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Anatolie Popa

Anatolie Popa (Russian: Анатолий Васильевич Попа, Anatoliy Vasilievich Popa; 15 March 1896 – 25 June 1920) was a Bessarabian-born military commander active during World War I and the Russian Revolution and Civil War, one of the organisers of the Moldavian armed resistance against the advancing Romanian troops in January 1918.

Biography edit

Early life and the Russian Revolution edit

Anatolie Popa was born into a poor peasant family in Cotiujenii Mari, in the Soroksky Uyezd of the Bessarabia Governorate.[1][2] After primary education in his home village and Vadul-Rașcov, he enrolled in the Bălți municipal school. However, as his family was unable to cope with the high fees, he dropped out before graduating. Nevertheless, with the low literacy rate in Bessarabia, at 15 Popa was able to get a job as secretary of the rural police in his home village. This provided him with an occasion to become acquainted with the anti-Tsarist literature, mainly through the students returning home during the holidays.[2]

 
Proclamation of the Moldavian Democratic Republic in the official journal of Sfatul Țării

With the start of World War I, Popa was drafted in the Imperial Russian Army and, after graduating the Odessa War College as an officer, he was sent to the Eastern Front. He was supportive of the overthrow of the Tsar during the February Revolution, and his political views were further influenced by the strong Bolshevik agitation in the 49th Technical Reserve Battalion in Odessa, where he was recovering from a battlefield injury. Popa was eventually put in command of a battalion of the 75th Sevastopol Infantry Regiment and in September 1917 was dispatched to Chișinău, the Bessarabian administrative centre.[2]

Popa soon joined the Moldavian national movement, which sought autonomy for Bessarabia, and was appointed a delegate to the Moldavian Central Military Executive Committee.[3] The movement for autonomy, spearheaded by the Moldavian National Party (MNP), was regarded with suspicion not only by the ethnic minorities, but also by the leftist revolutionary committees and the Moldavian peasant majority, who feared autonomy was a step towards annexation to the neighbouring conservative Kingdom of Romania.[4] The October Revolution, however, led to a mood change amongst the more moderate leftist groups, and in November 1917 the various revolutionary committees coagulated into a provisional provincial assembly, Sfatul Țării, which on 15 December [O.S. 2 December] proclaimed the autonomous Moldavian Democratic Republic within a Russian Democratic Federative Republic.[5]

The assembly, proclaiming itself the highest authority in Bessarabia, appointed a provisional executive, the Council of Directors; furthermore, it nominally pledged allegiance to the Provisional Government, placing itself in tacit opposition to the provincial and Chișinău city Soviets of workers' and soldiers' deputies, which had recognised the Bolshevik Council of People's Commissars (Sovnarkom) at the end of November.[6] As the latter commanded the allegiance of most regular troops of the Russian Army in Bessarabia, increasingly Bolshevik in outlook, the Council of Directors sought to enlist the Moldavian militias in an effort to create an Armed Force loyal to Sfatul Țării.[7] Anatolie Popa was among the officers chosen for this task and, on 28 December [O.S. 15 December], he received the command of the "nationalised" Moldavian 478th detachment of Bălți.[8][9] Popa was also appointed military commissioner for the Bălți county,[10] growing close to the local Council of peasants' deputies.[11] The state of emergency was soon declared in the Bălți county "in order to preserve public order", however Popa was reticent in using violence against the peasants. On 4 January 1918 [O.S. 22 December 1917], the Council's Military Director had to request the Commissioner for Moldavian Problems in Odessa to order Popa to comply with the directions issued by the local commissioner and commander of the garrison.[9]

Romanian intervention and defence of Bălți edit

The authority of Sfatul Țării was not universally recognised across Bessarabia; instead, several local committees, some loyal to the Sovnarkom, exercised authority locally. The most serious contender was the Chișinău City Soviet, which, radicalised by the Ukrainian Rada's demobilisation order, had elected a mostly Bolshevik executive committee in mid-December. The Soviet and the Council still collaborated in managing the demobilisation, however they were unable to cope with the disruption caused by the large number of disorganised, badly fed soldiers leaving the front.[12] Confronted with widespread peasant rioting and the unreliability of Moldavian troops, which were also siding with the Bolsheviks, a closed session of Sfatul Țării authorised the Council of Directors to look for military support outside the province: the leftist leaders, Ion Inculeț and Pantelimon Erhan, held talks with the chief of the Odessa Military District, while the nationalist MNP sought assistance from the Romanian government in Iași.[13] By 2 January 1918 [O.S. 20 December 1917], rumours of an imminent foreign military intervention had spread in Chișinău, prompting the Moldavian Military Central Executive Committee, the City Soviet and the provincial Peasants' Council to issue protests, affirming their commitment to the revolution and a federal Russia, and calling for redistributing land to peasants, purging the "reactionary" elements in Sfatul Țării and establishing relations with the Sovnarkom.[14] In spite of reassurances coming from the leaders of Sfatul Țării that only "neutral" troops would be brought, the provincial and Chișinău City soviets took steps toward strengthening their positions. On 6 January 1918 [O.S. 24 December 1917] they established a Revolutionary Headquarters, proclaimed the highest authority over all "Soviet" troops in Bessarabia, and soon they enlisted the support of the frontline department (Frontotdel) of the Rumcherod, which had arrived to Chișinău at the end of December.[14]

