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Grigory Mikhaylovich Semyonov

Grigory Mikhaylovich Semyonov, or Semenov (Russian: Григо́рий Миха́йлович Семёнов; September 25, 1890 – August 30, 1946), was a Japanese-supported leader of the White movement in Transbaikal and beyond from December 1917 to November 1920, a lieutenant general, and the ataman of Baikal Cossacks (1919).[1] Semyonov was also a prominent figure in the White Terror. U.S. Army intelligence estimated that he was responsible for executing 30,000 people in one year.[2]

Grigory Semyonov
Semyonov in 1920
Born(1890-09-25)September 25, 1890
Kuranzha Village, Transbaikal Oblast, Russian Empire
DiedAugust 30, 1946(1946-08-30) (aged 55)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Allegiance Russian Empire (1911–1917)
 Russian Republic (1917–1921)
Service/branch Imperial Russian Army
White Movement
Years of service1911–21
RankLieutenant General
Battles/warsWorld War I
Russian Civil War
AwardsOrder of St. George (twice[clarification needed])

Early life and career edit

Semyonov was born in the Transbaikal region of eastern Siberia. His father, Mikhail Petrovich Semyonov, was Russian; his mother was a Buryat.[3] Semyonov spoke Mongolian and Buryat fluently. He joined the Imperial Russian Army in 1908 and graduated from Orenburg Military School in 1911. Commissioned first as a khorunzhiy (cornet or lieutenant), he rose to the rank of yesaul (Cossack captain), distinguished himself in battle against the Germans and the Austro-Hungarians in World War I, and earned the Saint George's Cross for courage.[4]

Pyotr Wrangel wrote:[5]

Semenov was a Transbaikalian Cossack – dark and thickset, and of the rather alert Mongolian type. His intelligence was of a specifically Cossack calibre, and he was an exemplary soldier, especially courageous when under the eye of his superior. He knew how to make himself popular with Cossacks and officers alike, but he had his weaknesses in a love of intrigue and indifference to the means by which he achieved his ends. Though capable and ingenious, he had received no education, and his outlook was narrow. I have never been able to understand how he came to play a leading role.

As somewhat of an outsider among his fellow officers because of his ethnicity, he met another officer shunned by his peers, Baron Ungern-Sternberg, whose eccentric nature and disregard of the rules of etiquette and decorum repelled others. He and Ungern tried to organize a regiment of Assyrian Christians to aid in the Russian fight against the Ottomans. In July 1917, Semyonov left the Caucasus and was appointed commissar of the Provisional Government in the Baikal region and was responsible for recruiting a regiment of Buryat volunteers.[4]

Russian Civil War in Transbaikal edit

After the October Revolution of November 1917, Semyonov stirred up a sizable anti-Soviet rebellion but was defeated after several months of fighting, and he fled to the northeastern Chinese city of Harbin.[6] He then moved to Manzhouli in Inner Mongolia, where the Chinese Eastern Railway met the Chita Railway expelled the Bolshevik garrison guarding the rail junction, and recruited an army, mainly from Buryat and Chinese recruits. In January 1918, he invaded Transbaikal, but by February, had been forced by Bolshevik partisans to retreat back to Manzhouli, where he was visited by R.B.Denny, British Military Attache in Beijing, who formed an "extremely favourable impression of him". On his recommendation, the Foreign Office in London agreed to pay Semyonov £10,000 a month, with no conditions attached,.[7] The French government also decided to give him financial aid, while the Japanese placed an intelligence officer, Captain Kuroki Chikayochi, in Semyonov's headquarters.[8] The British subsidies ended, by which time "Japanese influence was so strong that Semyonov was for practical purposes a puppet."[7]

In April 1918, Semyonov launched another raid into Siberia and with the help of the Czechoslovak Legions by August 1918 he had managed to consolidate his positions in the Transbaikal region, where he set up a provisional government. On 6 September, his men captured Chita, and slaughtered 348 of its citizens. He made Chita his capital. Semyonov declared a "Great Mongol State" in 1918 and had designs to unify the Oirat Mongol lands, portions of Xinjiang, Transbaikal, Inner Mongolia, Outer Mongolia, Tannu Uriankhai, Kobdo, Hulunbei'er, and Tibet into one Mongolian state.[9] The region under his control, also called Eastern Okraina, extended from Verkhne-Udinsk near Lake Baikal to the Shilka River and the town of Stretensk, to Manzhouli and northeast some distance along the Amur Railway.[4] In early 1919, Semyonov declared himself ataman of the Transbaikal Cossack Host.

