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Imperial Russian Army

The Imperial Russian Army (Russian: Ру́сская импера́торская а́рмия, tr. Rússkaya imperátorskaya ármiya) was the armed land force of the Russian Empire, active from around 1721 to the Russian Revolution of 1917. In the early 1850s, the Russian Army consisted of more than 900,000 regular soldiers and nearly 250,000 irregulars (mostly Cossacks).

Precursors: Regiments of the New Order

Russian tsars before Peter the Great maintained professional hereditary musketeer corps known as streltsy. These were originally raised by Ivan the Terrible;[1] originally an effective force, they had become highly unreliable and undisciplined. In times of war the armed forces were augmented by peasants.

The regiments of the new order, or regiments of the foreign order (Полки нового строя or Полки иноземного строя, Polki novovo (inozemnovo) stroya), was the Russian term that was used to describe military units that were formed in the Tsardom of Russia in the 17th century according to the Western European military standards.[2]

There were different kinds of regiments, such as the regulars, dragoons, and reiters. In 1631, the Russians created two regular regiments in Moscow. During the Smolensk War of 1632–1634, six more regular regiments, one reiter regiment, and a dragoon regiment were formed. Initially, they recruited children of the landless boyars and streltsy, volunteers, Cossacks and others. Commanding officers comprised mostly foreigners. After the war with Poland, all of the regiments were disbanded. During another Russo-Polish War, they were created again and became a principal force of the Russian Army. Often, regular and dragoon regiments were manned with datochniye lyudi for lifelong military service. Reiters were manned with small or landless gentry and boyars' children and were paid with money (or lands) for their service. More than a half of the commanding officers were representatives from the gentry. In times of peace, some of the regiments were usually disbanded.

In 1681, there were 33 regular regiments (61,000 men) and 25 dragoon and reiter regiments (29,000 men). In the late 17th century, regiments of the new type represented more than a half of the Russian Army and at the beginning of the 18th century were used for creating a regular army.

Introduction of conscription

 
General Suvorov crossing the St. Gotthard Pass during the Italian and Swiss expedition in 1799

Conscription in Russia was introduced by Peter the Great in December 1699,[3] though reports say Peter's father also used it. The conscripts were called "recruits" (not to be confused with voluntary army recruitment,[4] which did not appear until the early 20th century).

Peter formed a modern regular army built on the German model, but with a new aspect: officers not necessarily from nobility, as talented commoners were given promotions that eventually included a noble title at the attainment of an officer's rank (such promotions were later abolished during the reign of Catherine the Great). Conscription of peasants and townspeople was based on quota system, per settlement. Initially it was based on the number of households, later it was based on the population numbers.[4]

The term of service in the 18th century was for life. In 1793 it was reduced to 25 years. In 1834, it was reduced to 20 years plus five years in the reserve, and in 1855 to 12 years plus three years in the reserve.[4]

1760s

The history of the Russian Army in this era was linked to the name of Russian General Alexander Suvorov, considered to be one of the few great generals in history who never lost a battle.

From 1777 to 1783 Suvorov served in the Crimea and in the Caucasus, becoming a lieutenant-general in 1780, and general of infantry in 1783, on the conclusion of his work there. From 1787 to 1791 he again fought the Turks during the Russo-Turkish War of 1787–1792 and won many victories. Suvorov's leadership also played a key role in a Russian victory over the Poles during the Kościuszko Uprising.[citation needed]

Imperial Russian Army in 1805

 
Capture of a French regiment's eagle by the Russian Imperial Guard at the Battle of Austerlitz

As a major European power, Russia could not escape the wars involving Revolutionary France and the First French Empire, but as an adversary to Napoleon, the leadership of the new emperor, Alexander I of Russia (r. 1801–1825), who came to the throne as the result of his father's assassination (in which he was rumoured to be implicated) became crucial.

The Russian Army in 1805 had many characteristics of Ancien Régime organization: there was no permanent formation above the regimental level, senior officers were largely recruited from aristocratic circles, and the Russian soldier, in line with 18th-century practice, was regularly beaten and punished to instill discipline. Furthermore, many lower-level officers were poorly trained and had difficulty getting their men to perform the sometimes complex manoeuvres required in a battle. Nevertheless, the Russians did have a fine artillery arm manned by soldiers trained in academies and who would regularly fight hard to prevent their pieces from falling into enemy hands.[5]

Both the Russians and Austrians met a decisive military defeat at the hands of Napoleon during the Battle of Austerlitz in 1805.

Napoleonic Wars

 
Russian dragoons and hussars in 1807

The War of the Fourth Coalition (1806–1807) involving Prussia, Russia, Saxony, Sweden and the United Kingdom against France formed within months of the collapse of the previous coalition. In August 1806, King Frederick William III of Prussia made the decision to go to war independently of any other great power except neighbouring Russia. Another course of action might have involved declaring war the previous year and joining Austria and Russia. This might have contained Napoleon and prevented the Allied disaster in the Battle of Austerlitz. In any event, the Russian Army, an ally of Prussia, still remained far away when Prussia declared war.

Napoleon smashed the main Prussian armies at the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt on 14 October 1806 and hunted down the survivors during the remainder of October and November. Having destroyed all Prussian forces west of the Oder, Napoleon pushed east to seize Warsaw. In late December, the initial clashes between the French and Russians at Czarnowo, Golymin, and Pułtusk were without result. The French emperor put his troops into winter quarters east of the Vistula River, but the new Russian commander Levin August von Bennigsen refused to remain passive.

Bennigsen shifted his army north into East Prussia and launched a stroke at the French strategic left wing. The main force of the blow was evaded by the French at the Battle of Mohrungen in late January 1807. In response, Napoleon mounted a counterattack designed to cut off the Russians. Bennigsen managed to avoid entrapment and the two sides fought the Battle of Eylau on 7 and 8 February 1807. After this indecisive bloodbath both sides belatedly went into winter quarters. In early June, Bennigsen mounted an offensive that was quickly parried by the French. Napoleon launched a pursuit toward Königsberg but the Russians successfully fended it off at the Battle of Heilsberg. On 14 June, Bennigsen unwisely fought the Battle of Friedland with a river at his back and saw his army mauled with heavy losses. Following this defeat, Alexander was forced to sue for peace with Napoleon at Tilsit on 7 July 1807, with Russia becoming Napoleon's ally. Russia lost little territory under the treaty, and Alexander made use of his alliance with Napoleon for further expansion. Napoleon created the Duchy of Warsaw out of former Prussian territory.[6]

At the Congress of Erfurt (September–October 1808) Napoleon and Alexander agreed that Russia should force Sweden to join the Continental System, which led to the Finnish War of 1808–1809 and to the division of Sweden into two parts separated by the Gulf of Bothnia. The eastern part became the Russian Grand Duchy of Finland.

The Russo-Turkish War broke out in 1805–06 against the background of the Napoleonic Wars. The Ottoman Empire, encouraged by the Russian defeat in the Battle of Austerlitz, deposed the Russophile hospodars of its vassal states Moldavia (Alexander Mourouzis) and Wallachia (Constantine Ypsilantis). Simultaneously, their French allies occupied Dalmatia and threatened to penetrate the Danubian principalities at any time. In order to safeguard the Russian border against a possible French attack and support the First Serbian uprising, a 40,000-strong Russian contingent advanced into Moldavia and Wallachia. The Sultan reacted by blocking the Dardanelles to Russian ships in 1807 and declared war on Russia. The war lasted until 1812.

In the Finnish War Alexander wrested the Grand Duchy of Finland from Sweden in 1809, and acquired Bessarabia from Turkey in 1812.

Anglo-Russian War (1807–1812)

The requirement of joining France's Continental Blockade against Britain was a serious disruption of Russian commerce, and in 1810 Alexander repudiated the obligation. This strategic change was followed by a substantial reform in the army undertaken by Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly as the Minister of War.

