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Editorial Standing in front of a map of India, Mrs
- 2022-01-28
- 1
Editorial The 26th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
- 2020-03-02
- 1
Editorial Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924). Russian Marxist revolutionary and communist politician. Monument built by Pavel Bondarenko in 1957 for the 40th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution. Sevastopol. Ukraine.
- 2019-11-27
- 5
Editorial Albania. Tirana. The pyramid: International Center of Culture. Formerly known as "Enver Hoxha Museum." This pyramid-shaped structure was designed by the daughter and son-in-law of the late communist leader Enver Hoxha. Inside.
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924). Russian Marxist revolutionary and communist politician. Monument. Kerch. Ukraine.
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial SUAREZ, Adolfo (Cebreros, 1932). Spanish politician. The king Juan Carlos I of Spain appointed him as Prime Minister in 1976. It legalized the Communist Party (1976) and formed the UCD beeing the Spain Prime Minister in 1979. Adolfo Suarez during and ...
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial House of Terror Museum. Dedicated to the fascist and communist regimes in Budapest at 20th century. Located in the old police station. Exterior. Budapest. Hungary.
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial House of Terror Museum. Dedicated to the fascist and communist regimes in Budapest at 20th century. Located in the old police station. Exterior. Budapest. Hungary.
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial Sachsenhausen concentration camp. 1936-1945. Cell in which was prisoner Lambert Horn (1899-1939), member of the German Communist Party. Oranienburg. Germany.
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial Montenegro. Risan. Communist Monument.
- 2019-09-16
- 1
Editorial Stamps showing Karl Marx (1818-1883), German politician and philosopher, and the covers of his main books. On left 'The Communist Manifesto' and on right 'The Capital'.
- 2019-07-02
- 1
Editorial Karl Marx (1818-1883) was an influential philosopher, political economist, and revolutionary organizer of the International Workingmen's Association. While Marx addressed a wide range of issues, he is most famous for his analysis of history in terms of...
- 2019-07-02
- 3
Editorial Karl Marx (1818-1883). German Philosopher, political economist and communist. Portrait. Engraving by Capuz. La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana, 1872. Colored.
- 2019-07-02
- 1
Editorial Karl Marx (1818-1883). German Philosopher, political economist and communist. Portrait. Engraving by Capuz. La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana, 1872.
- 2019-07-02
- 2
Editorial Electrification - pivot in the building of the communist economy.
- 2019-05-28
- 1
Editorial The 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
- 2019-05-28
- 1
Editorial Summit Conference, Geneva,1955. Nikita S. Khrushchev,First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party, shares a joke with Soviet Minister of Defense Marshall Zhukov.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Budapest revisited 42 years after the Hungarian Revolution. Children play on Koeztarsasag Square. One one side of the square stood the former head-quarters of the feared Secret Police of Communist Hungary. See 56-09-11 / 20,56-09-14 / 13,56-09-09 / 10A.
- 2019-05-16
- 3
Editorial The leaders of the GDR (German Democratic Republic) conspicously displayed: Walter Ulbricht, Secretary of the Communist Party, Wilhelm Pieck, President GDR and Otto Grotewohl, Prime-minister, Leipzig,1959.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial In Rostock, people hurry past the Communist Party premises; on the housefront pictures of Communist dignitaries and the banner " Long live the German Democratic Republic, the first workers-and farmers' state in the history of Germany". Rostoc...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Children in a school in Dresden give the sign of allegiance. They wear the red scarves of the " pioneers", the Communist Youth organization. The class is a wood-craft class. Dresden.1959.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Berlin remains free. May 1st, West-Berlin, 1959.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Anastas Mikoyan, member of the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party, visits Washington. Mikoyan and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. Washington,1959.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial May 1st parade in Berlin-East: Walter Ulbricht, First Secretary of the East-German Communist Party, on the grandstand.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial May 1st-parade 1957 in East-Berlin. On the grandstand, right, Walter Ulbricht, First Secretary of the German Communist Party (SED), left Walter Mittag, member of the Central Comittee. East Berlin,1957.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Polish elections 1957: Party Secretary Wladyslaw Gomulka casting his vote in a Warsaw polling-station. As opposed to other Communist dignitaries, Gomulka came without police escort and waited in line with other voters. His wife, with hat and fur-collar...
