Ryabinin Nikolai Vladimirovich. Ryabinin, Nikolai Sergeevich Excerpt characterizing Ryabinin, Nikolai Sergeevich

Ryabinin Nikolay Alexandrovich(1885-1938) captain 2nd rank. Born in Finland. He graduated from a three-year city school, then from the Commercial School (1905) and the St. Petersburg Polytechnic Institute (shipbuilding department in 1909). On June 22, 1909, he was enrolled as a cadet in the 2nd Baltic Fleet Crew and on September 10 of the same year he was transferred to the Marine Engineering School of Emperor Nicholas I. By Order of the Naval Department 89, on April 18, 1910, he was transferred to naval midshipmen. After an examination, he was promoted to midshipman and in December 1910 enlisted in the Black Sea Fleet Crew. From 1910 to 1917 he served in the Black Sea Fleet. For the courage shown in the battle with "Goeben", he was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th degree with swords and bow. In 1916 he was awarded the rank of senior lieutenant. On September 23, 1917, he was promoted to captain 2nd rank for “distinction in service.”

In March 1918, with part of the fleet, he came to Novorossiysk, where he continued to remain until the city was occupied by the Volunteer Army. He entered service in the naval department in the All-Russian Socialist Republic on May 3, 1919 and was enrolled in the reserve of ranks. In August 1919, he became commander of the Caspian transport flotilla, and then chief of staff of the Caspian flotilla. On February 12, 1920, he was appointed chief of staff of the Black Sea Fleet in place of Rear Admiral Bubnov, who was dismissed by order of General Denikin for supporting the candidacy of General Wrangel for the post of commander in the Crimea. In March 1920, at the Military Council in Sevastopol, assembled on the orders of General Denikin, he spoke as an active supporter of General Wrangel and was the first to mention his name. In the same month, an attempt was made on Ryabinin’s life by a group of officers led by Captain 2nd Rank Kislovsky, as a result of which he was wounded in the head.

On April 16, 1920, at a meeting of representatives of fleet ships, Ryabinin proposed sending everyone who wanted to leave Russia to Turkey, and then handing over the ships to representatives of Soviet Russia. Two hours later he was removed from his post by General Wrangel for his defeatist mood. On April 18, 1920 (according to his autobiography with his service record compiled in the RKKF) he was removed from office and dismissed from service. He worked as one of the captain's assistants on the steamship of the Russian Society of Shipping and Trade (ROPIT) "Lazarev". On November 14, 1920, he remained (having sent his family to Constantinople) of his own free will in Sevastopol and placed himself at the disposal of the red command. In 1921 Ryabinin N.A. returned to Finland, where his parents lived, and worked as a senior worker on Spiridonov’s estate.

In November 1922, by decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, he was restored to Soviet citizenship. In the spring of 1923, he returned to the USSR after an attempt on his life by Finnish fascists. By Navy Order No. 978 dated November 10, 1923, he was enlisted in naval service. On October 21, 1923, he was appointed assistant to the head of the organizational part of the combat department of the Naval Headquarters of the RKKF. On November 14, 1923, he was appointed head of the Mobilization Department of the Operations Directorate of the RKKF headquarters. On April 9, 1925, by order of the RKKF personnel, he was transferred to the reserve, “due to the impossibility of appropriate use.” In 1924, Grigorenko S.A. was married for the second time to a resident of the city of Nikolaev. From May 4, 1925 to 1926, he worked as a foreman at the shipbuilding plant named after. Marty in Nikolaev. From 1926 to 1929 worked in various positions in the regional executive committee of the city of Nikolaev.

In 1930, he was arrested by the Nikolaev district department of the GPU, by a verdict of the board on the basis of Art. 58th Criminal Code, sentenced to 5 years in forced labor camps. In the spring of 1934 he was released early. Due to restrictions on places of residence, he was forced to move with his family to the city of Gorokhovets, Vladimir region. Since May 3, 1934 Ryabinin N.A. worked as technical director of the Gorokhovets Shipyard.