At the same time, Russia continued its expansion. The Congress of Vienna created the Kingdom of Poland (Russian Poland), to which Alexander granted a constitution. Thus, Alexander I became the constitutional monarch of Poland while remaining the autocratic Emperor of Russia. He was also the Grand Duke of Finland, which had been annexed from Sweden in 1809 and awarded autonomous status.

The Russo-French alliance gradually became strained. Napoleon was concerned about Russia's intentions in the strategically vital Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits. At the same time, Alexander viewed the Duchy of Warsaw, the French-controlled reconstituted Polish state, with suspicion. The result was the War of the Sixth Coalition from 1812 to 1814.

French invasion of Russia

 
Russian artillerymen in 1812–1814

In 1812, Napoleon invaded Russia to compel Alexander I to remain in the Continental System and to remove the imminent threat of Russian invasion of Poland. The Grande Armée, 650,000 men (270,000 Frenchmen and many soldiers of allies or subject powers), crossed the Neman on 23 June 1812. Russia proclaimed a Patriotic War, while Napoleon proclaimed a Second Polish war, but against the expectations of the Poles who supplied almost 100,000 troops for the invasion force he avoided any concessions toward Poland, having in mind further negotiations with Russia. Russia maintained a scorched earth policy of retreat, broken only by the Battle of Borodino on 7 September, when the Russians stood and fought. This was bloody and the Russians eventually retreated, opening the road to Moscow. Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov made the decision in order to preserve the army. By 14 September, the French captured Moscow. The Russian governor Prince Rastopchin ordered the city burnt to the ground and large parts of it were destroyed. Alexander I refused to capitulate, and with no sign of clear victory in sight, Napoleon was forced to withdraw from Moscow's ruins. So the disastrous Great Retreat began, with 370,000 casualties largely as a result of starvation and the freezing weather conditions, and 200,000 captured. Napoleon narrowly escaped total annihilation at the Battle of Berezina, but his army was wrecked nevertheless. By December only 20,000 fit soldiers from the main army were among those who recrossed the Neman at Kaunas. By this time Napoleon had abandoned his army to return to Paris and prepare a defence against the advancing Russians.

1813 Campaign in Germany

As the French retreated, the Russians pursued them into Poland and Prussia, causing the Prussian Corps under Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg that had been formerly a part of the Grande Armée to ultimately change sides in the Convention of Tauroggen. This soon forced Prussia to declare war on France, and with its mobilisation, for many Prussian officers serving in the Russian Army to leave, creating a serious shortage of experienced officers in the Russian Army. After the death of Kutuzov in early 1813, command of the Russian Army passed to Peter Wittgenstein. The campaign was noted for the number of sieges the Russian Army conducted and a large number of Narodnoe Opolcheniye (irregular troops) that continued to serve in its ranks until newly trained recruits could reach the area of combat operations. Aleksey Petrovich Yermolov emerged as one of the leading and talented senior commanders of the army, participating in many important battles, including the Battle of Leipzig.

In 1813 Russia gained territory in the Baku area of the Caucasus from Qajar Iran as much due to the news of Napoleon's defeat in 1812 as the fear by the Shah of a new campaign against him by the resurgent Russian Army where the 1810 campaign led by Matvei Platov failed. This was immediately used to raise new regiments, and to begin creating a greater foothold in the Caucasus. By the early 19th century, the empire also was firmly ensconced in Alaska reached via Cossack expeditions to Siberia, although only a rudimentary military presence was possible due to the distance from Europe.

1814 Campaign in France

 
The Russian Army entering Paris in 1814

The campaign in France was marked by persistent advances made by the Russian-led forces towards Paris despite attempts by Alexander's allies to allow Napoleon an avenue for surrender. In a brilliant deceptive manoeuvre Alexander was able to reach, and take Paris with the help of the treason of Marshal Marmont before Napoleon could reinforce its garrison, effectively ending the campaign. More pragmatically, in 1814 Russia, Britain, Austria, and Prussia had formed the Quadruple Alliance. The allies created an international system to maintain the territorial status quo and prevent the resurgence of an expansionist France. This included each ally maintaining a corps of occupation in France. The Quadruple Alliance, confirmed by a number of international conferences, ensured Russia's influence in Europe, if only because of the proven capability of its army to defeat that of Napoleon and to carry the war to Paris.

After the allies defeated Napoleon, Alexander played a prominent role in the redrawing of the map of Europe at the Congress of Vienna in 1815. Many of the prominent Russian commanders were feted in the European capitals, including London. In the same year, under the influence of religious mysticism, Alexander initiated the creation of the Holy Alliance, a loose agreement pledging the rulers of the nations involved—including most of Europe—to act according to Christian principles. This emerged in part due to the influence religion had played in the army during the war of 1812, and its influence on the common soldiers and officers alike.

The Russian occupation forces in France, though not participating in the Belgian campaign, re-entered combat against the minor French forces in the East and occupied several important fortresses.

Reforms

 
39th Tomsk Regiment, 1916
 
Russian military districts in 1913

Following Russia's defeat in the Crimean War during the reign of Alexander II, the Minister of War, Count Dmitry Milyutin, (who held the post from 16 May 1861 to 21 May 1881) introduced military reforms. The reforms carried on during Milyutin's long tenure abolished the system of conscription of children, and resulted in the levy system being introduced in Russia and military districts being created across the country.

As part of Milyutin's reforms, on 1 January 1874, the emperor approved a conscription statute that made military service compulsory for all 20-year-old males with the term reduced for land army to six years plus nine years in reserve. This conscription created a large pool of experienced military reservists who would be ready to mobilize in case of war. It also permitted the Russian Empire to maintain a smaller standing army in peacetime. Ironically, this reform was a disaster for the Tsarist regime. By reducing the length of service, peasant elders and officials could no longer threaten radical youths with conscription. Soldiers now kept their peasant identities and many learned new skills and became literate. They radicalised the villages on their return.[citation needed]

The system of military education was also reformed, and elementary education was made available to all the draftees. Milyutin's reforms are regarded as a milestone in the history of Russia: they dispensed with the military recruitment and professional army introduced by Peter the Great and created the Russian army such as it continued into the 21st century. Up to Dmitry Milyutin's reforms in 1874 the Russian Army had no permanent barracks and was billeted in dugouts and shacks.[7]

The army saw service against the Turks during the Russo-Turkish War.

During the Boxer Rebellion 100,000 Russian troops fought to pacify part of Manchuria and to secure its railroads. Some Russian military forces were already stationed in China before the war, and one of them met a grotesque end at the Battle of Pai-t'ou-tzu when the dead Russians were mutilated by Chinese troops, who decapitated them and sliced crosses into their bodies. Other battles fought include Boxers attacks on Chinese Eastern Railway, Defence of Yingkou, Battles on Amur River, and the Russian Invasion of Northern and Central Manchuria.

The army's share of the budget fell from 30% to 18% in 1881–1902.[8] By 1904 Russia was spending 57% and 63% of what Germany and Austria-Hungary were spending on each soldier, respectively. Army morale was broken by crushing over 1500 protests from 1883 to 1903.[9]

The army was defeated by Japan during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05, notable engagements being the Siege of Port Arthur and the Battle of Mukden. There were over 400 mutinies from autumn 1905 to summer 1906.[10]

World War I and revolution

 
Defence of Przasnysz by the Imperial Russian Army on the Eastern Front, 1915

At the outbreak of the war, Emperor Nicholas II appointed his cousin, Grand Duke Nicholas as Commander-in-Chief. On mobilization, the Russian Army totalled 115 infantry and 38 cavalry divisions with nearly 7,900 guns (7,100 field guns, 540 field howitzers and 257 heavy guns). There were only 2 army ambulances and 679 cars. Divisions were allocated as follows: 32 infantry and 10.5 cavalry divisions to operate against Germany, 46 infantry and 18.5 cavalry divisions to operate against Austria-Hungary, 19.5 infantry and 5.5 cavalry divisions for the defence of the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea littorals, and 17 infantry and 3.5 cavalry divisions were to be transported in from Siberia and Turkestan.

