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Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations list
How to find all 19 collectables across every archive.
Jedi: Fallen Order Encrypted Logs are bonus collectables you can find as you play through the adventure.
These are special recordings your droid BD-1 can decrypt that detail the research of Eno Cordova, an old jedi that travelled the galaxy looking to unearth secrets about an ancient civilization.
Some of these logs are impossible to miss while completing the main quest, while others require you to scan certain objects / places to unlock.
On this page:
- Archive One - Discovery
- Archive Two - Miktrull
- Archive Three - Dathomir
- Archive Four - Eilram
- Archive Five - Astrium
- Archive Six - Vision
- Archive Seven - Goodbye
There are 19 encrypted logs for you to find in total, all split into seven distinct categories labelled as 'Archives'.
This Encrypted Log locations page will feature all 19 in order from Archive One - Seven. This way if you've reached the end of the game before grabbing them all, you can jump to a specific category of your choosing.
After more assistance with Jedi Fallen Order? Our pages on Legendary Beasts and Lightsaber parts can help.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive One - Discovery
Encrypted Log 1: To unlock the file 'An Ancient Sphere', you'll need to have learnt how to force pull so that you can reach a certain scannable object. Start from the Abandoned Workshop save point on Bogano.
From there, look towards the direction of the Mantis and you'll see a wall you can run across. Traverse this wall and climb up to the top of the Bogdo Sinkholes.
Once you're on top, look left and you'll see a pipe you can force pull down to make a bridge. Cross over this makeshift bridge, then walk left all the way to the edge of the cliff you're standing on. Ahead of you, there will be a rope hanging from a crane. Jump off the edge and force pull the rope to you, safely making swinging across to the other side.
As soon as you land, immediately turn around and jump back on the rope towards the Bogdo Sinkholes. You'll see a spinning fan that you must jump through embedded in the wall of the cliff. Swing towards this fan and jump off the rope. While airborne, you must slow the blades of this fan so that you can pass through it unhurt.
If you managed to make it through the fan, you'll land on a metal platform with a chest. From this platform, you can scan the orb hanging over the room to gain the encrypted log.
Encrypted Log 2: For the second entry - 'Sage, Vault and Tomb', start from the save point at the Abandoned workshop on Bogano. From there, travel along the pipe into the Hermit's Abode. Once you're inside, slow the fan blade and walk up to the table dead ahead. Scan this table for the second log to be added to the databank.
Encrypted Log 3: To unlock the log 'The Sages', start from the Abandoned Village save point on Zeffo. From there go into the caves next to you until you reach a split path. Take the right path and continue forward until you cross a metal pipe.
Once you've walked over this pipe, keep right until you find a large metal box. Scanning this box will play a recorded message from Cordova, and unlock the third log.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive Two - Miktrull
Encrypted Log 1: The encrypted log 'Sage Miktrull' can be found in the large circular building in the Tomb of Miktrull. Make your way to the second floor and use the vines to climb up to the higher side of the room.
From there, walk left until you see a broken wall you can force push open. Break down this wall and there will be a scannable wall next to a chest. Once you scan the wall, an audio recording will play and the log will be added.
Encrypted Log 2: The second log, 'Magnets' can be found soon after you enter the Tomb of Miktrull. From the save point, continue forward until you reach a large circular room with a water-covered floor.
From there, force push a weak part of the wall to reveal an exit. Walk through this new exit, and walk to the left side of the new room you've found yourself in. Scanning the wall will play an audio recording and give you the log.
Encrypted Log 3: The final log in the archive 'The Key to the Vault' is unmissable and gained through a cinematic. After freeing the ball inside in the Tomb of Miktrull, push it onto the slot on the floor to raise a hidden room.
Inside, the cinematic will start and BD-1 will play a video recording of Cordova. After this is finished, the log will be automatically added to your databank.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive Three - Dathomir
Encrypted Log 1: The first time you leave the temple on Bogano, you'll have to pass through the Abandoned Workshop while making your way back to the Mantis. On the way, you'll pass by a mural to Dathomir on a stone tablet, and a recording of Cordova will play. After the recording finishes, you'll gain the log 'Discovering Dathomir'.
Encrypted Log 2: For this encrypted log, fly to Dathomir and enter the Nightmare Ruins via the front entrance. Once you're inside walk up to the stairs ahead of you. Look right of the base of these stairs, and scan the pots by the large statues for to gain the log 'Kujet's Tomb'.
Encrypted Log 3: The log 'Shrouded in Darkness' can be found inside the Tomb of Kujet on Dathomir. Once you enter through the gap in the wall. Walk forward while keeping the right side of the large hallway. You will be able to scan the ashen bodies of Zeffo here, which will play an audio recording and add the final log of the archive to your databank.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive Four - Eilram
Encrypted Log 1: This log is obtained upon entering the tomb of Eilram on Zeffo during the quest 'The Eye of the Storm'. To unlock it, slow the rocks blocking your path in the storm at the centre of the tomb, then step on the glowing button on the floor.
Doing this will activate the lift, play an audio recording, and unlock the first log 'Tomb of Eilram'.
Encrypted Log 2: The log 'Sage Eilram' requires you to do a force push puzzle near the Tomb of Eilram save point in the large room with the tomb guardian. First, push the ball down the ramp towards the tomb guardian, then into the circular slot to your left in an illuminated room.
This will activate the wind tunnel and open a path behind where the tomb guardian was standing.