On September 4, 1937, he was arrested for the second time and sentenced to 10 years in the camps without the right to correspondence. According to the archives of the Vladimir KGB, he was shot on September 30, 1938 in Ivanovo. The burial place is unknown. In 1958, Nikolai Aleksandrovich Ryabinin was posthumously rehabilitated for lack of evidence of a crime.



R Yabinin Nikolai Sergeevich - commander of a machine gun platoon of the 412th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Brest Infantry Division of the 70th Army of the 2nd Belorussian Front, senior lieutenant.

Born on May 5, 1909 in the village of Velikopolye, now Orsha district of the Mari El Republic, in the family of an employee. Mariets. He graduated from junior high school and workers' school in 1930. He worked as an accountant at the Kuat collective farm.

In the Red Army in 1931-1932 and since 1942. He served in the 134th Infantry Regiment of the 45th Infantry Division as a Red Army soldier. Member of the CPSU(b) since 1932. In 1942 he graduated from the Vinnitsa Command Improvement Course (KUKS) in the city of Mozhga, Udmurt Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. After the courses according to Art. 65 gr. II Project 336-42 was declared unfit for service with exclusion from registration.

At his personal request, he was left in the army and seconded to the Southern Front, then at the disposal of the personnel department of the Moscow Military District (MVO). He served as deputy company commander for political affairs: until March 1943 - the 40th training machine-gun regiment of the 1st training brigade of the Moscow Military District, until June 1943 - the 38th reserve rifle regiment of the 18th reserve brigade of the Moscow Military District. Until February 1944 he was in the officer reserve of the personnel department of the Western Front.

At the front during the Great Patriotic War from March 1944. He was the commander of a machine gun platoon. He fought on the Belorussian, 1st and 2nd Belorussian fronts. In battles he was wounded twice.

Participated:
- in the Brest-Lublin operation, including the crossing of Pripyat and the liberation of the city of Brest, in the liberation of Poland and the battles on the Narew River - in 1944;
- in the Vistula-Oder operation, including in the battles for the city of Bromberg (Bydgoszcz) and the conquest of the bridgehead on the Vistula - in 1945.

The commander of the machine gun platoon of the 412th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division, Senior Lieutenant Ryabinin, at the head of a group of fighters, crossed the Vistula northeast of the city of Bromberg (Bydgoszcz, Poland) on January 27, 1945. Having captured a bridgehead on the left bank, the soldiers destroyed up to 2 platoons of enemy infantry. While holding the captured line, on January 28, 1945, he destroyed dozens of Nazis with machine gun fire. In this battle he was seriously wounded.

U Kaz of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated June 29, 1945 for the exemplary performance of combat missions of the command on the front of the fight against the Nazi invaders and the courage and heroism shown to the senior lieutenant Ryabinin Nikolai Sergeevich awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union with the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star medal (No. 7540).

After being wounded, he was treated in various hospitals until 1946, and became a group 1 disabled person - his arm was amputated. After being demobilized from the army, he lived in Moscow. He worked as a military instructor in one of the schools in the Krasnogvardeisky district. Died March 2, 1975. He was buried in Moscow at the Lublin cemetery (site 33).

In the city of Yoshkar-Ola, a street was named after him and a memorial plaque was installed.

Awarded the Order of Lenin (06/29/45), Red Star (08/14/44).

In 1930, Nikolai Ryabinin graduated from the workers' faculty and began working as an accountant at the Kuat collective farm in the Orsha region of the Mari Republic. In 1931-32, he served in military service as a Red Army soldier in the 134th Infantry Regiment of the 45th Infantry Division, there he joined the ranks of the Bolshevik Party, and returned to his native collective farm. A family appeared - a wife and three children. Normal life was hampered by frequent illnesses, which Ryabinin struggled with in every possible way.