Among the army's higher formations during the war were the Western Front, the Northwestern Front and the Romanian Front. The war in the East began with Russian invasion of East Prussia (1914) and the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia. The first ended in a Russian defeat by the German Empire in the Battle of Tannenberg (1914). In the west, a Russian Expeditionary Force was dispatched to France in 1915. Amid the Russian Revolution of 1917 the Imperial Russian Army collapsed and dissolved. The rebellious remnants of the Imperial army evolved to become part of the new Red Army.[11]

Organization

 
Emperor Nicholas II of Russia in the uniform of the Chevalier Guard Regiment, 1896

The Imperial Russian Army entered the Napoleonic Wars organized administratively and in the field on the same principles as it had been in the 18th century of units being assigned to campaign headquarters, and the "army" being known either for its senior commander, or the area of its operations. Administratively, the regiments were assigned to Military Inspections, the predecessors of military districts, and included the conscript training depots, garrisons and fortress troops and munitions magazines.

The army had been thoroughly reorganised on the Prussian model by the emperor's father Paul I against wishes of most of its officer corps, and with his demise immediate changes followed to remove much of the Prussianness from its character. Although the army had conventional European parts within it such as the monarch's guard, the infantry and cavalry of the line and field artillery, it also included a very large contingent of semi-regular Cossacks that in times of rare peace served to guard the Russian Empire's southern borders, and in times of war served as fully-fledged light cavalry, providing invaluable reconnaissance service often far better than that available to other European armies due to the greater degree of initiative and freedom of movement by Cossack detachments.[12] The Ukrainian lands of the Empire also provided most of the Hussar and Ulan regiments for the regular light cavalry. Another unusual feature of the army that was seen twice during the period was the constitution of the Narodnoe Opolcheniye, for the first time since the coming to power of the Romanov dynasty.[13]

In 1806 most of the Inspections were abolished, and replaced by divisions based on the French model although still territorially based. By 1809 there were 25 infantry divisions as permanent field formations, each organised around three infantry brigade and one artillery brigade. When Barclay de Tolly became the Minister of War in 1810, he instituted further reorganization and other changes in the army, down to company level, that saw the creation of separate grenadier divisions, and dedication of one brigade in each division to the jaeger light infantry for skirmishing in open order formations.

Imperial Guard

 
Church parade of the Finland Guard Regiment, 1905

Throughout the Napoleonic Wars the Imperial Russian Guard was commanded by Grand Duke Konstantin. The guard grew from a few regiments to two infantry divisions combined into the V Infantry Corps commanded at Borodino by General Lieutenant Lavrov and two cavalry divisions with their own artillery and train by the conclusion of the 1814 campaign.

Infantry of the Guard

At Austerlitz in 1805 the infantry of the Guard included: Guard Infantry Division – General Lieutenant Pyotr Malutin

 
Organization of the Imperial Russian Army, 28 June 1914

At Borodino in 1812 the infantry of the Guard included: Guard Infantry Division – General Lieutenant Nikolai Lavrov

Cavalry of the Guard

At Austerlitz in 1805 the cavalry of the Guard included: Guard Cavalry Division – General Lieutenant Andrei Kologrivov

 
Life Guards Cossack Regiment, 1855

At Borodino in 1812 the cavalry of the Guard included: 1st Cuirassier Division – General Major Nikolai Borozdin[14]

As part of the I Cavalry Corps – General Lieutenant Fyodor Uvarov

Artillery of the Guard

At Austerlitz in 1805 the artillery of the Guard included the Lifeguard Artillery Battalion under General Major Ivan Kaspersky. At Borodino in 1812 the artillery of the Guard included the Lifeguard Artillery Brigade (now a part of the Guard Infantry Division), the Lifeguard Horse Artillery under Colonel Kozen, attached to the 1st Cuirassier Division, and the Guard Sapper Battalion.

At Austerlitz in 1805 the Lifeguard Cossack regiment (five sotnias) was attached to the 1st Brigade of the Guard Cavalry Division. At Borodino in 1812 the Cossacks of the Guard included the Lifeguard Cossack regiment (five sotnias), the Black Sea Cossack Guard sotnia, and the Lifeguard Orel sotnia.

The General Staff Academy was established in 1832 in Saint Petersburg to train officers for the Army's General Staff.

The army saw combat against the British and French during the Crimean War of 1853–56.

Jews in the Russian Army

On August 26, 1827, Nicholas I of Russia declared the "Statute on Conscription Duty".[16] This statute made it mandatory that all Russian males ages twelve to twenty-five were now required to serve in the Russian armed forces for 25 years.[16] This was the first time that the massive Jewish population was required to serve in the Russian military.[17] The reasoning for Nicolas for mandatory conscription was because “in the military they would learn not only Russian but also useful skills and crafts, and eventually they would become his loyal subjects."[16]

Many Jewish families began to emigrate out of the Russian Empire in order to escape the conscription obligations. Due to this, the government began to employ khappers who would kidnap Jewish children and turn them over to the government for conscription. It became known that "the khappers were not scrupulous about adhering to the minimum age of 12 and frequently impressed children as young as 8."[18] "By the time the empire collapsed, around 1.5 million Jewish soldiers fulfilled what was often seen as a highly burdensome and intrusive obligation."[17] At first many Jews were hesitant, but by 1880 Russian Jews were fully integrated into the Russian military.[17]

Cossacks

 
2nd Orenburg Cossacks Regiment in 1910

In the Russian Empire, the Cossacks were organized into several voiskos (hosts), named after the regions of their location, whether along the Russian border, or internal borders between Russian and non-Russian peoples. Each host had its own leadership and traditions as well as uniforms and ranks. However, by the late 19th century, the latter were standardized following the example of the Imperial Russian Army. Each host was required to provide a number of regiments for service in the Imperial Russian Army and for border patrol work. While most Cossacks served as cavalry, there were infantry and artillery units in several of the larger hosts. Three regiments of Cossacks formed part of the Imperial Guard, as well as the konvoi—the emperor's mounted escort. The Imperial Guard regiments wore tailored government-issue uniforms of a spectacular and colourful appearance. As an example, the Konvoi wore scarlet cherkesskas, white beshmets and red crowns on their fleece hats.

Ethnic and religious minorities

 
Cossacks and Bashkirs attacking French troops at the Berezina

The Cossack institution recruited and incorporated Muslim Mishar Tatars.[19] Cossack rank was awarded to Bashkirs.[20] Muslim Turkics and Buddhist Kalmyks served as Cossacks. The Cossack Ural, Terek, Astrakhan, and Don Cossack hosts had Kalmyks in their ranks. Mishar Muslims, Teptiar Muslims, service Tatar Muslims, and Bashkir Muslims joined the Orenburg Cossack Host.[21] Cossack non Muslims shared the same status with Cossack Siberian Muslims.[22] Muslim Cossacks in Siberia requested an Imam.[23] Cossacks in Siberia included Tatar Muslims like in Bashkiria.[24]

Bashkirs and Kalmyks in the Russian military fought against Napoleon's forces.[25][26] They were judged suitable for inundating opponents but not intense fighting.[27] They were in a non standard capacity in the military.[28] Arrows, bows, and melee combat weapons were wielded by the Muslim Bashkirs. Bashkir women fought among the regiments.[29] Denis Davidov mentioned the arrows and bows wielded by the Bashkirs.[30][31] Napoleon's forces faced off against Kalmyks on horseback.[32] Napoleon faced light mounted Bashkir forces.[33] Mounted Kalmyks and Bashkirs numbering 100 were available to Russian commandants during the war against Napoleon.[34] Kalmyks and Bashkirs served in the Russian Army in France.[35] A nachalnik was present in every one of the 11 cantons of the Bashkir host which was created by Russia after the Pugachev's Rebellion.[36] Bashkirs had the military statute of 1874 applied to them.[37]

