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Commemoration of the Battle of Petrograd in 1919 was one of the key areas of Soviet state policy of memory in the second half of the 1930s and early 1940s. A particular manifestation of this was the creation of a thematic museum dedicated to the designated episode of the Russian civil war: the Oranienbaum Museum of the Defense of Petrograd. The first director of this institution was F. A. Ecker, who saw the institute of memory entrusted to him as a center for the study and popularization of the entire military-historic heritage of the northeast of the Leningrad region. This approach met with opposition from a number of representatives of the Leningrad Museum community but received support from the local political leadership. This study analyzes the socio-cultural factors that determined the activities of F. A. Ecker in Oranienbaum and conditioned its results.
Artem Nikolayevich Shipunov (Wed,) studied this question.