Go through this newly opened path and climb up the railing to find a second ball. Push the ball through the weakened wall to bring it down to the large room you were previously in. Force push this new ball into the recently activated wind tunnel to shoot it up to a higher platform.
Jump up to this platform and you'll see another slot to leave the second ball. Push the ball in and a path will open to your left with a large wind chime hanging from the ceiling. Scanning this chime will unlock the log.
Encrypted Log 3: This log is unlocked immediately after completing the quest 'The Eye of the Storm'. After learning how to force push, push down the door in front of you to gain access to a large spherical room.
Walk to the centre of this room, and a cinematic will automatically play showing a video recording of Cordova. After it's over, the log 'An Old Friend' will be unlocked in the databank.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive Five - Astrium
Encrypted Log 1: As you are climbing up the Origin tree on Kashyyyk for the first time, you'll encounter the giant Shyyyo Bird who lands on a small platform in front of two lung plants.
Once the bird flies away, walk onto the platform it was perched on and scan the feathers left behind. Scanning these will play an audio recording and unlock the encrypted log 'Shyyyo Bird'.
Encrypted Log 2: Make your way to the Gnarled Heights save point and wall run your way further up the tree. Once you do, pass through a hollowed out branch and jump down onto the nest of the Shyyyo Bird.
Walk to the back of the nest, and climb up two ledges to a hidden platform where a chest can be found. Turn around, and BD-1 will be able to scan the platform and play an audio log that unlocks the 'Astrium' encrypted log.
Encrypted Log 3: The third log 'Astrium' is gained once you make your way into the Chieftain's Canopy for the first time. Simply walk inside and BD-1 will scan the centre of the room, triggering a video recording to play and the log to be unlocked.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive Six - Vision
Encrypted Log 1: For the first log 'The Premonition', start at the save point in the Abandoned Workshop on Bogano, and take the pipe into Hermit's Abode. Climb up to the second floor via the rope and enter the room where you cut the electric wires.
Once you're there, scan the scrap in the centre of the room and an audio log will play - unlocking the entry in your databank.
Encrypted Log 2: To get the log 'Acquiring the Holocron', you'll need force push and the ability to slice open locked doors. Start from the save point in the Subterranean Refuge on Bogano and walk into The Great Divide.
As you walk there, look right and there will be a bridge you can force push down to make a path over to the other side of the area. Cross this bridge, then continue forward towards a large illuminated cave.
Once you've entered this cave, climb up the vines and ascend the stairs. Halfway up, you'll find a locked door that BD-1 will need to unlock. When the door is open, walk inside then immediately turn left and walk to the two statues close by.
Scanning these statues will play an audio recording and grant you this encrypted log.
Jedi Fallen Order Encrypted Logs locations in Archive Seven - Goodbye
Encrypted Log 1: The log 'My Friend' is gained upon finding your Kyber Crystal in the Crystal Caves on Ilum.
This is part of the main quest and can't be missed. Once the video recording of Cordova has been played in a cinematic the log will be unlocked.
Encrypted Log 2: When you first enter the vault on Bogano, BD-1 can scan the round object in the centre of the room. This will trigger a cutscene and unlock the ability to find other encrypted logs.
After the video recording left by Cordova is over, the log 'Secrets of the Vault' will be unlocked in the databank.
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Encrypted Logs Location in Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order
Location of all Cordava's Journey BD-1's encrypted logs for Databank in Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order, 7 story related and 12 find and scan encrypted logs, Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order Maps & Walkthrough.
There are a total of 19 Encrypted Logs in Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order, they are listed in Databank as Cordova's Journey Logs.
You have to find all Encrypted Logs for Data Disk Achievement - "Find all of BD-1's encrypted logs" .
7 Encrypted Logs will unlock automatically becouse they are story related .
12 Encrypted Logs you have find and scan manualy .
Cordova's Journey Logs:
Archive one - discovery, archive two - miktrull, archive three - dathomir, archive four - eilram, archive five - astrium, archive six - vision, archive seven - goodbye, 1. an ancient sphere.
Location: Bogano Bogdo Sinkholes
My Friend, I've unearthed a curious artifact. An ancient sphere capable of storing and conducting massive amounts of energy. Whatever civilization crafted this must be the same that created the seemingly impenetrable structure nearby! | believe studying this sphere may yield the information I need to discover who they were and why they built such a landmark.
2. Sage, Vault And Tomb
Location: Bogano Hermit's Abode
My Friend, examinations of the sphere proved fruitful. I've found similar relics across Bogano's surface, including a precious few with glyphs! After much study, I've discerned a pattern and begun to translate their language. Within their glyphs, I've determined the words Sage, Vault, and Tomb. There is more: what appears to be coordinates to the Zeffo system! Perhaps this is the same ancient civilization which abounded there!
3. The Sages
Location: Zeffo Turbine Facility
My friend, in the rotations since I left Bogano l've uncovered more about the Zeffo than I once believed possible. This planet, their homeworld, has been a revelation! It appears many, yet not all the Zeffo could wield the Force! They called it the "Life Wind" and those who wielded it, sages. Three names appear with frequency: Eilram, Miktrull, Kujet. It seems these sages held esteemed positions within their culture. I've informed the Council, to lukewarm reception. They have become too focused on Jedi history, but the history of the Force belongs to us all.
