 
  Literacy is the Path to Communism.
Poster Number: PP 1199
			  		  	  			  										Category: Education & Literacy
							  		  	  				Poster Notes: Poster was issued in Russian, German, Polish, Yiddish and Tatar languages.
			  		  	  				Media Size: 28x21
			  		  	  				Poster Type: Lithograph
			  		  	  				Publishing Date: 1920
			  		  		  		  	  				Print Run: 75,000
			  		  		  	  				Sources & Citation: Soviet Posters of the era of the Civil War 1918-1921 by B. S. Butnik-Siverskii (1960), page 485, poster 3253.
			  		  	  				Catalog Notes: PP 1199 Education & Literacy
			  		  		  	  				Language: Russian
			  		  	  Artist: Artist Unknown — неизвестный художник
					The artist's name on the poster is not indicated.  By assigning Artist Unknown to a poster it also could mean the artist used a chop mark whereby no signature is seen thus rendering the artist's identity anonymous.
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			Printer: 1st State Typo-lithography Workshop, Moscow (formerly Sytin) — 1-я Государственная типо-литография, Москва (до Сытина)
					The 1st State Typo-lithography Workshop began as the Sharapov-Sytin Partnership in the era before the Russian Revolution. Ivan Dmitrievich Sytin (1851-1934) was the son of a peasant from the Kostroma region northeast of Moscow.  In the 1860s, Sytin worked in Moscow as an apprentice and then as the manager for a printing shop owned by Peter Nikolaevich Sharapov.  In 1879, Sytin opened his own printing shop in Moscow using a single press.  By the start of ...
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			Publisher: State Publishing House, Moscow — Государственное издательство, Москва
			In May 1919, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee created the State Publishing House of the RSFSR (Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic), Moscow.  The State Publishing House had its origins in Imperial Russia as the Royal Print Yard in St. Petersburg.  As the Red Army controlled more provinces and cities in former Imperial Russia, the State Publishing House developed offices outside St. Petersburg.  The State Publishing House, Moscow is sometimes cited in historical references as the "...
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