The Council of Directors also ultimately decided on 8 January 1918 [O.S. 26 December 1917] to request military assistance from General Dmitry Shcherbachev, the nominal head of Russian troops on the Romanian front; the general, who had no effective authority over the troops, forwarded the request to the Romanians. Several leaders of the Nationalist Party would later testify this was the intended course of events, the Council fearing a direct call for Romanian troops would result in a popular revolt.[15] The request precipitated a Bolshevik takeover, as, on 14 January [O.S. 1 January] 1918, the Frontotdel proclaimed itself the supreme authority over all troops in Bessarabia and took control of the mail, telegraph and main railway stations in Bessarabia. The authority of Sfatul Țării, declared an "organ of the bourgeoisie", was virtually dissolved.[16] In this context, the Romanian army moved in into Bessarabia in early January and occupied several towns and villages along the Prut, encountering only light resistance from local pro-Soviet troops. The first major encounter took place in Chișinău on 19 January [O.S. 6 January], when Moldavian and Russian troops disarmed troops of the Transylvanian volunteer corps sent by the Romanian government to take the city.[17] Later that day, Erhan and Inculeț, summoned at a joint meeting of the provincial and City soviets with the Moldavian Military Central Executive Committee, denied any role in the Romanian invasion, repudiated the MNP directors, and even agreed to send a protest note to the Romanian government, calling for a withdrawal of its troops.[17] The mood among the Moldavian troops was also strongly anti-Romanian, and Erhan and the Military Director, Gherman Pântea, were forced to authorise resistance; however, as the main corps of the Romanian army approached Chișinău on 20 January [O.S. 7 January], Pântea directed most Moldavian troops in the opposite direction in order to avert a battle.[18] While the initial Romanian forays into the Bessarabian capital were repulsed with difficulties by the Russian and Moldavian troops, the Frontodel and the City Soviet, faced with a numerically superior opponent, ultimately decided to withdraw towards Bender, and the Romanians occupied Chișinău on 26 January [O.S. 13 January].[19]

 
Manifest issued by the Bălți Revolutionary Headquarters calling for mobilisation against the Romanian invasion

The news of the Romanian invasion quickly reached the rest of Bessarabia, and resistance was prepared, most notably in Bălți and Bender. On 21 January [O.S. 8 January], on the initiative of the Bălți County commissioner Vasile Rudiev, the county's Council of Peasants' Deputies began organising a resistance to the Romanian advance. The Council declared a general mobilisation and established the Revolutionary Headquarters for the Defence of the Country, comprising Andrei Paladi, chairman of the county's Land Committee, G. Galagan, member of the Provincial Peasant's Council executive committee, Rudiev, and others.[20][21][22][23] Already on the 22nd, the Revolutionary Headquarters was able to muster 3,000 workers and soldiers of the local garrison, who held a rally also attended by delegates from nearby villages.[21] The mobilisation was not however supported by all the committees: the Bălți Municipal Council rejected it on 23 January [O.S. 10 January] January, refused to send delegates to the Revolutionary Headquarters and event requested its dissolution. Its delegates to the 22 January [O.S. 9 January] joint session of the Peasants' Council, the Municipal Council, the Workers' and Soldiers' Soviet and the county zemstvo were even able to obtain a slight majority against armed resistance.[23] According to his own account, the chairman of the local Soviet, the Menshevik Razumovskyi, also attempted to delay the mobilisation, arguing that a hastily armed crowd would not be able to resist a regular army; however, his attempts to persuade the 27 January [O.S. 14 January] session of the Peasants' Council were received with jeers.[24] In spite of such opposition, Rudiev and Popa, who replaced the former in the Revolutionary Headquarters, handed out weapons to volunteers in the city and nearby villages and ensured that the two artillery pieces available to the garrison were properly manned.[20][25] According to a witness interrogated by the Romanians after taking the city, the local Revolutionary Committee, led by sub-lieutenant Solovyov, requested Popa to hand in the weapons from the garrison, threatening him with death;[26] another witness however indicated that Popa acted on its own accord, handing out weapons personally, in collaboration with other members of the Revolutionary Headquarters.[27] Popa also took into custody several Romanian officers arrested in the countryside, and rejected Razumovskyi's plea for their release, stating he was acting in retaliation to the arrest of Moldavian officers in Ungheni.[24]

The Second Congress of the Bălți County Peasants' deputies, held on 27 January [O.S. 14 January], voted to reject the authority of Sfatul Țării as unrepresentative, pledged allegiance to the Bolshevik Sovnarkom and called for the institution of Soviet power. Furthermore, the Congress rejected Bessarabia's separation from Soviet Russia and decided to send Paladi to Petrograd to request for military assistance against the Romanian intervention.[28][29] The call for an end to the Romanian intervention was initially joined by the Third Bessarabian Peasants' Congress, assembled in Chișinău on 31 January [O.S. 18 January] and presided by Rudiev. However, as the latter city had already been occupied by Romanian troops, the radical leaders of the Congress were arrested and executed shortly after; a more complacent leadership was installed and renounced overt opposition to the Romanian military occupation.[28][30] According to the pro-Romanian politician Dimitrie Bogos, Popa also attended the Provincial Congress in Chișinău on the 31st [O.S. 18th], where he sided with the initial majority, and only afterwards returned to Bălți and began organising the resistance against the Romanian army.[31]