In his rule over the Transbaikal, Semyonov has been described as a "plain bandit [who] drew his income from holding up trains and forcing payments, no matter what the nature of the load nor for whose benefit it was being shipped".[10] He handed out copies of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion to the Japanese troops with whom he became associated.[11]

 
Ataman Semyonov with the representatives of the American expedition to the Russian Civil War. Seated: Semyonov (left) and General Graves (right)

With Japanese protection, he recognised no other authority. When Admiral Aleksandr Kolchak, who based in Omsk, in Siberia, was declared Supreme Ruler by the White Armies, Semyonov refused to submit to him. They had met once, in Manzhouli, in May 1918, when Semyonov insulted Kolchak by failing to be at the railway station to greet him.[12] Kolchak considered sending an army into Transbaikal to remove Semyonov, but had to abandon the idea because Semyonov was protected by the Japanese, who had 72,000 troops in Siberia. In October 1919, Kolchak recognised Semyonov as commander-in-chief of the Transbaikal region.[3]

In December 1919, Semyonov sent a detachment to Irkutsk, which had been the last city west of Lake Baikal still nominally under Kolchak's rule until a coalition of Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries seized control. The detachment reached Irkutsk, but did nothing except take 30 men and one young woman hostage. They took their hostages abroad an icebreaker on Lake Baikal, where, on 5 January, they clubbed them to death with a wooden mallet, one by one, and threw them overboard - all except for one man who put up a fight and was thrown alive into the freezing water.[13]

When Kolchak resigned on 4 January 1920 he transferred his military forces in the Far East to Semyonov. However, Semyonov was unable to keep his troops in Siberia under control: they stole, burned, murdered, and raped, developing a reputation for being little better than thugs.[14] In July 1920, the Japanese Expeditionary Corps started a limited withdrawal in accordance with the Gongota Agreement, which was signed on 15 July 1920 with the Far Eastern Republic and undermined support for Semyonov. Transbaikal partisans, internationalists, and the 5th Soviet Army under Genrich Eiche launched an operation to retake Chita. In October 1920, units of the Red Army and guerrillas forced Semyonov's army out of the Baikal region. He escaped by plane to Manchuria. In late May 1921 Semyonov travelled to Japan, where he received some support. He returned to the Primorye in the hope of continuing to fight against the Soviets, but was finally forced to abandon all of Russian territory by September 1921.[4]

In exile edit

He eventually returned to China, where he was given a monthly 1000-yen pension by the Japanese government. In Tianjin, he made ties with the Japanese intelligence community and mobilized exiled Russian and Cossack communities that planned an eventual overthrow of the Soviets. He was also employed by Puyi, the dethroned Emperor of China, whom he wished to restore to power.[15][16]

While he was an exile in China, he was still backed by the Japanese. His influence was such that when Anastasy Vonsiatsky of the Russian Fascist Party wanted to visit Manchukuo, the Japanese puppet state in Manchuria, he needed Semyonov's help in getting a visa.[17] Vonsiatsky, however, saw Semyonov as a threat to his dream of being Russia's Mussolini, and declared that he should be shot, an outburst that led to the Russian Fascist Party splitting in two.[18] Konstantin Rodzaevsky, who supplanted Vonsiatsky as the leader of the Russian Fascists in China co-operated with Semyonov to placate the Japanese.

In 1934, the Japanese formed the Bureau for Russian Emigrants in Manchuria (BREM; Бюро по делам российских эмигрантов в Маньчжурской империи), which were nominally under the control of the recent Russian Fascist Party and provided identification papers necessary to live, work and travel in Manchukuo. Much more in favor with the Japanese than White General Kislitsin, Semyonov replaced him as BREM's chairman from 1943 to 1945.[19]

