![]() IvanovĪs the weather turned cold and fuel supplies disappeared, public transportation ceased, heating and electricity were turned off, and residents dismantled wooden houses and chopped down trees for warmth. ![]() Right: Military Patrol, by Sergei Zakharov (1944) / From The Leningrad School, 1930-1990, by S.V. Left: Beware of a Shelling (1943) / Russian State Film and Photo Archive at Krasnogorsk By early September, one Leningrader was recording in her diary that “We have returned to prehistoric times: life has been reduced to one thing - the hunt for food.” Even before Georgii Zhukov replaced Klement Voroshilov as commander of Leningrad’s defense, virtually all able-bodied adults who has not been called up or had volunteered for military service were mobilized as People’s Volunteers to dig trenches and otherwise fortify the city. By the beginning of the siege some 400,000 people - mostly children - had been evacuated from the city despite official assurances that food supplies were plentiful and the invaders were incurring huge losses. Within the city, grim determination struggled to overcome panic. The aim was to terrorize and starve the population into surrender. The siege began in September 1941 after the Army Group North under General Ritter von Leeb had severed the city’s vital rail line to Moscow and began bombarding seemingly random targets. Heroic Leningrad, by The Aladzhalov Brothers (1944) / Wikimedia Commonsīy 1943, Leningraders were enduring their second winter of the German army’s siege of their city. Professor of Russian and European History
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