Lenin–Stalinnьꞑ tugunuꞑ adaa-pile

[1][2] It functioned as the theoretical magazine of the Central Committee of the Tuvan People's Revolutionary Party.

[6] Over the course of its existence, editors of the Russian language edition, Pod znamenem Lenina–Stalina, included V. Belov, M. Volkov, Alexander Palmbach [ru], G. Miroshnichenko, M. Suschevsky and Y.

[1] The magazine covered issues relating to the political, economic, cultural, scientific and statistical affairs of the republic.

[6] According to Aranchyn, the publication called for the "abolition of feudalism and overcoming its religious ideology, for the construction of a non-capitalist economic system and development of a new revolutionary-democratic culture based on Marxist methodology and revolutionary practice".

[10] Seventy copies of the magazine, in both the Russian- and Tuvan-language editions, are held in the rare-book collections of the Tuva National Museum.

Cover of issue 2 of Pod znamenem Lenina–Stalina , 1942