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  1. Korolev rarely talked about his experience in the Gulag, and lived under constant fear of being executed for the military secrets he possessed. He was deeply affected by his time in the camp, becoming reserved and cautious as a result.

  2. 9 de mar. de 2007 · In all, Korolev spent more than two years in various jails, including four months in the Gulag. Fortunately for him, the famous aircraft designer Andrei Tupolev was also a political prisoner and head of one of the prison design bureaus known as ‘sharashkas’.

  3. 7 de jan. de 2015 · Em 1938, no auge da maciça repressão do regime stalinista, Korolev foi acusado de sabotagem econômica e sentenciado a seis anos de prisão em um Gulag (campo de concentração soviético). Durante o tempo em que esteve preso, foi submetido a condições desumanas no trabalho de mineiro de ouro nas instalações do Kolyma ...

  4. Following the initial reconnaissance of the Moon by Lunas 1, 2, and 3, Korolev established three largely independent efforts aimed at achieving a Soviet lunar landing before the Americans. The first objective, met by Vostok and Voskhod, was to prove that human space flight was possible.

  5. 28 de out. de 2019 · October 28, 2019. Commentary. On Aug. 21, 1957, in the deserts of central Kazakhstan, flames licked the concrete of the Baikonur Cosmodrome. After three disastrous failed tests, rocket designer Sergei Korolev and his team from Special Design Bureau 1 desperately needed the launch they had gathered to observe to proceed as planned.

  6. 12 de abr. de 2010 · The Scientist Who Survived the Gulag to Launch Sputnik. A victim of Stalin's Great Purge, Sergei Korolev designed the Tu-2 bomber in prison and went on to lead the Soviet space program. by Stephen Budiansky 4/12/2010. Sputnik I. (NASA) Share This Article.

  7. Korolev eventually fell out of favor with the Stalin regime and was thrown in prison. The Russian prison system, known as the Gulag, was a very brutal place. Korolev spent months on a railway, on a sailing vessel, and working in a gold mine while a part of the prison system.