviet army.

Order of Lenin in the award system of the USSR

The price of the Order of Lenin

The cost of the Order of Lenin depends on its type, safety and availability of documents. To date, the price of the order in collectible condition with documents starts from:
1930-34 Type 1 "Tractor" on propeller ≈800 pcs. - 3230000 rub.
1934-36 Type 2 "Silver Head" on screw ≈2000 pcs. - 520,000 rubles.
1936-43 Type 3 "Platinum head" on screw ≈11000 pcs. - 260,000 rubles.
1943-56 Type 4 "Round" on a block ≈160,000 pcs. - 78000 rub.
1957-91 Type 5 "Oval" on a block ≈400,000 pcs. - 65000 rub.
Price updated as of 03/21/2019

Varieties of the Order of Lenin

Type 1 "Tractor" 1930-1934


Dimensions - height - 38 mm, width - 37.5 mm.

Numbers: 1-800

The Order of Lenin is a portrait medallion with the image of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin against the background of factory pipes, under the portrait is an image of a tractor with a tractor driver, the portrait is placed in a gold circle filled with red enamel. The central medallion is framed with a wreath of ears of wheat, under the medallion there is an inscription "USSR", at the top there is a hammer and sickle.

On the reverse of the order, in the center is a bronze flange with a threaded screw. Above the screw, the number of the order is stamped in digits 1.5 mm high, below the screw is the stamp "GOSZNAK". The obverse and reverse are two separate parts, connected by soldering, inside the order is hollow. The clamping nut is made of silver, has a diameter of 32 mm, on the inside there is a soldered bronze washer with a thread.

Most of the orders of the first type were subsequently replaced with newer types, while maintaining the serial number, so there are awards of later types with numbers corresponding to the first type of the Order of Lenin.

Type 2 "Silver Head" 1934-1936


Dimensions - height - 38.5 mm, width - 38 mm.

Numbers: 700-2700

In 1932, the country's leadership drew attention to the fact that the country's highest state award lacks the main symbols of the state, the award was urgently finalized. In the final version, factory chimneys and a tractor were removed from the background, a five-pointed star was placed on the left side of the wreath, a red banner with a gold inscription "LENIN" was now on the top right, the sickle and hammer were moved to the lower part of the order. The material of the order was gold, and a silver coating was applied to the central medallion of the order.

The sign has become one-piece stamped. A silver threaded screw is soldered in the center of the obverse. Below the screw, the number of the order is stamped, and below it is a convex rounded inscription "MONDVOR". The clamping nut is made of silver, and can have a diameter of 28-33mm.

In the early versions of the second type of order, the silver coating was too thin and of poor quality, which gave rise to the myth of the existence of a type of order without a central medallion covered with silver, the so-called "Golden Head". This is a mistake, there was no order without a silver central medallion. On the later versions of the order, the thickness and quality of the silver coating of the medallion was increased, and this problem disappeared.

Type 3 "Platinum Head" 1936-43


Dimensions - height - 38-39 mm, width - 38 mm.

Numbers: 2600-13800

The main difference from the previous type is that the bas-relief of Lenin was made by a separate element of platinum, and was attached to the order with three rivets. The very surface of the central medallion, instead of silvering, began to be covered with gray-blue enamel.

On the reverse of the order, three rivets are visible that secure the bas-relief. The number of the order is located above the screw, and can be either knocked out or applied with a engraver. The mark of the manufacturer "MONDVOR", and on later versions, presumably after the evacuation Mint from Leningrad to Krasnokamsk "MONETNY DVOR".

Type 4 "Round" 1943-56


Dimensions - height (including eyelet) - 43 mm, width - 38 mm.

Numbers: 13800-192000

The appearance of the fourth type is associated with the decree of June 19, 1943, according to which orders having an oval or round shape were ordered to be worn on the left side of the chest on a pentagonal block covered with a silk moire ribbon. As a result, the Order of Lenin received an eyelet in the upper part for attaching to the block, and, accordingly, lost the screw on the reverse.

Some of the already made orders were remade to be worn on a block. A screw was removed from the reverse of the badge, and a ring was added with the help of soldering, this option was called “dovetail” by collectors. Besides, early variants the fourth type, have a round recess on the reverse, in the place where the screw was located, on later versions, it is absent.

The maker's mark on all orders of the fourth type "MINET" in a semicircle at the bottom. The number of the Order of Lenin can be either applied with a engraver or stamped with a punch.

Type 5 "Oval" 1957-91


Dimensions - height (including eyelet) - 45 mm, width - 38 mm.

