Little pieces of Soviet history. Azerbaijan.

in Silver Bloggers8 days ago

You see them for sale all over the former Soviet Republics, Azerbaijan was no different; here is just a small selection of the literally 1,000's on sale in Baku.

Badges, or in Russian, znachki, have a history in Soviet lives. In Pre Soviet times,the 19th century, they were given to workers as a reward for work done. ( keep the peasants happy, give them a badge, you know the tsarist regime was as bad if not worse than Soviet times, but shhh! never speak against the monarchy)

Come the Soviet period and their emphasis on the use of znachki shifted from rewarding work done to acting as souvenirs of local and national celebrations.

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Collecting became a popular hobby, they were issued for all sorts of events: smaller badges and less fancy badges to celebrate maybe a factory opening, or production records beaten; through to larger more elaborate ones to commemorate such things as major anniversaries such as The October Revolution,( bye bye inbred monarchy) or the part a city played in The Great Patriotic War.

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Easy to collect, easy to wear and show off, just pin to a hat or banner or a lapel, often seen as a badge of honour, displaying an individual's experiences of life, from ones school, to their workplace.

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They were also seen as a progressive achievement in the military, where a medal was not deemed appropriate for day to day activities and service, so an, "expert riflemen", "explosives expert" through to drivers and cooks, they all had their own znachki.

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They also became collectable souvenirs, hotels would sell them, as well as museums, sports stadia, et al the list goes on.

When you see the mayday parades in Moscow and see all the officers and men with their chest laden with medals, and think "fuck me , he has seen some action" Do not be fooled, medals were given out by the shed load, a lot to commemorate anniversaries, not for valour on the battlefield.

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It is all smoke and mirrors, low pay, low morale poor conditions, give em a medal that will shut them up

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Slava Ukraini

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I'm sure the peasants people, aren't/ weren't fooled by the regime's wasteful expenditure.
As you say, things were possibly worse under the monarchy! Decisions influenced by the crazy Rasputin's hold over the Tsarina led to bad political appointments, but how could the Tzar not see the horrific suffering of his people!
The murder of him and his family was abhorrent, but the silence and apathy of their European cousins when their lives were in danger, equally so.
Many so-called democratic governments are no better either, especially here in South Africa!
At least these badges led to a hobby for the people. That is quite a collection!

I have visited the place where the Romanovs were wiped out, in Yekaterinburg, it is like a shrine to a lot of russians, they now seem to be revered and worshipped.

centuries of inbreeding weakens the gene pool, we still have those vile windsors as our monarchy, it will never end.

Does democracy live anywhere? the control lies with hidden faces within the wef the who and the cabals who control them. It is all one big game, like risk or monopoly.

It's weird how one finds Russians worshipping the imperial family!
The inbreeding of the royals is just awful.

That visit must have been quite something; I was fascinated with the story of Anastasia; the book The Riddle of Anna Anderson by Peter Kurth is fascinating and very convincing! (Yes, I'm a conspiracy theorist)

We are not conspiracy theorists...we are truth seekers.

It is also strange that some people I have chatted too across the former Soviet Union still worship Stalin too!

I give upvote and comment. Better or worse than medal?

They really show how personal stories and national history were intertwined, all pinned onto a small piece of metal. History really comes alive in the little things!

yed indeed lovely little trinkets of social history

... and think "fuck me, he has seen some action" Do not be fooled, medals were given out by the shed load...

Exactly—we need you to open our eyes, haha… Cheers, comrade! 😅

LOL you to comrade x