Popa also contacted Gherman Pântea, the acting Director for the military of the provisional Bessarabian executive, requesting information about the situation in Chișinău. According to the transcript of their 2 February [O.S. 20 January] exchange, Popa had managed to enlist an infantry battalion, two cavalry squadrons, a machine-gun company, a motor transport company, as well as an artillery battery. Noting that the population was outraged by the Romanian intervention and the Peasants' Council had switched allegiance to the Petrograd government, he requested more officers and money for the soldiers' pay, and offered to send ammunitions and even troops to Chișinău. In his reply, Pântea repeated the Romanian argument that their intervention was only meant to protect the supply depots and pacify the capital, and expressed his distrust of the Bolshevik government. However, he also noted the Moldavian troops' dissatisfaction with the Romanian presence and affirmed his commitment to a republican Bessarabia "alongside Russia". Furthermore, Pântea informed Popa about his intention to resign from the executive, as the latter was becoming increasingly pro-Romanian, as well as his decision to mobilise the Moldavian Army to defend the country in case "someone looks over the Prut", towards the Romanian government.[32][33][34]

Between 3 and 5 February [O.S. 21 and 23 January], Moldavian and Russians troops, led by the Revolutionary Headquarters, defended Bălți against the Romanian offensive.[31] The defenders of the city, comprising up to a thousand volunteers and the revolutionary troops in the garrison, were also joined by armed peasants from Cubolta, Hăsnășenii Mici and other nearby villages. The initial advance of the Romanian 1st Cavalry Division commanded by general Mihail Schina was temporarily repulsed with losses at Fălești, with the general himself briefly captured by a peasants self-defense group in Obreja on 4 February [O.S. 22 January]. The same day the Romanians attempted to enter the city, but, coming under machine gun and artillery fire, they retreated with heavy losses; another Romanian cavalry detachment was repulsed near the railway station. Superior both in number of troops and artillery, the Romanian troops were ultimately able to defeat the revolutionary detachments and capture the town in the afternoon of 5 February [O.S. 23 January], with part of the defenders retreating toward the north.[35][31][11][20] Soviet sources also indicate the counter-revolutionary forces acting inside Bălți as a factor in the defeat.[11] The Romanian occupation forces immediately began a crackdown on the resistance, with 20 locals executed and more than one thousand arrested in the following two days.[11][20] Anatolie Popa was also apprehended on the occasion and, on 14 February [O.S. 1 February], was sentenced to death by a Court Martial for his role in organising and arming the local troops.[11][31][36][37] The assessment of the battle was mixed: while the Soviet historiography praised the Defence of Bălți as a heroic deed,[28] Bogos saw the battle as an "infamy" comparable to the events of January 6, when Moldavian troops in Chișinău disarmed the Transylvanian volunteer corps.[31] As argued by historian Izeaslav Levit, the opponents of the Romanian intervention included people of different ethnic backgrounds and political options: while the chairman of the local Soviet, the Ukrainian lieutenant Soloviev, collaborated with the Revolutionary Headquarters chiefly in order to prevent its takeover by the Bolsheviks, the Moldavians Rudiev and Popa were primarily supporters of the Moldavian autonomy and of peasants' interest, pushed into collaboration with the Bolsheviks by what they saw as their betrayal by the right wing of the Sfatul Țării.[38]

Russian Civil War and death edit

Owing to Popa's good standing with the Bessarabian population, the Romanian authorities sought to co-opt him in their administration; consequently, he was soon pardoned by King Ferdinand and offered a position in the Romanian Army.[31][1][37] Anatol Popa however took the occasion and fled over the Dniester, to Ukraine, joining the Soviet partisan groups. Given a command position, he led a partisan detachment that crossed the Dniester back into Bessarabia during the Khotyn Uprising in January 1919. After the Romanian Army violently suppressed the rebellion, he returned to Ukraine, where his group engaged troops loyal to the Directorate.[11][1][36][39]

By April 1919, Popa was appointed commander of the first infantry regiment of the 1st Bessarabian brigade, led by Filip Levenson. This Red Army unit included many participants in the Khotyn Uprising, and was later redesignated as a Special Bessarabian Brigade and in June was integrated into the newly organised 45th Soviet Rifle Division. Under the command of Bessarabian Yona Yakir, the division fought in the Southern Campaign of the Russian Civil War; after the fall of Odessa, it took a 400 kilometre march across enemy lines, engaging along the way the forces of Yudenich, Denikin and Makhno.[11][1] On 13 February 1920 Anatolie Popa was given the command of the 399th Regiment "Communist" of the 45th Division, which was sent to the Polish front, suffering heavy losses. Replenished to a full strength of 400, on 23 March the regiment was ordered to capture the settlement of Novo-Miropol'. The assault encountered strong resistance and Popa, heavily wounded, was captured by the Polish forces. He died under interrogation before the Soviets were able to take the town, three days later.[40][41][42] Posthumously awarded the Order of the Red Banner, Popa was praised by Yakir in his 1929 memoirs as a "titan commander" who "possessed both great willpower and great endurance".[40]