Numbers: 191500-465000

On the reverse of the order, a recessed round plane with a diameter of more than 20 mm appeared in the center. The maker's mark has moved to the top. Possible options: above the top rivet in a semicircle "LENINGRAD", below the top rivet "MINET" in two lines; or only "MINT" in two lines, below the top rivet. The number can be both knocked out and applied with a engraver, and located both above and below the bottom two rivets, there are also options with a number printed on the bottom of the reverse, below the round recess.

Statute of the Order of Lenin

  1. The Order of Lenin is the highest award of the USSR for particularly outstanding services in the revolutionary movement, labor activity, defense of the socialist Fatherland, development of friendship and cooperation between peoples, strengthening of peace, and other especially outstanding services to the Soviet state and society.
  2. The Order of Lenin is awarded to:
    citizens of the USSR;
    enterprises, associations, institutions, organizations, military units, warships, formations and associations, union and autonomous republics, territories, regions, autonomous regions, autonomous regions, districts, cities and others settlements.
    The order can also be awarded to persons who are not citizens of the USSR, as well as enterprises, institutions, organizations, settlements of foreign states.
  3. Awarding the Order of Lenin is made:
    for exceptional achievements and successes in the field of economic, scientific, technical and socio-cultural development Soviet society, increasing the efficiency and quality of work, for outstanding services in strengthening the might of the Soviet state, fraternal friendship of the peoples of the USSR;
    for especially important merits in the defense of the socialist Fatherland, strengthening the defense capability of the USSR;
    for outstanding revolutionary, state and socio-political activity;
    for especially important services in the development of friendship and cooperation between the peoples of the Soviet Union and other states;
    for particularly outstanding services in strengthening the socialist community, developing the international communist, workers' and national liberation movement, in the struggle for peace, democracy and social progress;
    for other especially outstanding services to the Soviet state and society.
  4. As a rule, persons whose selfless work has previously been awarded by other orders can be presented for awarding the Order for Labor Merit.
  5. The Order of Lenin is awarded to persons awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, the title of Hero of Socialist Labor, as well as to cities and fortresses that have been awarded the title of "Hero City" and the title of "Hero Fortress" respectively.
  6. The Order of Lenin is worn on the left side of the chest and, in the presence of other orders of the USSR, is located in front of them.

In the 1920s After the end of the Civil War, it became necessary to create the highest award of the Soviet Union, awarded not only for military merit. In the first years after the revolution in Russia, the Order of the Red Banner (since 1932 - the Order of the Red Banner) was established, which was awarded for military exploits, but there were no awards for peaceful merits.

At the beginning of 1930, work began on a project for a new order, called the "Order of Lenin". The artists of the Goznak factory in Moscow were given the task of creating a drawing of the order, the main image on the sign of which was to be a portrait of Lenin. From the many sketches, the work of the artist was chosen, who took as the basis for the portrait a photograph of Lenin taken at the Second Congress of the Comintern in Moscow by photographer Viktor Bulla in July-August 1920. On it, Lenin was captured in profile to the left of the viewer.

In the spring of 1930, a sketch of the order was handed over to sculptors Ivan Shadr and Pyotr Tayozhny to create a model. The first signs of the Order of Lenin were made at the Goznak factory.

The work on the sketches was still underway, when on April 6, 1930, the decision of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR on the establishment of the Order of Lenin was issued, and on May 5, 1930, the statute of the order was approved by the decision of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR.

Subsequently, the statute of the order and its description were amended by a decree of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of September 27, 1934, by decrees of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of June 19, 1943 and December 16, 1947. Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of March 28, 1980 approved The Statute of the Order in the new edition.

According to the statute, the Order of Lenin is the highest award of the USSR for especially outstanding services in the revolutionary movement, labor activity, defense of the socialist fatherland, development of friendship and cooperation between peoples, strengthening peace and other especially outstanding services to the Soviet state and society.

The Order of Lenin was awarded to: citizens of the USSR; enterprises, associations, institutions, organizations, military units, warships, formations and associations, union and autonomous republics, territories, regions, autonomous regions, autonomous districts, districts, cities and other settlements.

They could also be awarded to persons who are not citizens of the USSR, as well as enterprises, institutions, organizations and settlements of foreign states.

It was the first order of the Soviet Union, which was awarded for both labor and combat distinctions.

The Order of Lenin was awarded:
- for exceptional achievements and successes in the field of economic, scientific, technical and socio-cultural development of Soviet society, increasing the efficiency and quality of work, for outstanding services in strengthening the might of the Soviet state, fraternal friendship of the peoples of the USSR;
- for especially important merits in the defense of the socialist Fatherland, strengthening the defense capability of the USSR;
- for outstanding revolutionary, state and socio-political activity;
- for especially important merits in the development of friendship and cooperation between the peoples of the Soviet Union and other states;
- for particularly outstanding services in strengthening the socialist community, developing the international communist, workers' and national liberation movement, in the struggle for peace, democracy and social progress;
- for other especially outstanding services to the Soviet state and society.