After the start of the Great Patriotic War, Ryabinin was not immediately drafted into the army again because of his medical record. Only in February 1942 he was sent to the Vinnitsa KUKS, evacuated to the Udmurt city of Mozhga. But even after them, having become a lieutenant 3 months later, Ryabinin was declared unfit by a medical commission with a recommendation for dismissal. An order was even issued to this effect.

But in some unthinkable way, Lieutenant Ryabinin in May 1942 was seconded to the personnel department of the Southern Front, where he remained until the end of June. Then he was sent to a training unit in Moscow, where he served first as a political instructor and then as deputy commander of a training company for political affairs in a number of training units.

In February 1944, Lieutenant Ryabinin was appointed commander of a machine gun platoon of the 412th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division of the 70th Army of the Belorussian Front. After heavy fighting on the Oryol Bulge in the summer of 1943, the army was in reserve and was engaged in formation in the rear. Only in April 1944 did it become part of the 1st Belorussian Front, and its formations began to concentrate on the front line along the southern bank of Pripyat in Volyn. In May 1944, Ryabinin received the rank of senior lieutenant.

Senior Lieutenant Ryabinin received his baptism of fire in tactical battles in June 1944. And already on July 17, 1944, an offensive began on this section of the front during the Brest-Lublin operation. Ryabinin's machine gun platoon took part in crossing Pripyat near the village of Ratno and conquering a bridgehead on the northern bank of the river. From this bridgehead, the troops of the 70th Army launched an attack on the city of Brest. Ryabinin's machine gun platoon took part in the battle for the Malorita station and in street battles in Brest. Moreover, the machine gunners, together with the riflemen, cleared 9 city blocks of the enemy and reached the Western Bug River in the area of ​​the Brest Fortress. For his distinction in these battles, Senior Lieutenant Ryabinin was awarded the Order of the Red Star.

In August 1944, the division in which Ryabinin fought liberated the territory of Poland. His machine gunners, with their devastating fire, contributed to the capture of the settlement of Losice and the Jadow station. But on September 1, 1944, on the approaches to the Narev River, Senior Lieutenant Ryabinin was wounded in the left shin and was treated in the medical battalion.

From the bridgehead on the Narew, already as part of the 2nd Belorussian Front, the troops of the 70th Army in January 1945 went on the offensive during the Vistula-Oder operation. Ryabinin’s machine gunners took part in the battles for the village of Racenz, together with the riflemen crossed the Drwentse River and reached the Vistula near the city of Bromberg (Bydgoszcz).

On the evening of January 27, 1945, a rifle company of the 412th Infantry Regiment, with a machine-gun platoon of senior lieutenant Ryabinin attached to it, quickly crossed the Vistula across the ice and in battle captured a small bridgehead on its bank. The company commander died in hand-to-hand combat, and Ryabinin took command of the combined group. When capturing the enemy's trenches, up to 40 fascists were destroyed. In this battle, Ryabinin was wounded, but continued to command the unit.

On the morning of the next day, January 28, 1945, the enemy threw large forces into the bridgehead, numbering up to an infantry regiment with the support of tanks and artillery. A heavy, bloody battle ensued. Ryabinin's fighters fought to the death, stubbornly holding the conquered bridgehead. At a critical moment, when the Nazis seemed about to break into the paratroopers’ positions, the platoon commander himself lay down behind the machine gun, replacing the deceased machine gunner, and began mowing down the Nazis with well-aimed bursts. His fire was so devastating that up to 50 enemy corpses remained in the snow before the Nazis rolled back. The machine gunner's position was hit by several artillery pieces and mortars. One mine exploded almost next to Ryabinin. The group commander received multiple injuries and was evacuated across the river. But the fighters of Senior Lieutenant Ryabinin completed the task, defending the bridgehead, to which other units of the 1st Infantry Division crossed and began fighting for the city of Bromberg. For the courage and heroism shown during the crossing of the Vistula, senior lieutenant Ryabinin was nominated for the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

At evacuation hospital No. 4845, doctors saved Ryabinin’s life by removing 11 fragments from his body. But he developed gangrene from a wound in the elbow. The left arm had to be amputated. Here he was treated until December 1945, and here he learned from the newspapers about his high award. In 1946, he arrived in Moscow, where he was awarded the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star medal in the Kremlin.