See also edit


Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Nazaria 2012, p. 209.
  2. ^ a b c Abakumova & Esaulenko 1987, p. 107.
  3. ^ Kalinenok & Esaulenko 1982, p. 139.
  4. ^ Levit 2000, p. 2.
  5. ^ Levit 2000, p. 19.
  6. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 27–28, 44–45.
  7. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 65–67.
  8. ^ Halipa & Moraru 1991, pp. 75–76.
  9. ^ a b Ciobanu 2010, p. 116.
  10. ^ Bogos 1998, p. 153.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Abakumova & Esaulenko 1987, p. 108.
  12. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 113–120, 125–126.
  13. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 179–180.
  14. ^ a b Levit 2000, pp. 186–190.
  15. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 192–197.
  16. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 207–209, 213–217.
  17. ^ a b Levit 2000, pp. 219–224.
  18. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 227–229.
  19. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 232, 242, 253.
  20. ^ a b c d Shornikov 2011, p. 25.
  21. ^ a b Tsaranov 1984, p. 266.
  22. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 229–231.
  23. ^ a b Berezniakov 1967, p. 48, footnote 1.
  24. ^ a b Berezniakov 1967, p. 47-48, Doc. 33.
  25. ^ Levit 2000, p. 231.
  26. ^ Berezniakov 1967, p. 50, Doc. 34.
  27. ^ Berezniakov 1967, p. 43, Doc. 29.
  28. ^ a b c Tsaranov 1984, p. 267.
  29. ^ Levit 2000, p. 254.
  30. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 256–263.
  31. ^ a b c d e f Bogos 1998, p. 154.
  32. ^ Bereznyakov 1970, pp. 45–47, Doc. 41.
  33. ^ Bogos 1998, pp. 154–156.
  34. ^ Levit 2000, pp. 265–268.
  35. ^ Polivțev 2017, pp. 387–388.
  36. ^ a b Berezniakov 1967, p. 43, footnote 1.
  37. ^ a b Polivțev 2017, p. 388.
  38. ^ Levit 2000, p. 232.
  39. ^ Polivțev 2017, pp. 388–389.
  40. ^ a b Abakumova & Esaulenko 1987, p. 109.
  41. ^ Kalinenok & Esaulenko 1982, pp. 137–138.
  42. ^ Polivțev 2017, p. 389.

References edit

  • Berezniakov, Nikolay Vasil'evich, ed. (1967). Борьба трудящихся Молдавии против интервентов и внутренней контрреволюции в 1917–1920 гг. [The struggle of the working people of Moldova against the interventionists and internal counterrevolution in 1917–1920] (in Russian). Kishinev: Cartea Moldovenească.
  • Bereznyakov, Nikolay Vasil'evich, ed. (1970). За власть Советскую : Борьба трудящихся Молдавии против интервентов и внутренней контрреволюции (1917–1918 гг.) [For the power of the Soviets: The struggle of the working people of Moldova against the interventionists and internal counterrevolution (1917–1918)] (in Russian). Kishinev: Academy of Sciences of the Moldavian SSR.
  • Kalinenok, Marat Alexandrovich; Esaulenko, A. (1982). Активные участники борьбы за власть Советов в Молдавии [Active participants in the struggle for the power of the Soviets in Moldova] (in Russian). Kishinev: Știința.
  • Tsaranov, Vladimir Ivanovich, ed. (1984). История Молдавской ССР с древнейших времен до наших дней [History of the Moldavian SSR from ancient times to the present day] (in Russian). Kishinev: Știința.
  • Abakumova, N.; Esaulenko, A. (1987). Попа, Анатолий Васильевич [Popa, Anatoliy Vasilievich]. In Shemyakov, Dmitriy Egorovich (ed.). Борцы за счастье народное : Сб. документ. очерков [Fighters for the happiness of the people: Collection of documentary sketches] (in Russian). Kishinev: Cartea Moldovenească.
  • Halipa, Pantelimon; Moraru, Anatolie (1991). Testament pentru urmași [A testament for the future generations] (in Romanian). Chișinău: Hyperion. ISBN 5-368-01446-5.
  • Bogos, Dimitrie (1998). La răspântie : Moldova de la Nistru 1917-1918 [At the crossroads: Moldavia on the Dniester 1917-1918] (in Romanian). Chișinău: Știința. ISBN 9975-67-056-3.
  • Levit, Izeaslav (2000). Год судьбоносный : от провозглашения Молдавской республики до ликвидации автономии Бессарабии : (ноябрь 1917 - ноябрь 1918 г.) [The fateful year: from the proclamation of the Moldavian Republic to the abolition of the Bessarabian autonomy: (November 1917 – November 1918)] (in Russian). Chișinău: Tipografia Centrală. ISBN 9975-78-057-1.
  • Ciobanu, Vitalie (2010). Militarii Basarabeni 1917-1918 : Studiu și documente [The Bessarabian military 1917-1918: Study and documents] (in Romanian). Chișinău: Bons Offices. ISBN 978-9975-80-330-4.
  • Shornikov, Petr Mihaylovich (2011). Бессарабский фронт (1918-1940 гг.) [The Bessarabian Front (1918-1940)] (in Russian) (2nd ed.). Tiraspol: Poligrafist.
  • Nazaria, Sergiu (2012). O istorie contra miturilor: relațiile internaționale în epoca războaielor mondiale (1914-1945/1947) [A history against myths: international relations in the era of the world wars (1914-1945/1947)] (in Romanian). Chișinău: Tipografia Centrală. ISBN 978-9975-53-115-3.
  • Polivțev, Vladimir (2017). "На защите завоеваний революции и воссоздаваемой Молдавской Государственности (1917-1918 гг.)" [In protection of the revolution results and restructuring of Moldovan statehood (1917-1918)] (PDF). In Beniuc, Valentin; et al. (eds.). Statalitatea Moldovei: continuitatea istorică și perspectiva dezvoltării. Chișinău: International Relations Institute of Moldova. pp. 354–391. ISBN 978-9975-56-439-7.