To be awarded the Order of Lenin for labor merits, as a rule, persons were presented whose selfless work had previously been awarded by other orders. The Order of Lenin was awarded to persons awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, the title of Hero of Socialist Labor, as well as cities and fortresses, which were awarded the title of Hero City and Hero Fortress respectively.

The Order of Lenin is worn on the left side of the chest and, in the presence of other orders of the USSR, is located in front of them.

The appearance, dimensions and materials used to make the order changed many times, both during the creation process and after its establishment.

The variants of the Order of Lenin awarded to the recipients can be divided into four main types.

The first Orders of Lenin, issued from 1930 to September 1934, were made of 925 silver.

In a round medallion, framed by a wreath of two rows of wheat ears, against the background of industrial buildings, there is a bas-relief portrait of Lenin, looking to the left of the viewer. At the bottom of the medallion is a machine operator on a tractor moving to the left. The medallion was surrounded by a soldered double gold rim filled with ruby ​​enamel inside. Above the medallion, on the wreath, there is a gilded hammer and sickle; below the medallion, on a rectangular plate, there are gold overlaid letters "USSR" filled in with ruby ​​enamel in the middle. The order for attaching to clothing had a pin with a special nut on the reverse side of the badge.

About 700 orders of the first type were issued.

Since the Order of Lenin of the first type did not have images of the main proletarian symbols - the red star and the red banner, it was decided to slightly change the appearance of the sign.

The Order of Lenin was now made not from silver, but from 650 gold. From the obverse of the order, the images of the tractor and the industrial landscape disappeared, and the inscription "USSR" also disappeared.

On the new type of order appeared a red banner with the inscription "LENIN" and a red star. The hammer and sickle moved from the top of the order to the bottom. The red banner, red star, hammer and sickle on the badge of the second type are covered with ruby-red enamel. The central round portrait-medallion with the image of Lenin is silver-plated. The surface of the ears around the medallion has a natural golden surface.

The Order of Lenin of the second type was awarded from September 1934 to June 1936.

Compared with the previous type, the main change was that the Lenin bas-relief was a separate piece and was made of platinum (the weight of the bas-relief ranged from 2.4 to 2.75 g). The bas-relief was attached to the order with three rivets.
The surface of the central medallion of orders of the third type was covered with gray-blue enamel. Another change was to increase the fineness of the gold. Now the order was made of 950 gold.

By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of June 19, 1943, the wearing of the Order of Lenin attached to the clothes of the recipient was introduced with a pentagonal block, covered with an order ribbon.

The Order of Lenin is a sign depicting a portrait-medallion of V. I. Lenin made of platinum, placed in a circle framed by a golden wreath of ears of wheat.
The dark gray enamel background around the portrait-medallion is smooth and bordered by two concentric gold rims, between which ruby ​​red enamel is laid. On the left side of the wreath there is a five-pointed star, at the bottom there is a sickle and a hammer, on the right in the upper part of the wreath there is an unfolded panel of a red banner. The star, the hammer and sickle, and the banner are covered with ruby-red enamel and bordered with gold rims. On the banner there is an inscription in gold letters "LENIN".
The Order of Lenin is made of gold, the laid on bas-relief of Lenin is made of platinum. Pure gold in the order 28.604 ± 1.1 g, platinum 2.75 g (as of September 18, 1975). The total weight of the order is 33.6±1.75 g.
The order, with the help of an eyelet and a ring, is connected to a pentagonal block covered with a silk moiré ribbon 24 mm wide, in the middle of the ribbon there is a longitudinal red stripe, 16 mm wide, along the edges middle lane two golden stripes 1.5 mm wide, then two red stripes 1.5 mm wide, and two golden stripes 1 mm wide.
On the reverse side of the block there is a device for attaching to clothing.
Dimensions: height - 43-45 mm (including the eyelet in the upper part), width - 38 mm, diameter of the portrait medallion - 25 mm.

The badges of the Order of Lenin of the old type were exchanged by the awarded for the badges of the new type by the Department for Registration and Registration of the Awarded under the Secretariat of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR upon presentation of the awarded order book and identity document.

The signs of the Order of Lenin began to be issued in July 1931, but the first Decree of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR on awarding them to the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper is dated May 23, 1930.

Among the first recipients of the Order of Lenin were major military leaders Vasily Blyukher, Semyon Budyonny, Kliment Voroshilov, Mikhail Tukhachevsky, as well as the heroes of the first five-year plans, miner Alexei Stakhanov, locomotive driver Pyotr Krivonos, agricultural workers Maria Demchenko, Mamlakat Nakhangova, Mark Ozerny and others.

