• Thumbnail for Maxim Gorky Fortresses
    Coastal Batteries #30 and #35, commonly known in English as Maxim Gorky I and Maxim Gorky II, were coastal batteries used by the Soviet Union during the...
    7 KB (808 words) - 07:02, 13 May 2024
  • Maxim Gorky was a Russian writer. Maxim Gorky, Maxim Gorkiy or Maksim Gorkiy may also refer to: Soviet cruiser Maxim Gorky, a Kirov-class cruiser SS Maxim...
    750 bytes (120 words) - 01:57, 5 June 2021
  • Thumbnail for Maxim Gorky
    Пешков; 28 March [O.S. 16 March] 1868 – 18 June 1936), popularly known as Maxim Gorky (Максим Горький), was a Russian and Soviet writer and proponent of socialism...
    82 KB (9,384 words) - 12:53, 17 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Schwerer Gustav
    Fort Siberia knocked out of action. Five shells fired. 17 June Maxim Gorky Fortresses bombarded. Five shells fired. By the end of the siege on 4 July...
    23 KB (2,148 words) - 17:58, 13 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Soviet cruiser Maxim Gorky
    Maxim Gorky (Russian: Максим Горький) was a Project 26bis Kirov-class cruiser of the Soviet Navy that saw action during World War II and continued in...
    12 KB (1,379 words) - 13:25, 24 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Children of the Sun (play)
    solntsa) is a 1905 play by Maxim Gorky, written while he was briefly imprisoned in Saint Petersburg's Peter and Paul Fortress during the abortive Russian...
    3 KB (343 words) - 11:09, 14 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Sevastopol
    heavy fortifications, such as the Maxim Gorky Fortresses. After fierce fighting, which lasted for 250 days, the fortress city finally fell to Axis forces...
    66 KB (5,866 words) - 02:34, 12 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Siege of Sevastopol (1941–1942)
    river. The 600 mm guns concentrated on the coastal batteries and Maxim Gorky fortress. Meanwhile, the German 22nd Infantry Division attacked further to...
    69 KB (9,071 words) - 15:32, 17 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Obukhovskii 12-inch/52-caliber Pattern 1907 gun
    Soviet Separate Coastal Army maintained four of the guns in the Maxim Gorky Fortresses in Crimea. When an advancing German Army laid siege to Sevastopol...
    12 KB (1,287 words) - 13:51, 11 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Alexander Parvus
    Munich, he founded the publishing house that introduced the work of Maxim Gorky to Germany. In 1900, Parvus met Vladimir Lenin for the first time, in...
    23 KB (2,868 words) - 21:04, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nizhny Novgorod
    Nizhny Novgorod (redirect from Gorky (city))
    opened for service in 1927. The Marxist activist and Tsarist dissident Maxim Gorky was born in Nizhny Novgorod in 1868 as Alexey Maximovich Peshkov. In...
    90 KB (8,928 words) - 06:22, 15 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Rostov-on-Don
    Pushkinskaya Street Maxim Gorky Park Traditional Cossack villages (stanitsas) National Sholokhov Museum-Reserve Azov ancient fortress Rostov circus Rostov...
    67 KB (5,843 words) - 15:17, 15 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sergei Trufanov
    book about Rasputin. In this work he was supported by Maxim Gorky, since 1902 a friend of Lenin. Gorky hoped that Trufanov's story on Rasputin would discredit...
    12 KB (1,264 words) - 14:55, 12 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for History of Nizhny Novgorod
    exhibition. In the Soviet era, Nizhny Novgorod was renamed Gorky, in honor of the writer Maxim Gorky. Then it was the industrial center of the Soviet Union...
    40 KB (4,955 words) - 04:10, 15 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mother (1926 film)
    Mother (1926 film) (category Films based on works by Maxim Gorky)
    killed and her son is imprisoned. Based on the 1906 novel The Mother by Maxim Gorky, it is the first installment in Pudovkin's "revolutionary trilogy", alongside...