anatolie, popa, russian, Анатолий, Васильевич, Попа, anatoliy, vasilievich, popa, march, 1896, june, 1920, bessarabian, born, military, commander, active, during, world, russian, revolution, civil, organisers, moldavian, armed, resistance, against, advancing, . Anatolie Popa Russian Anatolij Vasilevich Popa Anatoliy Vasilievich Popa 15 March 1896 25 June 1920 was a Bessarabian born military commander active during World War I and the Russian Revolution and Civil War one of the organisers of the Moldavian armed resistance against the advancing Romanian troops in January 1918 Anatolie PopaBorn 1896 03 15 15 March 1896Cotiujenii Mari Soroksky Uyezd Bessarabia Governorate Russian EmpireDied25 June 1920 1920 06 25 aged 24 Novo Miropol UkraineAllegianceRussian EmpireMoldavian Democratic RepublicSoviet RussiaService wbr branchImperial Russian ArmyBessarabian ArmyRed ArmyYears of service1914 19171917 19181918 1920RankStabs kapitanMilitary commissarRegimental CommanderUnit75th Sevastopol Infantry RegimentBălți County Moldavian Cohorts45th Rifle DivisionBattles warsRomanian Campaign Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia Russian Civil War Polish Soviet War Soviet Ukrainian WarAwardsOrder of the Red Banner Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and the Russian Revolution 1 2 Romanian intervention and defence of Bălți 1 3 Russian Civil War and death 2 See also 3 Notes 4 ReferencesBiography editEarly life and the Russian Revolution edit Anatolie Popa was born into a poor peasant family in Cotiujenii Mari in the Soroksky Uyezd of the Bessarabia Governorate 1 2 After primary education in his home village and Vadul Rașcov he enrolled in the Bălți municipal school However as his family was unable to cope with the high fees he dropped out before graduating Nevertheless with the low literacy rate in Bessarabia at 15 Popa was able to get a job as secretary of the rural police in his home village This provided him with an occasion to become acquainted with the anti Tsarist literature mainly through the students returning home during the holidays 2 nbsp Proclamation of the Moldavian Democratic Republic in the official journal of Sfatul Țării With the start of World War I Popa was drafted in the Imperial Russian Army and after graduating the Odessa War College as an officer he was sent to the Eastern Front He was supportive of the overthrow of the Tsar during the February Revolution and his political views were further influenced by the strong Bolshevik agitation in the 49th Technical Reserve Battalion in Odessa where he was recovering from a battlefield injury Popa was eventually put in command of a battalion of the 75th Sevastopol Infantry Regiment and in September 1917 was dispatched to Chișinău the Bessarabian administrative centre 2 Popa soon joined the Moldavian national movement which sought autonomy for Bessarabia and was appointed a delegate to the Moldavian Central Military Executive Committee 3 The movement for autonomy spearheaded by the Moldavian National Party MNP was regarded with suspicion not only by the ethnic minorities but also by the leftist revolutionary committees and the Moldavian peasant majority who feared autonomy was a step towards annexation to the neighbouring conservative Kingdom of Romania 4 The October Revolution however led to a mood change amongst the more moderate leftist groups and in November 1917 the various revolutionary committees coagulated into a provisional provincial assembly Sfatul Țării which on 15 December O S 2 December proclaimed the autonomous Moldavian Democratic Republic within a Russian Democratic Federative Republic 5 The assembly proclaiming itself the highest authority in Bessarabia appointed a provisional executive the Council of Directors furthermore it nominally pledged allegiance to the Provisional Government placing itself in tacit opposition to the provincial and Chișinău city Soviets of workers and soldiers deputies which had recognised the Bolshevik Council of People s Commissars Sovnarkom at the end of November 6 As the latter commanded the allegiance of most regular troops of the Russian Army in Bessarabia increasingly Bolshevik in outlook the Council of Directors sought to enlist the Moldavian militias in an effort to create an Armed Force loyal to Sfatul Țării 7 Anatolie Popa was among the officers chosen for this task and on 28 December O S 15 December he received the command of the nationalised Moldavian 478th detachment of Bălți 8 9 Popa was also appointed military commissioner for the Bălți county 10 growing close to the local Council of peasants deputies 11 The state of emergency was soon declared in the Bălți county in order to preserve public order however Popa was reticent in using violence against the peasants On 4 January 1918 O S 22 December 1917 the Council s Military Director had to request the Commissioner for Moldavian Problems in Odessa to order Popa to comply with the directions issued by the local commissioner and commander of the garrison 9 Romanian intervention and defence of Bălți edit The authority of Sfatul Țării was not universally recognised across Bessarabia instead several local committees some loyal to the Sovnarkom exercised authority locally The most serious contender was the Chișinău City Soviet which radicalised by the Ukrainian Rada s demobilisation order had elected a mostly Bolshevik executive committee in mid December The Soviet and the Council still collaborated in managing the demobilisation however they were unable to cope with the disruption caused by the large number of disorganised badly fed soldiers leaving the front 12 Confronted with widespread peasant rioting and the unreliability of Moldavian troops which were also siding with the