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navy WW2 USSR BOOK estonia TALLINN NAVY NAVAL TRIBUTS

$ 7.91

Availability: 44 in stock
  • Condition: Very good, bit of storage wear.

    Description

    navy WW2 USSR BOOK estonia TALLINN NAVY NAVAL TRIBUTS
    OLD WW2 USSR SOVIET NAVY BOOK
    Admiral Tributs : biograficheskiĭ ocherk
    By V. I. Grinkevich and M. Korsunskii
    PRINTED IN TALLINN, ESTONIA, USSR 1980
    157 Pages - Hardcover (8 inches/ 21 cm tall)
    16 Pages of Photos (mostly portraits)
    Text in Russian - No English
    Condition: Very good, bit of storage wear.
    Biography of Vladimir Filippovich Tributs with some coverage of Estonia in WW2.
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    Vladimir Filippovich Tributs
    (Russian: Влади́мир Фили́ппович Три́буц) (1900 – 1977) was a Soviet naval commander and admiral from 1943.
    Tributs joined the Navy in 1918 and during the Russian Civil War participated in combat actions on the Volga and in the Caspian. Graduated and received his commission from M.V. Frunze Higher Naval School in 1926 and graduated from the Naval Academy in 1932. From 1932 to 1936 he served on ships of the Baltic Fleet (the Parizhskaya Kommuna and the Battleship Marat) and commanded the destroyer Yakov Sverdlov. From February 1938 to April 1939 Tributs served as the Chief of Staff of the Baltic Fleet and from April 1939 to 1947 he commanded it.
    As war approached, Tributs observed the growing evidence of hostile German activity with apprehension; in the summer of 1940, he "advanced Baltic Fleet headquarters from its historic seat at the Kronstadt fortress in Leningrad to the port of Tallinn, two hundred miles to the west" despite his worries about security problems and the difficulty of constructing a new base.[1] On June 19 he put the Baltic Fleet up to "Readiness No. 2" state, which meant fueling the ships and putting their crews on alert, and late on the evening of June 21 (the eve of the German invasion) he moved to "Readiness No. 1" state, which was fully operational.[2] On August 17, the defense of Leningrad was placed in his hands.
    A leading navy commander during the Siege of Leningrad, Tributs led the Soviet evacuation of Tallinn, organized military operations in defense of the ports of Kronstadt and Oranienbaum during 1941-1943, and arranged counterattacks by naval aircraft of the Baltic Fleet defending Leningrad from aerial bombing attacks. His active involvement in the defense of Leningrad helped to save the city from still more destruction, but failed to save the suburban palaces of the Tsars, such as the Peterhof Palace, from destruction by the Nazis.
    Tributs retired in February 1961 and, turning to military history after his retirement, he produced over 50 works including military histories of the Baltic Fleet and its operations during the Second World War.
    The Udaloy class destroyer Admiral Tributs is named after him.
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