    7 KB (748 words) - 10:11, 27 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gorky Park (Rostov-on-Don)
    central urban park in Rostov-on-Don, Rostov oblast, Russia, named after Maxim Gorky. It is the eldest park in Rostov-on-Don. The park was established in...
    6 KB (568 words) - 21:07, 24 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Mariia Vetrova
    Mariia Vetrova (category Prisoners of the Peter and Paul Fortress)
    Paul Fortress. Her death became a rallying cry for the rise of an anti-Tsarist student movement, inspiring dedications by Tolstoy and Maxim Gorky, the...
    12 KB (867 words) - 23:03, 14 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sergey Smirnov (writer)
    Sergey Smirnov (writer) (category Maxim Gorky Literature Institute alumni)
    Power Engineering Institute without getting a degree and entered the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute. In 1941 he went to the front. After the war he...
    3 KB (192 words) - 03:32, 1 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pavel Kadochnikov
    Bergman. Yakov Sverdlov (1940) as Maxim Gorky Anton Ivanovich Is Angry (1941) as Aleksey Petrovich Mukhin Fortress on the Volga (1942, part 1, 2) as Rudnev...
    9 KB (870 words) - 19:59, 30 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Saimaa
    other cargo, though tourists also use the waterways. The Russian writer Maxim Gorky went into exile near the shores of Lake Saimaa for a period of time after...
    8 KB (691 words) - 05:32, 26 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Orenburg
    Memorial Apartment of T.G. Shevchenko Orenburg City Memorial House Orenburg Maxim Gorky State Drama Theater Orenburg State Regional Music Theater Orenburg State...
    27 KB (2,930 words) - 03:29, 12 August 2024
  • also known as The Spy: The Story of a Superfluous Man, a 1908 novel by Maxim Gorky The Spy, a 1920 novel by Upton Sinclair The Spy (Cussler novel), a 2010...
    4 KB (581 words) - 16:08, 16 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gorkovskaya (Saint Petersburg Metro)
    Travnikov. It opened on July 1, 1963. The station's name was derived from Maxim Gorky Avenue (later renamed Kronverskiy Avenue). The station was designed as...
    3 KB (164 words) - 04:22, 30 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Krasnodar
     Catherine's Cathedral, the State Arts Museum, a park and theater named after Maxim Gorky, the beautiful concert hall of the Krasnodar Philharmonic Society, which...
    37 KB (3,363 words) - 15:18, 17 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Röchling shell
    the Belgian Fort d'Aubin-Neufchâteau. They were also tested against the fortresses of Hůrka, Hanička and Dobrošov (today's Czech Republic), the Gössler wall...
    6 KB (625 words) - 07:13, 27 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Rostov Oblast
    tractors.[citation needed] Rostov academic drama theatre, named after Maxim Gorky. Rostov State Musical Theater. The theater opened in September 1999,...
    24 KB (2,577 words) - 13:01, 17 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sergey Mstislavsky
    to The Roof of the World) remained unfinished. Mstislavsky, who in Maxim Gorky's Literature Institute was the head of the Prose department, also wrote...
    5 KB (605 words) - 18:55, 6 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for We (novel)
    allowed to emigrate to Paris in 1931, probably after the intercession of Maxim Gorky. The novel was first published in English in 1924 by E. P. Dutton in...
    45 KB (5,130 words) - 20:40, 6 July 2024
  • Nina Sadur (category Maxim Gorky Literature Institute alumni)
    under Russian dramatist Viktor Rozov and critic Inna Vishnevskaia at the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute in Moscow, graduating in 1983. Sadur wrote short...
    7 KB (721 words) - 05:48, 19 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Vladimir Palace
    design was transferred to House of Scientists (Дом Учёных), (named after Maxim Gorky). Under the patronage of Russian Academy of Sciences, the palace and...
    4 KB (515 words) - 22:56, 6 March 2024