Bolsheviks a closed session of Sfatul Țării authorised the Council of Directors to look for military support outside the province the leftist leaders Ion Inculeț and Pantelimon Erhan held talks with the chief of the Odessa Military District while the nationalist MNP sought assistance from the Romanian government in Iași 13 By 2 January 1918 O S 20 December 1917 rumours of an imminent foreign military intervention had spread in Chișinău prompting the Moldavian Military Central Executive Committee the City Soviet and the provincial Peasants Council to issue protests affirming their commitment to the revolution and a federal Russia and calling for redistributing land to peasants purging the reactionary elements in Sfatul Țării and establishing relations with the Sovnarkom 14 In spite of reassurances coming from the leaders of Sfatul Țării that only neutral troops would be brought the provincial and Chișinău City soviets took steps toward strengthening their positions On 6 January 1918 O S 24 December 1917 they established a Revolutionary Headquarters proclaimed the highest authority over all Soviet troops in Bessarabia and soon they enlisted the support of the frontline department Frontotdel of the Rumcherod which had arrived to Chișinău at the end of December 14 The Council of Directors also ultimately decided on 8 January 1918 O S 26 December 1917 to request military assistance from General Dmitry Shcherbachev the nominal head of Russian troops on the Romanian front the general who had no effective authority over the troops forwarded the request to the Romanians Several leaders of the Nationalist Party would later testify this was the intended course of events the Council fearing a direct call for Romanian troops would result in a popular revolt 15 The request precipitated a Bolshevik takeover as on 14 January O S 1 January 1918 the Frontotdel proclaimed itself the supreme authority over all troops in Bessarabia and took control of the mail telegraph and main railway stations in Bessarabia The authority of Sfatul Țării declared an organ of the bourgeoisie was virtually dissolved 16 In this context the Romanian army moved in into Bessarabia in early January and occupied several towns and villages along the Prut encountering only light resistance from local pro Soviet troops The first major encounter took place in Chișinău on 19 January O S 6 January when Moldavian and Russian troops disarmed troops of the Transylvanian volunteer corps sent by the Romanian government to take the city 17 Later that day Erhan and Inculeț summoned at a joint meeting of the provincial and City soviets with the Moldavian Military Central Executive Committee denied any role in the Romanian invasion repudiated the MNP directors and even agreed to send a protest note to the Romanian government calling for a withdrawal of its troops 17 The mood among the Moldavian troops was also strongly anti Romanian and Erhan and the Military Director Gherman Pantea were forced to authorise resistance however as the main corps of the Romanian army approached Chișinău on 20 January O S 7 January Pantea directed most Moldavian troops in the opposite direction in order to avert a battle 18 While the initial Romanian forays into the Bessarabian capital were repulsed with difficulties by the Russian and Moldavian troops the Frontodel and the City Soviet faced with a numerically superior opponent ultimately decided to withdraw towards Bender and the Romanians occupied Chișinău on 26 January O S 13 January 19 nbsp Manifest issued by the Bălți Revolutionary Headquarters calling for mobilisation against the Romanian invasion The news of the Romanian invasion quickly reached the rest of Bessarabia and resistance was prepared most notably in Bălți and Bender On 21 January O S 8 January on the initiative of the Bălți County commissioner Vasile Rudiev the county s Council of Peasants Deputies began organising a resistance to the Romanian advance The Council declared a general mobilisation and established the Revolutionary Headquarters for the Defence of the Country comprising Andrei Paladi chairman of the county s Land Committee G Galagan member of the Provincial Peasant s Council executive committee Rudiev and others 20 21 22 23 Already on the 22nd the Revolutionary Headquarters was able to muster 3 000 workers and soldiers of the local garrison who held a rally also attended by delegates from nearby villages 21 The mobilisation was not however supported by all the committees the Bălți Municipal Council rejected it on 23 January O S 10 January January refused to send delegates to the Revolutionary Headquarters and event requested its dissolution Its delegates to the 22 January O S 9 January joint session of the Peasants Council the Municipal Council the Workers and Soldiers Soviet and the county zemstvo were even able to obtain a slight majority against armed resistance 23 According to his own account the chairman of the local Soviet the Menshevik Razumovskyi also attempted to delay the mobilisation arguing that a hastily armed crowd would not be able to resist a regular army however his attempts to persuade the 27 January O S 14 January session of the Peasants Council were received with jeers 24 In spite of such opposition Rudiev and Popa who replaced the former in the Revolutionary Headquarters handed out weapons to volunteers in the city and nearby villages and ensured that the two artillery pieces available to the garrison were properly manned 20 25 According to a witness interrogated by the Romanians after taking the city the local Revolutionary Committee led by sub lieutenant Solovyov requested Popa to hand in the weapons from the garrison threatening him with death 26 another witness however indicated that