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- Marina_Yurlova abstract "Marina Yurlova (Russian: Мари́на Максимилиа́новна Ю́рлова; 25 February 1900 - 1 April 1984) was a Russian child soldier and author. She was born in Raevskaya, a small village near Krasnodar. The daughter of a colonel of the Kuban Cossacks, she was just 14 years old when her father went to war in August 1914. Caught up in the adventure and tradition of Cossack women following their men to the front, she became a child soldier in the Russian army at age 14. Specifically, she joined the Reconnaissance Sotnia (100 horse squadron) of the 3rd Ekaterinodar Regiment.Yurlova originally worked as a groom in Armenia; She was mentored and protected by a Sargeant in the army of the Causcasus named Kosel, who procured a uniform for Marina and made her a sort of mascot for his unit. In 1915, she was on a dangerous mission in which Kosel was killed, and she was shot in the leg while blasting bridges across the Araxes River near Yerevan. She was treated at the Red Cross hospital in Baku and then returned to the Eastern Front, where she trained as an auto mechanic and became a military driver. In 1917, she was wounded, and spent nearly the entire year 1918 in a hospital in Moscow, suffering from concussion and shell shock - the result of an explosion. After her release, she again joined the Russian forces under the command of Captain Kappel, and was shot through the shoulder by Bolsheviks while on patrol. According to her autobiography, she was wrongly sent to an asylum in Omsk for a period of about three weeks as she recovered from this wound and from shell shock. Due to the intervention of a friendly officer, she was released and given passage and 500 rubles to travel to the American hospital in Vladivostok. The train she was a passenger on was stopped in the middle of the Siberian wasteland, sandwiched between two Bolshevik armies. Led by a contingent of Russian officers, along with party of about 100 Royalists (both men and women) she walked through Siberia for a month, eventually reaching the American hospital in Vladivostok. The American hospital, Marina said, \"was quite perfectly run, quite perfectly kind\", and after recuperating there for three weeks, she was given passport and passage to Sulphur Springs, Japan. In 1922, she immigrated to the United States, where she performed as a dancer. She married filmmaker William C. Hyer and became a U.S. citizen in 1926.Yurlova published two autobiographies, Cossack Girl (1934) and Russia Farewell (1936). In 1984, she died at the age of 84 years.She won the Cross of Saint George for Bravery three times.".
- Marina_Yurlova birthDate "1900-02-25".
- Marina_Yurlova birthName "Marina Maximilionovna Yurlova".
- Marina_Yurlova birthPlace Raevskaya.
- Marina_Yurlova birthPlace Russian_Empire.
- Marina_Yurlova birthYear "1900".
- Marina_Yurlova deathDate "1984-04-01".
- Marina_Yurlova deathYear "1984".
- Marina_Yurlova nationality Russian_Americans.
- Marina_Yurlova occupation Marina_Yurlova__1.
- Marina_Yurlova stateOfOrigin Russian_Americans.
- Marina_Yurlova thumbnail Marina_Yurlova_2.jpg?width=300.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageID "44807543".
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageLength "5167".
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageRevisionID "700808727".
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink 14_-_Diaries_of_the_Great_War.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Aras_(river).
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Armenia.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Category:1900_births.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Category:1984_deaths.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Category:Imperial_Russian_emigrants_to_the_United_States.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Category:Kuban_Cossacks.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Category:Russian_soldiers.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Cross_of_St._George.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Krasnodar.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Kuban_Cossacks.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Raevskaya.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Russian_Americans.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Russian_Empire.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink World_War_I.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink Yerevan.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLink File:Marina_Yurlova.jpg.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageWikiLinkText "Marina Yurlova".
- Marina_Yurlova birthDate "1900-02-25".
- Marina_Yurlova birthName "Marina Maximilionovna Yurlova".
- Marina_Yurlova birthPlace Raevskaya.
- Marina_Yurlova birthPlace Russian_Empire.
- Marina_Yurlova deathDate "1984-04-01".
- Marina_Yurlova deathPlace "New York, New York".
- Marina_Yurlova name "Marina Yurlova".
- Marina_Yurlova nationality Russian_Americans.
- Marina_Yurlova notableWorks "Cossack Girl, Russia Farewell".
- Marina_Yurlova occupation "soldier, writer, dancer".
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Birth_date.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Death_date_and_age.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_person.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-ru.
- Marina_Yurlova wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Marina_Yurlova subject Category:1900_births.
- Marina_Yurlova subject Category:1984_deaths.
- Marina_Yurlova subject Category:Imperial_Russian_emigrants_to_the_United_States.
- Marina_Yurlova subject Category:Kuban_Cossacks.
- Marina_Yurlova subject Category:Russian_soldiers.
- Marina_Yurlova hypernym Soldier.
- Marina_Yurlova type Agent.
- Marina_Yurlova type Person.
- Marina_Yurlova type Person.
- Marina_Yurlova type Agent.
- Marina_Yurlova type NaturalPerson.
- Marina_Yurlova type Thing.
- Marina_Yurlova type Q215627.
- Marina_Yurlova type Q5.
- Marina_Yurlova type Person.
- Marina_Yurlova comment "Marina Yurlova (Russian: Мари́на Максимилиа́новна Ю́рлова; 25 February 1900 - 1 April 1984) was a Russian child soldier and author. She was born in Raevskaya, a small village near Krasnodar. The daughter of a colonel of the Kuban Cossacks, she was just 14 years old when her father went to war in August 1914. Caught up in the adventure and tradition of Cossack women following their men to the front, she became a child soldier in the Russian army at age 14.".
- Marina_Yurlova label "Marina Yurlova".
- Marina_Yurlova sameAs Q17297762.
- Marina_Yurlova sameAs Marina_Yurlova.
- Marina_Yurlova sameAs Marina_Yurlova.
- Marina_Yurlova sameAs m.0c5kkc3.
- Marina_Yurlova sameAs Q17297762.
- Marina_Yurlova wasDerivedFrom Marina_Yurlova?oldid=700808727.
- Marina_Yurlova depiction Marina_Yurlova_2.jpg.
- Marina_Yurlova isPrimaryTopicOf Marina_Yurlova.
- Marina_Yurlova name "Marina Yurlova".