After the establishment on April 16, 1934 of the title of Hero of the Soviet Union (GSS), the Order of Lenin began to be awarded to everyone who received this honorary title. Since the Gold Star medal was established only in 1939, the Order of Lenin was the only distinction for the GSS. After the establishment of the Golden Star of the Hero, the Order of Lenin automatically continued to be issued with it.

Starting from June 4, 1944 and until September 14, 1957, the Order of Lenin was awarded to officers for long service (25 years of impeccable service). Also, since the early 1950s. The order of Lenin could also be received by civilians for long-term and fruitful work.

Many of the foreign leaders of the communist movement, such as Georgy Dimitrov (Bulgaria), Gustav Husak (Czechoslovakia), Janos Kadar (Hungary), Dolores Ibarruri (Spain), Ho Chi Minh (Vietnam), Walter Ulbricht (GDR), Fidel Castro (Cuba) ) and others received the Order of Lenin.

Almost all Soviet leaders and military leaders of the highest rank were awarded the Order of Lenin. A number of them repeatedly. So, 12 times the Order of Lenin was awarded to Minister of Foreign Trade of the USSR Nikolai Patolichev, 11 times to Marshal of the Soviet Union Dmitry Ustinov, 10 times to Minister of Medium Machine Building of the USSR Efim Slavsky and Colonel General of Aviation Academician Alexander Yakovlev.

Another 20 autonomous republics, eight autonomous regions, six territories, more than 100 regions and some cities have been awarded the Order of Lenin. Moscow (1947, 1965), Leningrad (1945, 1957), Kyiv (1954, 1961) each have two Orders of Lenin. The Moscow Region has three Orders of Lenin (1934, 1956, 1966).

More than 380 industrial and construction enterprises and about 180 agricultural enterprises and organizations have received this award.

The last in the history of the USSR to be awarded the Order of Lenin was the director of the Maslyaninsky brick factory in the Novosibirsk region, Yakov Mull. He was awarded this award "for his great personal contribution to the reconstruction and technical re-equipment of the enterprise and the achievement of high performance in labor" (Decree of the President of the USSR of December 21, 1991).

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, no new submissions were made for the Order of Lenin. Nevertheless, two cases of issuing orders deserved before 1991, but not previously received, took place in 1994 and 1996. Taking into account these two awards, 431 thousand 418 awards have been made since the establishment of the Order of Lenin.

The material was prepared on the basis of information from open sources

Establishment of the Order of Lenin.

In July 1926, the head of the main department of the Red Army, V. N. Levichev, proposed the creation of a fundamentally new award for the soldiers and commanders of the Red Army and Navy, who already had the distinction of the government of the young Soviet Republic. By this time in Soviet Russia the Order of the Red Star already existed as the highest award, but there were already multiple cavaliers. Therefore, he proposed to create such an order, which one could replace many others. In addition, it was supposed to become precisely the highest award, and the rest, according to their status, were supposed to have a lower step in the hierarchy of awards of the Soviet state.

Initially, the new award was to be called the “Order of Ilyich”, and in essence be an exclusively military award. But since Civil War by this time had already ended, the draft of the new award was not accepted. Although, according to the Council of People's Commissars, the need for the highest, universal award was obvious.

Late 20s, early 30s. years, the issue of creating a new award again becomes relevant. The Moscow factory "Goznak" receives the task to create a sketch, which would depict V. I. Lenin. The author of the sketch, which was taken as the basis of the new sign, was the artist Dubasov I.I. held in Moscow. In the spring of 1930, the sketch was handed over for revision to the sculptors Shadr I. and Taezhny P., who created the layout. In the same year, the first prototypes of the badge were made at the Goznak factory in Moscow. The new award has been named The order of Lenin.

It was formally established in April 1930, and the statute in May of that year. The final version of the statute was made in 1980. From that time until the moment of exclusion from the system of awards, not the USSR, but the Russian Federation, the statute did not change. By statute The order of Lenin- the highest award of the USSR. Awarded for fruitful work aimed at protecting the Socialist Fatherland, certain merits in revolutionary and labor activity. And also for a significant contribution to the development of friendship and cooperation between peoples and states, aimed at strengthening peace.

Order of Lenin citizens of the USSR, various organizations and enterprises of both civil and military activities, as well as administrative units that are part of the Soviet state, can be awarded. Also in the list of those awarded, foreign citizens and administrative units of foreign states can also be awarded this order if their activities fall under the definitions of the statute of the sign Order of Lenin. However, only the achievements listed above were not enough to receive this high award. This order could be obtained by having in your track record other awards, or the title of Hero of Socialist Labor or Hero of the Soviet Union. And cities claiming to receive the Order of Lenin had to have the title City - Hero or Fortress - Hero.