Title, ranks, and insignia, 1917

See for a more detailed history, ranks, and insignia
Different material colours of the shoulder board insignia denote various regiments. In this case, the 1st Neva Infantry Regiment.[38]
Infantry Artillery Cavalry Cossack host Shoulder strap, epaulette
Ryadovye (Enlisted personnel)
Ryadovoy (en: Private) Cannoneer Ryadovoy, Hussar, Dragoon,
Uhlan, Cuirassier
Cossack  
Yefeytor (Gefreiter) Prikasny  
Unter-ofitsery (Under Officers/NCOs)
Mladshy unter-ofitser
(Junior Corporal)
Mladshy feyerverker
(Junior Feuerwerker)
Mladshy unter-ofitser Mladshy uryadnik
(Junior Cossack Corporal)
 
Starshy unter-ofitser
(Senior Corporal)
Starshy feyerverker
(Senor Feuerwerker)
Starshy unter-ofitser Starshy uryadnik
(Senior Cossack Corporal)
 
Feldfebel (Sergeant) Vakhmistr (Wachtmeister)  
Podpraporshchik
(Junior Praporshchik)
Podkhorunzhy
(Junior Cossack Praporshchik)
 
Zauryad-praporshchik (Deputy Praporshchik)  
Ober-ofitsery (Upper officers, senior officer corps)
Praporshchik
(wartime only)
 
Podporuchik (Junior Lieutenant) Kornet (Cornet) Khorunzhy (Chorąży)  
Poruchik (Lieutenant) Sotnik (Cossack Lieutenant)  
Shtabs-kapitan (Staff Captain) Shtabs-rotmistr (Stabsrittmeister) Podyesaul (Junior Yesaul)  
Kapitan (Captain)
(after 1884 it was upgraded to level VIII, and became a staff officer rank)
Rotmistr (Rittmeister)
(after 1884 it was upgraded to level VIII, and became a staff officer rank)
Ysaul
(after 1884, it was upgraded to the VIII, and became a staff officer rank)
 
Shtab-Ofitsery (Staff officer ranks)
Mayor (Major)
(abolished in 1884)
Voyskovay starshina
(until 1884)
 
Podpolkovnik (Lieutenant colonel) Podpolkovnik
(until 1884)
 
Voyskovay starshina (from 1885)
(Lieutenant colonel)
Polkovnik (Colonel)  
General officers
General-major (Major general)  
General-leytenant (Lieutenant general)  
General ot infanterii
(General of the infantry)
General ot artillerii
(General of the artillery)
General ot kavalrii
(General of the cavalry)
 
General-feldmarshal (General field marshal)  

Other regiments

Notes

  1. ^ "Military Reforms in Russia: Brief Historical Reference," in "Military Thought" 92UM1103E Moscow Voyennaya Mysl in Russian May 1992 Special Edition (signed to press 19 May 1992 pp3-4, via Joint Publications Research Service, JPRS-UMT-92-008-L, 16 June 1992, p.11.
  2. ^ This article includes content derived from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969–1978, which is partially in the public domain.
  3. ^ David R. Stone, A Military History of Russia, 2006, p.47, via Google Books
  4. ^ a b c Jerome Blum (1971) "Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century," ISBN 0-691-00764-0, pp. 465,466
  5. ^ p. 33, Fisher, Fremont-Barnes
  6. ^ Maps of Napoleon's Campaign In Poland 1806–7.
  7. ^ Wiesław Caban, Losy żołnierzy powstania listopadowego wcielonych do armii carskiej, w: Przegląd Historyczny, t. XCI, z. 2, s. 245.
  8. ^ Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy, page 56.
  9. ^ Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy
  10. ^ Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy, page 57.
  11. ^ See The Soviet High Command 1918–1941:A Military-Political History 1918–1941, St Martin's Press (Macmillan), London, 1962
  12. ^ Summerfield (2005)
  13. ^ Summerfield (2007)
  14. ^ General Lieutenant Depreradovich fell ill, was not present in battle
  15. ^ Raised two years prior as the Odessa Hussars in the southern Ukraine as a personal project by the Grand Duke Constantine
  16. ^ a b c Petrovsky-Shtern, Y. (2015, 03 01). Military Service in Russia. Retrieved from The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe: http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Military_Service_in_Russia
  17. ^ a b c Petrovsky-Shtern., Y. (2008). Jews in the Russian Army, 1827–1917: Drafted into Modernity. C: Cambridge University Press.
  18. ^ Leeson, D. (n.d.). Military Conscription in 19th Century Russia. Retrieved from JewishGen InfoFile: http://www.jewishgen.org/InfoFiles/ru-mil.txt
  19. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780–1910. BRILL. pp. 61–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  20. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 79–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  21. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780–1910. BRILL. pp. 86–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  22. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780–1910. BRILL. pp. 87–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  23. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780–1910. BRILL. pp. 122–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  24. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780–1910. BRILL. pp. 170–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  25. ^ Vershinin, Alexander (29 July 2014). "How Russia's steppe warriors took on Napoleon's armies". Russia & India Report.
  26. ^ John R. Elting (1997). Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armée. Perseus Books Group. pp. 237–. ISBN 978-0-306-80757-2.
  27. ^ Michael V. Leggiere (16 April 2015). Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany: Volume 2, The Defeat of Napoleon: The Franco-Prussian War of 1813. Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-1-316-39309-3.Michael V. Leggiere (16 April 2015). Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany: 1. Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-1-107-08054-6.
  28. ^ Janet M. Hartley (2008). Russia, 1762-1825: Military Power, the State, and the People. ABC-CLIO. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-0-275-97871-6.
  29. ^ Nasirov, Ilshat (2005). "Islam in the Russian Army". Islam Magazine. Makhachkala.
  30. ^ Alexander Mikaberidze (20 February 2015). Russian Eyewitness Accounts of the Campaign of 1807. Frontline Books. pp. 276–. ISBN 978-1-4738-5016-3.
  31. ^ Denis Vasilʹevich Davydov (1999). In the Service of the Tsar Against Napoleon: The Memoirs of Denis Davidov, 1806-1814. Greenhill Books. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-85367-373-3.
  32. ^ Andreas Kappeler (27 August 2014). The Russian Empire: A Multi-ethnic History. Routledge. pp. 129–. ISBN 978-1-317-56810-0.
  33. ^ Tove H. Malloy; Francesco Palermo (8 October 2015). Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non-Territorial Autonomy. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-106359-6.
  34. ^ Dominic Lieven (15 April 2010). Russia Against Napoleon: The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-101-42938-9.
  35. ^ Dominic Lieven (15 April 2010). Russia Against Napoleon: The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 504–. ISBN 978-1-101-42938-9.
  36. ^ Bill Bowring (17 April 2013). Law, Rights and Ideology in Russia: Landmarks in the Destiny of a Great Power. Routledge. pp. 129–. ISBN 978-1-134-62580-2.
  37. ^ Charles R. Steinwedel (9 May 2016). Threads of Empire: Loyalty and Tsarist Authority in Bashkiria, 1552–1917. Indiana University Press. pp. 145–. ISBN 978-0-253-01933-2.
  38. ^ "International Encyclopedia of Uniform Insignia". Retrieved 30 August 2010.

