Vertushka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Vertushka (Russian: Вертушка) was a special internal telephone system in the Soviet Union, named after the Russian word for rotary dials, the existence of which on a telephone was a novelty in an era dominated by manual switchboards. The telephone is dial-less and directly linked to Kremlin. It connected the leader to key subordinates, like regional party secretary, high ranking military officials or big state-owned factory chiefs. Having a Vertushka reflected the high status of the owner in the hierarchy of governance.[1][2] The telephone was designed for only receiving calls from the leader. [3]

Parallel systems existed in other cities as well as in the capitals of Soviet satellite states, as well as in many Soviet ministries and departments, to make up for an insufficiency in funding levels for a true national network; the legacy of this persisted beyond the fall of the Soviet Union, with approximately 20% of phones in 1991 existing on private networks.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Space vacuums and dial-less phones: Surprise designs behind the Iron Curtain. CNN.
  2. ^ Sistema: How power works in modern Russia. Russia Direct.
  3. ^ Made in Russia—In praise of the unsung icons of Soviet design. Calvert Journal.
  4. ^ Solnick, Steven (1991). "Revolution, Reform and the Soviet Telephone System, 1917-1927". Soviet Studies. 43 (1): 167–172. ISSN 0038-5859. Retrieved 19 June 2021.

Further reading[]

  • Breaking with Moscow, Arkady Shevchenko, Knopf (1985) ISBN 0-394-52055-6
  • Nomenklatura : the Soviet Ruling Class, Michael Voslensky ; translated by Eric Mosbacher ; preface by Milovan Djilas, Doubleday (1984) ISBN 0-385-17657-0
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