- The Motherland Calls
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The Motherland Calls Soviet Union / Commonwealth of Independent States
The Motherland Calls in VolgogradFor heroes of the Battle of Stalingrad Unveiled 15 October 1967 Location 48°44′32.5″N 44°32′13″E / 48.742361°N 44.53694°E near Mamayev Kurgan, Volgograd Designed by Yevgeny Vuchetich, Nikolai Nikitin The Motherland Calls, (Russian: Родина-мать зовёт! Rodina Mat' Zovyot!), also called Mother Motherland, Mother Motherland Is Calling, simply The Motherland, or The Mamayev Monument, is a statue in Mamayev Kurgan in Volgograd, Russia commemorating the Battle of Stalingrad. It was designed by sculptor Yevgeny Vuchetich and structural engineer Nikolai Nikitin. Declared the largest statue in the world in 1967, it is the last non-religious statue to be declared the largest; every record holder since has been a Buddhism-related sculpture. Compared to the later higher statues, The Motherland Calls is significantly more 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 protruded in a calling gesture. The technology behind the statue is based on a combination of prestressed concrete with wire ropes structure, a solution which can be found also in another work of Nikitin's, the super-tall Ostankino Tower in Moscow.
Contents
Construction and dedication
When the memorial was dedicated in 1967 it was the tallest sculpture in the world, measuring 85 metres (279 feet) from the tip of its sword to the top of the plinth. The figure itself measures 52 metres (170 feet), and the sword 33 metres (108 feet). Two hundred steps, symbolizing the 200 days of the Battle of Stalingrad, lead from the bottom of the hill to the monument. The lead sculptor was Yevgeny Vuchetich, and the significant structural engineering challenges of the 7,900 tonnes (7,800 long tons; 8,700 short tons) of concrete[1] sculpture were handled by Nikolai Nikitin. The statue appears on both the current flag and coat of arms of Volgograd Oblast.
Sculpture name and translation
The repetitive wording in the title "Mother Motherland" does not exist in Russian: the word for "Motherland", "Родина", is derived from "birth" and can be literally translated as "birth place".
Sculpture model and inspiration
The model who posed for the statue, Valentina Izotova, a native of the city, is still recognized for her resemblance to the statue. She was recruited by Lev Maistrenko, an artist who was working on the memorial complex in the early 1960s.
According to some sources the statue was partially inspired by the Winged Victory of Samothrace,[citation needed] with somewhat more extended drapery. Marshal of the Soviet Union Vasily Ivanovich Chuikov is buried in the area of the monument, as is famous Soviet sniper Vasily Zaytsev, who killed 242 Axis soldiers in the battle of Stalingrad.
Structural problems
The statue is currently leaning due to groundwater level changes causing movement of the foundations; the leaning is rapidly getting worse.[1] The statue is not fixed to its foundations and is held in place only by its weight. It has moved by 20 centimetres and is not expected to be able to move much farther without collapsing. While local authorities deny that the statue is in danger, conservation and restoration works started in 2010. [2]
See also
- Socialist realism
- Mother Motherland, name for any of several huge statues in various cities of the former Soviet Union
- Worker and Kolkhoz Woman
- List of statues by height
Further reading
Scott W. Palmer, "How Memory was Made: The Construction of the Memorial to the Heroes of the Battle of Stalingrad", The Russian Review 68:3 (July 2009), 373-407.
Notes
- ^ a b http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8040471.stm BBC News (2009)
- ^ http://v1.ru/news/328742.html
External links
- Google Maps Satellite view of statue in Volgograd
- YouTube video of Родина-мать зовёт! ("Rodina Mat' Zovyot!")
- View from the top and inside
Records Preceded by
Tokyo Wan Kannon
56 m (183.7 ft)World's tallest statue
1967 –1989Succeeded by
Dai Kannon of Kita no Miyako park
88 m (289 ft)Coordinates: 48°44′32.5″N 44°32′13″E / 48.742361°N 44.53694°E
Airfields · Axis order of battle · Red Army order of battle · Bombing of Stalingrad in World War II · German commanders · German unitsOperations Formations 4th Panzer · 6th
2nd
8th
3rd · 4th
1st Guards · 2nd Guards · 3rd Guards · 21st · 51st · 62nd · 64th · 65thXIV Panzer · XL Panzer · XLVIII Panzer · IV · VIII · XI · LI · 8th Air
1st Tank · 4th Tank · 13th Tank · 16th Tank · 24th Tank · 26th Tank · 4th Mechanised · 13th Mechanised · 3rd Guards Cavalry · 4th Cavalry · 8th Cavalry6th Panzer · 14th Panzer · 16th Panzer · 17th Panzer · 22nd Panzer, · 24th Panzer · 3rd Motorised Infantry · 29th Motorised Infantry · 60th Motorised Infantry · 5th Infantry · 44th Infantry · 71st Infantry · 76th Infantry · 79th Infantry · 94th Infantry · 100th Infantry · 113th Infantry · 295th Infantry · 297th Infantry · 305th Infantry · 371st Infantry · 376th Infantry · 384th Infantry · 389th Infantry
13th Guards Rifle · 15th Guards Rifle · 33rd Guards Rifle · 35th Guards Rifle · 36th Guards Rifle · 37th Guards Rifle · 39th Guards Rifle · 38th Rifle · 45th Rifle · 62nd Rifle · 64th Rifle · 91st Rifle · 93rd Rifle · 95th Rifle · 112th Rifle · 138th Rifle · 157th Rifle · 169th Rifle · 173rd Rifle · 181st Rifle · 193rd Rifle · 196th Rifle · 204th Rifle · 214th Rifle · 221st Rifle · 248th Rifle · 284th Rifle · 302nd Rifle · 308th Rifle · 422nd Rifle · 685th Rifle · 414th Anti-Tank · 149th Artillery · 60th Cavalry · 81st CavalryNotable
participantsAdolf Hitler · Alexander Edler von Daniels · Wilhelm Hoffman · Hermann Hoth · Hans-Valentin Hube · Erwin König · Erich von Manstein · Friedrich Paulus · Wolfram von Richthofen · Arthur Schmidt · Walther von Seydlitz-Kurzbach · Karl Strecker
Viktor Pavičić
Italo Gariboldi
Gusztáv Vitéz Jány
Constantin Constantinescu-Claps · Petre Dumitrescu · Mihail Lascăr
Joseph Stalin · Azi Aslanov · Vasily Badanov · Vasily Chuikov · Nikolay Dyatlenko · Sasha Fillipov · Peter Gitelman · Vasily Grossman · Nikita Khrushchev · Dmitry Lelyushenko · Rodion Malinovsky · Yakov Pavlov · Alexander Rodimtsev · Konstantin Rokossovsky · Alexander Shcherbakov · Semyon Timoshenko · Aleksandr Vasilevsky · Nikolay Voronov · Erich Weinert · Andrei Yeremenko · Vasily Zaytsev · Georgy ZhukovLocations Barmaley Fountain · Barrikady works · Grain silo · Gumrak · Kalach · Mamayev Kurgan · Pavlov's House · Pitomnik Airfield · Red October Steel Factory · River Don · River Volga · Tatsinskaya Airfield · Tsaritsa gorge · Volgograd Tractor FactoryIn memoriam The Motherland Calls · Stalingrad Madonna · Sword of Stalingrad · Battle of Stalingrad in popular cultureCategories:- Russian art
- Soviet art
- Monuments and memorials built in the Soviet Union
- Soviet military memorials and cemeteries
- World War II memorials in Russia
- Outdoor sculptures in Russia
- Colossal statues
- Concrete sculptures
- 1967 works
- Inclined towers
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