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MOSCOW VICTORY PARADE OF 1945

(Redirected from 1945 Moscow Victory Parade)
The 1945 Victory parade was the first major Soviet event recorded on colour film.

'Moscow Victory Parade of 1945' was a victory parade held after the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War. It took place in the Soviet capital of Moscow, mostly centering around a military parade through Red Square. The parade took place on a rainy June 24, 1945, over a month after May 9th, the day of Germany's surrender to Soviet commanders.
Marshals Georgy Zhukov, who had formally accepted the German surrender to the Soviet Union, and Konstantin Rokossovsky, rode through the parade ground on white and black stallions, respectively. The fact is commemorated by the equestrian statue of Zhukov in front of the State Historical Museum, on Manege Square. The Premier of the Soviet Union Joseph Stalin stood atop of Lenin's Mausoleum and watched the parade.
Displays of the Red Army aircraft and vehicles were some of the focal points of the ceremony. One of the most famous moments at the end of the troops parade took place when various Red Army soldiers carried the banners of Nazi Germany and threw them down next to the Mausoleum. One of the standards that were tossed down belonged to the deceased leader of Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler.


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See also
External links

See also



London Victory Parade of 1946

External links



German Flags at the 1945 Soviet Victory Parade

Official site of the 2005 Russian 60th celebration of the 1945 Victory Parade

Short Colour Video recordings of the Military Parade

Russian site from where the short video of the parade can be downloaded

Archival footage of Russian Victory parades, Moscow, Red Squire.

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