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Polish elections 1957: Leaving the polling station, Secretary General of the Polish Communist Party Wladyslav Gomulka is greeted and applauded by well-wishers. The crowd accompanied Gomulka and his wife all the way back to their apartment house. Warsaw...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Party-secretary of the Polish Communist Party Wladyslav Gomulka addressing a meeting of the Sejm, the Polish parliament. Warsaw,1957.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Wladyslaw Gomulka, Secretary General of the Polish Communist Party,1957.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Poland's Prime Minister Josef Cyrankievicz and the Secretary-General of the Polish Communist Party Wladyslav Gomulka waiting for Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-lai at Warsaw airport. Freezing weather caused their eyes to water. Warsaw,1957.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Membership meeting of an agricultural cooperative in Karzag in the Hungarian Puszta, the vast plain in the East of the country. Members elected officials and presidents, but voting was usually along lines prescribed by the Communist Party. Karzag,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial On a suburban streetcar station in Budapest, the letters " MSZMP", " Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party" stand for an anti-stalinist party founded on October 31, 1956 by members of the Hungarian Communist Party, under the leadership...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial On a Budapest factory wall, the letters " MSZMP", " Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party" stand for an anti-stalinist party founded on October 31, 1956 by members of the Hungarian Communist Party, under the leadership of Imre Nagy and...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial On December 31,1956,after the end of the Revolution and the victory of the Communist government, the Chinese Ambassador pays a courtesy call on members of the Hungarian Parliament. Budapest,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Aftermath of the Hungarian Revolution: A lonely cannon in the snow at Dunapentele (Sztalinvaros), the pride of Communist Hungary's heavy industry and yet a center of Revolution in October and November 1956. Dunapentele,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23,1956. It was crushed by Soviet tanks and artillery after days of street-fighting. Insurgents stormed the Soviet bookstore " Horizon" in Kossuth Lajos street and ...
- 2019-05-16
- 3
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally on October 23,1956. It was crushed by Soviet troops after days of street-fighting. Crowds try to catch " Szabad Nep", the former Communist Party paper whose editors joined the Revolution ...
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial Hungarian Revolution 1956: The Soviet bookstore in Vaci ut is stormed by the population who set fire to Communist propaganda material. An enthusiast recites poems by Sandor Petoefi, poet of the Hungarian uprising of 1848. Budapest, 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23, 1956. It was crushed by Soviet tanks and artillery after days of street-fighting. The insurgents have hung the Hungarian national flag in a window of the HQ of AVH, the...
- 2019-05-16
- 7
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23,1956. It was crushed by Soviet troops after days of streetfighting. In front of the just-conquered Budapest Headquarters of the Communist Hungarian Worker's Party.
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23,1956. It was crushed by Soviet tanks and artillery after days of street-fighting. In front of the Budapest Communist Party Headquarters, passers-by burn pictures of Party ...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23,1956. It was crushed by Soviet tanks and artillery after days of street-fighting. A painter paints the Hungarian coat of arms on a truck, to replace hammer and sickle, the...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial The Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23,1956. It was crushed by Soviet tanks and artillery after days of street-fighting. A Budapest street with flags from which hammer and sickle,the Communist symbols,have been...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Nova Huta steelmill near Cracow was Communist Poland's industrial flagship and pride. A group of workers during lunch hour. Nova Huta, Poland,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Sunday gloom in Nova Huta, an industrial town built after World War II. The Nova Huta steelmill was the pride and flagship of the heavy industry in Communist Poland. Nova Huta,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The first "International Jazz Festival" in Sopot, including two ba...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The first "International Jazz Festival" in Sopot, including two ba...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial A funeral procession winds its way though a rain-swept landscape. Communist Poland has remained strongly Catholic eben under Communism. Poland,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The first "International Jazz Festival" in Sopot, including two ba...
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial In a small,experimental puppet theatre,two young poets, Miron Bialoszewski and Lech Stefanski,performed their morbid,expressionist plays which were well attended and no longer branded "bourgeois deviations" by the Communist government.Warsaw,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The first "International Jazz Festival" in Sopot, including two ba...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Early in the century, Lenin spent a few years in Poronin near Zakopane, Poland. The former pub where the first meeting of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party was held, was converted into a museum. Lenin statue in the garden of the Muse...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial In 1956, Poland was the only country in the Communist world which permitted jews to emigrate to Israel. Daily crowds in front of the Israeli legation, waiting for visas. Warsaw,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Edward Gierek, Secretary General of the Polish Communist Party, addressing a meeting in Bytom.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Nova Huta steelmill near Cracow was Communist Poland's industrial flagship and pride. A group of workers sitting near the Martin steel plant, built by Communist East Germany. Nova Huta, 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Early in the century, Lenin spent a few years in Poronin near Zakopane, Poland. The former pub where the first meeting of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party was held, was converted into a museum. A little girl looks at the Lenin bust....
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial First election of a beauty queen in Communist Poland. In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The contes...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial First election of a beauty-queen in Communist Poland. The contest for the title of 'Miss Sopot' drew such huge crowds that the event had to be moved to the roof the casino of that once elegant sea-side resort. Sopot,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial First election of a beauty-queen in Communist Poland. The contest for the title of 'Miss Sopot' drew such huge crowds that it had to be moved to the roof of the casino of that once elegant sea-side resort. The beribboned winner. Sopot,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 3
Editorial First election of a beauty queen in Communist Poland. In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The contes...
