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  1. Nikolái Ilich Podvoiski (del ruso: Николай Ильич Подвойский) (4 de febrero jul. / 16 de febrero de 1880 greg. - 28 de julio de 1948), revolucionario ruso. Desempeñó un papel destacado en la Revolución de Octubre y escribió numerosos artículos para el periódico soviético Krásnaya Gazeta ( Gaceta Roja ).

  2. Nikolai Ilyich Podvoisky (Russian: Николай Ильич Подвойский; Ukrainian: Микола Ілліч Подвойський; February 16 [O.S. February 4], 1880 – July 28, 1948) was a Russian Bolshevik revolutionary, Soviet statesman and the first People's Commissar of Military and Naval Affairs of the Russian SFSR.

  3. Nikolái Ilich Podvoiski (del ruso: Николай Ильич Подвойский) ( 4 de febrero jul. / 16 de febrero de 1880 greg. - 28 de julio de 1948 ), revolucionario ruso. Desempeñó un papel destacado en la Revolución de Octubre y escribió numerosos artículos para el periódico soviético Krásnaya Gazeta ( Gaceta Roja ).

  4. 21 de feb. de 2016 · Nikolai Ilyich Podvoisky was born 04[16] February 1880 in Kunashevka Nijinsky in Chernigov Province. The son of a priest, from 1894 he studied at the Chernigov Theological Seminary.

  5. Nikolai Podvoisky, one of the troika who led the storming of the Winter Palace, was responsible for the commission. The scene of the storming was based more on The Storming of the Winter Palace (1920), a re-enactment involving Vladimir Lenin and thousands of Red Guards , witnessed by 100,000 spectators, than the original occasion ...

  6. Nikolai Ilyich Podvoisky ( Russian: Николай Ильич Подвойский; Ukrainian: Микола Ілліч Подвойський; February 16 [ O.S. February 4], 1880 – July 28, 1948) was a Russian Bolshevik revolutionary, Soviet statesman and the first People's Commissar of Military and Naval Affairs of the Russian SFSR.

  7. 9 de oct. de 2021 · However, the initiative came not from the Comintern but from Nikolai Podvoisky, head of the Soviet Council for Physical Culture, an agency charged with preparing Soviet youth for military conscription. The concept of proletarian sports organizations, by contrast, originated in the pre-1914 German Social Democratic Party (SPD).