Tributes will be paid to the north-east men who fought fascism in the Spanish civil war this weekend.
A total of 19 local men joined the International Brigades for the 1936-39 conflict against fascist general Franco.
Now two plaques will be unveiled in Aberdeen in memory of two of the volunteers on Saturday.
Bob Cooney’s plaque will be unveiled at 9.30am at the Castlehill Housing Association flats in the street named after him, Bob Cooney Court, just off Berryden Road.
John Londragan’s plaque will be unveiled an hour later inside the Aberdeen Trades Union Council office at the Adelphi.
Later that day, the town house will host the annual meeting of the International Brigade Memorial Trust (IBMT), the charity that keeps alive the memory and spirit of the 2,500 volunteers from the British Isles who fought in the Spanish Civil War.
On Sunday at 12.30pm there will be a march with International Brigade and trade union banners from the Kirk of St Nicholas to the Castlegate for a rally at noon. It will be led by Grampian District Pipes and Drums.
Organisers of the weekend’s events say it is an opportunity for local people to celebrate an important part of the city’s heritage.
Unite’s regional officer Tommy Campbell said: “We should be proud of these men who stood up to fascism while the British government preferred to appease the fascist dictators.”