Nikolai Vlasov

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Native name
Николай Иванович Власов
Born11 November 1916
Petrograd, Russian Empire
Allegiance Soviet Union
Nikolai Ivanovich Vlasov
Vlasov in 1943
Native name
Николай Иванович Власов
Born11 November 1916
Petrograd, Russian Empire
Died26 January 1945 (aged 28)
Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp, Nazi Germany
Allegiance Soviet Union
Branch Soviet Air Force
Years of service1934–1945
RankPodpolkovnik
Unit275th Fighter Aviation Division
Battles / warsWorld War II
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union
Order of Lenin (2)
Order of the Red Banner

Nikolai Ivanovich Vlasov (Russian: Николай Иванович Власов; 11 November 1916 – 26 January 1945) was a flying ace, lieutenant colonel of the Soviet Air Forces, and a Hero of the Soviet Union. On 29 July 1943 his Yak-1 fighter was shot down over Leningrad by anti-aircraft fire from the ground. After being taken captive he led underground resistance efforts in the various concentration camps he was held in and managed to make multiple escape attempts. After one escape attempt he was sent to Mauthausen where he made preparations for a prisoner uprising. However, he did not live to participate in the prison revolt as he had been betrayed by another prisoner and held under close watch of the SS. After being tortured by the SS he was thrown alive into a crematorium furnace on 26 January 1945 as Allied troops were approaching the area. Several of his fellow prisoners went on with the uprising after his death, and on 3 February 1945 roughly 500 prisoners from his block broke through a fence and escaped.

Vlasov was born on 11 November 1916 to a working-class Russian family in Petrograd, then part of the Russian Empire. Upon completing seven grades of secondary school he worked as a mechanic at a factory and served as secretary of a Komsomol committee until joining the Red Army in 1934. After completing flight courses at a military aviation school he became qualified as a flight instructor in 1936 before joining the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1939.[1]

World War II

Commemoration and legacy

References

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