1. Sage Miktrull
Location: Zeffo Tomb of Miktrull
My Friend, what I've found here is disconcerting. It seems these candles were offerings brought to this tomb in exaltation of the Sage Miktrull. At first I believed them votives to the Life Wind, but the further | delve into this tomb the less the evidence supports this. And yet there is one gift that intrigues me, statuary of Zeffo holding circular objects much like spheres. Though much of this tomb is well preserved, these are uniformly destroyed. An interesting puzzle.
My Friend, these devices appear to simulate this planet's gravitational pull. I can't help but see it as a motif. This place, less a tomb and more a temple to one ruler's pride. I've found repeated glyphs with the same word: "Astrium." Always near damaged statues. I believe this Astrium was once a ubiquitous, sacred symbol. Perhaps even linked to the Vault.
3. The Key To The Vault
Location: Zeffo Tomb of Miktrull - Story Related
My Friend, I finally found an intact representation of the most sacred Zeffo artifact. A depiction of Miktrull at the Vault on Bogano - you can see the object in their hand. I believe it allows a Force wielder to perceive the mysteries of the Vault. It is the key and the guide: the Zeffo Astrium! But who destroyed images of it and why? It requires further research, however the next step is clear: find an Astrium, if any still exist.
1. Discovering Dathomir
Location: Bogano - Abandoned Workshop
My Friend, I recently discovered the Zeffo had some interest in Dathomir. Strange for such a culture to have any sort of fascination with a place so... dark. There's more to be discovered on Dathomir.
2. Kujet's Tomb
Location: Dathomir Nightmare Ruins
My Friend, we've reached the tomb of Kujet in search of an Astrium. It is more secluded than even I would've thought. It seems the way in was secret even during the time of the Zeffo. A contrast from the ostentatious Tomb of Miktrull... yet not a welcome one. The Nightsisters of Dathomir granted me passage, but even they warned me against these ruins. Something dark transpired here - I can feel it.
3. Shrouded In Darkness
Location: Dathomir Tomb of Kujet
My friend, I have never been one to shy away from the pursuit of knowledge, but the shadow of the dark side lies heavy in this tomb. I've uncovered Kujet's legacy: a ruthless leader who destroyed the Astriums and lives of any who opposed the sage's rule. These Zeffo were once Kujet's enemies, brave rebels who stood against tyranny. F-forgive me. I've spent too many rotations on this planet. My mind is beginning to slip. I can go no further. I must return to Zeffo.
1. Tomb Of Eilram
Location: Zeffo Tomb of Eilram - Story Related
My Friend, I believe this to be the earliest Zeffo site we've uncovered yet. Despite my reservations, I cannot chase the Bogano Vault from my mind. Its visions shaped the direction of an entire culture. I must understand why.
2. Sage Eilram
Location: Zeffo Tomb of Eilram
My Friend, This tomb is utterly fascinating. It once served as a proving ground for Force-sensitive Zeffo sages, but was converted into a space to honor their remains. And yet nothing received greater honor here than the Force itself, the Life Wind, as they called it. It's beautiful to see.
3. An Old Friend
My Friend, After my analysis of the architecture in Eilram's Tomb, I confirmed the Zeffo had contact with Kashyyyk! It's time to call on an old friend. There's a good chance Chieftain Tarfful can provide the information I seek.
1. Shyyyo Bird
Location: Kashyyyk Origin Tree
My Friend, as Tarfful led us here he spoke of a glorious creature called the Shyyyo Bird. He said the bird is the forest's protector. So rare it's nearly legendary. I would dearly love to research this creature further, but the Astrium must be my priority. Thope to one day return and search for the Shyyyo with Tarfful.
2. Origin Tree
Location: Kashyyyk Gnarled Heights
My Friend, Never have I seen a view more exquisite than atop this free. The climb has given me time to reflect. It was the will of the Force that I found Bogano, and that I am here now. There is a greater journey ahead.
Location: Kashyyyk Chieftain's Canopy - Story Related
My Friend, I found my quarry atop Kashyyyk's Origin Tree: the Astrium. This relic is the key to the vault on Bogano. The dark side clouded every attempt at finding one on Dathomir, but the Force provided a new path!
1. The Premonition
My Friend, Entering the Vault gave me a premonition just as it did for the Zeffo. I saw the fall of the Jedi, the overwhelming power of the dark side spreading across the galaxy! We must act quickly. I need to inform the Council!
2. Acquiring The Holocron
Location: Bogano Abandoned Workshop
My Friend, I flew with all haste to Coruscant and presented my findings to the Council. Despite my persistence, despite my research, they do not take this threat seriously. Only one person believed in me. My old confidant, Jocasta Nu. She entrusted me with a holocron from the Jedi Archives - a secret copy of her list of young Force-sensitives.
1. My Friend
Location: Ilum - Crystal Caves - Story Related
BD-1, This may be the last you see of me. I can sense the doom of the Jedi Order is upon us. I must leave the holocron behind - if anything happens to me, I trust that another will come to find it. You agreed to guard this secret, at the cost of your own memories. I will never forget that sacrifice. I believe in you, as I always have. If another Jedi comes to Bogano, you will be their guide. Thank you. Goodbye, my friend.
2. Secrets Of The Vault
Location: Bogano Ancient Vault - Story Related
My Friend, My name is Jedi Master Eno Cordova. The Bogano Vault - constructed by the Zeffo millennia ago - granted me a vision of the Jedi's doom. To preserve the Order, I've hidden a holocron detailing the names and locations of all known young Force-sensitives deep within the Vault. To access the holocron you must seek out the tombs of three great Zeffo Sages. BD-1 will aid you on your journey. He will be your guide.
