Memorial of Glory (Tiraspol)
Memorial of Glory is a city memorial located on Suvorov Square of Tiraspol, the capital of Transnistria, an unrecognized breakaway region of Moldova. It commemorates the Veterans and the dead of the Great Patriotic War, the Soviet-Afghan War, and the Transnistria War.
History
Early years
In the 1920s, a square was located on the site of the Memorial of Glory. The commissioner of the cavalry brigade Grigory Kotovsky was buried there during the Russian Civil War after the liberation of Tiraspol from the White Guard. The decision to create a memorial complex in Tiraspol was made in the early 1970s. The construction of the memorial was very popular within the city. The construction of the memorial saw the participation of all organizations, enterprises and educational institutions of the city, with civil servants such as office workers assisting every day after work for 5 hours in the construction of the memorial. The construction process was at that time was headed by Hero of Socialist Labor I. D. Dyachenko. The authors of the project were sculptors Leonid Fishbein and Garry Faif. The complex was opened on Defender of the Fatherland Day in 1972. That same day, a solemn ceremony of the reburial of Red Army soldiers and officers at the complex was held. When the Memorial of Glory was opened, employees of the Tiraspol Museum of History and Local Lore wrote about 900 letters to the relatives and friends of the soldiers buried at the memorial.Later developments
The T-34-85 tank erected at the memorial was transported from Hungary in April 1945. During the Second World War, it was a combat vehicle of Lieutenant Boris Sergeev, who served with his father, Vasily Antonovich Sergeev, a prominent Colonel in the Red Army.Boris and his crew died under the Budapest Offensive and the machine was transported back to the territory of the Soviet Union, according to the request of his father. Under it is stored a capsule with soil brought from the city of Volgograd. The last burials at the Glory Memorial were held in 1992. Among them was Nikolai Ostapenko, the head of the Slobodzeysky District Council of People's Deputies, who died on 30 April 1992 in an attack. Another part of the memorial is a monument opened in 1995 dedicated to the soldiers who died in the Soviet-Afghan War.