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"Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin in Honor
"Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin in Honor
"Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin in Honor
"Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin in Honor

"Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin in Honor of the 30th Anniversary Defeat of Nazi Invaders. Real USSR Memorabilia. Comes with Certificate of Authenticity. Circulated Condition

Product ID : 43610294
4.7 out of 5 stars


Galleon Product ID 43610294
UPC / ISBN 637769699352
Shipping Weight 0.03 lbs
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Model
Manufacturer Captain Nikkiesavage’s Collectibles
Shipping Dimension 3.54 x 2.17 x 0.08 inches
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1,111

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"Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin in Honor Features

  • Comes with Certificate of Authenticity from Nikkiesavage

  • Tallest statue of a woman in the World Commemrating end of WW2.

  • Statue is in Stalingrad site of the most bloody battle in WW2 where out of millions of Nazi invaders only 5,000 survived.

  • Minted in 1985

  • Great for a WW2 memorabilia collector, reasonably large coin (about Kennedy 50 cent coin)


About "Motherland Calls" Stalingrad 1 Ruble Coin In Honor

This coin commemorates 30th anniversary end of WW2 and defeat of Nazi Germany in WW2. The coin pictures "Motherland Calls" Memorial Complex statue. The Motherland Calls (Russian: Родина-мать зовёт!, Homeland-Mother Is Calling!) is the compositional centre of the monument-ensemble "Heroes of the Battle of Stalingrad" on Mamayev Kurgan in Volgograd, Russia. It was designed by sculptor Yevgeny Vuchetich and structural engineer Nikolai Nikitin, and declared the tallest statue in the world in 1967. It is the tallest statue in Europe and the tallest statue (excluding pedestal) of a woman in the world. The work of sculptor Yevgeny Vuchetich and engineer Nikolai Nikitin is an 85 metre figure of a woman stepping forward with a raised sword. The statue is an allegorical image of the Motherland, which calls on its sons and daughters to repulse the enemy and continue their further attack. The Motherland Calls is highly complex from an engineering point of view, due to its characteristic posture with a sword raised high in the right hand and the left hand extended in a calling gesture. The technology behind the hollow statue is based on a combination of prestressed concrete with wire ropes, a solution which can also be found in another work of Nikitin's, the Ostankino Tower in Moscow. The sculpture is hollow. Inside, the entire statue consists of separate cells or chambers, like rooms in a building. The concrete walls of the sculpture are 25–30 centimetres thick.[2] The construction of the monument was started in May 1959 and completed on 15 October 1967.[3] It was the tallest sculpture in the world at the time of creation. Restoration work on the main monument of the monument complex was done in 1972, when the sword was replaced by another entirely consisting of stainless steel.