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Cordova’s Encrypted Logs (“Data Disk” Achievement/Trophy)
View guide index
Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order Guide & Walkthrough
- The Journey Begins
- Rebuilding the Jedi Order
- The Eye of the Storm
- The Tomb of Eilram
- A Fateful Meeting
- The Second Sister's Origin
- The Tomb of Miktrull
- Fractured Trust
- Diverging Paths
- Fall of the Ninth Sister
- The Swamps of Dathomir
- Shadow of the Master
- Laid to Rest
- The Lost Holocron
- The Final Battle
- Chests in Bogano
- Secrets in Bogano
- Force Echoes in Bogano
- Data Scans in Bogano
- Chests in Zeffo
- Secrets in Zeffo
- Force Echoes in Zeffo
- Data Scans in Zeffo
- Chests in Kashyyyk
- Secrets in Kashyyyk
- Force Echoes in Kashyyyk
- Data Scans in Kashyyyk
- Chests in Dathomir
- Secrets in Dathomir
- Force Echoes in Dathomir
- Data Scans in Dathomir
- Chests in Ilum
- Secrets in Ilum
- Force Echoes in Ilum
- Data Scans in Ilum
- Data Scans in the Fortress Inquisitorius
- Terrarium Seeds ("Green Thumb" Achievement/Trophy)
- Cordova's Encrypted Logs ("Data Disk" Achievement/Trophy)
This part of the Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order Walkthrough is dedicated to the Encrypted Logs that Cordova left in BD-1’s memory. There are 19 Encrypted Logs, and if you get all of them, you unlock the “ Data Disk ” Achievement/Trophy. Those Encrypted Logs are like Data Scans. Seven of them will automatically be unlocked during your adventure. For the other twelve, you will find here their precise location with pictures and descriptions, classified by planet.
Archive One: Discovery – 1. An Ancient Sphere
Zone : Bogdo Sinkholes
This Encrypted Log is hidden in Cordova’s workshop where there is a huge sphere. To scan it, you have to wait until you get the Force Pull to lower a bridge, and then you have to use a rope and the Force Slow to slip between the propellers. Alternatively, you can also use the Jedi Flip once unlocked.
Archive Six: Vision – 2. Acquiring the Holocron
Zone : Abandoned Workshop
To find this Encrypted Log, you must unlock the Force Push to reach the Abandoned Workshop by its flooded area, and then use BD-1’s Scomp Link skill to open this door. The object to be scanned is located directly on your left as you enter the room.
Archive One: Discovery – 2. Sage, Vault and Tomb
Zone : Hermit’s Abode
In the Hermit’s Abode, slow down the propeller to reach a workbench where you repaired BD-1 at the beginning of the adventure. The Encrypted Log is on the table at the back.
Archive Six: Vision – 1. The Premonition
This Encrypted Log is located on the upper level of the Hermit’s Abode, above Cordova’s room, where BD-1 first healed you after you received an electrical shock by attacking a cable.
Archive Two: Miktrull – 1. Sage Miktrull
Zone : Tomb of Miktrull
This message is located in a small alcove in the main room of the tomb. You must destroy a wall with the Force Push to reveal it and a chest.
Archive Two: Miktrull – 2. Magnets
This Encrypted Log is located in the first room of the tomb where you must activate a switch to burn brambles. Scan the left wall to trigger the message.
Archive One: Discovery – 3. The Sages
Zone : Turbine Facility
This Encrypted Log is located in the cave plunged into darkness where the Empire’s turbines are. As soon as you enter the area, turn right and scan what looks like a crate.
Archive Four: Eilram – 2. Sage Eilram
Zone : Tomb of Eilram
In the area of the tomb where you need to activate mechanisms with spheres, scan the chimes hanging from the ceiling at the back of the room to obtain this Encrypted Log.
Archive Five: Astrium – 1. Shyyyo Bird
Zone : Origin Tree
This giant feather to scan is located just after unlocking the Jedi Flip power, in the area of the Origin Tree.
Archive Five: Astrium – 2. Origin Tree
Just after healing the Shyyyo bird, climb on the right edge to be able to scan the tree and get this Encrypted Log.
Archive Three: Dathomir – 2. Kujet’s Tomb
Zone : Nightmare Ruins
This Encrypted Log is located just before the entrance to the Tomb of Kujet, you will need to scan the statue to the right of the stairs to decrypt it.
Archive Three: Dathomir – 3. Shrouded in Darkness
Zone : Tomb of Kujet
Once inside the tomb and before facing Taron Malicos, scan the ashes on your right to get this Encrypted Log.
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Zeffo Encrypted Logs Locations
This page will show all the locations of Encrypted Logs that can be found when exploring Zeffo in Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order. As Cal Kestis explores different planets , his buddy droid, BD-1 , can find certain elements to inspect and scan, gaining new information about the worlds you traverse.
How to Find and Unlock All Encrypted Logs in Zeffo
To make things as easy as possible, all Encrypted Log locations have been broken down and categorized into the areas in which they are found.
Turbine Facility
Archive one - discovery | the sages 03.
When entering the Turbine Facility, take the path that leads right and use the wall run. Once on the other side, follow the path across the pipe and you'll find the Encrypted Log in a crate that sits along the edge of the path.