After the war, disabled person of the 1st group N.S. Ryabinin began working as a military instructor in one of the Moscow schools and lived after the war for 30 years...

(12/12/1918, Ermolovka village, Saransk district, Penza province (now Luninsky district, Penza region) - 10/10/1985, Ulyanovsk), poet, member of the Union of Writers of the USSR.

Born in the village of Ermolovka, Saransk district, Penza province, later Luninsky district, Penza region (in 2006, the village was excluded from the registration data as a populated place that had virtually ceased to exist, in which there were no officially registered residents). He began writing poetry during his school years. In 1938 he entered the Ulyanovsk State Pedagogical Institute. The first publications of poetry, under the pseudonym Ryabinin, appeared in periodicals in 1940, when he was in his third year at the institute. In July 1941 he was drafted into the army, fought on the Karelian front, fought in mortar units in the Arctic, in difficult conditions of the tundra. He was a mortar crew gunner and deputy political instructor. In July 1945, after completing the course, he was appointed commander of a mortar platoon and participated in the war with Japan. During the Great Patriotic War, his poems were published in the front-line newspapers “Sentinel of the North”, “Into the Battle for the Motherland”, “For the Glory of the Motherland”. He was awarded the Order of the Red Star (1945), medals “For Military Merit” (1943), “For Defense of the Soviet Arctic” (1945). After demobilization from the army, he returned to his interrupted studies at the Ulyanovsk Pedagogical Institute, which he graduated in 1947. He spent more than 30 years teaching, working as a teacher of Russian language and literature in schools in the Ulyanovsk region. At first he taught in the village. Baranovka, Nikolaevsky district, then, from 1948 to 1952. worked as head teacher of the Krasnobor secondary school in the Veshkaim district. From 1955 to 1972 taught literature and Russian language at Tetyushskaya secondary school in the Ulyanovsk region. A talented teacher, appreciating his subject and knowing it thoroughly, he educated and graduated more than one generation of students, in whom he instilled not only an interest, but also a love for great Russian literature.

He organized and led a literary club at school, held reading competitions, was the director of the school teachers' theater, and under his supervision scripts were prepared and staged. He considered the village of Tetyushskoye his second homeland and was in no hurry to move to the city. He moved to Ulyanovsk only when he retired. In memory of a respected, excellent teacher, Ryabinin readings are held annually at the Tetyushskaya secondary school, at which the poems of not only Nikolai Ryabinin, but also other famous writers of the Simbirsk-Ulyanovsk region are performed by students of the Ulyanovsk region.

Since 1972, he devoted himself entirely to literary creativity. Author of several poetry collections published by the Volga Book Publishing House. In 1958, the first collection of poems, “Signs,” was published. Subsequently, books of poems appeared: “Cranes” (1960), “Noon” (1963), “Swallows before the Rain” (1968), “The Smell of the Earth” (1973), “Voice in the Rye” (1977), “Winter” (1982) . The main themes of N. Ryabinin’s work are about the past war, working people, the Russian village, and his native nature. His poems are filled with deep meaning, subtle emotional experiences and deep thoughts about time and oneself, about the connection between the past and the present.

Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin died on October 10, 1985, and was buried in the Northern Cemetery of Ulyanovsk.

Bibliography:

Ryabinin, N. R. Signs: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin. - Ulyanovsk: Ulyan. book publishing house, 1958. - 56 p.

