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    Ferdinand

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    Posts posted by Ferdinand

    1. Here is his wartime record card. Because he died in combat, no other record card was written up after the war.

      Translation:

      Record card

      Last name: Mamoshin

      First name: Ivan

      Patronymic: Ivanovich

      Rank: Senior Lieutenant

      Duty position and unit: Deputy battalion commander in the 69th Mechanized Brigade

      Awarded:

      - Order of the Red Banner - By Order nr. 066/N of 29 April 1944 - For combat with the German invaders

      Home address: 3rd Guards Tank Army, 1st Ukrainian Front

      Personal particulars

      1. Year of birth: 1913

      2. Place of birth:

      3. Party membership and period: Not a member

      4. Nationality: Russian

      5. Period of service in the Red Army:

      6. Awarding data is located in file nr.:

      Awards presented:

      - Order of the Red Banner - Nr. 107213 - Temporary certificate nr. V-046946

      The rest after dinner. :cheers:

    2. This very nice Red Banner (S/N 107213) was originally on a 5-sided suspension, but has been converted to screwback. It was awarded on 29 April 1944 to Senior Lieutenant Ivan Ivanovich Mamoshin. I'm guessing the conversion was done by the recipient, perhaps to match his other screwback awards, or maybe he did not want to wear his (only) order dangling from a piece of cloth. The modification is pretty obvious, so I don't think it was done by a seller to deceive, and I doubt it increases the value much. In any case, it is pretty neatly done.

      Sr. Lt. Mamoshin went MIA (propal bez vesti) on 4 February 1945 and was declared dead on 25 March 1945 (I think, because one of his service records gives this date as "pogib v boyu").

      Mamoshin also received a Red Star on 31 August 1944 and a Nevsky on 9 March 1945 (so posthumously).

      http://gmic.co.uk/uploads/monthly_01_2010/post-2048-1264180488.jpghttp://gmic.co.uk/uploads/monthly_01_2010/post-2048-12641804934.jpg

    3. Help translating the pencil writing on the OGPW doc would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance! :cheers:

      "Died in September" and "Nr. 2 Pugachev Street, apartment 11".

      This annotation was on the back of one. Help translating is again greatly appreciated!

      Also "Nr. 2 Pugachev Street, apartment 11".

      Last document in the group, for a hard-worker badge, awarded to their son?

      Yes, so it seems!

    4. All right then;

      - His Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky should be 2nd Class, not 1st Class.

      - Brezhnev never received the Medal for Distinguished Service in Guarding the State Border of the USSR.

      - The ribbons for his Medals for Valiant Labor in the GPW, Medal for Restoration of the Black Metallurgical Enterprises, 250 years Leningrad, and 1500 years Kiev are missing.

      And don't get me started on the foreign awards... ;)

    5. Who am I ?

      Georgi Ivanov Ivanov (Kakalov).

      What did I do of famous ?

      You were the first Bulgarian in space.

      Why did I change my name ?

      As soon as you entered the Soviet International Space Programme Intercosmos in 1978, you had to change your surname to Ivanov, because Kakalov occasionally had negative connotations in Russian.

      Which most prestigious Soviet award did I get, and when ?

      You became a Hero of the Soviet Union on 13 April 1979.

    6. I came across a Red Banner on eBay, very similar to mine. Same mint, slightly higher serial number, and also nicely conversed to screwback:

      - http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=180436245824

      It sold for $380, a slightly higher price than what normal Red Banners in this serial number range are selling for.

    7. It's really hard to make an accurate estimate of the serial numbers of the other awards. Echoes of War is our only lead, which doesn't contain awards to Mongolians, and I have not yet seen research on a Red Banner or so to a Mongolian. We could try to make a guess for the serial number range for the year 1971, but you would end up with a range spanning about 10,000 numbers.

      These Combat Merit Medals aren't serial numbered by the way.

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