RM2B0WD02–Abandoned ruins of the Mramorny camp of the Gulag forced-labour camp system in the Kodar Mountains in the Transbaikal Region in Siberia, Russia. The camp was established in January 1949 in the altitude about 2,150 metres (7,000 ft) above sea level to serve the nearby Uranium mine. The politician prisoners of Soviet regime used to work here in the extremely hard conditions forced to live in large canvas tents even in winter. The camp was closed in October 1951 because Uranium reserves were depleted here. The photograph was taken in August 1994.
RMBK8RAG–American tourist explores ruins of former quarters at a gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Peninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, former Soviet Union
RM2HXCFR1–Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008), Russian author and outspoken critic of communism, in Cologne, Germany, meeting with reporters on February 14, 1974 after his expulsion from Russia. Solzhenitsyn is best known for The Gulag Archipelago (1973), the publication of which outraged the Soviet authorities. Solzhenitsyn spent eight years in a Soviet Gulag forced-labor camp for writing derogatory comments in private letters to a friend, Nikolai Vitkevic, about Joseph Stalin's conduct of World War II.
RMEC28CA–Gulag, Soviet forced labor camp. Prisoner's jacket, each deportee had an identification number assigned to them. Latvia.
RM2B2BEDB–Soviet forced laborers are taken to labor camps in Siberia in overcrowded freight trains. Undated photo, probably in the 1930s.
RF2PH014M–Location map of the Gulag concentration camps across the Soviet Union
RF2G8EHNE–Ruined prison watchtower from the Soviet era, Atlasova Island, Kuril Islands, Russian Far East
RM2T33Y4E–Original painting of Soviet dissident and politician Natan Sharansky from his autobiography 'Fear No Evil'.
RM2BG2PM0–Prisoners of Soviet gulag. USSR. Circa 1936-1937
RMBGPJGK–Ground level view of the deserted Stalin era gulag buildings from the Salekhard Igarka Railway in northern Siberia.
RFKNFW5D–The former Kadyktchan gulag camp , in the northern part of Kolyma, Siberia. Here is what remains of a barrack surrounded by taiga.
RMBDABTK–Prison watchtower on Atlasova Island , Kuril Islands , Russia
RFKNFN59–In Siberia, the city of Vikhorevka remembers the victims of the gulag camps (Ozerlag) which built the BAM section between Taichet and Bratsk.
RMR5MN4E–A settlement of the Lithuanian deportees in Siberia. Museum: Gulag Museum, Moscow. Author: ANONYMOUS.
RM2E209H5–21 May 1991, Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, Russia, USSR. A Russian German multigenerational family waits with their belongings inside the airport for days for their flight to Germany.
RM2F6Y26M–Portrait of Stalin and postal letters from Gulag, 1940s, USSR
RM2X1612X–EVACUATION OF POLISH CIVILIANS FROM THE SOVIET UNION TO PERSIA, 1942 - The mother and two youngest Kowalski children on the train at Teheran train station ready to leave for East Africa. When Poland was attacked by the Nazis on 1 September, the Red Army also invaded on 17 September 1939. As a result of the Soviet invasion enormous numbers of Polish soldiers and civilians were deported by the NKVD to various locations in the Soviet Union; many ended up in the Gulag camps in Siberia, others were send to exile in Kazakhstan.After the German invasion of the Soviet Union and signing of the Sikorski
RMHX2F1Y–Watch tower in replica of Soviet exile settlement for Polish people in Centre for Education and Regional Promotion in Szymbark village, Poland
RM2DBHXMT–After Stalin (standing with hat) had adopted his fighting name as a professional revolutionary and fought for Lenin's revolution, he was exiled to Siberia several times. Because of inadequate monitoring, he escaped exile several times.
RM2B0WCTK–Abandoned ruins of the Mramorny camp of the Gulag forced-labour camp system in the Kodar Mountains in the Transbaikal Region in Siberia, Russia. The camp was established in January 1949 in the altitude about 2,150 metres (7,000 ft) above sea level to serve the nearby Uranium mine. The politician prisoners of Soviet regime used to work here in the extremely hard conditions forced to live in large canvas tents even in winter. The camp was closed in October 1951 because Uranium reserves were depleted here. The photograph was taken in August 1994.
RMBK8RAE–Ruins of former quarters at a gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Peninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, former Soviet Union
RM2HXCFR5–Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008), Russian author and outspoken critic of communism, in Cologne, Germany, meeting with reporters on February 14, 1974 after his expulsion from Russia. Solzhenitsyn is best known for The Gulag Archipelago (1973), the publication of which outraged the Soviet authorities. Solzhenitsyn spent eight years in a Soviet Gulag forced-labor camp for writing derogatory comments in private letters to a friend, Nikolai Vitkevic, about Joseph Stalin's conduct of World War II.