Among the very first recipients of the Order of Lenin was the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper. The awarding of the newspaper staff took place in May 1930, and was timed to coincide with the fifth anniversary of the creation of this publication. "Komsomolskaya Pravda" received the Order of Lenin at number one. The first foreign cavaliers were several specialists from Germany (Johann Georg Liebhard) and the United States (Frank Bruno Honey and Leon Evnis Svazhian, George Gorfield McDowell, Mike Traikovich Hadaryan), who worked in the production and agriculture of the Soviet state.

The most interesting facts in the history of the existence of the Order of Lenin, perhaps, include the following: 1. In April 1936, the title Hero of the Soviet Union was established, but there was no specific insignia for the title. Therefore, those who received it high rank, were awarded the badge of the Order of Lenin; From June 1944 to September 1957, the order was awarded to officers of the army and navy for long service (25 years of service in the Armed Forces), and from the end of the fifties, this order was also awarded to civilians for long and fruitful work, in 1935 Krupskaya N K., the widow of V. I. Lenin. The last recipient on the list appeared in December 1991 - Mul Ya. Ya., director of a brick factory from the Novosibirsk region. After the USSR ceased to exist, awards were no longer made. In total, from 1930 until its exclusion from the list of awards of the Russian Federation, more than four hundred and sixty thousand awards were made.

The first type of the Order of Lenin.

With the image of industrial buildings and a tractor, under a bas-relief. 1930 - 1934 Made of 925 sterling silver with gold plating and red enamel. Height 38 mm, width 37.5 mm.

The order consists of eight parts. The sign itself is made of two halves soldered together. Looking at the edge, you can see the junction. The letters "C", "C", "C" and "P" are soldered to the obverse, each of which is a separate part. The letters are gilded and covered with red enamel. The seventh detail is the base of the screw, made of brass in the form of a two-stage flange. The eighth detail is a brass screw inserted into the base. The stamp "GOZNAK" is embossed in relief letters in a rectangular recess. The serial number is stamped with punches in the upper part of the reverse.

The silver fastening nut, 32 mm in diameter, has a built-in threaded brass part on the concave side, similar to the screw flange. In total, signs of the first type were issued 700 pieces. The smallest known serial number is 15, and the largest is 690. Due to the fact that most of the orders of the first type were later replaced by cavaliers with orders of later types, to which the "old" number was transferred, you can find awards that have "not type numbers.

The second type of the Order of Lenin. "Screw, solid stamped". 1934 - 1936

Made of gold 650° using red enamel, silvering. Dimensions: height - 38.5 mm, width - 38 mm.

Consists of two parts. The main part is made in one piece. With the frequent wearing of the order, the bas-relief of Lenin's head and the badge itself were wiped off and often looks as if whitish due to the fact that the gold standard of the order is low.


The second part is a silver screw soldered in the center of the reverse. The screw has a two-stage flange at the base. The hallmark "MONDVOR" is concave, stamped in relief letters below the screw. Between the screw and the stamp, the punches are engraved with a serial number, the height of the digits of which is 1.7 mm. The diameter of the silver fastening nut in early specimens is 24 mm, while in later specimens it is 33 mm. The smallest known number is 711 and the largest is 2676.

In the early orders of this type, silvering was not applied very well, in a thin layer and often completely erased, which is why the bas-relief of Lenin looked completely gold. (It should also be taken into account that silver atoms, when applied to a gold surface, penetrate quite actively into gold and with prolonged contact of these two metals, if the silvering is thin, it can practically disappear). Later, starting from about 1500, silvering was applied in a thicker layer, and the badge retained its original appearance longer when worn. The final solution to improve the preservation was found in the fact that the bas-relief was made of platinum.

The third type of the Order of Lenin. "Screw, with applied platinum bas-relief". 1936 - 1943

A characteristic feature of the third type is that the bas-relief of Lenin no longer forms a single whole with the base, but is attached to the base with three rivets. The bas-relief is made of platinum and its weight ranges from 2.4 g to 2.75 g. The fineness of gold in the fourth type of the Order of Lenin is 950. The central surface of the medallions, in orders of this type, began to be covered with gray-blue enamel.

Sizes 28 - 39 mm high and 38 mm wide. The sequence number range is 2695 - 13378.

Fourth type. "Suspended, round" 1943 - 1956

An eyelet has been added in the upper part, into which a connecting link is threaded for attaching to the block. The size, with an eyelet in the upper part, became 43 mm. The smallest known number is 13808 and the largest is 191115.



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Order of Lenin - the highest state award Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, established by a decree of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of April 6, 1930.

