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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Miron Ivanovich Merzhanov, born Meran Merzhanyantz, was a Soviet architect of Armenian descent, notable for being the de-facto personal architect of Joseph Stalin in 1933 1941. Arrested in 1942 on political charges, Merzhanov continued professional work as a sharashka architect, designing numerous public buildings in the Black Sea region, Krasnoyarsk and Komsomolsk-na-Amure. Meran Merzhanyantz was born to a middle-class Armenian family in Nor Nakhichevan. On the eve…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Miron Ivanovich Merzhanov, born Meran Merzhanyantz, was a Soviet architect of Armenian descent, notable for being the de-facto personal architect of Joseph Stalin in 1933 1941. Arrested in 1942 on political charges, Merzhanov continued professional work as a sharashka architect, designing numerous public buildings in the Black Sea region, Krasnoyarsk and Komsomolsk-na-Amure. Meran Merzhanyantz was born to a middle-class Armenian family in Nor Nakhichevan. On the eve of World War I he graduated from high school and was admitted to Saint Petersburg Institute of Civil Engineers. Merzhanyantz was eventually drafted into the Russian Army and served in deep rear training units. After the Russian revolution of 1917 he deserted and returned to Rostov. When faced with mandatory draft into Denikin's front-line troops, he preferred to volunteer with the military engineers, again escaping combat service. With the fall of the White movement, Merzhanyantz relocated to Krasnodar