Popa acted on its own accord handing out weapons personally in collaboration with other members of the Revolutionary Headquarters 27 Popa also took into custody several Romanian officers arrested in the countryside and rejected Razumovskyi s plea for their release stating he was acting in retaliation to the arrest of Moldavian officers in Ungheni 24 The Second Congress of the Bălți County Peasants deputies held on 27 January O S 14 January voted to reject the authority of Sfatul Țării as unrepresentative pledged allegiance to the Bolshevik Sovnarkom and called for the institution of Soviet power Furthermore the Congress rejected Bessarabia s separation from Soviet Russia and decided to send Paladi to Petrograd to request for military assistance against the Romanian intervention 28 29 The call for an end to the Romanian intervention was initially joined by the Third Bessarabian Peasants Congress assembled in Chișinău on 31 January O S 18 January and presided by Rudiev However as the latter city had already been occupied by Romanian troops the radical leaders of the Congress were arrested and executed shortly after a more complacent leadership was installed and renounced overt opposition to the Romanian military occupation 28 30 According to the pro Romanian politician Dimitrie Bogos Popa also attended the Provincial Congress in Chișinău on the 31st O S 18th where he sided with the initial majority and only afterwards returned to Bălți and began organising the resistance against the Romanian army 31 Popa also contacted Gherman Pantea the acting Director for the military of the provisional Bessarabian executive requesting information about the situation in Chișinău According to the transcript of their 2 February O S 20 January exchange Popa had managed to enlist an infantry battalion two cavalry squadrons a machine gun company a motor transport company as well as an artillery battery Noting that the population was outraged by the Romanian intervention and the Peasants Council had switched allegiance to the Petrograd government he requested more officers and money for the soldiers pay and offered to send ammunitions and even troops to Chișinău In his reply Pantea repeated the Romanian argument that their intervention was only meant to protect the supply depots and pacify the capital and expressed his distrust of the Bolshevik government However he also noted the Moldavian troops dissatisfaction with the Romanian presence and affirmed his commitment to a republican Bessarabia alongside Russia Furthermore Pantea informed Popa about his intention to resign from the executive as the latter was becoming increasingly pro Romanian as well as his decision to mobilise the Moldavian Army to defend the country in case someone looks over the Prut towards the Romanian government 32 33 34 Between 3 and 5 February O S 21 and 23 January Moldavian and Russians troops led by the Revolutionary Headquarters defended Bălți against the Romanian offensive 31 The defenders of the city comprising up to a thousand volunteers and the revolutionary troops in the garrison were also joined by armed peasants from Cubolta Hăsnășenii Mici and other nearby villages The initial advance of the Romanian 1st Cavalry Division commanded by general Mihail Schina was temporarily repulsed with losses at Fălești with the general himself briefly captured by a peasants self defense group in Obreja on 4 February O S 22 January The same day the Romanians attempted to enter the city but coming under machine gun and artillery fire they retreated with heavy losses another Romanian cavalry detachment was repulsed near the railway station Superior both in number of troops and artillery the Romanian troops were ultimately able to defeat the revolutionary detachments and capture the town in the afternoon of 5 February O S 23 January with part of the defenders retreating toward the north 35 31 11 20 Soviet sources also indicate the counter revolutionary forces acting inside Bălți as a factor in the defeat 11 The Romanian occupation forces immediately began a crackdown on the resistance with 20 locals executed and more than one thousand arrested in the following two days 11 20 Anatolie Popa was also apprehended on the occasion and on 14 February O S 1 February was sentenced to death by a Court Martial for his role in organising and arming the local troops 11 31 36 37 The assessment of the battle was mixed while the Soviet historiography praised the Defence of Bălți as a heroic deed 28 Bogos saw the battle as an infamy comparable to the events of January 6 when Moldavian troops in Chișinău disarmed the Transylvanian volunteer corps 31 As argued by historian Izeaslav Levit the opponents of the Romanian intervention included people of different ethnic backgrounds and political options while the chairman of the local Soviet the Ukrainian lieutenant Soloviev collaborated with the Revolutionary Headquarters chiefly in order to prevent its takeover by the Bolsheviks the Moldavians Rudiev and Popa were primarily supporters of the Moldavian autonomy and of peasants interest pushed into collaboration with the Bolsheviks by what they saw as their betrayal by the right wing of the Sfatul Țării 38 Russian Civil War and death edit Owing to Popa s good standing with the Bessarabian population the Romanian authorities sought to co opt him in their administration consequently he was soon pardoned by King Ferdinand and offered a position in the Romanian Army 31 1 37 Anatol Popa however took the occasion and fled over the Dniester to Ukraine joining the Soviet partisan groups Given a command position he led a partisan detachment that crossed the Dniester back into Bessarabia during the Khotyn Uprising in January 1919 After the Romanian