A country USSR
Type order
To whom is awarded citizens of the USSR, enterprises, associations, institutions, organizations, military units, warships, formations and associations, union and autonomous republics, territories, regions, autonomous regions, autonomous districts, districts, cities and other settlements
Grounds for awarding exceptional achievements and outstanding achievements
Status not awarded
Options height: 38–45 mm width: 38 mm material: gold, platinum
Date of establishment April 6, 1930
First award May 23, 1930
Last award 21 December 1991
Number of awards 431 418

History of the order

In July 1926, the head of the main department of the Red Army, V. N. Levichev, proposed creating a fundamentally new award for the soldiers and commanders of the Red Army and Navy, who already had the distinctions of the government of the young Soviet republic. By this time, the Order of the Red Star already existed in the award system of Soviet Russia, as the highest award, but there were already multiple cavaliers. Therefore, he proposed to create such an order, which one could replace many others. In addition, it was supposed to become precisely the highest award, and the rest, according to their status, were supposed to have a lower step in the hierarchy of awards of the Soviet state. Initially, the new award was to be called the “Order of Ilyich”, and in essence be an exclusively military award. But, since the Civil War had already ended by this time, the draft of the new award was not accepted. Although, according to the Council of People's Commissars, the need for the highest, universal award was obvious.

Late 20s, early 30s. years, the issue of creating a new award again becomes relevant. The Moscow factory "Goznak" receives the task to create a sketch, which would depict V. I. Lenin. The author of the sketch, which was taken as the basis of the new sign, was the artist Dubasov I.I. held in Moscow. In the spring of 1930, the sketch was handed over for revision to the sculptors Shadr I. and Taezhny P., who created the layout. In the same year, the first prototypes of the badge were made at the Goznak factory in Moscow. The new award has been named The order of Lenin.

It was formally established in April 1930, and the statute in May of that year. The final version of the statute was made in 1980. From that time until the moment of exclusion from the system of awards, not the USSR, but the Russian Federation, the statute did not change. By statute The order of Lenin- the highest award of the USSR. Awarded for fruitful work aimed at protecting the Socialist Fatherland, certain merits in revolutionary and labor activity. And also for a significant contribution to the development of friendship and cooperation between peoples and states, aimed at strengthening peace.

statute

  1. The Order of Lenin is the highest award of the USSR for particularly outstanding services in the revolutionary movement, labor activity, defense of the socialist Fatherland, development of friendship and cooperation between peoples, strengthening of peace, and other especially outstanding services to the Soviet state and society.
    2. The Order of Lenin is awarded to:
  • citizens of the USSR;
  • enterprises, associations, institutions, organizations, military units, warships, formations and associations, union and autonomous republics, territories, regions, autonomous regions, autonomous districts, districts, cities and other settlements.

The Order of Lenin can also be awarded to persons who are not citizens of the USSR, as well as enterprises, institutions, organizations, and settlements of foreign states.
3. Awarding the Order of Lenin is made:

  • for exceptional achievements and successes in the field of economic, scientific, technical and socio-cultural development of Soviet society, for raising the efficiency and quality of work, for outstanding services in strengthening the might of the Soviet state, and for the fraternal friendship of the peoples of the USSR;
  • for especially important merits in the defense of the socialist Fatherland, strengthening the defense capability of the USSR;
  • for outstanding revolutionary, state and socio-political activity;
  • for especially important services in the development of friendship and cooperation between the peoples of the Soviet Union and other states;
  • for particularly outstanding services in strengthening the socialist community, developing the international communist, workers' and national liberation movement, in the struggle for peace, democracy and social progress;
  • for other especially outstanding services to the Soviet state and society.
  1. For the awarding of the Order of Lenin for labor merits, as a rule, persons whose selfless work has previously been awarded by other orders can be presented.
  2. The Order of Lenin is awarded to persons awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, the title of Hero of Socialist Labor, as well as to cities and fortresses that have been awarded the title of "Hero City" and the title of "Hero Fortress" respectively.
  3. The Order of Lenin is worn on the left side of the chest and, in the presence of other orders of the USSR, is located in front of them.

Description of the order

The Order of Lenin is a sign depicting a portrait-medallion of V. I. Lenin made of platinum, placed in a circle framed by a golden wreath of ears of wheat. The dark gray enamel background around the portrait-medallion is smooth and bordered by two concentric gold rims, between which ruby ​​red enamel is laid. On the left side of the wreath there is a five-pointed star, below - a sickle and a hammer, on the right in the upper part of the wreath - an unfolded red banner. The star, the hammer and sickle, and the banner are covered with ruby-red enamel and bordered with gold rims. On the banner is the inscription in gold letters "LENIN".

The Order of Lenin is made of gold, the laid on bas-relief of V. I. Lenin is made of platinum. Pure gold in the order is 28.604 ± 1.1 g, platinum - 2.75 g (as of September 18, 1975). The total weight of the order is 33.6 ± 1.75 g. The height of the order is 40.5 mm, the width of the order is 38 mm, the diameter of the portrait medallion is 25 mm.