See also

References

  • Jerome Blum, Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century, Princeton University Press, 1951.
  • Chandler, David G., The Campaigns of Napoleon, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1995 ISBN 0-02-523660-1
  • Fisher, Toddm Fremont-Barnes, Gregory, The Napoleonic Wars: The Rise and Fall of an Empire, Osprey Publishing Ltd., Oxford, 2004 ISBN 1-84176-831-6
  • Harrison, Richard W. The Russian Way of War: Operational Art, 1904–1940 (University Press of Kansas, 2001)
  • Menning, Bruce W. Bayonets before Bullets: The Russian Imperial Army, 1861–1914. (Indiana U.P. 1992).
  • Reese, Roger R. The Russian Imperial Army, 1796–1917 (Ashgate 2006)
  • Summerfield, Stephen (2005) Cossack Hurrah: Russian Irregular Cavalry Organisation and Uniforms during the Napoleonic Wars, Partizan Press ISBN 1-85818-513-0
  • Summerfield, Stephen (2007) The Brazen Cross: Brazen Cross of Courage: Russian Opochenie, Partizans and Russo-German Legion during the Napoleonic Wars, Partizan Press ISBN 978-1-85818-555-2
  • Wildman, Allan K. The End of the Russian Imperial Army: The Old Army and the Soldiers' Revolt (March–Apr. 1917) (Princeton University Press, 1987)
  • Deyo, Daniel C. Legions of the East: A Compendium of the Russian Army in the First World War (Counterintelligence Consulting LLC, 2016)

External links

  • Mark Conrad’s Home Page – Russian Military History
  • Russian army during the Napoleonic Wars
  • Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection, Brown University Library Military history and graphics

