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History class is going to be much harder in 2000 years
Imam Hussein shrine in Karbala, Iraq
Sen tembel değilsin onlar çok çalışıyor
Azeri and turkish soldiers near Baku during Battle for the city in 1918.
Cossacks with British Armored Cars Arrive in Baku
An Austin armored car of the sort provided by the British to Bicherakov’s forces.
July 5 1918, Baku–Dunsterville’s mission to stop the Turkish advance east into the Caucasus and Persia had made little material progress so far, but he had made some unlikely allies in his time in Persia. Among these was a group of Cossacks under Lazar Bicherakov, essentially the last forces of what had once been a considerable Russian military presence in Persia. Dunsterville provided Bicherakov with money and with several armored cars. In early July, with Dunsterforce now having enough British troops to cover northwestern Persia, Bicherakov departed for Baku. On paper, at least, Bicherakov had embraced the Bolshevik revolution, and had even already been appointed as the overall commander of Bolshevik forces around Baku before his arrival there on July 5.
Bicherakov’s 1200 well-trained men and four armored cars were desperately needed in Baku. The Turks were advancing through the Republic of Armenia as per the terms of their treaty with that country, and were raising the new “Army of Islam” for an advance on Baku, which had already defeated local Armenian forces in a series of battles west of the city.
Today in 1917: Brief Manchu Restoration in China Today in 1916: Guerrilla Attacks Begin in Occupied Serbia Today in 1915: More Desperate Italian Attacks Along the Isonzo Today in 1914: Kaiser Wilhelm Pledges “Germany’s Full Support” to Austria
Sources include: Roger Ford, Eden to Armageddon.
Ziba Ganiyeva. Sniper School, 1941
Ziba Pasha qizi Ganiyeva ( 20 August 1923, Shamakhi, Azerbaijan – 2010, Moscow) was an Azerbaijani philologist and a former World War II female sniper (Northwestern Front, 3rd Moscow Communist Rifle Division), accounted for 21 kills and awarded with the Medal For the Defence of Moscow, Combat Order of the Red Banner and the Order of the Red Star.
Child of an Azerbaijani father and an Uzbek mother, in 1937, Ganiyeva was admitted to dance courses at the newly established Uzbek Philharmonia. In 1940, she moved to Moscow to enter the Russian Academy of Theatre Arts, but voluntarily enlisted in the army on 7 November 1941, shortly after the opening of the Eastern Front of World War II.
During the war, Ganiyeva was a radio operator and a spy who crossed the front line 16 times. She participated in the Battle of Moscow. Ziba’s military service was discontinued after she was heavily wounded during the reconnaissance operation in Moscow suburbs in 1942. She was carried off the battlefield and subsequently spent 11 months in a hospital.
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