Farewell of Slavianka but you're a White Army officer fighting in Siberia

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The "White Army" was a common collective name for the armed formations of the White movement and anti-Soviet governments during the Civil War in Russia. They fought against the Red Army of the Bolsheviks. The White armies comprised a number of different groups, who operated independently and did not share a single ideology or political goal. After several crushing defeats at the hands of the resurgent Red Army, the Eastern front largely collapsed, and dissolved by November 1919.

Just wanted to mention again that I read every comment and suggestion left in the comments even if I dont reply!

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"Where are the musicians? Army music! Quickly! Music i said !"
*Farewell Of Slavianka intensifies*

theycallmehope
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My Great Grandfather was a Don Cossack Officer in both WWI and the Russian Civil War. It actually gives you that immersion. Gives me chills.

WARGAMER
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Funny thing that my great great grandfather was a Finnish volunteer in the white army of Russia and came back and my great grandfather fought the soviets during the winter war and continuation war

fatcatinatuxedo
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This is what I call, "anti-asmr". It puts my heart in a vise, makes me lie awake and, sometimes, even brings a tear to my eyes.

CitizenNoFDABE
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I'm always fascinated about imperial Russia all the way to the Russian civil war!

richmondlandersenfells
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"Are we going to lay the Reds with the Whites?"
""Together. We're all God's men. God didn't paint them different colours"

Matuss
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This reminds me of one time when a russian on CS:GO blasted a communist American kid with his patriotic scream and this song in the background. Perfect.

-unbreakeblecow
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“Ceddin Deden” but you are an officer of Ottoman army in First Balkan War.

safakozgokhan
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"A Las Baricadas but you're the last fighting barricade in Barcelona"

nonsense
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“The battle has begun” but you are a Bulgarian rebel holding the Shipka pass

ChildTV_BG
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My Socials teacher had a great-grandfather that fought in the white army, he was a German/Dutch immigrant that founded a farming community in eastern Ukraine that was intended to help share agricultural knowledge with the locals in an effort to aid Russia's farming industry (Oddly enough the community was a Protestant/Jewish joint effort) Both him and his son fought the Bolscheviks until they were eventually overrun and the village was lost and ransacked, by that point his wife and daughter had made their way to Siberia and evacuated to Canada along with the anti-soviet foreign contingent. His last name was Weibe by the way, apparently he's related to a famous Dutch engineer who was responsible for draining a large delta of the Rhine.

AmphiStuG
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It dont feel like it when you're listening.

But you're actually in the losing side of the war.

officialeuladegenerate
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I’m siberian native. My great grandfather helped imperial officers to ambush red army leader Kalandarashvili, because before the war Kalandarashvili was well known cruel bandit from Georgia and potentially was too dangerous for locals

artemlebedev
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I'm a son of Cossack, and this song means a lot for me. My great grandfather also was fighting for White Army

thekerich_pro
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My Great Grandfather Mikhailov Aleksey Afanasiyevich was born in 1880 year in Stavropol province. He was Cuban Cossack. Also he was a participant in the First World War, from where he brought the Medal of St. George of the 4th degree, the Medals of St. Anna and Stanislav. During the Civil War, he was a supporter of the white movement. Participated in the campaign of atamans (the highest Cossack rank) Krasnov and Denikin to Moscow. After the advent of Soviet power, he was dispossessed and worked on a collective farm. He died in 1953. I'm proud of them!

billyherington
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when the captain tells you to bayonet charge: i sleep
when the reds shoot your only nun: *THOSE BASTARDS*

marblemarble
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In 0:07 you can actually hear him say "Where are the musicians? The music, now! I said play the music!" and then the song starts playing

gildef
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Fun fact: Skoropadskyi, the Ukranian leader in WW1 when the peace was signed, reportedly locked himself in his room and cried for a week when he heard the death of the Tsar and his family.

HawkThunder
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My great grandpa's brother were captured on the Eastern front of WW1.
He was a soldier in the Austro-Hungarian army, and he was Hungarian from a german and slavic culture rooted village.
Mainly a bearer of a German surname he was quite like an ordinary grey European as the other ones.
He has died in Tomsk in Siberia, but quite sure about he got involved in the Russian Civil war in the side of (???) I cannot guess.
He has died in 1919 at Tomsk area.

Rustythemouse
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My great uncle was an officer in the imperial army... him and all his men died fighting. His father and my great grandmother barely escaped into what is now Eastern Ukraine.

Talot