The order, with the help of an eyelet and a ring, is connected to a pentagonal block covered with a silk moire ribbon 24 mm wide, in the middle of the ribbon there is a longitudinal red stripe, 16 mm wide, along the edges of the middle stripe two golden stripes 1.5 mm wide, then two red stripes 1 each, 5 mm, and two golden stripes 1 mm wide.

Types of Orders of Lenin

The first type of the Order of Lenin

First view It was established by the decision of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of May 23, 1930. Lenin was depicted in the center, looking to the left. Factories were located in the background. A tractor was located under the head, which almost completely covered the shoulders of Vladimir Ilyich. Then came a small gold rim in the shape of a circle. Outside of the rim were ears of wheat. “USSR” is written in gold at the bottom, and a sickle and a hammer in the form of state symbols are embossed on top. When creating this order, the following standards were applied:

  • metal - silver 925 and gold 900;
  • height - 38 mm;
  • width - 37.5 mm;
  • circulation - 700 copies.

Stopped production orders of the first type due to the fact that some other awards used more gold than the country's highest award.

The second type of the Order of Lenin

Order of Lenin of the second type was established on September 27, 1934. For him changed only width and height standards. They were 38 mm and 38.5 mm, respectively. Gold was 750 samples.

On the second Order of Lenin Lenin was also depicted looking to the left. He is dressed in a suit. The portrait is surrounded by a gold circle. Ears of wheat, as on the first type of orders, are made of gold. But at the top of the award is a red flag. It says "LENIN". The flagpole is highest point awards. On the left is a red five-pointed star, and a hammer and sickle are carved from below. The order was attached to three special rivets installed on the reverse smooth side.

The third type of the Order of Lenin

The third type of the Order of Lenin Outwardly, it completely repeats the previously adopted one, but its height could vary from 38 mm to 39 mm. Gold began to use 950 tests. The bas-relief of Lenin was a separate piece made of platinum. Previously, the entire order was a solid piece of silver. The weight of the award was 2.4 - 2.75 grams. This award was issued from June 11, 1936 to June 19, 1943. Fastening was carried out using 3 rivets.

The fourth type of the Order of Lenin

The fourth type of the Order of Lenin has been significantly changed. It has been awarded since June 19, 1943. It is worth noting that all orders of the previous types were replaced by an order of type IV.

Outwardly, the award completely copies the third type, but the method of attaching it to the chest has changed. And the order was made a special small eyelet, which was connected to the ring on moire ribbons. Thus, the order turned into a medal, and its wearing on the chest was greatly facilitated.

When creating the last type of the Order of Lenin, they used such standards:

  • metal - gold (28.6 grams) and platinum (2.75 grams);
  • weight - 33.6 grams;
  • the width of the moire ribbon is 24 mm, the width of the longitudinal red strip is 16
  • mm, two golden stripes - 1.5 mm;
  • height - 43 - 45 mm;
  • width - 38 mm;
  • the diameter of the medallion with the image of Lenin is 28 mm.

Fifth type of the Order of Lenin

The fifth type of the Order of Lenin was awarded from 1950 to 1991. The shape of the order is almost oval, 38 mm wide and 45 mm high. significant changes in the stamps of the reverse side of the order. It is worth noting that on reverse side each medal of alltypes the serial number of the award was knocked out, which corresponded to the number in the state register.