Arrest and execution edit

 
Photo of Semyonov after his arrest by Soviet authorities

Semyonov was captured in Dalian by Soviet paratroopers in September 1945 during the Soviet invasion of Manchuria in which the Red Army conquered Manchukuo. He was taken to Moscow, and put on trial with seven others, including Rodzaevsky in front of the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the USSR. He pleaded guilty to espionage, sabotage, terrorism, and armed struggle,[20] and was sentenced to death by hanging. Semyonov was executed on August 29, 1946.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Bisher, Jamie, White Terror: Cossack Warlords of the Trans-Siberian, Routledge, London, 2009.
  2. ^ "The Wilson administration's war on Russian Bolshevism". Peace History. Retrieved 2024-02-11.
  3. ^ a b Kvakin, Andrei.V. "Семенов Григорий Михайлович Биографический указатель1890-1946". Khronos. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e Bisher, White Terror.
  5. ^ Always With Honour. By General baron Peter N Wrangel. Robert Speller & Sons. New York. 1957.
  6. ^ Bisher, Jamie (2006). White Terror: Cossack Warlords of the Trans-Siberian. Routledge. p. 152.
  7. ^ a b Fleming, Peter (2001). The Fate of Admiral Kolchak. Edinburgh: Birlinn. p. 49. ISBN 1-84158-138-0.
  8. ^ Bisher. White Terror. pp. 60–61.
  9. ^ Paine 1996, pp. 316-7.
  10. ^ Norton, Henry Kittredge (1923). "The Far Eastern Republic of Siberia." London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd. p69.
  11. ^ Tokayer, Marvin (1979). The Fugu Plan. New York: Paddington Press Ltd. p47.
  12. ^ Fleming. Admiral Kolchak. p. 74.
  13. ^ Fleming. Admiral Kolchak. pp. 194–95.
  14. ^ Richard Pipes, Russia under the Bolshevik Regime, New York 1994, p.46, and Bisher, White Terror.
  15. ^ Arnold C. Brackman, The Last Emperor. Hew York: Scribner's, 1975, p. 151.
  16. ^ Williams, Stephanie (2011). Olga's Story: Three Continents, Two World Wars, and Revolution -- One Woman's Epic Journey Through the Twentieth Century. Doubleday Canada. p. 327.
  17. ^ Stephan, John J. (1978). The Russian Fascists, Tragedy and Farce in Exile, 1925-1945. London: Hamish Hamilton. pp. 145–46. ISBN 0-241-10033-X.
  18. ^ Stephan. The Russian Fascists. pp. 164–65.
  19. ^ "General V.A. Kislitsin: From Russian Monarchism to the Spirit of Bushido," Harbin and Manchuria: Place, Space, and Identity, edited by Thomas Lahusen, special issue of South Atlantic Quarterly, vol. 99, no. 1.
  20. ^ Stephan. The Russian Fascists. pp. 352–53.
  • Paine, S. C. M. (1996). Imperial Rivals: China, Russia, and Their Disputed Frontier (illustrated ed.). M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 1563247240. Retrieved 24 April 2014.