Ryabinin, N. R. Cranes: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin. - Ulyanovsk: Ulyan. book publishing house, 1960. - 50 p.

Ryabinin, N. R. Noon: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin. - Ulyanovsk: Ulyan. book publishing house, 1963. - 56 p..

Ryabinin, N. R. Swallows before the rain: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin. - Saratov: Volga. book publishing house, 1968. - 47 p.

Ryabinin, N. R. The smell of earth: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin. - Saratov: Volga. book publishing house, 1973. - 80 p.

Ryabinin, N.R. Winter: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin. - Saratov, Volga region. book publishing house, 1982. - 119 p.

Publications in collections, almanacs, periodicals:

Ryabinin, N.R. Avdeev Kurgan; Harvest: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Literary Ulyanovsk: almanac Ulyan. lit. groups. - Ulyanovsk, 1948. - No. 2. - P. 97.

/ Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Literary Ulyanovsk: literary-art. almanac. - Ulyanovsk, 1953. - No. 6. - P. 126-128. - Contents : Before dawn; Volga; Buoyman; “What could a guy care about...”

Ryabinin, N.R. [Selection of poems]/ Nikolay Romanovich Ryabinin // Volga. - 1971. - No. 2. - P. 69-71. - Contents: Tetyushskoe; “The quail whistles in the rye...”; “Mom, I remember you when you were young...”; “Living in retirement means sitting in front of the TV...”

Ryabinin, N.R. "The old women were gathered...": poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Volga. - 1973. - No. 1. - P. 97.

Ryabinin, N.R. “My village is originally Russian...”: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // The smell of earth: collection. - Saratov: Volga. book publishing house, 1973. - pp. 3-4.

Ryabinin, N.R. "Sad light..."; “The house where the district authorities serve...”: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Volga. - 1973. - No. 7. - P. 118-119.

Ryabinin, N.R. [Selection of poems]/ Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Volga. - 1976. - No. 2. - P. 111-113. - Contents : "No rain…"; “Drowsy and lethargic from the heat...”; “Have you been to the March forest?..”; We part with the huts; “He understood that the doctors were hiding it in vain...”

Ryabinin, N.R. Winter; "The soft sound of wheels...": poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Volga. - 1980. - No. 9. - P. 130.

Ryabinin, N.R. [Selection of poems]/ Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Day of Volga Poetry. 1983: Ulyanovsk. Penza. Saratov: Sat. - Saratov: Volga. book publishing house, 1983 - pp. 38-42. - Contents: “Plow every inch...”; “Who drove here?..”; Signs; Rural custom; Pine; “During the holidays they dance and sing...”; “The grasses have become gray and prickly...”; Sounds of the rain; “Grandma is going to the forest...”

Ryabinin, N.R. Sounds of the rain: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Volga. - 1983. - No. 8. - P. 103-105. - Contents : “Yesterday’s farmers...”; “This is how dwellings used to be...”; “For rural residents...”; “Even though he is completely unfamiliar to me...”; “Tired combine operator...”; “The sound of the wind barely touches the ear...”; “There is nothing more pleasing to the ear...”

Ryabinin, N.R. [Selection of poems]/ Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Obelisks: collection. poems. - Saratov: Volga. book publishing house, 1985. - pp. 86-93. - Contents: “I walked with flowers. I was twenty..."; On the platform; “I’m proud of my share...”; Dugout; It was hard; “More and more often in a soldier’s dreams...”; “There on the hills cloudberries grow with blueberries...”; Countryman; At the TV; “There was a construction worker - now he is a deaf old man...”; “What was the worst thing in the war?..”; “Well, my sons are growing up...”

Ryabinin, N.R. The horse ran away; Tetyushskoe: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Karamzin Garden: collection. prose and poetry of Ulyanovsk authors. - Ulyanovsk, 1997. - Issue. 4. - pp. 144-145.