Tomb of Miktrull
Cordova's journey | archive two: miktrull 02.
Once you arrive in the Tomb of Miktrull, head upstairs to the flooded room. Make your way to the left side of the room by walking around the outside of the area. You will find the data entry location along the large wall as you walk back inside the area.
Up Next: Dathomir Collectibles
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Data Disk achievement in Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order
Find all of BD-1's encrypted logs
How to unlock the Data Disk achievement
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Moscow 25 years on: do I still recognise the city?
When former Moscow correspondent Mark Rice-Oxley first set foot in the city, the cars were all Zhigulis, no one smiled, and a trip to Pizza Hut was a big day out. A quarter of a century on, how much has life really changed here?
- Moscow then and now: interactive with images from the Guardian archive
W i-Fi on the metro. Startups in the suburbs. Glass towers in the business parks and rollerbladers on the embankment. What happened to Moscow? It used to be so gloriously haggard, like it was nursing the mother of all hangovers from 200 years of heavy history.
Not any more. Now lovers canoodle by fountains that dance to Tchaikovsky. Middle classes murmur in al fresco restaurants to a bossa nova soundtrack. There are marble malls and 24-hour supermarkets and lots of children’s playgrounds. Grass and pedestrian walkways and public conveniences. And still the facelift goes on.
It is 25 years since this correspondent first set foot in Europe’s largest city. In those days, the air was thick with cheap gasoline, cars were all Zhigulis (Ladas) and ZiLs – or else dodgy, paperless German saloons driven by men with thick necks and leather jackets. A chic lunch was a kebab at the Baku restaurant on Gorky street; a trip to Pizza Hut was a big day out. The colours people wore really were 50 shades of grey, only not so much EL James as LI Brezhnev . And no one smiled.
The question for someone who lived here through the 1990s but hasn’t been back for a decade is this: is it for the better? The answer has to be yes.
There are some things that jar. The first thing you notice is the traffic. In 1990, there were less than a million cars on Moscow’s roads. Now there are at least 4 million. Sometimes it feels as if all of them are stuck on the road in front of you.
The authorities appear to have decided that the solution is more roads, so a flurry of construction creates further hold-ups. Eventually there will be four ring roads, which might help. Or it might just bring even more drivers out on to the roads.
The thoroughfares and side streets are infinitely better than 20 years ago, however, when they were so uneven that sometimes it was a smoother ride to drive down the tramlines (trams have now been axed). There are also car parks and designated spaces instead of people just dumping their cars on the sidewalk, and digital departure boards for (new) buses and trolleys – plus an app that shows their current location.
Shopping is a very different experience too. In the late Soviet period, shops were named bluntly after the products that were supposed to be on sale inside but often weren’t: Bread, Milk, Products, Clothes, Flowers. In time these gave way to “kiosk capitalism”: a messy array of shacks and “pavilions” selling everything from Mars bars to medicine, and shoes to sunflower seeds. Impromptu markets sprang up everywhere: fruit, vegetables, and the sad sight of pensioners selling old radios, flowers, car parts – anything to supplement their income.
Now all that has gone. Instead, Moscow offers a retail experience every capitalist metropolis will recognise. Supermarkets and malls, nail parlours and jewellers, banks and car showrooms – oh, and lots of dentists, for some reason.
If there is an objection here, it’s that the architectural charm of old Moscow is being bludgeoned by neon and new monoliths; glass and steel is smothering history and nostalgia. More liveable? Yes. More civilised? Perhaps. More vulgar? In places, yes – although a leafy proliferation of green covers a multitude of sins.
The other notable change is the love affair with English. Twenty-five years ago, there were few clues for non-Russian speakers. Now, though, you can have a pedikyur after a biznes lanch at Coffee Khaus , while checking your gadzhet . This correspondent was directed by a volyunteer to a shattle (shuttle bus) for a meeting with a prshik (P-R-shik, or PR official).
Lifestyles and attitudes seem to have been transformed too – a collective lifting of mood. I’m not the only to notice: Ilya and Svetlana, expatriate Russians living in Germany who are back in Moscow for the first time in six years, say they are so pleasantly surprised that they might consider moving back. “Everyone seems to be free and moving about happily,” says Svetlana. “I’ve never seen the city like this before. It’s full of art and culture and just a different atmosphere.”
Things I have seen for the first time in Moscow this week include: unicyclists, parking meters, kids on trikes, open-air table tennis tables and slot machines. But not everything has changed. A concrete spray of high-rise buildings still fans out into endless suburbs – though even here, modernity is encroaching. One of my old apartment blocks (a typical 1960s, five-storey affair) is now dwarfed on all sides by high-rise office blocks in a style that new Moscow seems to like: terracotta redbrick punctuated by black glass.
Out in the suburbs, the first thing that strikes you is the space. Because everyone lives up in the air, not cheek-by-jowl on the ground, there are huge open reaches that nobody seems to quite know what to do with. Old Moscow is still very visible out here: kiosks selling fruit and newspapers, old ladies peddling books, shoes, lengths of old cable.
And while the bulldozers and diggers are coming, with manifold signs of reconstruction everywhere you go, perhaps the old tower blocks aren’t really all that bad. They may look ugly and tired in places, but they are energy efficient (important in a city which must keep 11 million people warm for six sub-zero months of the year). They also encourage neighbourliness and a community spirit, and deter loneliness. And they have these great rubbish chutes you can use to dump your trash 22 storeys down to the ground.