RMEC28BE–Two mugs with information recorded by prisoners during the deportation on the Gulag, June 1941. Latvia, Occupied.
RMRHBGNK–Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in 1974, after being exiled from the Soviet Union, in Langenbroich, West Germany where he was staying in the home of writer Heinrich Böll.
RF2PH014N–Location map of the Gulag concentration camps across the Soviet Union
RFME758X–St Petersburg, Russia - March 27, 2018. Monument to the Victims of Communist Terror in St Petersburg.
RF2PF4848–Russia line vector icons and signs. Moscow, USSR, Kremlin, Sputnik, Czarist, cold war, Siberia, Soviet outline vector illustration set
RM2BG2PJ8–Prisoners of Soviet gulag. USSR. Circa 1936-1937
RMBGPJH6–Ground level view of the deserted Stalin era gulag buildings from the Salekhard Igarka Railway in northern Siberia.
RF2FM5DKG–Close-up of a rusty barbed wire fence surrounding a detention, concentration and extermination camp, focus in the background, black and white
RF2HCNXP0–PERM KRAI, RUSSIA - JULY 1, 2018: Exhibit in the Museum of the History of Political Repression Perm-36 Gulag Museum , Russia
RFKNFNDR–In Siberia, the city of Vikhorevka remembers the victims of the gulag camps (Ozerlag) which built the BAM section between Taichet and Bratsk.
RMR5M967–A settlement of the Lithuanian deportees in Siberia. Museum: Gulag Museum, Moscow. Author: ANONYMOUS.
RM2E2R4RB–21 May 1991, Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, Russia, USSR. A Russian German teenage boy, with his family, waits with their belongings inside the airport for days for their flight to Germany.
RF2CBW9TG–Pole Star Stele, Salekhard, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia
RM2WY64NX–EVACUATION OF POLISH CIVILIANS FROM THE SOVIET UNION TO PERSIA, 1942 - There are touching scenes of reunion. People recognise each other; families are reunited. Some who were thought to be dead are found again. A little girl is kissing her grandmother, 6 November 1942. When Poland was attacked by the Nazis on 1 September, the Red Army also invaded on 17 September 1939. As a result of the Soviet invasion enormous numbers of Polish soldiers and civilians were deported by the NKVD to various locations in the Soviet Union; many ended up in the Gulag camps in Siberia, others were send to exile in K
RMHX2F22–Old train in replica of Soviet exile settlement for Polish people in Centre for Education and Regional Promotion in Szymbark village, Poland
RMB25MC9–July 10, 2008 - Monument to the victims of the Soviet invasion of Poland on Sept 17, 1939 in the Polish capital of Warsaw.
RM2B0WCTJ–Abandoned ruins of the Mramorny camp of the Gulag forced-labour camp system in the Kodar Mountains in the Transbaikal Region in Siberia, Russia. The camp was established in January 1949 in the altitude about 2,150 metres (7,000 ft) above sea level to serve the nearby Uranium mine. The politician prisoners of Soviet regime used to work here in the extremely hard conditions forced to live in large canvas tents even in winter. The camp was closed in October 1951 because Uranium reserves were depleted here. The photograph was taken in August 1994.
RMBK8R62–Ruins of former officers quarters at gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Penninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, former Soviet Union
RMGC5YH9–cartography, historical maps, modern times, USSR, forced labour camps, 1920s - 1950s, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RMG1AF5H–Ruins of former officers quarters at a gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Peninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, Russian Federation
RMEC28CB–Gulag, Soviet forced labor camp. Prisoner's jacket, each deportee had an identification number assigned to them. Latvia.
RMRHBGRB–Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in 1974, after being exiled from the Soviet Union, in Langenbroich, West Germany where he was staying in the home of writer Heinrich Böll.
RMB2NYCD–Nobel Prize-winning Russian author, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, died of heart failure near Moscow, Russia, on 8/3/2008
RM2JPDEAP–Soviet dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn speaking at a meeting of the AFL-CIO in Washington, D.C., delivering his Warning to the West speech on June 30, 1975. (USA)
RM2BG2PWH–Prisoners of Soviet gulag. USSR. Circa 1936-1937
RMBGPJKB–Ground level view of the deserted Stalin era gulag buildings from the Salekhard Igarka Railway in northern Siberia.