Ryabinin, N.R. Tetyushskoe: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Bogatov, A.M. Village on the Moscow highway / Alexander Mikhailovich Bogatov. - Ulyanovsk: Printing House, 2000. - P. 5.

Ryabinin, N.R. Tetyushskoe: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // With reverent love... : travelers, writers and poets about the Simbirsk-Ulyanovsk region: anthology / comp. and ed. V.N. Egorov. - Ulyanovsk: Promotion Technologies Corporation, 2005. - P. 317.

Ryabinin, N.R. Countryman: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Monomakh. - 2005. - No. 2. - P. 39.

Ryabinin, N.R. Wartime songs: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Karamzin Garden: literary art. almanac. - Ulyanovsk, 2010. - No. 1/2. - pp. 15-18. - Contents : “Well, the sons are growing up...”; Wartime songs; About the old cap; Countryman; Old letters; “Pianos are played for you at concerts...” ; "I'm proud of my share..."

Ryabinin, N.R. Wartime songs; Countryman: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Simbirsk: lit. magazine. - Ulyanovsk, 2015. - No. 5. - P. 55.

Ryabinin, N.R. Tetyushskoe: poems / Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin // Simbirsk lit. magazine. - Ulyanovsk, 2015. - No. 9. - P. 34.

About him:

Blagov, N. Time of arrival of cranes: essay / Nikolay Blagov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1961. - March 1.

About the collection of poems by N. Ryabinin “Cranes”.

Kuznetsov, A. Poetic manhood: essay / A. Kuznetsov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1963. - June 4.

About the collection of poems by N. Ryabinin “Noon”.

Kuznetsov, A. “Swallows before the rain”: essay / A. Kuznetsov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1968. - September 4.

About the collection of poems by N. Ryabinin “Swallows before the rain”.

Bunin, A. The good name of the poet: essay / Alexander Bunin // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1968. - December 15.

Gladysheva, O. Literary life of the Volga region: review / O. Gladysheva // Volga. - 1973. - No. 9. - P. 169-170.

Pyrkov, V. The wisdom of simplicity: essay / Vladimir Pyrkov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1973. - September 20.

About the collection of poems by N. Ryabinin “The Smell of the Earth”.

Bunin, A. Life goes on: essay / Alexander Bunin // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1977. - March 24.

Blagov, N. Kind and bright feelings: essay / Nikolay Blagov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1978. - December 12.

The poet N. Ryabinin is 60 years old.

Blagov, N. Warmth of wintering bread: feature article / Nikolay Blagov // Volga. - 1982. - No. 11. - P. 135-136. - (Poet about the poet).

About the new collection of poems by N. Ryabinin “Winter”.

Azanov, V. “Like lines from simple-minded letters...”: essay / V. Azanov // Earth and man on it: literary-critical. Art. - Saratov, 1985. - P. 21, 22-24, 28.

Kirillov, V. Furrows originate...: meeting with N. Ryabinin: essay / V. Kirillov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1992. - July 16.

Kirillov, V. The living appearance of the poet: to the 75th anniversary of the birth of Nikolai Ryabinin / V. Kirillov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1993. - December 11.

Dvoryanskov, V. Silver thread: creative portrait of the poet N. Ryabinin / V. Dvoryanskov // Ulyanovskaya Pravda. - 1998. - March 28. - P. 18.

Bogatov, A.M. Nikolai Ryabinin (Sidorov Nikolai Romanovich): Art. / Alexander Mikhailovich Bogatov // Bogatov, A.M. Village on the Moscow highway / Alexander Mikhailovich Bogatov. - Ulyanovsk: Printing House, 2000. - P. 215.

Nikitina, N.I. Ryabinin (Sidorov) Nikolai Romanovich: Art. / Nina Ivanovna Nikitina // Ulyanovsk-Simbirsk Encyclopedia: in 2 volumes / ed. and comp. V.N. Egorov. - Ulyanovsk, 2004. - T. 2: N-Ya. - P. 211.

