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  2. 1919 Soviet invasion of Ukraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../1919_Soviet_invasion_of_Ukraine

    2 January – 31 August 1919. Location. Ukraine. Result. Soviet defeat. Hryhorivshchyna and Makhnovshchyna rebel against Soviet command. Whites with the help from Allies win the battle for the Donbas, successfully capture Kyiv and advance on Moscow. Poland occupies Volhynia and Galicia (Eastern Lesser Poland)

  3. Ukrainian–Soviet War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian–Soviet_War

    The Ukrainian–Soviet War [1] (Ukrainian: радянсько-українська війна, romanized: radiansko-ukrainska viina) is the term commonly used in post-Soviet Ukraine for the events taking place between 1917 and 1921, nowadays regarded essentially as a war between the Ukrainian People's Republic and the Bolsheviks (Russian SFSR and Ukrainian SSR).

  4. Operation Bagration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Bagration

    The advancing Soviets found cities destroyed, villages depopulated, and much of the population killed or deported by the occupiers. To show the outside world the magnitude of the victory, some 57,000 German prisoners, taken from the encirclement east of Minsk, were paraded through Moscow: even marching quickly and twenty abreast, they took 90 ...

  5. Battle of Kiev (1943) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kiev_(1943)

    Battle of Kiev (1943) Kiev after its liberation in November 1943. The Second Battle of Kiev was a part of a much wider Soviet offensive in Ukraine known as the Battle of the Dnieper involving three strategic operations by the Soviet Red Army and one operational counterattack by the Wehrmacht, which took place between 3 November and 22 December ...

  6. Battle of Kiev (1941) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kiev_(1941)

    The battle took place over a large area in eastern Ukraine, with Kiev being the focal point of Soviet defenses, and of the German encirclement. Adolf Hitler , the leader of the Third Reich , described the Battle of Kiev as "the biggest battle in the history of the world", while Joseph Goebbels , the German minister of propaganda , called it ...

  7. Dissolution of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissolution_of_the_Soviet...

    The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was formally dissolved as a sovereign state and subject of international law on 26 December 1991 by Declaration № 142-Н of the Soviet of the Republics of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union. [1] It also brought an end to the Soviet Union's federal government and General Secretary (also ...

  8. Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_Soviet_Socialist...

    The natural-gas industry flourished as well, and Ukraine became the site of the first post-war production of gas in the Soviet Union; by the 1960s Ukraine's biggest gas field was producing 30 percent of the USSR's total gas production. The government was not able to meet the people's ever-increasing demand for energy consumption, but by the ...

  9. Battle of Kiev (1918) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kiev_(1918)

    t. e. The Battle of Kiev of January 1918 was a Bolshevik military operation of Petrograd and Moscow Red Guard formations directed to capture the capital of Ukraine. The operation was led by Red Guards commander Mikhail Artemyevich Muravyov as part of the Soviet expeditionary force against Kaledin and the Central Council of Ukraine.