Pyotr Demichev
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Pyotr Demichev | |
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Пётр Демичев | |
Ekaterina Furtseva | |
Succeeded by | Vasily Zakharov |
Personal details | |
Born | Civil servant | 3 January 1918 [
Central institution membership Other political offices held
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Pyotr Nilovich Demichev (
Biography
He was born on January 3, 1918 [O.S. December 21, 1917] in the village of Pesochnya, Kaluga province (now Kaluga region) in a working-class family.
In 1937-1944 he served in the Red Army, he took part in military operations in Mongolia (1939-1940).
After graduating from school, he studied at a mechanical engineering college. In 1937, he entered the Military Academy of Chemical Defense named after Kliment Voroshilov. He was graduated from the D. Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia in 1944.[3] In 1944-1945 he was engaged in scientific and pedagogical activities at the Moscow Institute of Chemical Technology.
Party career
He joined the CPSU in 1939, he was the head of department, secretary of the Soviet District Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks of Moscow. In 1950, he was Deputy head of the department of Propaganda and Agitation of the Moscow City Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks.
In 1953 he graduated from the Higher Party School under the CPSU Central Committee (in absentia). At the HPS, he worked on a dissertation on European philosophy of the 19th century, but he did not complete it. In 1965, he replaced
Post-soviet life and death
After the dissolution of the USSR, Demichev lived in Moscow with his family. He died on August 10, 2010 from natural causes in the village of Zhavoronki, Odintsovsky district in Moscow at the age of 92. He was buried at the Znamensky cemetery.
Awards
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Order of Lenin, four times (1963, 1968, 1971 & 1988) |
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Order of the October Revolution (2 January 1978) |
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Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree (23 April 1985) |
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Order of the Red Banner of Labor (30 January 1957)
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Medal "For Labour Valour" (25 December 1959) |
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Jubilee Medal "Forty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945" (23 April 1985) |
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Medal "For Strengthening of Brotherhood in Arms" (2 June 1980) |
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Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland (20 April 1985) |
References
- ^ "Party Propagandist Named to Head Culture Ministry". Associated Press. August 16, 1986.
- ^ "Red art chief fired; 'fresh wind' stirring?". The Spokesman-Review. Associated Press. June 19, 1986.
- ISBN 5-7237-0321-8.