Troshina, M.S. Notes to the poems of Ulyanovsk poets published in the newspaper "Ulyanovskaya Pravda" (1943 - 1953) / M. S. Troshina // Local history notes. - Ulyanovsk, 2006. - Issue. 12. - pp. 188-194.

Analysis of the themes of poetic worksN. Blagovaand N. Ryabinin, published for the first time on the pages of the newspaper.

Dvoryanskov, V. Belated review: essay / Vladimir Dvoryanskov // Dvoryanskov, V. Native side: Stories. Stories. Essays / Vladimir Dvoryanskov. - Ulyanovsk: Region-Invest, 2007. - P. 302-309.

Same: // Monomakh. - 2007. - No. 2. - P. 18-19.

Review of the book by the poet N. Ryabinin "Winter".

Polotnyanko, N.A. Poet, warrior, teacher Nikolai Romanovich Ryabinin (Sidorov). Years of life (1918-1985)/ Nikolai Alekseevich Polotnyanko // Literary Ulyanovsk. - Ulyanovsk: [b. i.], 2012. - Issue. 3 (23). - pp. 174-176.

“Let’s remember everyone by name...”: Ulyanovsk front-line writers: [P. Bey-sov, N. Krasnov, V. Dedyukhin, G. Konovalov, N. Ryabinin, N. Levitanov, I. Khmarsky, M. Nebykov, S. Osipov] // Simbirsk: lit. magazine. - 2015. - No. 5. - P. 51-61. - (Roads of military memory).

Dubova, A. To the singer of his native land. Ryabinin readings- 2017 / Alexandra Dubova // Ilyich’s homeland (Ulyanovsk region). - 2017. - October 27. - P. 6: photo.

A reading competition dedicated to the memory of N. R. Ryabinin, a member of the USSR Writers' Union, a participant in the Great Patriotic War, a teacher at the Tetyushskaya secondary school.

, Orsha district, Mari El

Date of death Affiliation

USSR USSR

Type of army Years of service Awards and prizes

Nikolai Sergeevich Ryabinin(-) - senior lieutenant of the Soviet Army, participant in the Great Patriotic War, Hero of the Soviet Union ().

Biography

A street in Yoshkar-Ola is named after Ryabinin; in Moscow there is a memorial plaque on the house where he lived (Okskaya Street).

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Notes

Literature

  • Heroes of the Soviet Union: A Brief Biographical Dictionary / Prev. ed. collegium I. N. Shkadov. - M.: Military Publishing House, 1988. - T. 2 /Lyubov - Yashchuk/. - 863 p. - 100,000 copies. - ISBN 5-203-00536-2.