Other aspects of Moscow remain eternal. This must, for example, be one of the greenest metropolises in the world – there are more trees than ever here. And one of the whitest too, with very, very few black or ethnic faces on the streets. It may also be one of the thinnest – obesity is not something Russia has to worry about – and one of the most musical: there is always a soundtrack playing in the city’s public spaces – from tango to techno, Sinatra to Stevie Wonder, plus the full range of Russian favourites: pop, punk and folk.
And then there’s the metro, of course. A delicious waft of ancient air, biscuity with notes of damp greatcoats, hits you as you enter. A ride is 60p, less if you bulk buy. Trains every minute. There are more stops than 20 years ago, one or two new lines even, but everything else is remarkably unchanged.
It’s easy to imagine you’re in a film down here. Deep tunnels, marble and chandeliers. Escalators that plunge further than the eye can see. And that same solicitous female voice (has it ever been changed?) that asks you to be careful when the doors shut, and not to forget your things when you get off.
If anywhere sums up Moscow’s transformation, though, it is the city’s epicentre: cranes, smart upcycled buildings almost Hanseatic in style, vast pedestrian areas, and a stage in construction for Moscow’s next big party: Friday’s Russia Day . At the centre of it all is Red Square. And it still isn’t red.
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The Billionaires’ Secret Plan to Solve California’s Housing Crisis
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Conor Dougherty , an economics reporter for The New York Times.
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Tech industry investors spent roughly $900 million buying land to build a dream city in a rural part of the Bay Area.
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Archives and Research
Moscow's Archives and the New History of the Communist Party of the United States
Randi Storch | Oct 1, 2000
Historians of communism now have access to an enormous range of new sources, but the picture emerging is not at all clear. The Russian State Archive of Social and Political History (RGASPI), formerly Moscow's Center for the Preservation of Documents of Modern History (RTsKhIDNI), holds the largest collection of materials related to international communism, totaling approximately 20 million documents. These collections include rich and varied sources related to communism in the United States that reveal a multidimensional story of American communism, one that will allow us to study local history in a national and international context.
I encountered this complex picture of American Communist Party history as I did my own research at the archive on the relationship between Chicago's party and the city's working people. The story I uncovered there is quite different from those I have been reading about in the most recent academic publications and popular press articles that suggest the last word on American communism is one of espionage and Moscow's domination. In fact, the substance of the archives should reopen the debate on the meaning of American communism.
The first studies based on these documents focused on national and international party issues. In The Secret World of American Communism, the first of a proposed 14-part series released by Yale University Press, Harvey Klehr, John Haynes, and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov showed that the Soviet Union helped fund the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA) and that top leaders in the American party supported Soviet espionage. With carefully selected documents, they suggested that the essence of the communist movement was its attempts to sabotage the American government. The second volume in this series, The Soviet World of American Communism , used the same approach to prove that, in some all-consuming fashion, "the American Communist party was a creature of the Comintern and, through it, of the Soviet Union."1
These works have been picked up in the popular media as if they held the long-sought-after evidence that established once and for all the depravity of the American communist movement, yet their arguments are still able to spark heated discussions among historians. In both books, the authors succeeded in gaining popular attention, as well as raising some historians' ire, by selectively using Moscow's archives to confirm assertions made by the first scholars of American communism—Cold War scholars whose anticommunist interpretations were shaped by the dominant political atmosphere of the country in the aftermath of World War II.
These Cold War historians and their 1990s counterparts believe the most important aspect of American communism was the party's subordination to Soviet Russia. Theodore Draper, writing in 1960, determined that by 1929, "nothing and no one could alter the fact that the American Communist Party had become an instrument of the Russian Communist Party." 2 Thus Draper and those writing in the 1990s from the same perspective see the party organization as a monolith. Each communist act is explained as another example of Soviet intrigue. 3
Because these historians assumed top-level party leaders determined the character and actions of the party, they also discounted the effect of local party experience in shaping the party and in influencing the politics of people who joined it. Focusing instead on the national leadership and emphasizing the Comintern's influence on it, Draper concluded, "a history of the Communist party is chiefly a history of its top leadership." Echoing Draper almost four decades later, Klehr, Haynes, and Kyrill M. Anderson argue that, "the dictates of the Comintern almost invariably superseded policies offered on the basis of local conditions."4
Because the CPUSA believed in democratic centralism, which required members to follow party policy, an institutional perspective is certainly an important part of the story. But Cold War scholars and their modern counterparts interpret all aspects of the party's organization and structure with negative moral overtones, depicting American communists as alienated from American society. Such nationally focused, institutional approaches therefore make it impossible to describe—let alone gauge the significance of—local party membership and activities. And by assuming that top-level discussions and factional fights always dictated the attitudes and actions of organizers in the streets and factories, these scholars ignore local developments and grassroots rationales that inspired working people to join the party.
