Русский: Плакат «В жертву Интернационалу». Без выходных данных. Цветная литография, 1 лист, 63×89 см
English: "Sacrifice to the International", a White Russian anti-Bolshevik propaganda poster produced during the Russian Civil War. In this image, a number of senior Bolsheviks - Uritzky, Sverdlov, Zinoviev, Lunacharsky, Lenin, Patrovsky, Trotsky, Kamenev, and Radek - sacrifice an allegorical character representing Russia to a statue of Karl Marx. The figure of Alexander Kerensky can be seen behind these figures, looking on impotently. In the foreground are negative stereotypes of Red Army characters, a sailor, Jews, one of whom holds a bag of thirty pieces of silver, a reference to the Biblical figure of Judas Iscariot, and Asiatic soldiers with booty.
Reproduced in various historical studies of revolutionary Russia, and on various websites, including that of the Victoria and Albert Museum, which has a copy of the poster in its collection.
Author
Неизвестный художник (не указан в выходных данных плаката; имеется нерасшифрованная авторская монограмма «МВ» или «ВМ»)
Licensing
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
This work is in the public domain in Russia according to article 1281 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation, articles 5 and 6 of Law No. 231-FZ of the Russian Federation of December 18, 2006 (the Implementation Act for Book IV of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation).
This usually means that one of the following conditions is fulfilled.
This work was originally published before January 1, 1930 and the known author of this work died:[1]
(a) before January 1, 1951 or
(b) between January 1, 1951 and January 1, 1955, did not work during the Great Patriotic War and did not participate in it.
This work was originally published anonymously or under a pseudonym before January 1, 1930 and the name of the author did not become known during 50 years after publication, counted from January 1 of the year following the year of publication.
This work is a film (a video fragment or a single shot from it):
(a) which was first shown before January 1, 1930[2] or
(b) which was created by legal entity between January 1, 1929 and January 1, 1930, provided that it was first shown in the stated period or was not shown until August 3, 1993.
This work is an information report (including photo report), which was created by an employee of TASS, ROSTA, or KarelfinTAG as part of that person’s official duties between July 10, 1925[3] and January 1, 1930, provided that it was first released in the stated period.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1930. [1] If the author of this work was subjected to repression and rehabilitated posthumously, replace the death date by the later rehabilitation date. [2] Amateur films which were first shown on January 1, 1930 or later are subjects of points 1-2 of this template. [3]ROSTA reports created before July 10, 1925 are subjects of points 1-2 of this template.