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  1. www.wikidata.org › wiki › Q552297Iona Yakir - Wikidata

    Soviet military commander. This page was last edited on 4 February 2024, at 20:49. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  2. Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir (3 August 1896-12 June 1937) was a Ukrainian-Jewish Red Army commander during the Russian Civil War and Polish-Soviet War. Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir was born in Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire in 1896, the son of a prosperous Jewish pharmacist. He worked as a turner in a military factory in Odessa during World War I and became a follower of Vladimir Lenin's ...

  3. 25 de sept. de 1987 · The Yakir family, which suffered for generations under Soviet power, Thursday won a 14-year battle to emigrate to Israel. Even among the long-term Jewish refuseniks, it’s quite a story. The ...

  4. Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir (Иона Эммануилович Якир; August 3, 1896, Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire – June 11, 1937, Moscow, Soviet Union) was the Red Army commander and one of the world's major military reformers between World War I and World War II.

  5. www.wikiwand.com › es › Iona_YakirIona Yakir - Wikiwand

    Iona Emmanuílovich Yakir , Imperio ruso – 11 de junio de 1937, Moscú, Unión Soviética) fue Comandante del Ejército Rojo y uno de los mayores innovadores militares del mundo en el periodo de entreguerras.

  6. Iona Jakir jako dowódca sił zbrojnych Ukrainy i Krymu. W latach 1921–1923 dowodził wojskami Rejonu Krymskiego Kijowskiego Okręgu Wojskowego [2]. Początkowo był dowódcą i komisarzem 3 Kazańskiej dywizji strzeleckiej [8], zaś od września 1923 r. był dowódcą i komisarzem 14 korpusu strzeleckiego, zaś w grudniu tego samego roku ...

  7. after and given assistance." A Childhood in Prison is Iona Yakir's son Pyotr's account of how the Soviet regime looked after him from the day his father was arrested in 1937 until 1942, from his fifteenth year to his twentieth. Exiled at first to Astrakhan where members of other Purge victims'