imperial, russian, army, russian, Ру, сская, импера, торская, рмия, rússkaya, imperátorskaya, ármiya, armed, land, force, russian, empire, active, from, around, 1721, russian, revolution, 1917, early, 1850s, russian, army, consisted, more, than, regular, soldi. The Imperial Russian Army Russian Ru sskaya impera torskaya a rmiya tr Russkaya imperatorskaya armiya was the armed land force of the Russian Empire active from around 1721 to the Russian Revolution of 1917 In the early 1850s the Russian Army consisted of more than 900 000 regular soldiers and nearly 250 000 irregulars mostly Cossacks Imperial Russian ArmyRusskaya imperatorskaya armiyaCockade of the Imperial Russian ArmyActive1721 1917Country RussiaAllegianceEmperor of RussiaTypeArmySize12 15 000 000 during World War I4 200 000 during the Russian Civil WarMascot s EngagementsGreat Northern WarRusso Turkish WarsRusso Swedish WarsRusso Persian WarsRusso Polish WarsSeven Years WarNapoleonic WarsCaucasian WarCrimean WarRusso Japanese WarWorld War IRussian RevolutionCommandersCommander in chiefRussian EmperorNotablecommandersPeter the GreatBoris SheremetevAlexander MenshikovPyotr RumyantsevAlexander SuvorovGrigory PotemkinMikhail KutuzovPyotr BagrationAleksey YermolovMikhail SkobelevAleksei Brusilov Contents 1 Precursors Regiments of the New Order 2 Introduction of conscription 3 1760s 4 Imperial Russian Army in 1805 5 Napoleonic Wars 5 1 Anglo Russian War 1807 1812 5 2 French invasion of Russia 5 3 1813 Campaign in Germany 5 4 1814 Campaign in France 6 Reforms 7 World War I and revolution 8 Organization 8 1 Imperial Guard 8 1 1 Infantry of the Guard 8 1 2 Cavalry of the Guard 8 1 3 Artillery of the Guard 9 Jews in the Russian Army 10 Cossacks 11 Ethnic and religious minorities 12 Title ranks and insignia 1917 12 1 Other regiments 13 Notes 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksPrecursors Regiments of the New Order EditRussian tsars before Peter the Great maintained professional hereditary musketeer corps known as streltsy These were originally raised by Ivan the Terrible 1 originally an effective force they had become highly unreliable and undisciplined In times of war the armed forces were augmented by peasants The regiments of the new order or regiments of the foreign order Polki novogo stroya or Polki inozemnogo stroya Polki novovo inozemnovo stroya was the Russian term that was used to describe military units that were formed in the Tsardom of Russia in the 17th century according to the Western European military standards 2 There were different kinds of regiments such as the regulars dragoons and reiters In 1631 the Russians created two regular regiments in Moscow During the Smolensk War of 1632 1634 six more regular regiments one reiter regiment and a dragoon regiment were formed Initially they recruited children of the landless boyars and streltsy volunteers Cossacks and others Commanding officers comprised mostly foreigners After the war with Poland all of the regiments were disbanded During another Russo Polish War they were created again and became a principal force of the Russian Army Often regular and dragoon regiments were manned with datochniye lyudi for lifelong military service Reiters were manned with small or landless gentry and boyars children and were paid with money or lands for their service More than a half of the commanding officers were representatives from the gentry In times of peace some of the regiments were usually disbanded In 1681 there were 33 regular regiments 61 000 men and 25 dragoon and reiter regiments 29 000 men In the late 17th century regiments of the new type represented more than a half of the Russian Army and at the beginning of the 18th century were used for creating a regular army Introduction of conscription EditFurther information Cantonist General Suvorov crossing the St Gotthard Pass during the Italian and Swiss expedition in 1799 Conscription in Russia was introduced by Peter the Great in December 1699 3 though reports say Peter s father also used it The conscripts were called recruits not to be confused with voluntary army recruitment 4 which did not appear until the early 20th century Peter formed a modern regular army built on the German model but with a new aspect officers not necessarily from nobility as talented commoners were given promotions that eventually included a noble title at the attainment of an officer s rank such promotions were later abolished during the reign of Catherine the Great Conscription of peasants and townspeople was based on quota system per settlement Initially it was based on the number of households later it was based on the population numbers 4 The term of service in the 18th century was for life In 1793 it was reduced to 25 years In 1834 it was reduced to 20 years plus five years in the reserve and in 1855 to 12 years plus three years in the reserve 4 1760s EditThe history of the Russian Army in this era was linked to the name of Russian General Alexander Suvorov considered to be one of the few great generals in history who never lost a battle From 1777 to 1783 Suvorov served in the Crimea and in the Caucasus becoming a lieutenant general in 1780 and general of infantry in 1783 on the conclusion of his work there From 1787 to 1791 he again fought the Turks during the Russo Turkish War of 1787 1792 and won many victories Suvorov s leadership also played a key role in a Russian victory over the Poles during the Kosciuszko Uprising citation needed Imperial Russian Army in 1805 Edit Capture of a French regiment s eagle by the Russian Imperial Guard at the Battle of Austerlitz As a major European power Russia could not escape the wars involving Revolutionary France and the First French Empire but as an adversary to Napoleon the leadership of the new emperor Alexander I of Russia r 1801 1825 who came to the throne as the result of his father s assassination in which he was rumoured to be implicated became crucial The Russian Army in 1805 had many characteristics of Ancien Regime organization there was no permanent formation above the regimental level senior officers were largely recruited from aristocratic circles and the Russian soldier in line with 18th century practice was regularly beaten and punished to instill discipline Furthermore many lower level officers were poorly trained and had difficulty getting their men to perform the sometimes complex manoeuvres required in a battle Nevertheless the Russians did have a fine artillery arm manned by soldiers trained in academies and who would regularly fight hard to prevent their pieces from falling into enemy hands 5 Both the Russians and Austrians met a decisive military defeat at the hands of Napoleon during the Battle of Austerlitz in 1805 Napoleonic Wars Edit Russian dragoons and hussars in 1807 The War of the Fourth Coalition 1806 1807 involving Prussia Russia Saxony Sweden and the United Kingdom against France formed within months of the collapse of the previous coalition In August 1806 King Frederick William III of Prussia made the decision to go to war independently of any other great power except neighbouring Russia Another course of action might have involved declaring war the previous year and joining Austria and Russia This might have contained Napoleon and prevented the Allied disaster in the Battle of Austerlitz In any event the Russian Army an ally of Prussia still remained far away when Prussia declared war Napoleon smashed the main Prussian armies at the Battle of Jena Auerstedt on 14 October 1806 and hunted down the survivors during the remainder of October and November Having destroyed all Prussian forces west of the Oder Napoleon pushed east to seize Warsaw In late December the initial clashes between the French and Russians at Czarnowo Golymin and Pultusk were without result The French emperor put his troops into winter quarters east of the Vistula River but the new Russian commander Levin August von Bennigsen refused to remain passive Bennigsen shifted his army north into East Prussia and launched a stroke at the French strategic left wing The main force of the blow was evaded by the French at the Battle of Mohrungen in late January 1807 In response Napoleon mounted a counterattack designed to cut off the Russians Bennigsen managed to avoid entrapment and the two sides fought the Battle of Eylau on 7 and 8 February 1807 After this indecisive bloodbath both sides belatedly went into winter quarters In early June Bennigsen mounted an offensive that was quickly parried by the French Napoleon launched a pursuit toward Konigsberg but the Russians successfully fended it off at the Battle of Heilsberg On 14 June Bennigsen unwisely fought the Battle of Friedland with a river at his back and saw his army mauled with heavy losses Following this defeat Alexander was forced to sue for peace with Napoleon at Tilsit on 7 July 1807 with Russia becoming Napoleon s ally Russia lost little territory under the treaty and Alexander made use of his alliance with Napoleon for further expansion Napoleon created the Duchy of Warsaw out of former Prussian territory 6 At the Congress of Erfurt September October 1808 Napoleon and Alexander agreed that Russia should force Sweden to join the Continental System which led to the Finnish War of 1808 1809 and to the division of Sweden into two parts separated by the Gulf of Bothnia The eastern part became the Russian Grand Duchy of Finland The Russo Turkish War broke out in 1805 06 against the background of the Napoleonic Wars The Ottoman Empire encouraged by the Russian defeat in the Battle of Austerlitz deposed the Russophile hospodars of its vassal states Moldavia Alexander Mourouzis and Wallachia Constantine Ypsilantis Simultaneously their French allies occupied Dalmatia and threatened to penetrate the Danubian principalities at any time In order to safeguard the Russian border against a possible French attack and support the First Serbian uprising a 40 000 strong Russian contingent advanced into Moldavia and Wallachia The Sultan reacted by blocking the Dardanelles to Russian ships in 1807 and declared war on Russia The war lasted until 1812 In the Finnish War Alexander wrested the Grand Duchy of Finland from Sweden in 1809 and acquired Bessarabia from Turkey in 1812 Anglo Russian War 1807 1812 Edit The requirement of joining France s Continental Blockade against Britain was a serious disruption of Russian commerce and in 1810 Alexander repudiated the obligation This strategic change was followed by a substantial reform in the army undertaken by Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly as the Minister of War At the same time Russia continued its expansion The Congress of Vienna created the Kingdom of Poland Russian Poland to which Alexander granted a constitution Thus Alexander I became the constitutional monarch of Poland while remaining the autocratic Emperor of Russia He was also the Grand Duke of Finland which had been annexed from Sweden in 1809 and awarded autonomous status The Russo French alliance gradually became strained Napoleon was concerned about Russia s intentions in the strategically vital Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits At the same time Alexander