Nakhimov Naval School

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The Russian cruiser Aurora was the first campus and training ship of the Nahkimov Naval School.

The Nakhimov Naval School (

teenagers introduced in the Soviet Union and once also located in other cities. They are named after well-known Russian admiral Pavel Nakhimov.[1]

History

The first Nakhimov School was introduced in

Leningrad Nakhimov Naval School opened. The Riga Nakhimov Naval School (Latvian: Rigas Nachimova Skola) existed during 1945-1953.[3]

Today in Russia, only the

Sergey Shoygu laid the foundation stone for a new branch of the school in Kaliningrad, due to open in September 2020.[5]

School culture

Victory Day Parade
in 2019.

Today, all Nakhimov schools have the traditional honor of opening all Victory Day Parades in their local city with their corps of drums (sans Saint Petersburg since the 1990s). It also participated in the now defunct October Revolution Day parades. In 2015 Major General Timur Apakidze, a Soviet naval aviation pioneer who had died in a flying accident in 2001, was added to the rolls of the Nakhimov Naval School in perpetuity.[6] The general service march of the schools is the March of Nakhimovtsev (Марш Нахимовцев), written by Vasily Solovyov-Sedoi in 1949.[7] Students at the Nakhimov Naval School and its graduates are known as "Nakhimovites".[8]

List of current schools

Cadets of the Murmansk Nakhimov Naval School in 2018.
Name Location Foundation date Notes
Nakhimov Naval School
St. Petersburg
1944
Murmansk Nakhimov Naval School Murmansk 2017 On 31 August 2016, President
Sergey Shoigu to establish a Nakhimov Naval School in Murmansk
. Construction of the building continued for a little over a year until it was completed on 1 September 2017. The complex was the first Nakhimov school built in Russia since the first school was opened in St. Petersburg in 1944.
Vladivostok Presidential Cadet School Vladivostok 2013
Sevastopol Presidential Cadet School Sevastopol 2014

Former schools

Riga Nakhimov Naval School

The

Afro-Russian actor and poet James Lloydovich Patterson.[10][11]

Tbilisi Nakhimov Naval School

The

RSFSR. It was disbanded in 1955. Among its notable alumni is Yuri Pivnev, the longtime head of the Leningrad DOSAAF.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "nmvu.ru - НВМУ". nvmu.ru. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  2. ^ "ТБИЛИССКОЕ НАХИМОВСКОЕ ВОЕННО-МОРСКОЕ УЧИЛИЩЕ". www.kadet.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  3. ^ "Кинозал НВМУ. Rigas Nachimova Skola - НВМУ". www.nvmu.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2 February 2009. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  4. ^ "В Дагестане появится филиал Петербургского Нахимовского училища" (in Russian). Zvezda. 10 July 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  5. ^ "Министр обороны РФ принял участие в церемонии закладки камня под строительство филиала Нахимовского военно-морского училища в Калининграде" (in Russian). Ministry of Defence. 13 August 2019. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  6. ^ https://function.mil.ru/news_page/country/more.htm?id=12071083 (In Russian)
  7. ^ http://partita.ru/docs/marche-008.shtml (In Russian)
  8. .
  9. ^ "Народ.Ру: РИЖСКОЕ НАХИМОВСКОЕ ВОЕННО-МОРСКОЕ УЧИЛИЩЕ (1945-1955)". rigapodplav.narod.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-06-16.
  10. ^ Dimenshteyn, Ilya. «Любимый воспитанник Любови Орловой». Ves.lv. 18 September 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2019. (in Russian)
  11. ^ Рижское нахимовское училище. Хроника., archived from the original on 2021-12-15, retrieved 2020-06-16
  12. ^ kudago. "Нахимовское военно-морское училище". KudaGo.com (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-07-22.
  13. ^ Страницы истории Тбилисского Нахимовского училища в судьбах его выпускников. Часть 43. (In Russian)

http://nvmu.edumil.ru/