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Telnyashka with stripes coloured in black. Designated Soviet and then Russian fleet and naval infantry.

A telnyashka (Russian: тельня́шка) is a dark color and white striped, sleeveless or not, undershirt, which is an iconic uniform of the Russian Navy, the Russian Airborne Troops (VDV) and the Russian Naval Infantry (marines), initially by Soviet predecessors of these troops. It has been a symbol of great military pride for those who wear it gradually becoming a broader symbol of masculinity and self-confidence.

Technical details[]

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Russian paratroopers wearing telnyashkas on a parade.

The official uniforms of mentioned troops include no shirts and a specially crafted jacket thus making telnyashkas a visible part of it (not just underwear).

Telnyashkas are also available to civilian customers and may come in a variety of knittings. Single thread knitting is the standard military-issue variant, but double and quadruple knittings for increased warmth can be produced. A quadruple telnyashka is enough to keep a person warm with nothing else on even at 5 °C, as it was originally developed for military divers to be worn under a dry suit.[1]

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Soviet special forces wear telnyashkas with battle dress during the War in Afghanistan.

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History[]

File:RIAN archive 21512 Duty Seaman Rings the Bells.jpg

Soviet Navy's Pacific Fleet sailor in full dress.

Telnyashkas come from a practice that originated in the merchants and fishermen of Brittany, who adopted the style to distinguish them from other nationalities at a distance, later adopted and popularized by the French Navy and other navies of the pre-Dreadnought era. These continued in use for some time.

The tradition of Russian/Soviet ground troops wearing a naval uniform comes from Soviet Navy sailors who fought on the ground while under siege during World War II. It is exemplified by the famed Soviet sniper Vassili Zaitsev. Zaitsev was a petty officer in the Soviet Pacific Fleet who volunteered for army duty, but, despite transfer, he refused to give up his Navy telnyashka because of the pride it engendered.

General Margelov, who was later to modernise the Soviet airborne forces, had previously served with a Naval Infantry unit in World War II, and procured telnyashkas for the VDV as a mark of their elite status.

Soviet Marines in  consisiting of black jacket and telnyashka.

Soviet Marines in full dress consisiting of black jacket and telnyashka.

In other countries[]

Bulgarian 68-th Special Forces Brigade have telnyashka as part of their uniform.

Troops' colors[]

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Russian Marines in dark-blue telnyashkas.

Telnyashkas with stripes of certain dark color are traditionally the marks of particular troops, for example:

File:RIAN archive 109544 Frontier Guards Day.jpg

Former servicemen wear green telnyashkas during Border Guard's Day celebration in Russia.

Popular culture[]

File:Nu pogodi by vjacheslav kotenochkin.jpg

A scene from the Nu, pogodi Episode #7, showing The Wolf in telnyashka.

Soviet 1936 silent propaganda film We Come from Kronshtadt started aesthetization of telnyaskha with the scene of Bolshevik sailor emerging from the sea in his torn undershirt after he survived execution by drowning.

Telnyashka has become such evident symbol of masculinity in Soviet culture, that it is sported by dozens of popular non-military characters of the cinema and even children' cartoons, notably The Wolf in the Nu, pogodi and Matroskin the Cat in the Troe iz Prostokvashino.

There is a popular saying that ironically presents telnyashkas as an attribute of "real men": "We are few in number, but we wear telnyashkas!" (["Нас мало, но мы в тельняшках!", Nas malo, no my v telnyashkakh!] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)).

References[]

  1. Henrik Holt. "Mens Wear: Russian Style". ArticleSnatch. 
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