viewed the Duchy of Warsaw the French controlled reconstituted Polish state with suspicion The result was the War of the Sixth Coalition from 1812 to 1814 French invasion of Russia Edit Main article French invasion of Russia Main article Russian Army order of battle 1812 Russian artillerymen in 1812 1814 In 1812 Napoleon invaded Russia to compel Alexander I to remain in the Continental System and to remove the imminent threat of Russian invasion of Poland The Grande Armee 650 000 men 270 000 Frenchmen and many soldiers of allies or subject powers crossed the Neman on 23 June 1812 Russia proclaimed a Patriotic War while Napoleon proclaimed a Second Polish war but against the expectations of the Poles who supplied almost 100 000 troops for the invasion force he avoided any concessions toward Poland having in mind further negotiations with Russia Russia maintained a scorched earth policy of retreat broken only by the Battle of Borodino on 7 September when the Russians stood and fought This was bloody and the Russians eventually retreated opening the road to Moscow Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov made the decision in order to preserve the army By 14 September the French captured Moscow The Russian governor Prince Rastopchin ordered the city burnt to the ground and large parts of it were destroyed Alexander I refused to capitulate and with no sign of clear victory in sight Napoleon was forced to withdraw from Moscow s ruins So the disastrous Great Retreat began with 370 000 casualties largely as a result of starvation and the freezing weather conditions and 200 000 captured Napoleon narrowly escaped total annihilation at the Battle of Berezina but his army was wrecked nevertheless By December only 20 000 fit soldiers from the main army were among those who recrossed the Neman at Kaunas By this time Napoleon had abandoned his army to return to Paris and prepare a defence against the advancing Russians 1813 Campaign in Germany Edit As the French retreated the Russians pursued them into Poland and Prussia causing the Prussian Corps under Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg that had been formerly a part of the Grande Armee to ultimately change sides in the Convention of Tauroggen This soon forced Prussia to declare war on France and with its mobilisation for many Prussian officers serving in the Russian Army to leave creating a serious shortage of experienced officers in the Russian Army After the death of Kutuzov in early 1813 command of the Russian Army passed to Peter Wittgenstein The campaign was noted for the number of sieges the Russian Army conducted and a large number of Narodnoe Opolcheniye irregular troops that continued to serve in its ranks until newly trained recruits could reach the area of combat operations Aleksey Petrovich Yermolov emerged as one of the leading and talented senior commanders of the army participating in many important battles including the Battle of Leipzig In 1813 Russia gained territory in the Baku area of the Caucasus from Qajar Iran as much due to the news of Napoleon s defeat in 1812 as the fear by the Shah of a new campaign against him by the resurgent Russian Army where the 1810 campaign led by Matvei Platov failed This was immediately used to raise new regiments and to begin creating a greater foothold in the Caucasus By the early 19th century the empire also was firmly ensconced in Alaska reached via Cossack expeditions to Siberia although only a rudimentary military presence was possible due to the distance from Europe 1814 Campaign in France Edit The Russian Army entering Paris in 1814 The campaign in France was marked by persistent advances made by the Russian led forces towards Paris despite attempts by Alexander s allies to allow Napoleon an avenue for surrender In a brilliant deceptive manoeuvre Alexander was able to reach and take Paris with the help of the treason of Marshal Marmont before Napoleon could reinforce its garrison effectively ending the campaign More pragmatically in 1814 Russia Britain Austria and Prussia had formed the Quadruple Alliance The allies created an international system to maintain the territorial status quo and prevent the resurgence of an expansionist France This included each ally maintaining a corps of occupation in France The Quadruple Alliance confirmed by a number of international conferences ensured Russia s influence in Europe if only because of the proven capability of its army to defeat that of Napoleon and to carry the war to Paris After the allies defeated Napoleon Alexander played a prominent role in the redrawing of the map of Europe at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 Many of the prominent Russian commanders were feted in the European capitals including London In the same year under the influence of religious mysticism Alexander initiated the creation of the Holy Alliance a loose agreement pledging the rulers of the nations involved including most of Europe to act according to Christian principles This emerged in part due to the influence religion had played in the army during the war of 1812 and its influence on the common soldiers and officers alike The Russian occupation forces in France though not participating in the Belgian campaign re entered combat against the minor French forces in the East and occupied several important fortresses Reforms Edit 39th Tomsk Regiment 1916 Russian military districts in 1913 Following Russia s defeat in the Crimean War during the reign of Alexander II the Minister of War Count Dmitry Milyutin who held the post from 16 May 1861 to 21 May 1881 introduced military reforms The reforms carried on during Milyutin s long tenure abolished the system of conscription of children and resulted in the levy system being introduced in Russia and military districts being created across the country As part of Milyutin s reforms on 1 January 1874 the emperor approved a conscription statute that made military service compulsory for all 20 year old males with the term reduced for land army to six years plus nine years in reserve This conscription created a large pool of experienced military reservists who would be ready to mobilize in case of war It also permitted the Russian Empire to maintain a smaller standing army in peacetime Ironically this reform was a disaster for the Tsarist regime By reducing the length of service peasant elders and officials could no longer threaten radical youths with conscription Soldiers now kept their peasant identities and many learned new skills and became literate They radicalised the villages on their return citation needed The system of military education was also reformed and elementary education was made available to all the draftees Milyutin s reforms are regarded as a milestone in the history of Russia they dispensed with the military recruitment and professional army introduced by Peter the Great and created the Russian army such as it continued into the 21st century Up to Dmitry Milyutin s reforms in 1874 the Russian Army had no permanent barracks and was billeted in dugouts and shacks 7 The army saw service against the Turks during the Russo Turkish War During the Boxer Rebellion 100 000 Russian troops fought to pacify part of Manchuria and to secure its railroads Some Russian military forces were already stationed in China before the war and one of them met a grotesque end at the Battle of Pai t ou tzu when the dead Russians were mutilated by Chinese troops who decapitated them and sliced crosses into their bodies Other battles fought include Boxers attacks on Chinese Eastern Railway Defence of Yingkou Battles on Amur River and the Russian Invasion of Northern and Central Manchuria The army s share of the budget fell from 30 to 18 in 1881 1902 8 By 1904 Russia was spending 57 and 63 of what Germany and Austria Hungary were spending on each soldier respectively Army morale was broken by crushing over 1500 protests from 1883 to 1903 9 The army was defeated by Japan during the Russo Japanese War of 1904 05 notable engagements being the Siege of Port Arthur and the Battle of Mukden There were over 400 mutinies from autumn 1905 to summer 1906 10 World War I and revolution Edit Defence of Przasnysz by the Imperial Russian Army on the Eastern Front 1915 See also Imperial Russian Army formations and units 1914 and Russian Army 1917 At the outbreak of the war Emperor Nicholas II appointed his cousin Grand Duke Nicholas as Commander in Chief On mobilization the Russian Army totalled 115 infantry and 38 cavalry divisions with nearly 7 900 guns 7 100 field guns 540 field howitzers and 257 heavy guns There were only 2 army ambulances and 679 cars Divisions were allocated as follows 32 infantry and 10 5 cavalry divisions to operate against Germany 46 infantry and 18 5 cavalry divisions to operate against Austria Hungary 19 5 infantry and 5 5 cavalry divisions for the defence of the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea littorals and 17 infantry and 3 5 cavalry divisions were to be transported in from Siberia and Turkestan Among the army s higher formations during the war were the Western Front the Northwestern Front and the Romanian Front The war in the East began with Russian invasion of East Prussia 1914 and the Austro Hungarian province of Galicia The first ended in a Russian defeat by the German Empire in the Battle of Tannenberg 1914 In the west a Russian Expeditionary Force was dispatched to France in 1915 Amid the Russian Revolution of 1917 the Imperial Russian Army collapsed and dissolved The rebellious remnants of the Imperial army evolved to become part of the new Red Army 11 Organization EditMain article Imperial Russian Army formations and units 1914 Emperor Nicholas II of Russia in the uniform of the Chevalier Guard Regiment 1896 The Imperial Russian Army entered the Napoleonic Wars organized administratively and in the field on the same principles as it had been in the 18th century of units being assigned to campaign headquarters and the army being known either for its senior commander or the area of its operations Administratively the regiments were assigned to Military Inspections the predecessors of military districts and included the conscript training depots garrisons and fortress troops and munitions magazines The army had been thoroughly reorganised on the Prussian model by the emperor s father Paul I against wishes of most of its officer corps and with his demise immediate changes followed to remove much of the Prussianness from its character Although the army had conventional European parts within it such as the monarch s guard the infantry and cavalry of the line and field artillery it also included a very large contingent of semi regular Cossacks that in times of rare peace served to guard the Russian Empire s southern borders and in times of war served as fully fledged light cavalry providing invaluable reconnaissance service often far better than that available to other European armies due to the greater degree of initiative and freedom of movement by Cossack detachments 12 The Ukrainian lands of the Empire also provided most of the Hussar and Ulan regiments for the regular light cavalry Another