- 2019-05-16
- 3
Editorial First election of a beauty queen in Communist Poland. In 1956, the Sopot Jazz festival in Poland helped redefine the country's cultural landscape allowing jazz to be played openly despite it having been banned under the Communist regime. The contes...
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial First election of a beauty-queen in Communist Poland. The contest for the title of 'Miss Sopot' drew such huge crowds that it had to be moved to the roof of the casino of that once elegant sea-side resort. Sopot,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 3
Editorial Jan Werich, the comic and cabaret actor is an institu-tion in Prague and enjoys a fool's freedom in Communist Czechoslovakia. Here he spoofs a party official who is surrounded by his own portraits. Prague,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Waiting for a tram, a man in Prague reads " Pravda", the Soviet Communist Party newspaper.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Siroky, Czechoslovak Prime Minister, greeting arrving guests. Next to him Zdenek Fierlinger and Antonin Novotny, Secretary General of the Communist Party. Prague, 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial The agricultural cooperative of Dolni Chabri,CSSR, holds its half-year meeting in the local,state-owned pub.Members were dissatisfied and wanted to leave,but an organizer from the Communist Party accused them of falsifying work-sheets and told them to ...
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. At the entrance to a cooperative in the Hungarian puszta, the large plain, names of outstanding workers and their records are listed on huge boards.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. Discussion in an agricultural cooperative in Hungary.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Meeting of the Peoples'Front executive in the spring of 1956. Secretary General of the Hungarian Communist Party Matyas Rakosi talks to Protestant bishop Albert Bereczky.
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. Harvest on a cooperative farm on the puszta, the Hungarian pl...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Daily Life in Communist Hungary: a couple strolls along the Danube. Budapest, summer 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Imre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Imre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, in his home on Orso-street. Prime Minister from 1953 to 1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister again in the early days of the Revolution. When the Revolution was...
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial Imre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Meeting of a communal agricultural commission under the chairmanship of the Secretary of the Communist Party. On the wall a portrait of Party Secretary Matyas Rakosi, ousted and exiled to the Soviet Union in the spring of 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Andras Hegedues, Prime Minister in Communist Hungary (1955-1956, right), talking to Isztvan Dobi, former Prime Minister amd member of the Central Committee of the Hungarian Communist Party.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary,most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives.Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market.A farm-couple selling mushrooms. Hungary,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Hungarian Communism, Protestants, Catholics and Jews were fairly free to exercise their religion, but members of the high clergy were persecuted. A meeting, in Parliament, between members of the Communist government and religious leaders. Budapes...
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial A stormy meeting of the Hungarian Writers'Association showed the cracks in the Communist system: Istvan Antos, member of the Communist Party's economic committee, explained the new Five-year-Plan and noted down criti-cism. Next to him Peter Veres, pres...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. A short rest during work in the fields in the village of Karzag.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial A discussion with the Communist party-secretary in a Puszta-village.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. Farmwomen offering chicken and geese in Budapest.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. A boy selling heads of cabbage on a Budapest street.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. A couple in their farm house.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. Harvest on a cooperative farm on the puszta, the Hungarian pl...
- 2019-05-16
- 4
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Hungarian Revolution 1956: Matyas Rakosi, First Secretary of the Hungarian Communist Party, during a meeting of Peoples'Front executive. After his fall from power in the spring of 1956, he went into exile in the Soviet Union. Rakosi died in Moscow in 1...
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Life in Communist Hungary: A fashion show in Budapest in the summer of 1956, prior to the October Revolution. Budapest,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Daily Life in Communist Hungary: A shoeshine-boy in the streets of Budapest, summer 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. A farmwoman sells hand-made lace on the market. Kalocsa,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into large agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and sales on the free market. Under a festive welcome-gate of the cooperative, a herd of cows ret...
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Life in Communist Hungary: A fashion show in Budapest in the summer of 1956, prior to the October Revolution. Budapest,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Daily Life in Communist Hungary: Budapest was the most elegant city in the Communist world. New, Western-style elegance in a shopwindow in Vaci-ut, summer 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 3
Editorial Daily Life in Communist Hungary: a newspaper stall in downtown Budapest.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Daily Life in Communist Hungary: Officers stroll along " Halasz-bastion" (Fisherman's Bastion), Budapest, summer 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Under Communist rule in Hungary, most farms were turned into huge agricultural cooperatives. Private farming was restricted to small plots for family-use and private sale on the free market. Farmers and their children returning from a farmers' market.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial Life in Communist Hungary: A fashion show in Budapest in the summer of 1956, prior to the October Revolution. Budapest,1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
Editorial Daily Life in Communist Hungary: Hungarian ladies in a Budapest coffeehouse, Budapest, summer 1956.
- 2019-05-16
- 2
Editorial The Petoefi-Club, named after the hero-poet of the Hungarian Revolution 1848, was a meeting place for intellectuals critical of the Communist Party-line. On June 27, 1956, a discussion was held on the press-and information policy of the Geroe-government.
- 2019-05-16
- 1
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