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Amazing colourised pictures show Lenin and Stalin at the heart of the Russian revolution

The original black and white photographs were painstakingly colourised by artist Viacheslav Peregudov from Irkutsk, Russia

THE gritty reality of the Russian Revolution in the early 20th century has been brought to life thanks to a series of expertly colourised images.

Striking pictures show Vladimir Lenin disguised as factory worker KP Ivanov at Razliz station in August 1917 as well as Lenin with Joseph Stalin in 1922.

 Lenin speaking to the Red Army troops leaving for the front in Moscow, 1920
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Lenin speaking to the Red Army troops leaving for the front in Moscow, 1920Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com

Other stunning colour shots show the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II with his family and visiting the army in 1916, the Tsar family executor Jakob Jurovsky and the February revolution taking place in 1917.

The original black and white photographs were painstakingly colourised by artist Viacheslav Peregudov, 51, from Irkutsk, Russia.

He said: “The crowds were intoxicated by freedom soldiers mixed with civilians.”

“The first was the February revolution, which screamed in the squares about equality and brotherhood, followed by the Bolshevik revolution, the civil war.

 Emperor Nicholas II visits the Army in 1916
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Emperor Nicholas II visits the Army in 1916Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Colourised image of the Women of Death battalion in 1917
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Colourised image of the Women of Death battalion in 1917Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 The second anniversary of the October Revolution in Moscow, 1920
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The second anniversary of the October Revolution in Moscow, 1920Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 The funeral of Junkers in Vladivostok 1919
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The funeral of Junkers in Vladivostok 1919Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Jakob Jurovsky, who is known as the Tsar family executor, pictured in 1915
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Jakob Jurovsky, who is known as the Tsar family executor, pictured in 1915Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Lenin and Stalin in Gorky 1922
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Lenin and Stalin in Gorky 1922Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Nikolay Romanov with his son Alexay in exile, 1918
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Nikolay Romanov with his son Alexay in exile, 1918Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com

“And you're looking for the point where the giant Empire began its descent to the edge of the abyss.”

He continued: “One of the greatest dreams of any person in the world is a time machine. And the greatest regret of any person is that it is impossible to produce this machine in our world.

“Not in our time at least but who knows; maybe in 100 years. For now we can do it just in our imagination.

“I would say my time machine works on a fuel of imagination and the real colour of the past which is a channel of reality that has been ignored for many years due to black and white images.”

The Russian Revolution was a pair of revolutions in Russia in 1917 which dismantled the Tsarist autocracy and led to the rise of the Soviet Union.

 Lenin disguised as worker Ivanov in 1917
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Lenin disguised as worker Ivanov in 1917Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Boris Savinkov - a Russian writer - pictured in 1917
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Boris Savinkov - a Russian writer - pictured in 1917Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Red Army soldiers in 1919
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Red Army soldiers in 1919Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 A colourised picture of Rasputin
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A colourised picture of RasputinCredit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Leo Trotsky (centre, front)
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Leo Trotsky (centre, front)Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Sergei Vitte, Prime Minister of Imperial Russia, pictured in 1905
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Sergei Vitte, Prime Minister of Imperial Russia, pictured in 1905Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Emperor Nikolas II with his wife and their daughter Olga
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Emperor Nikolas II with his wife and their daughter OlgaCredit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com

The Russian Empire collapsed with the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II and the old regime was replaced by a provisional government during the first revolution of February 1917.

In the October Revolution, the Bolsheviks led an armed insurrection by workers and soldiers in Petrograd that successfully overthrew the Provisional Government, transferring all its authority to the soviets with the capital being relocated to Moscow shortly thereafter.

Soon after, civil war erupted among the "Reds" (Bolsheviks), the "Whites" (counter-revolutionaries), the independence movements and the non-Bolshevik socialists.

It continued for several years, during which the Bolsheviks defeated both the Whites and all rival socialists and thereafter reconstituted themselves as the Communist Party.

In this way, the Revolution paved the way for the creation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in 1922.

 Barricades on Petrograd in 1917
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Barricades on Petrograd in 1917Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Agitpoezd (agitation train) 'October Revolution' guards in 1919
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Agitpoezd (agitation train) 'October Revolution' guards in 1919Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Guard soldiers from the Kexholm regiment guarding the Central telegraph in Petrograd 1917
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Guard soldiers from the Kexholm regiment guarding the Central telegraph in Petrograd 1917Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Nikolay Marshalk with his brother and wife Vera, during the Civil War in Russia
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Nikolay Marshalk with his brother and wife Vera, during the Civil War in RussiaCredit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 Nikolas II pictured with his son
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Nikolas II pictured with his sonCredit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com
 February revolution in Russia in 1917
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February revolution in Russia in 1917Credit: Viacheslav Peregudov / mediadrumimages.com

Viacheslav began to colourise old photographs around five years ago and was quickly drawn to images of Russia in the early 20th Century.

He added: “When I started my project, it was just a few historical photos.

“I didn’t do it for money but just my private pleasure and today it is a collection of more than 50 colourised photos that were shot in the period from 1898 to 1935.

“Sometimes I do colourisation for other photographs but I always return to Russia in the early 1900s.”


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