grigory, mikhaylovich, semyonov, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, russian, march, 2024, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting,. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian March 2024 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 220 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Semyonov Grigorij Mihajlovich see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated ru Semyonov Grigorij Mihajlovich to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Grigory Mikhaylovich Semyonov or Semenov Russian Grigo rij Miha jlovich Semyonov September 25 1890 August 30 1946 was a Japanese supported leader of the White movement in Transbaikal and beyond from December 1917 to November 1920 a lieutenant general and the ataman of Baikal Cossacks 1919 1 Semyonov was also a prominent figure in the White Terror U S Army intelligence estimated that he was responsible for executing 30 000 people in one year 2 Grigory SemyonovSemyonov in 1920Born 1890 09 25 September 25 1890Kuranzha Village Transbaikal Oblast Russian EmpireDiedAugust 30 1946 1946 08 30 aged 55 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionCause of deathExecution by hangingAllegiance Russian Empire 1911 1917 Russian Republic 1917 1921 Service wbr branchImperial Russian Army White MovementYears of service1911 21RankLieutenant GeneralBattles warsWorld War IRussian Civil WarAwardsOrder of St George twice clarification needed Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Russian Civil War in Transbaikal 3 In exile 4 Arrest and execution 5 ReferencesEarly life and career editSemyonov was born in the Transbaikal region of eastern Siberia His father Mikhail Petrovich Semyonov was Russian his mother was a Buryat 3 Semyonov spoke Mongolian and Buryat fluently He joined the Imperial Russian Army in 1908 and graduated from Orenburg Military School in 1911 Commissioned first as a khorunzhiy cornet or lieutenant he rose to the rank of yesaul Cossack captain distinguished himself in battle against the Germans and the Austro Hungarians in World War I and earned the Saint George s Cross for courage 4 Pyotr Wrangel wrote 5 Semenov was a Transbaikalian Cossack dark and thickset and of the rather alert Mongolian type His intelligence was of a specifically Cossack calibre and he was an exemplary soldier especially courageous when under the eye of his superior He knew how to make himself popular with Cossacks and officers alike but he had his weaknesses in a love of intrigue and indifference to the means by which he achieved his ends Though capable and ingenious he had received no education and his outlook was narrow I have never been able to understand how he came to play a leading role As somewhat of an outsider among his fellow officers because of his ethnicity he met another officer shunned by his peers Baron Ungern Sternberg whose eccentric nature and disregard of the rules of etiquette and decorum repelled others He and Ungern tried to organize a regiment of Assyrian Christians to aid in the Russian fight against the Ottomans In July 1917 Semyonov left the Caucasus and was appointed commissar of the Provisional Government in the Baikal region and was responsible for recruiting a regiment of Buryat volunteers 4 Russian Civil War in Transbaikal editAfter the October Revolution of November 1917 Semyonov stirred up a sizable anti Soviet rebellion but was defeated after several months of fighting and he fled to the northeastern Chinese city of Harbin 6 He then moved to Manzhouli in Inner Mongolia where the Chinese Eastern Railway met the Chita Railway expelled the Bolshevik garrison guarding the rail junction and recruited an army mainly from Buryat and Chinese recruits In January 1918 he invaded Transbaikal but by February had been forced by Bolshevik partisans to retreat back to Manzhouli where he was visited by R B Denny British Military Attache in Beijing who formed an extremely favourable impression of him On his recommendation the Foreign Office in London agreed to pay Semyonov 10 000 a month with no conditions attached 7 The French government also decided to give him financial aid while the Japanese placed an intelligence officer Captain Kuroki Chikayochi in Semyonov s headquarters 8 The British subsidies ended by which time Japanese influence was so strong that Semyonov was for practical purposes a puppet 7 In April 1918 Semyonov launched another raid into Siberia and with the help of the Czechoslovak Legions by August 1918 he had managed to consolidate his positions in the Transbaikal region where he set up a provisional government On 6 September his men captured Chita and slaughtered 348 of its citizens He made Chita his capital Semyonov declared a Great Mongol State in 1918 and had designs to unify the Oirat Mongol lands portions of Xinjiang Transbaikal Inner Mongolia Outer Mongolia Tannu Uriankhai Kobdo Hulunbei er and Tibet into one Mongolian state 9 The region under his control also called Eastern Okraina extended from Verkhne Udinsk near Lake Baikal to the Shilka River and the town of Stretensk to Manzhouli and northeast some distance along the Amur Railway 4 In early 1919 Semyonov declared himself ataman of the Transbaikal Cossack Host In his rule over the Transbaikal Semyonov has been described as a plain bandit who drew his income from holding up trains and forcing payments no matter what the nature of the load nor for whose benefit it was being shipped 10 He handed out copies of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion to the Japanese troops with whom he became associated 11 nbsp Ataman Semyonov with the representatives of the American expedition to the Russian Civil War Seated Semyonov left and General Graves right With Japanese protection he recognised no other authority When Admiral Aleksandr Kolchak who based in Omsk in Siberia was declared Supreme Ruler by the White Armies Semyonov refused to submit to him They had