First awards

  • As soon as the decree on the establishment of a new order was published, several factory Komsomol organizations Leningrad, a proposal was made: for merits in the education of youth, to award the Order of Lenin to the newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda, the fifth anniversary of which was to be celebrated on May 24, 1930. The initiative of the Leningrad Komsomol members was supported by the youth of many other cities and villages of the country. May 23, 1930 "Komsomolskaya Pravda" was awarded this award.
  • The first cavaliers of the Order of Lenin were advanced workers - a slaughterer S. Filimonov, a locksmith A. Vysokolov, a foreman I. Grachkov, a worker-drummer S. Sidorov.
  • The first holders of the Order of Lenin in the Armed Forces of the USSR were sappers of the North Caucasian Military District - corps engineer K. S. Kalugin, company commander V. A. Kopylov, squad leader V. N. Emelyanov, sappers-demolitionists N. I. Evsikov and V A. Kiprov. They extinguished a fire of unprecedented strength that broke out at the Maykop oil fields in May 1930. Hundreds of people fought the fire for almost a year. The fire raged on the territory for several square kilometers and was pacified only on April 7, 1931.
  • For early fulfillment of the five-year plan, the Azneft and Grozneft oil associations and a group of oil workers were awarded the Order of Lenin. This award was also awarded to S. M. Kirov, under whose leadership in the early 1920s oil industry Baku.
  • In 1932, the Stalingrad and Kharkov Tractor Plants and a number of other enterprises were awarded the Order of Lenin. These were gigantic factories built in the shortest possible time literally from scratch. The awards were given to their most active builders and workers. And in August of the same year, the 23rd Red Banner Rifle Division was awarded the Order of Lenin "for active assistance in the construction of the Kharkov Tractor Plant."
  • Among the first collective farmers who received the Order of Lenin was K. L. Denisov. The son of a poor peasant, himself a laborer from an early age, he organized 18 collective farms, and led one of them for many years.
  • In February 1933, the 25th Red Banner Chapaevskaya Rifle Division was awarded this award for outstanding achievements on the economic front.
  • In the spring of the same year, Roman Panchenko, a Red Army soldier of the 11th Khorezm Regiment, was awarded the Order of Lenin for the defeat of the Basmachi gang that invaded the territory of the USSR, and for the heroism shown at the same time. This was the first award of the Order of Lenin for military distinction. On May 17, the Red Army soldier R. Panchenko was surrounded during the battle with the Basmachi and, having shot all the cartridges, turned out to be unarmed. When the bandits rushed to capture him, the brave warrior tore a saber out of the scabbard of one of the Basmachi and put the enemies to flight.
  • With the beginning of the Stakhanovist movement, the Order of Lenin became an award that was awarded to the most famous and authoritative leaders in production - innovators in various sectors of the national economy. Among the first awarded were miners Nikita Izotov and Alexei Stakhanov, weavers Maria and Evdokia Vinogradov, machinist Pyotr Krivonos, tractor driver Praskovya Angelina, beet grower leader Maria Demchenko. These were people whose names the whole country knew, whose labor achievements were an example for millions.

Sailors awarded the Order of Lenin

Afanasiev Ivan Ivanovich was awarded the Gold Star medal, 2 Orders of Lenin, etc. During the Great Patriotic War, he was the captain of the Old Bolshevik timber carrier attached to the Northern Fleet. At the end of May 1942, a timber carrier loaded military equipment, ammunition and gasoline, followed from Reykjavik (Iceland) to Murmansk as part of an allied convoy and was attacked and set on fire by fascist aircraft. One of the bombs hit the ship. On the proposal of the British command to leave the ship, the captain refused. The convoy left, leaving a burning timber truck behind. The crew saved their ship from fire, repaired the damage and delivered the cargo to Murmansk.

Vershinin Fedor Grigorievich was awarded 2 Orders of Lenin, the Order of the Red Banner, etc. Awarded during Soviet-Finnish war. He commanded the submarine "Sch-311". He made 1 military campaign during which he sank 2 ships, another one was probably damaged. On February 7, 1940, he was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union.

Kalinin Fedor Alekseevich was awarded the Gold Star medal and the Order of Lenin. November 17, 1943 was for the heroic deed shown during the crossing of the Kerch Strait, the capture of a bridgehead on the Kerch Peninsula.

Petrovsky Konstantin Maksimovich was awarded the Gold Star medal, the Order of Lenin, the Order of the Red Star. In May 1942, as part of the crew of the ship "Old Bolshevik", he participated in the convoy PQ-16, en route from the port of Reykjavik to Murmansk. For 3 days, the crew repelled 47 attacks by German aircraft. Bombs hit the hold, a fire broke out, threatening to explode ammunition and destroy the ship. For many hours in a row, P., in fire and smoke, fought for the survivability of the ship along with the sailors. The ship was rescued and independently arrived at the port.

Shumsky Alexey Denisovich was awarded the Gold Star medal and the Order of Lenin. November 1, 1943 at the head of a platoon, together with the 386th separate battalion marines landed on the northern outskirts of the village of Eltigen. The platoon captured Hill 47.7 by storm, which provided cover for the left flank of the battalion. During the day, they kept the height, reflecting a large number of enemy counterattack. In this battle, Shumsky died.

The price of the Order of Lenin

To date, prices for the Order of Lenin start from:

  • 1930-34 Type 1 "Tractor" on propeller ≈800 pcs. - 50000 c.u.
  • 1934-35 Type 2 "Golden head" on screw ≈2000 pcs. - 8000 c.u.
  • 1935-36 Type 3 "Silver Head" on screw ≈5700 pcs. - 8000 c.u.
  • 1936-43 Type 4 "Platinum head" on screw ≈11705 pcs. - 4000 c.u.
  • 1943-56 Type 5 "Round" on a block ≈160,000 pcs. - 1200 USD
  • 1957-91 Type 6 "Oval" on a block ≈400,000 pcs. - 1705 c.u.
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