2. leht 2-st
					
				
				Postitatud: 17 Juul, 2006 17:02
				Postitas Janka
				
Et siis mõni mees isegi mitu tükki neid saanud või?
 
			 
			
					
				
				Postitatud: 17 Juul, 2006 17:18
				Postitas marksman
				1 asi on saamine, a keegi võiks välja uurda ka põhjused, miks sai.
			 
			
					
				Tean suurepäraselt.....
				Postitatud: 17 Juul, 2006 17:20
				Postitas stilett
				Tean suurepäraselt, et nonsens likvideeriti.Aga, eks selle ordeni andmine Leonidile oli liig mis liig....Armee poliitosakonna ülemale sisuliselt, mida ta sõja ajal oli.
			 
			
					
				Re: Tean suurepäraselt.....
				Postitatud: 17 Juul, 2006 17:34
				Postitas OveT.
				stilett kirjutas:Aga, eks selle ordeni andmine Leonidile oli liig mis liig.....
 
Kes tegi? Ise tegi!
 
			 
			
					
				
				Postitatud: 17 Juul, 2006 17:50
				Postitas marksman
				just-just, Leonid ikka pigem võtts 

   palju tal neid tähekesi oli? 5??
ega eriti sellist kogust ei saadud muidu... 
a ikkagi olex huvitav neid saamispõhjusi teada
 
			 
			
					
				
				Postitatud: 17 Juul, 2006 17:57
				Postitas OveT.
				marksman kirjutas:a ikkagi olex huvitav neid saamispõhjusi teada
 
Mille eest: 
The names of the first three holders were announced on April 10 of 1944. These were marshals Georgy Zhukov, Alexander Vasilevsky and the Commander-in-Chief of the Soviet Armed Forces Josef Stalin.  They were all awarded for the liberation of Ukraine.  
Most of Orders were handed out in 1945. On March 30 Marshals Konstantin Rokossovsky and Ivan Konev were awarded the much touted distinction respectively for the liberation of Poland and the crossing of the Oder River. On April 26 Marshals Rodion Malinovsky and Fyodor Tolbukhin also received their Orders of Victory for the liberation of Hungary and Austria. 
On May 31 Marshal Leonid Govorov was added to the list in recognition of his role in the liberation of Estonia. Also on May 31 Marshals Zhukov and Vasilevsky received their second Victory Orders, one for taking Berlin and the other for crushing the German resistance in Koenigsberg, now Kaliningrad. On June 4 a Victory Order was handed to Marshal Semyon Timoshenko Stalin’s pre-war Defense Minister, and to the chief of Soviet Army’s military staff, General of the Army Alexei Antonov, the only holder of the Victory Order who didn’t happen to be a Marshal of the Soviet Union. On June 26 of 1945 Josef Stalin received his second Victory Order and Marshal Kirill Meterskov was awarded for the Soviet routing of  Japan’s Kwantung army in the far East. 
The Victory Order was awarded also to international leaders of the anti-Hitler coalition, among them the Commander in Chief of the Yugoslav People’s Liberation Army, General Josip Broz Tito, Marshal of Poland Michal Rolja-Zymersky, British Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery, US General of the Army Dwight Eisenhower and  King Mihai I of Romania. 30 years later the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was became the 17th recipient of the Victory Order even though his military achievements were “inconsistent with the status of the Order”.