RF2FM5YT8–Close-up of a rusty barbed wire fence surrounding a detention, concentration and extermination camp, focus in the background, color
RF2HCNY3E–PERM KRAI, RUSSIA - JULY 1, 2018: Exhibit in the Museum of the History of Political Repression Perm-36 Gulag Museum , Russia
RFKNFN53–In Siberia, the city of Vikhorevka remembers the victims of the gulag camps (Ozerlag) which built the BAM section between Taichet and Bratsk.
RMR5J0PW–A settlement of the Lithuanian deportees in Siberia. Museum: Gulag Museum, Moscow. Author: ANONYMOUS.
RF2CBW9TF–Pole Star Stele, Salekhard, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia
RM2WY69DY–EVACUATION OF POLISH CIVILIANS FROM THE SOVIET UNION TO PERSIA, 1942 - The audience watching performance with great interest during a concert organised for refugees at the camp. When Poland was attacked by the Nazis on 1 September, the Red Army also invaded on 17 September 1939. As a result of the Soviet invasion enormous numbers of Polish soldiers and civilians were deported by the NKVD to various locations in the Soviet Union; many ended up in the Gulag camps in Siberia, others were send to exile in Kazakhstan.After the German invasion of the Soviet Union and signing of the Sikorski-Mayski A
RMCXY4PW–Novelist Sofi Oksanen
RMB255N8–July 10, 2008 - Monument to the victims of the Soviet invasion of Poland on Sept 17, 1939 in the Polish capital of Warsaw.
RM2B0WCTN–Abandoned ruins of the Mramorny camp of the Gulag forced-labour camp system in the Kodar Mountains in the Transbaikal Region in Siberia, Russia. The camp was established in January 1949 in the altitude about 2,150 metres (7,000 ft) above sea level to serve the nearby Uranium mine. The politician prisoners of Soviet regime used to work here in the extremely hard conditions. The wooden barrack pictured in the foreground was used as dwelling for camp guard while prisoners were forced to live in large canvas tents even in winter. The camp was closed in October 1951 because Uranium reserves were de
RM2AYAF4P–barbed wire on a fence of a prison to prevent unauthorized access
RF2K290KD–Barbed wire fence with snow
RMG1AF67–Ruins of former officers quarters at a gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Peninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, Russian Federation
RMEC28BW–Soviet concentration camps. Huge graveyards were full of stakes with plates where the only identification on the tomb. Latvia.
RF2RMTYWF–Barbed wire fence with snow - black and white photo
RM2BNN533–Vandalized Stalin statue in the Graveyard of Fallen Monuments in Moscow Russia
RM2JPDEAW–Soviet dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn speaking at a meeting of the AFL-CIO in Washington, D.C., delivering his Warning to the West speech on June 30, 1975. (USA)
RM2BG2PKK–Prisoners of Soviet gulag. USSR. Circa 1936-1937
RMBGPJMT–Ground level view of the deserted Stalin era gulag buildings from the Salekhard Igarka Railway in northern Siberia.
RF2FM5DJX–Close-up of a rusty barbed wire fence surrounding a detention, concentration and extermination camp, focus in the background, black and white
RF2HCNXRR–PERM KRAI, RUSSIA - JULY 1, 2018: Exhibit in the Museum of the History of Political Repression Perm-36 Gulag Museum , Russia
RFKNFNDN–In Siberia, the city of Vikhorevka remembers the victims of the gulag camps (Ozerlag) which built the BAM section between Taichet and Bratsk.
RF2TDD4D4–Monument to the Fallen and Murdered in the East - Warsaw, Poland.
RF2PHW1AB–Russia, Magadan, Church Of The Nativity, travel landmark vector illustration
RM2CBW9TN–Tourists in front of the monument to a mammoth at the entrance of Salekhard, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia
RM2X14MWR–EVACUATION OF POLISH CIVILIANS FROM THE SOVIET UNION TO PERSIA, 1942 - New clothes, issued by the American and British Red Cross, are tried on by an elderly woman and found quite satisfactory. When Poland was attacked by the Nazis on 1 September, the Red Army also invaded on 17 September 1939. As a result of the Soviet invasion enormous numbers of Polish soldiers and civilians were deported by the NKVD to various locations in the Soviet Union; many ended up in the Gulag camps in Siberia, others were send to exile in Kazakhstan.After the German invasion of the Soviet Union and signing of the Si
RMCXY4MM–Novelist Sofi Oksanen being interviewed after the publication of her book 'When the Pigeons Disappeared'.