Army violently suppressed the rebellion he returned to Ukraine where his group engaged troops loyal to the Directorate 11 1 36 39 By April 1919 Popa was appointed commander of the first infantry regiment of the 1st Bessarabian brigade led by Filip Levenson This Red Army unit included many participants in the Khotyn Uprising and was later redesignated as a Special Bessarabian Brigade and in June was integrated into the newly organised 45th Soviet Rifle Division Under the command of Bessarabian Yona Yakir the division fought in the Southern Campaign of the Russian Civil War after the fall of Odessa it took a 400 kilometre march across enemy lines engaging along the way the forces of Yudenich Denikin and Makhno 11 1 On 13 February 1920 Anatolie Popa was given the command of the 399th Regiment Communist of the 45th Division which was sent to the Polish front suffering heavy losses Replenished to a full strength of 400 on 23 March the regiment was ordered to capture the settlement of Novo Miropol The assault encountered strong resistance and Popa heavily wounded was captured by the Polish forces He died under interrogation before the Soviets were able to take the town three days later 40 41 42 Posthumously awarded the Order of the Red Banner Popa was praised by Yakir in his 1929 memoirs as a titan commander who possessed both great willpower and great endurance 40 See also editGavril Buciușcan Grigory Kotovsky Gherman Pantea Boris KamkovNotes edit a b c d Nazaria 2012 p 209 a b c Abakumova amp Esaulenko 1987 p 107 Kalinenok amp Esaulenko 1982 p 139 Levit 2000 p 2 Levit 2000 p 19 Levit 2000 pp 27 28 44 45 Levit 2000 pp 65 67 Halipa amp Moraru 1991 pp 75 76 a b Ciobanu 2010 p 116 Bogos 1998 p 153 a b c d e f g Abakumova amp Esaulenko 1987 p 108 Levit 2000 pp 113 120 125 126 Levit 2000 pp 179 180 a b Levit 2000 pp 186 190 Levit 2000 pp 192 197 Levit 2000 pp 207 209 213 217 a b Levit 2000 pp 219 224 Levit 2000 pp 227 229 Levit 2000 pp 232 242 253 a b c d Shornikov 2011 p 25 a b Tsaranov 1984 p 266 Levit 2000 pp 229 231 a b Berezniakov 1967 p 48 footnote 1 a b Berezniakov 1967 p 47 48 Doc 33 Levit 2000 p 231 Berezniakov 1967 p 50 Doc 34 Berezniakov 1967 p 43 Doc 29 a b c Tsaranov 1984 p 267 Levit 2000 p 254 Levit 2000 pp 256 263 a b c d e f Bogos 1998 p 154 Bereznyakov 1970 pp 45 47 Doc 41 Bogos 1998 pp 154 156 Levit 2000 pp 265 268 Polivțev 2017 pp 387 388 a b Berezniakov 1967 p 43 footnote 1 a b Polivțev 2017 p 388 Levit 2000 p 232 Polivțev 2017 pp 388 389 a b Abakumova amp Esaulenko 1987 p 109 Kalinenok amp Esaulenko 1982 pp 137 138 Polivțev 2017 p 389 References editBerezniakov Nikolay Vasil evich ed 1967 Borba trudyashihsya Moldavii protiv interventov i vnutrennej kontrrevolyucii v 1917 1920 gg The struggle of the working people of Moldova against the interventionists and internal counterrevolution in 1917 1920 in Russian Kishinev Cartea Moldovenească Bereznyakov Nikolay Vasil evich ed 1970 Za vlast Sovetskuyu Borba trudyashihsya Moldavii protiv interventov i vnutrennej kontrrevolyucii 1917 1918 gg For the power of the Soviets The struggle of the working people of Moldova against the interventionists and internal counterrevolution 1917 1918 in Russian Kishinev Academy of Sciences of the Moldavian SSR Kalinenok Marat Alexandrovich Esaulenko A 1982 Aktivnye uchastniki borby za vlast Sovetov v Moldavii Active participants in the struggle for the power of the Soviets in Moldova in Russian Kishinev Știința Tsaranov Vladimir Ivanovich ed 1984 Istoriya Moldavskoj SSR s drevnejshih vremen do nashih dnej History of the Moldavian SSR from ancient times to the present day in Russian Kishinev Știința Abakumova N Esaulenko A 1987 Popa Anatolij Vasilevich Popa Anatoliy Vasilievich In Shemyakov Dmitriy Egorovich ed Borcy za schaste narodnoe Sb dokument ocherkov Fighters for the happiness of the people Collection of documentary sketches in Russian Kishinev Cartea Moldovenească Halipa Pantelimon Moraru Anatolie 1991 Testament pentru urmași A testament for the future generations in Romanian Chișinău Hyperion ISBN 5 368 01446 5 Bogos Dimitrie 1998 La răspantie Moldova de la Nistru 1917 1918 At the crossroads Moldavia on the Dniester 1917 1918 in Romanian Chișinău Știința ISBN 9975 67 056 3 Levit Izeaslav 2000 God sudbonosnyj ot provozglasheniya Moldavskoj respubliki do likvidacii avtonomii Bessarabii noyabr 1917 noyabr 1918 g The fateful year from the proclamation of the Moldavian Republic to the abolition of the Bessarabian autonomy November 1917 November 1918 in Russian Chișinău Tipografia Centrală ISBN 9975 78 057 1 Ciobanu Vitalie 2010 Militarii Basarabeni 1917 1918 Studiu și documente The Bessarabian military 1917 1918 Study and documents in Romanian Chișinău Bons Offices ISBN 978 9975 80 330 4 Shornikov Petr Mihaylovich 2011 Bessarabskij front 1918 1940 gg The Bessarabian Front 1918 1940 in Russian 2nd ed Tiraspol Poligrafist Nazaria Sergiu 2012 O istorie contra miturilor relațiile internaționale in epoca războaielor mondiale 1914 1945 1947 A history against myths international relations in the era of the world wars 1914 1945 1947 in Romanian Chișinău Tipografia Centrală ISBN 978 9975 53 115 3 Polivțev Vladimir 2017 Na zashite zavoevanij revolyucii i vossozdavaemoj Moldavskoj Gosudarstvennosti 1917 1918 gg In protection of the revolution results and restructuring of Moldovan statehood 1917 1918 PDF In Beniuc Valentin et al eds Statalitatea Moldovei continuitatea istorică și perspectiva dezvoltării Chișinău International Relations Institute of Moldova pp 354 391 ISBN 978 9975 56 439 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anatolie Popa amp oldid 1194219616, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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