- Coat of arms of the Soviet Union
The state
coat of arms of theSoviet Union ( _ru. Государственный герб СССР "Gosuarstvennyiy gerb SSSR" [ _uk. Державний герб СРСР; _be. Дзяржаўны герб СССР; _kk. ССРО мемлекеттік елтаңбасы; _lt. TSRS Valstybinis herbas; _lv. PSRS valsts ģerbonis; _et. NSVL riigivapp] ) was adopted in 1923 and was used until the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991. Although it technically is an emblem rather than a coat of arms, since it doesn't follow heraldic rules, in Russian it is called "герб" (transliteration: "gerb"), the word used for a traditional coat of arms.History
First version (1923-1936)
The project of the first version of the coat of arms was accepted on July 6, 1923 by the 2nd session of the
Central Executive Committee (CIK) of theUSSR and the version was completed on September 22 of that year.cite journal | last = Bolotina | first = S. | year = 1983 | month = November | title = How Our State Emblem Was Created | journal =Nauka i Zhizn | pages = pp. 20–24 | id = ISSN|0028-1263 | language = Russian] This design was fixed in the1924 Soviet Constitution :"The State Emblem of the USSR is composed of a sickle and a hammer on a globe depicted in the rays of the sun and framed by ears of wheat, with the inscription "Workers of All Countries, Unite!" in six languages - Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Georgian, Armenian, Turko-Tatar. At the top of the Emblem is a five-pointed star."econd version (1936-1946)
According to the
1936 Soviet Constitution , the USSR consisted of eleven republics. Hence the major new version's difference from the previous one were eleven ribbons bearing USSR State Motto inscriptions in eleven languages.Third version (1946-1956)
The number of republics in the USSR became 16 shortly before the
Great Patriotic War , but the coat of arms was changed to reflect this only after the war. By a Decision ofPresidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of June 26, 1946, all 16 constituent republics were represented on the coat of arms. The USSR State Motto was inscribed on 16 ribbons in 16 languages (Estonian, Latvian,
Lithuanian, Moldavian, Finnish languages were added to the previous version). Inscriptions in Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Uzbek, Tajik, Kazakh, Kyrgyz languages were updated due to the transfer from theLatin alphabet toCyrillic alphabet of respective republics.Fourth version (1956-1991)
In 1956
Karelo-Finnish SSR was transformed intoKarelo-Finnish ASSR and soon this was reflected on the USSR coat of arms. By a Decision of Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of September 12, 1956, a ribbon bearing the USSR State Motto in Finnish was removed.ru icon [http://www.heraldicum.narod.ru/russia/ussr.htm Герб СССР] ]One more minor change was introduced into the USSR State Motto in
Belarusian language by a Decision of the Presidium of Supreme Soviet of the USSR of April 1, 1958.Description
The coat of arms shows the traditional Soviet emblems of the
hammer and sickle and the Red Star over a globe, and two wreaths ofwheat covered by theUSSR State motto ("Workers of the World, Unite!") in theofficial language s of the Soviet Republics, in the reverse order they were mentioned in theConstitution of the Soviet Union .Each Soviet Republic (SSR) and Autonomous Soviet Republic (ASSR) had its own coat of arms, largely inspired by the coat of arms of the Union.
Footnotes
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