met once in Manzhouli in May 1918 when Semyonov insulted Kolchak by failing to be at the railway station to greet him 12 Kolchak considered sending an army into Transbaikal to remove Semyonov but had to abandon the idea because Semyonov was protected by the Japanese who had 72 000 troops in Siberia In October 1919 Kolchak recognised Semyonov as commander in chief of the Transbaikal region 3 In December 1919 Semyonov sent a detachment to Irkutsk which had been the last city west of Lake Baikal still nominally under Kolchak s rule until a coalition of Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries seized control The detachment reached Irkutsk but did nothing except take 30 men and one young woman hostage They took their hostages abroad an icebreaker on Lake Baikal where on 5 January they clubbed them to death with a wooden mallet one by one and threw them overboard all except for one man who put up a fight and was thrown alive into the freezing water 13 When Kolchak resigned on 4 January 1920 he transferred his military forces in the Far East to Semyonov However Semyonov was unable to keep his troops in Siberia under control they stole burned murdered and raped developing a reputation for being little better than thugs 14 In July 1920 the Japanese Expeditionary Corps started a limited withdrawal in accordance with the Gongota Agreement which was signed on 15 July 1920 with the Far Eastern Republic and undermined support for Semyonov Transbaikal partisans internationalists and the 5th Soviet Army under Genrich Eiche launched an operation to retake Chita In October 1920 units of the Red Army and guerrillas forced Semyonov s army out of the Baikal region He escaped by plane to Manchuria In late May 1921 Semyonov travelled to Japan where he received some support He returned to the Primorye in the hope of continuing to fight against the Soviets but was finally forced to abandon all of Russian territory by September 1921 4 In exile editHe eventually returned to China where he was given a monthly 1000 yen pension by the Japanese government In Tianjin he made ties with the Japanese intelligence community and mobilized exiled Russian and Cossack communities that planned an eventual overthrow of the Soviets He was also employed by Puyi the dethroned Emperor of China whom he wished to restore to power 15 16 While he was an exile in China he was still backed by the Japanese His influence was such that when Anastasy Vonsiatsky of the Russian Fascist Party wanted to visit Manchukuo the Japanese puppet state in Manchuria he needed Semyonov s help in getting a visa 17 Vonsiatsky however saw Semyonov as a threat to his dream of being Russia s Mussolini and declared that he should be shot an outburst that led to the Russian Fascist Party splitting in two 18 Konstantin Rodzaevsky who supplanted Vonsiatsky as the leader of the Russian Fascists in China co operated with Semyonov to placate the Japanese In 1934 the Japanese formed the Bureau for Russian Emigrants in Manchuria BREM Byuro po delam rossijskih emigrantov v Manchzhurskoj imperii which were nominally under the control of the recent Russian Fascist Party and provided identification papers necessary to live work and travel in Manchukuo Much more in favor with the Japanese than White General Kislitsin Semyonov replaced him as BREM s chairman from 1943 to 1945 19 Arrest and execution edit nbsp Photo of Semyonov after his arrest by Soviet authorities Semyonov was captured in Dalian by Soviet paratroopers in September 1945 during the Soviet invasion of Manchuria in which the Red Army conquered Manchukuo He was taken to Moscow and put on trial with seven others including Rodzaevsky in front of the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the USSR He pleaded guilty to espionage sabotage terrorism and armed struggle 20 and was sentenced to death by hanging Semyonov was executed on August 29 1946 4 References edit Bisher Jamie White Terror Cossack Warlords of the Trans Siberian Routledge London 2009 The Wilson administration s war on Russian Bolshevism Peace History Retrieved 2024 02 11 a b Kvakin Andrei V Semenov Grigorij Mihajlovich Biograficheskij ukazatel1890 1946 Khronos Retrieved 24 October 2022 a b c d e Bisher White Terror Always With Honour By General baron Peter N Wrangel Robert Speller amp Sons New York 1957 Bisher Jamie 2006 White Terror Cossack Warlords of the Trans Siberian Routledge p 152 a b Fleming Peter 2001 The Fate of Admiral Kolchak Edinburgh Birlinn p 49 ISBN 1 84158 138 0 Bisher White Terror pp 60 61 Paine 1996 pp 316 7 Norton Henry Kittredge 1923 The Far Eastern Republic of Siberia London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd p69 Tokayer Marvin 1979 The Fugu Plan New York Paddington Press Ltd p47 Fleming Admiral Kolchak p 74 Fleming Admiral Kolchak pp 194 95 Richard Pipes Russia under the Bolshevik Regime New York 1994 p 46 and Bisher White Terror Arnold C Brackman The Last Emperor Hew York Scribner s 1975 p 151 Williams Stephanie 2011 Olga s Story Three Continents Two World Wars and Revolution One Woman s Epic Journey Through the Twentieth Century Doubleday Canada p 327 Stephan John J 1978 The Russian Fascists Tragedy and Farce in Exile 1925 1945 London Hamish Hamilton pp 145 46 ISBN 0 241 10033 X Stephan The Russian Fascists pp 164 65 General V A Kislitsin From Russian Monarchism to the Spirit of Bushido Harbin and Manchuria Place Space and Identity edited by Thomas Lahusen special issue of South Atlantic Quarterly vol 99 no 1 Stephan The Russian Fascists pp 352 53 Paine S C M 1996 Imperial Rivals China Russia and Their Disputed Frontier illustrated ed M E Sharpe ISBN 1563247240 Retrieved 24 April 2014 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grigorii Semenov Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grigory Mikhaylovich Semyonov amp oldid 1219048122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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