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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DzerzhinovoDzerzhinovo - Wikipedia

    Dzerzhinovo (Russian: Дзержиново; Belarusian: Дзяржынава; Polish: Dzierżynowo), until 1881 known as Ozemblovo (Polish: Oziębłowo; Russian: Оземблово; Belarusian: Аземблава), today known as the State Cultural Institution of the Dzerzhinovo Homestade Museum, is a historical and cultural estate, including a ...

  2. Дзержиново — малая Родина Феликса Эдмундовича Дзержинского (1877—1926), революционера, советского государственного и партийного деятеля. Сегодня здесь действует Дом-музей семьи Дзержинских, где размещена экспозиция, посвящённая истории рода Дзержинских, а также жизни и деятельности Феликса Эдмундовича. Новости. Все новости.

  3. The Dzerzhinovo Memorial Complex is located on the outskirts of Naliboki forest near the village of Piatrylavichy (Stowbtsy district, Minsk region, Belarus). This complex is a restored manor of Dzerzhinsky, the original of which belonged to the end of the 19th century (pictured below).

  4. In 1943, the manor house of Dzerzhinovo, where Dzerzhinsky was born, was destroyed and family members (including Dzerzhinsky's brother Kazimierz) were killed by the Germans, because of their support for the Polish Home Army.

  5. Dzerzhinovo (Russian: Дзержиново; Belarusian: Дзяржынава; Polish: Dzierżynowo), until 1881 known as Ozemblovo (Polish: Oziębłowo; Russian: Оземблово; Belarusian: Аземблава), today known as the State Cultural Institution of the Dzerzhinovo Homestade Museum, is a historical and cultural estate, including a ...

  6. Jul 20, 1998 · Feliks Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky (born Sept. 11 [Aug. 30, Old Style], 1877, Dzerzhinovo, near Minsk, Russian Empire [now in Belarus]—died July 20, 1926, Moscow) was a Bolshevik leader and the head of the first Soviet secret police organization.

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  8. Overview. Feliks Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky. (1877—1926) Russian Bolshevik leader. Quick Reference. (b. 11 Sept. 1877, d. 20 July 1926). Soviet politician Born in Dzerzhinovo, near Minsk, as the son of a Polish nobleman, he became a revolutionary for the Lithuanian‐Polish Marxist parties in 1896.