An excerpt characterizing Ryabinin, Nikolai Sergeevich

At this house there were riding horses and a retinue had gathered, apparently preparing for the departure of the sovereign.
“I can see him any minute,” thought Rostov. If only I could directly hand him the letter and tell him everything, would I really be arrested for wearing a tailcoat? Can't be! He would understand on whose side justice is. He understands everything, knows everything. Who could be fairer and more generous than him? Well, even if they arrested me for being here, what’s the harm?” he thought, looking at the officer entering the house occupied by the sovereign. “After all, they are sprouting. - Eh! It's all nonsense. I’ll go and submit the letter to the sovereign myself: so much the worse it will be for Drubetskoy, who brought me to this.” And suddenly, with a determination that he himself did not expect from himself, Rostov, feeling the letter in his pocket, went straight to the house occupied by the sovereign.
“No, now I won’t miss the opportunity, like after Austerlitz,” he thought, expecting every second to meet the sovereign and feeling a rush of blood to his heart at this thought. I will fall at my feet and ask him. He will raise me, listen and thank me.” “I am happy when I can do good, but correcting injustice is the greatest happiness,” Rostov imagined the words that the sovereign would say to him. And he walked past those who were looking at him curiously, onto the porch of the house occupied by the sovereign.
From the porch a wide staircase led straight upstairs; to the right a closed door was visible. At the bottom of the stairs there was a door to the lower floor.
-Who do you want? - someone asked.
“Submit a letter, a request to His Majesty,” said Nikolai with a trembling voice.
- Please contact the duty officer, please come here (he was shown the door below). They just won't accept it.
Hearing this indifferent voice, Rostov was afraid of what he was doing; the thought of meeting the sovereign at any moment was so tempting and therefore so terrible for him that he was ready to flee, but the chamberlain Fourier, who met him, opened the door to the duty room for him and Rostov entered.
A short, plump man of about 30, in white trousers, over the knee boots and one cambric shirt, apparently just put on, stood in this room; the valet was fastening beautiful new silk-embroidered footrests on his back, which for some reason Rostov noticed. This man was talking to someone who was in another room.
“Bien faite et la beaute du diable, [Well-built and the beauty of youth," this man said, and when he saw Rostov he stopped talking and frowned.
-What do you want? Request?…
– Qu"est ce que c"est? [What is this?] - someone asked from another room.
“Encore un petitionnaire, [Another petitioner,”] answered the man with the help.
- Tell him what's next. It's coming out now, we have to go.
- After the day after tomorrow. Late…
Rostov turned and wanted to go out, but the man in the arms stopped him.
- From whom? Who are you?
“From Major Denisov,” Rostov answered.
- Who are you? Officer?
- Lieutenant, Count Rostov.
- What courage! Give it on command. And go, go... - And he began to put on the uniform handed to him by the valet.
Rostov went out again into the hallway and noticed that there were already many officers and generals on the porch in full dress uniform, whom he had to pass by.
Cursing his courage, frozen by the thought that at any moment he could meet the sovereign and in his presence be disgraced and sent under arrest, fully understanding the indecency of his act and repenting of it, Rostov, with downcast eyes, made his way out of the house, surrounded by a crowd of brilliant retinue , when someone's familiar voice called out to him and someone's hand stopped him.

Ryabinin Nikolay Vladimirovich

International Master of Sports in Athletics.

The fact that there is a modern sports complex in the center of Prechistoye is his merit. Several years ago, Nikolai Ryabinin wrote a letter to the President of the Russian Federation, Dmitry Medvedev, asking for help with the construction of a stadium that was so necessary for May Day residents. And today hundreds of girls and boys, famous athletes, sports fans of all ages visit the new sports complex every day. “Movement is life!” - the slogan of the May Day activist. And he knows this firsthand. Nikolai Ryabinin is a current international master of sports in athletics, a winner of various world-class competitions. Behind him are thousands of kilometers, hundreds of cities and dozens of countries.

Essay-interview about Nikolai Vladimirovich Ryabinin

Nikolai Ryabinin is a person worthy of emulation. A father of many children, a social activist, an athlete and just a sincere person. It was Nikolai who was at the origins of the construction of the Nadezhda sports complex in the village of Prechistoye. Having once written a letter to the then-current president Dmitry Medvedev that a multifunctional sports facility was urgently needed in the beautiful village of the Yaroslavl region, the regional center of the Pervomaisky district, Nikolai and the entire sports community of the region found a response to their idea from the country's leadership. And now it’s 2018, and dozens of guys spend their free time at the stadium from morning to evening. Including Nikolai and his children.

On April 2, 2018, the children of grade 1a of the Prechistenskaya school met with Nikolai in their classroom. In addition to welcoming words and a call to play sports, Nikolai Ryabinin, Honored Master of Sports in International Athletics, demonstrated to the children master class on morning warm-up.

Joyful students, repeating the movements of the great May Day athlete, talked after the warm-up about the desire to be like today's famous guest. And this was the best indicator of the importance of the activities of famous people of the Pervomaiskaya land for the younger generation!

Tatyana Sokolova and children of grade 1a