Such one-sided interpretations were already under attack by the 1980s and early 1990s, when a group of scholars began shifting the terms of the debate. Most of these revisionist historians placed American communism within the broader history of this country's radical movements, taking three main approaches to the party's history. Some interviewed aging Communists to produce personal narratives that focus on activists' party experiences and activities, suggesting that Soviet policy could not explain all of their decisions and behaviors. Others made similar claims, in national party histories, arguing that America's party leaders were responsive to domestic political and social conditions. A third group, relying on oral history and newspaper sources, wrote local studies to discuss communist experience at the city level. 5 Rather than emphasizing the small and sectarian party of the 1920s and the postwar years, as Draper and David Shannon had, these revisionist historians looked at the party during its Popular Front heyday of the 1930s and World War II era and concluded that people joined because this was a radical movement offering solutions to America's problems. "Unlike their predecessors," Michael E. Brown noted, "the new historians emphasize the variations and complexities of context." 6
But in their attempt to write a more sympathetic history of American communism, many of these scholars romanticize the communist movement, understate its bureaucratic structure, and downplay sectarianism. In an effort to demystify and decriminalize the party, they swung the pendulum far away from the depiction of communists as automatons of democratic centralism and toward a conception of communists as idealized, organic radicals.
While personal testimony allowed these scholars to rely less on party sources and institutional interpretations, the turn to oral history presented its own problems. Personal interviews tended to move historians away from New York's leaders and encouraged them to focus more on local contexts, but works based heavily on oral testimony ran into the danger of presenting skewed, personal interpretations of history.
And using local sources meant that revisionist historians did not always grasp the significance of being a member of an international movement dominated by the Soviet Union. Because the Communist Party was an international movement operating through democratic centralism, it was inherently different from any other American political organization. It is essential to integrate this international context with a grassroots focus in order to understand the Communist Party and the role it played in working-class politics more generally.
But if these scholars' emphasis on localism led them to understate the significance of internationalism, they at least began to provide a more nuanced interpretation of American communism. As they responded to what might be referred to as Cold War histories, paving the way for new research and new interpretations, their efforts were stymied in part by a shortage of sources.
Now, however, the opening of former party archives in Moscow provides access to rich new sources. The RGASPI collection includes more than 4,000 files of CPUSA records, dating from 1919 to the late 1930s. Although the records are incomplete for the periods from 1919–22 and for the period after 1936, they still tell us a great deal about this enigmatic organization.
Fond (file) 515, the CPUSA's collection, holds minutes and correspondence for each department within the national party during this period. Perhaps most exciting from a social historian's perspective, however, is that it also contains the papers of each party district. This means that for the first time scholars have access to extensive internal party documents such as correspondence, financial records, meeting minutes, and discipline reports at the state, city, and neighborhood levels. Researchers can study shop papers, industrial reports, and organizing plans. Local educational material is plentiful, including the locations, materials, and course information for local party schools. The archive also contains local papers of agitation and propaganda committees, industrial committees, control committees, women's committees, Negro committees, and each ethnic group in the party.
The CPUSA papers represent just one collection at RGASPI containing United States material. There are thousands of other files that reach into the early 1940s pertaining to the Profintern (fond 534), which coordinated industrial organizing. This collection includes minutes of national and city industrial conferences, trade union organizers' reports, reports on the American Federation of Labor, minutes and letters from various industrial organizers, and copies of shop papers and leaflets. The Comintern papers (fond 495) include the papers of the Anglo-American secretariat, the Negro Bureau, and the Trade Union commission, each containing correspondence and minutes relating to local party activity and activists.
For the first time, it is possible to document the functioning of the local party, its relationship to the international, and the importance of individual members in shaping the party's program. Chicago's party sources reveal that local pressures and politics convinced communist trade unionists to leave the Trade Union Unity League for the American Federation of Labor before the Comintern agreed to this action. Local party organizers also led the way into the Congress of Industrial Organizations. These examples show that party policy was not merely imposed from the top, but was also established through the experience and activity of party trade unionists. Local shifts that predated Comintern policy changes also occurred in the Chicago party's unemployment activities and in its youth organizing. Its activists were dynamic elements of the social conflicts of the day and their party activities reflected it.
These materials also tell us a great deal about the ways in which ordinary people experienced communism. From the perspective of Chicago's neighborhoods, the party looked quite different than it did from New York and Moscow. Rather than describe rank-and-file experiences according to party leaders' plans, new evidence allows us to read about communist members' victories and frustrations from their own records. Neighborhood records, for example, show how activity varied from predominately African American to predominately Jewish neighborhoods. Rank-and-file letters to party leaders reveal party members' hopes, frustrations, and motivations. Such sources reveal openings in the movement in which individuals inserted their own visions of activism, and they allude to a larger context surrounding communists' activities, suggesting why communism made sense to some Chicago workers.
Pieces of this archive are showing up in various libraries and soon will be available online. The Library of Congress has already made some CPUSA materials available to researchers on microfilm. Also, the International Computerization of the Comintern Archive project (Incomka) is working on digitizing one million pages of the most used and "historically significant" collections of the Comintern archive. Such increased access will certainly help researchers rethink the meaning of American communism in this new round of scholarship although the editors' choice of documents will be important. But until such projects are complete, the best and the most complete records of American communism are in Moscow.
The opening of Moscow's archives has also opened a new period of Communist Party history, when opportunities to study local communist experiences are plentiful. While relations between the United States and Russia have changed considerably since the 1950s, the challenges of writing a balanced Communist party history are just as complicated and significant as ever. The new sources make it possible to reassess the movement, suggesting that in order to understand the experience of American communism we must be sensitive to the interplay between internationalism and localism. As Maurice Isserman noted in The Nation in 1995 , "the story of the C.P.U.S.A. is full of contradictions, and it's past time for all concerned to acknowledge and learn to live with them." Certainly this archive and its collections make such a conclusion emphatic.
