Anastasia Ivanovna Filatova ( February 4, 1920 - October 21, 2001 , Moscow ) - the spouse of the leader of Mongolia Y. Tsedenbala , a Russian by nationality. She played a significant role in the policy of Mongolia, especially in social and educational programs. After the resignation of her husband, she lived with her entire family in Moscow, and repeatedly gave interviews. Tsedenbal and Filatov had two children: Vladislav (died in a car accident in 2000 [1] ) and Zoriga (scientist-biologist, lives in Moscow, daughter of Anastasia Tsedenbal).
| Anastasia Ivanovna Tsedenbal Filatova | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | February 4, 1920 |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | October 21, 2001 (81 years) |
| Place of death | Moscow , Russia |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | wife of the MPR leader, head of the MPR children's fund |
The correspondent of the newspaper " Izvestia " Leonid Shinkarev wrote that Tsedenbal and Filatov met through Nikolai Vazhnov , political adviser to Choibalsan in the mid-1940s. Filatov, then secretary of the Komsomol organization of the USSR Ministry of Trade, visited her neighbors Vazhnova in a Moscow communal apartment. According to the memoirs of his son Vazhnova, after Tsedenbal declared that he liked the girl, the Central Committee of the CPSU (b) recommended Vazhnova to promote their relationship [2] [3] . In Mongolia for many years the head of the Republican Children's Fund [4] . She was buried at the Vagankovo cemetery [5] .
In 2006, a monument was erected in the suburb of Ulan Bator Filatova.
Sources
- ↑ Journal of the Other - Photo for memory
- ↑ As Ryazan beauty Nastya Filatova commanded Mongolia // Izvestia , 2004
- ↑ Egorov M. Everybody was run by a redhead // Trud , June 2, 2006
- ↑ The book "Yumzhagiin Tsedenbal and Anastasia Filatova" was published in Mongolia
- ↑ Anastasia Ivanovna Tsedenbal-Filatova. Historical people of Mongolia
Links
Literature
- Shinkarev L.I. Tsedenbal and his time: a documentary narration in 2 vols. T. 1: Love. Power. Tragedy.; T. 2: Documents. Letters Memories. 2006, 920 pages. ISBN 5-9606-0026-9
- Shinkaryov L. Tsedenbal Filatova Khoyor: Khair Durlal, Erh Medel, Emganel. Ulaanbaatar, Mөnhiyn үseg hevlekh үyldver, 2004
- Sh. Nadirov 1984 (Moscow: Oriental Literature, 1995)
- Sergey Radchenko, "The 1964 Coupling of the Split and the Sino-Soviet Split", Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 8 (No. 1).