RMB255PJ–July 10, 2008 - Monument to the victims of the Soviet invasion of Poland on Sept 17, 1939 in the Polish capital of Warsaw.
RM2B0WCTT–Abandoned ruins of the wooden bridge over the Middle Sakukan River in the Kodar Mountains in the Transbaikal Region in Siberia, Russia. The bridge was build by the politician prisoners of Soviet regime in the late 1940s as a part on transport communications to the Mramorny camp of the Gulag forced-labour camp system located in the altitude about 2,150 metres (7,000 ft) above sea level. The camp was established in January 1949 to serve the nearby Uranium mine. The politician prisoners of Soviet regime used to work here in the extremely hard conditions. The camp was closed in October 1951 becaus
RM2AYAF4X–barbed wire on a fence of a prison to prevent unauthorized access
RMR0G946–Commemorative plaque next to the house where Czechoslovak general Sergej Vojcechovský (Sergei Wojciechowski) was arrested by the SMERSH on 12 May 1945 in Konviktská Street in Prague, Czech Republic. Sergej Vojcechovský was a military commander in the White Army during the Russian Civil War and then lived in exile in Czechoslovakia and served in the Czechoslovak Army. He was arrested by the SMERSH (Soviet military counterintelligence service) and sent to Moscow shortly after the Red Army liberated Prague in May 1945. He died in prison on 7 April 1951 in the Ozerlag Labour Camp of the Gulag in T
RMG1AF6A–Ruins of former officers quarters at a gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Peninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, Russian Federation
RF2K290KC–Barbed wire fence with snow
RF2GMMMCA–Barbed wire fence with snow - black and white photo
RF2K2875A–Barbed wire fence with snow
RMH3EPA2–Monument to the Fallen and Murdered in the East.
RM2BG2PWR–Prisoners of Soviet gulag. USSR. Circa 1936-1937
RMBGPJEB–Ground level view of the deserted Stalin era gulag buildings from the Salekhard Igarka Railway in northern Siberia.
RF2FM5YTA–Close-up of a rusty barbed wire fence surrounding a detention, concentration and extermination camp, focus in the background, color, vertical
RF2HCNY2G–PERM KRAI, RUSSIA - JULY 1, 2018: Exhibit in the Museum of the History of Political Repression Perm-36 Gulag Museum , Russia
RFKNFNDJ–In Siberia, the city of Vikhorevka remembers the victims of the gulag camps (Ozerlag) which built the BAM section between Taichet and Bratsk.
RMAPBK8M–Russian books on sale at a second-hand bookstore in Davis Square Somerville Massachusetts
RF2CBW9XD–Monument to a mammoth at the entrance of Salekhard, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia
RM2X2FGT2–EVACUATION OF POLISH CIVILIANS FROM THE SOVIET UNION TO PERSIA, 1942 - The Kowalski family resting during their journey on foot from the Soviet Union over the mountains into Persia. When Poland was attacked by the Nazis on 1 September, the Red Army also invaded on 17 September 1939. As a result of the Soviet invasion enormous numbers of Polish soldiers and civilians were deported by the NKVD to various locations in the Soviet Union; many ended up in the Gulag camps in Siberia, others were send to exile in Kazakhstan.After the German invasion of the Soviet Union and signing of the Sikorski-Mays
RMCXY4T1–Novelist Sofi Oksanen signing her book 'When the Pigeons Disappeared'.
RMB25CT7–July 10, 2008 - Monument to the victims of the Soviet invasion of Poland on Sept 17, 1939 in the Polish capital of Warsaw.
RF2BTBDNF–Rusty Piece of Old Machinery Lies Among Rubbish Outside the Abandoned Fish Factory on Olkhon Island, Lake Baikal, Russia
RMR0G90R–Commemorative plaque next to the house where Czechoslovak general Sergej Vojcechovský (Sergei Wojciechowski) was arrested by the SMERSH on 12 May 1945 in Konviktská Street in Prague, Czech Republic. Sergej Vojcechovský was a military commander in the White Army during the Russian Civil War and then lived in exile in Czechoslovakia and served in the Czechoslovak Army. He was arrested by the SMERSH (Soviet military counterintelligence service) and sent to Moscow shortly after the Red Army liberated Prague in May 1945. He died in prison on 7 April 1951 in the Ozerlag Labour Camp of the Gulag in T
RMG1AF5R–Ruins of former officers quarters at a gulag prison near Amguema, Chukchi Peninsula, Magadon Region, Siberia, Russian Federation
RF2GG70WD–Barbed wire fence with snow - black and white photo
RF2K28735–Barbed wire fence with snow
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