This research was supported by grants from the University of Illinois, SUNY Cortland, and the International Research and Exchanges Board, with funds provided by the U.S. Department of State (Title VIII program) and the National Endowment for the Humanities. None of these organizations is responsible for the views expressed.
1. Harvey Klehr, John Earl Haynes, and Kyrill Anderson, The Soviet World of American Communism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998), 2.
2. Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia: The Formative Years (New York: Viking, 1960), 440. While Draper's work has been the most influential, the Ford Foundation sponsored 10 studies, beginning in 1953, on various aspects of "Communism in American Life."
3. As Hugh Wilford points out, these historians did not distinguish between the Comintern and the Soviet Communist Party. See Hugh Wilford, "The Communist International and the American Communist Party," in Tim Rees and Andrew Thorpe (eds.), International Communism and the Communist International, 1919–1943 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998): 225–33.
4. First quote is from Draper, 4; second from Klehr, Haynes, and Anderson, The Soviet World of American Communism , 5.
5. Examples from the first group are Steve Nelson, James R. Barrett, and Rob Ruck, Steve Nelson, American Radical (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1981); Nell Irvin Painter, The Narrative of Hosea Hudson (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979); Dorothy Ray Healey and Maurice Isserman, California Red: A Life in the American Communist Party (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1990). Examples of the second group are Maurice Isserman, Which Side Were You On? The American Communist Party During The Second World War (1982; Urbana: University of Illinois Press, Reprint, 1993); Fraser Ottanelli, The Communist Party of the United States: From the Depression to World War II (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1991). Examples of the third group are Paul Lyons, Philadelphia Communists, 1936–1956 (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1982); Robin Kelley, Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Depression (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990).
6. Michael E. Brown, "Introduction: The History of the History of US Communism," in Michael E. Brown, Randy Martin, Frank Rosengarten and George Snedeker (eds.), New Studies in the Politics and Culture of U.S. Communism (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1993), 18.
Randi Storch is an assistant professor of history at SUNY, Cortland.
Tags: Archives
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Archive Three - Dathomir. Archive Four - Eilram. Archive Five - Astrium. Archive Six - Vision. Archive Seven - Goodbye. There are 19 encrypted logs for you to find in total, all split into seven ...
There are a total of 19 Encrypted Logs in Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order, they are listed in Databank as Cordova's Journey Logs.. You have to find all Encrypted Logs for Data Disk Achievement - "Find all of BD-1's encrypted logs".. 7 Encrypted Logs will unlock automatically becouse they are story related.. 12 Encrypted Logs you have find and scan manualy.
Archive Six - Vision: Acquiring the Holocron 02 | Cordova's Journey advertisement Requiring the use of Force Push, you will find the Abandoned Workshop secret after pushing the bridge that ...
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Cordova's Journey | Archive Two: Miktrull 02. Once you arrive in the Tomb of Miktrull, head upstairs to the flooded room. Make your way to the left side of the room by walking around the outside ...
The 19 logs in total are gathered in the Databank under Cordova's Journey, and 7 of those are story-related and unmissable. For the remaining 12, you'll need to head to a specific area and be prompted by BD-1 to scan a nearby object. ... Archive One. An Ancient Sphere: Bogano, Bogdo Sinkholes — Go into the room where you need to slow ...
Also in this room are a couple of things BD-1 will want to scan - a cracked tablet that for Databank entry [Bogano: The Researcher #12] and some Zeffo statues for [Cordova's Journey: Archive Six ...
The Cordovas journey is all you need for this most of them you will get from jus story related but the rest you must find on the planets but 1 of the scans I found to glitch on me archive five ...
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Note: At this point, we'll also unlock a number of Databank entries including [Cordova's Journey: Archive Seven - Goodbye #2] and a couple of character entries [Character: Eno Cordova #1] and ...
Where to find Archive 5-1 and 6-1 in Cordova's Journey ? Discussion. Hi, These two archives are the last path before the platinium trophy. I supposed the archive 5-1 is on Kashyyyk and 6-1 on Dathomir.
Archive Six - Vision Cordova's Journey All Databank Locations Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order collectible echoes and items video. Here you can see where to find ...
Allow BD-1 to scan the wall here for another Databank entry [Cordova's Journey: Archive Two - Miktrull #1]. Hop back down to the lower level and interact with the panel. This will have a large ...
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Grass and pedestrian walkways and public conveniences. And still the facelift goes on. It is 25 years since this correspondent first set foot in Europe's largest city. In those days, the air was ...
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March 11, 2024, 6:00 a.m. ET. Hosted by Michael Barbaro. Featuring Conor Dougherty. Produced by Rikki Novetsky , Michael Simon Johnson , Eric Krupke and Will Reid. Edited by Marc Georges. Original ...
Have BD-1 scan these for a Databank entry [Cordova's Journey: Archive Five - Astrium #1]. Use the Lung Plants here to continue. After bouncing on the first, your vision will go funny.
Historians of communism now have access to an enormous range of new sources, but the picture emerging is not at all clear. The Russian State Archive of Social and Political History (RGASPI), formerly Moscow's Center for the Preservation of Documents of Modern History (RTsKhIDNI), holds the largest collection of materials related to international communism, totaling approximately 20 million ...
Dec 13, 2021 - 01:37 pm. Despite concerns about coronavirus, the Moscow city government decided to celebrate Christmas and the New Year with its annual festival. Called "The Journey to Christmas ...