unusual feature of the army that was seen twice during the period was the constitution of the Narodnoe Opolcheniye for the first time since the coming to power of the Romanov dynasty 13 In 1806 most of the Inspections were abolished and replaced by divisions based on the French model although still territorially based By 1809 there were 25 infantry divisions as permanent field formations each organised around three infantry brigade and one artillery brigade When Barclay de Tolly became the Minister of War in 1810 he instituted further reorganization and other changes in the army down to company level that saw the creation of separate grenadier divisions and dedication of one brigade in each division to the jaeger light infantry for skirmishing in open order formations Imperial Guard Edit Church parade of the Finland Guard Regiment 1905 Throughout the Napoleonic Wars the Imperial Russian Guard was commanded by Grand Duke Konstantin The guard grew from a few regiments to two infantry divisions combined into the V Infantry Corps commanded at Borodino by General Lieutenant Lavrov and two cavalry divisions with their own artillery and train by the conclusion of the 1814 campaign Infantry of the Guard Edit At Austerlitz in 1805 the infantry of the Guard included Guard Infantry Division General Lieutenant Pyotr Malutin 1st Brigade General Major Leonty Depreradovich I Preobrazhensky Lifeguard regiment 2 btns Semenovsky Lifeguard regiment 2 btns 2nd Brigade General Major Vasily Lobanov Izmailovsky Lifeguard regiment 2 btns Life Guard Jager 1 btn Life Grenadier regiment 3 btns Organization of the Imperial Russian Army 28 June 1914 At Borodino in 1812 the infantry of the Guard included Guard Infantry Division General Lieutenant Nikolai Lavrov 1st Brigade General Major Baron Roman Rosen Preobrazhensky Lifeguard regiment 3 btns Semenovsky Lifeguard regiment 3 btns 2nd Brigade Colonel Vladimir Khrapovitsky Izmailovsky Lifeguard regiment 3 btns Lithuanian Lifeguard regiment 3 btns 3rd Brigade Colonel Baron Adam Bistrom Finnish Lifeguard regiment 3 btns Lifeguard Jager regiment 3 btns Cavalry of the Guard Edit At Austerlitz in 1805 the cavalry of the Guard included Guard Cavalry Division General Lieutenant Andrei Kologrivov 1st Brigade General Major Ivan Yankovich Lifeguard Hussar regiment 4 sq 2nd Brigade General Major Nikolay Depreradovich Horse Guard regiment 4 sq Chevalier Guard Regiment 4 sq Life Guards Cossack Regiment 1855 At Borodino in 1812 the cavalry of the Guard included 1st Cuirassier Division General Major Nikolai Borozdin 14 1st Brigade General Major Ivan Shevich Horse Guard Regiment 4 sq Chevalier Guard Regiment 4 sq 2nd Brigade General Major Nikolai Borozdin His Majesty Cuirassier Regiment 4 sq Her Majesty Cuirassier Regiment 4 sq Astrakhan Cuirassier Regiment 4 sq non Guard status As part of the I Cavalry Corps General Lieutenant Fyodor Uvarov 1st Brigade General Major Anton Chalikov Lifeguard Dragoon Regiment 4 sq Lifeguard Uhlan Regiment 15 4 sq 2nd Brigade General Major Orlov Denisov Lifeguard Hussar Regiment 4 sq Artillery of the Guard Edit At Austerlitz in 1805 the artillery of the Guard included the Lifeguard Artillery Battalion under General Major Ivan Kaspersky At Borodino in 1812 the artillery of the Guard included the Lifeguard Artillery Brigade now a part of the Guard Infantry Division the Lifeguard Horse Artillery under Colonel Kozen attached to the 1st Cuirassier Division and the Guard Sapper Battalion At Austerlitz in 1805 the Lifeguard Cossack regiment five sotnias was attached to the 1st Brigade of the Guard Cavalry Division At Borodino in 1812 the Cossacks of the Guard included the Lifeguard Cossack regiment five sotnias the Black Sea Cossack Guard sotnia and the Lifeguard Orel sotnia The General Staff Academy was established in 1832 in Saint Petersburg to train officers for the Army s General Staff The army saw combat against the British and French during the Crimean War of 1853 56 Jews in the Russian Army EditOn August 26 1827 Nicholas I of Russia declared the Statute on Conscription Duty 16 This statute made it mandatory that all Russian males ages twelve to twenty five were now required to serve in the Russian armed forces for 25 years 16 This was the first time that the massive Jewish population was required to serve in the Russian military 17 The reasoning for Nicolas for mandatory conscription was because in the military they would learn not only Russian but also useful skills and crafts and eventually they would become his loyal subjects 16 Many Jewish families began to emigrate out of the Russian Empire in order to escape the conscription obligations Due to this the government began to employ khappers who would kidnap Jewish children and turn them over to the government for conscription It became known that the khappers were not scrupulous about adhering to the minimum age of 12 and frequently impressed children as young as 8 18 By the time the empire collapsed around 1 5 million Jewish soldiers fulfilled what was often seen as a highly burdensome and intrusive obligation 17 At first many Jews were hesitant but by 1880 Russian Jews were fully integrated into the Russian military 17 Cossacks Edit 2nd Orenburg Cossacks Regiment in 1910 Main article Cossacks In the Russian Empire the Cossacks were organized into several voiskos hosts named after the regions of their location whether along the Russian border or internal borders between Russian and non Russian peoples Each host had its own leadership and traditions as well as uniforms and ranks However by the late 19th century the latter were standardized following the example of the Imperial Russian Army Each host was required to provide a number of regiments for service in the Imperial Russian Army and for border patrol work While most Cossacks served as cavalry there were infantry and artillery units in several of the larger hosts Three regiments of Cossacks formed part of the Imperial Guard as well as the konvoi the emperor s mounted escort The Imperial Guard regiments wore tailored government issue uniforms of a spectacular and colourful appearance As an example the Konvoi wore scarlet cherkesskas white beshmets and red crowns on their fleece hats Ethnic and religious minorities Edit Cossacks and Bashkirs attacking French troops at the Berezina The Cossack institution recruited and incorporated Muslim Mishar Tatars 19 Cossack rank was awarded to Bashkirs 20 Muslim Turkics and Buddhist Kalmyks served as Cossacks The Cossack Ural Terek Astrakhan and Don Cossack hosts had Kalmyks in their ranks Mishar Muslims Teptiar Muslims service Tatar Muslims and Bashkir Muslims joined the Orenburg Cossack Host 21 Cossack non Muslims shared the same status with Cossack Siberian Muslims 22 Muslim Cossacks in Siberia requested an Imam 23 Cossacks in Siberia included Tatar Muslims like in Bashkiria 24 Bashkirs and Kalmyks in the Russian military fought against Napoleon s forces 25 26 They were judged suitable for inundating opponents but not intense fighting 27 They were in a non standard capacity in the military 28 Arrows bows and melee combat weapons were wielded by the Muslim Bashkirs Bashkir women fought among the regiments 29 Denis Davidov mentioned the arrows and bows wielded by the Bashkirs 30 31 Napoleon s forces faced off against Kalmyks on horseback 32 Napoleon faced light mounted Bashkir forces 33 Mounted Kalmyks and Bashkirs numbering 100 were available to Russian commandants during the war against Napoleon 34 Kalmyks and Bashkirs served in the Russian Army in France 35 A nachalnik was present in every one of the 11 cantons of the Bashkir host which was created by Russia after the Pugachev s Rebellion 36 Bashkirs had the military statute of 1874 applied to them 37 Title ranks and insignia 1917 EditSee for a more detailed history ranks and insigniaMain article Comparative officer ranks of World War I Main article History of Russian military ranks Main article Ranks and rank insignia of the Russian armed forces until 1917Different material colours of the shoulder board insignia denote various regiments In this case the 1st Neva Infantry Regiment 38 Infantry Artillery Cavalry Cossack host Shoulder strap epauletteRyadovye Enlisted personnel Ryadovoy en Private Cannoneer Ryadovoy Hussar Dragoon Uhlan Cuirassier Cossack Yefeytor Gefreiter Prikasny Unter ofitsery Under Officers NCOs Mladshy unter ofitser Junior Corporal Mladshy feyerverker Junior Feuerwerker Mladshy unter ofitser Mladshy uryadnik Junior Cossack Corporal Starshy unter ofitser Senior Corporal Starshy feyerverker Senor Feuerwerker Starshy unter ofitser Starshy uryadnik Senior Cossack Corporal Feldfebel Sergeant Vakhmistr Wachtmeister Podpraporshchik Junior Praporshchik Podkhorunzhy Junior Cossack Praporshchik Zauryad praporshchik Deputy Praporshchik Ober ofitsery Upper officers senior officer corps Praporshchik wartime only Podporuchik Junior Lieutenant Kornet Cornet Khorunzhy Chorazy Poruchik Lieutenant Sotnik Cossack Lieutenant Shtabs kapitan Staff Captain Shtabs rotmistr Stabsrittmeister Podyesaul Junior Yesaul Kapitan Captain after 1884 it was upgraded to level VIII and became a staff officer rank Rotmistr Rittmeister after 1884 it was upgraded to level VIII and became a staff officer rank Ysaul after 1884 it was upgraded to the VIII and became a staff officer rank Shtab Ofitsery Staff officer ranks Mayor Major abolished in 1884 Voyskovay starshina until 1884 Podpolkovnik Lieutenant colonel Podpolkovnik until 1884 Voyskovay starshina from 1885 Lieutenant colonel Polkovnik Colonel General officersGeneral major Major general General leytenant Lieutenant general General ot infanterii General of the infantry General ot artillerii General of the artillery General ot kavalrii General of the cavalry General feldmarshal General field marshal Other regiments Edit Orenburg Cadet Corps 15th Rifle His Majesty King Nikola I Regiment 5th Kargolovsk Dragoon Regiment Orlov Cadet CorpsNotes Edit Military Reforms in Russia Brief Historical Reference in Military Thought 92UM1103E Moscow Voyennaya Mysl in Russian May 1992 Special Edition signed to press 19 May 1992 pp3 4 via Joint Publications Research Service JPRS UMT 92 008 L 16 June 1992 p 11 This article includes content derived from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia 1969 1978 which is partially in the public domain David R Stone A Military History of Russia 2006 p 47 via Google Books a b c Jerome Blum 1971 Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century ISBN 0 691 00764 0 pp 465 466 p 33 Fisher Fremont Barnes Maps of Napoleon s Campaign In Poland 1806 7 Wieslaw Caban Losy zolnierzy powstania listopadowego wcielonych do armii carskiej w Przeglad Historyczny t XCI z 2 s 245 Orlando Figes A People s Tragedy page 56 Orlando Figes A People s Tragedy Orlando Figes A People s Tragedy page 57 See The Soviet High Command 1918 1941 A Military Political History 1918 1941 St Martin s Press Macmillan London 1962 Summerfield 2005 Summerfield 2007 General Lieutenant Depreradovich fell ill was not present in battle Raised two years prior as the Odessa Hussars in the southern Ukraine as a personal project by the Grand Duke Constantine a b c Petrovsky Shtern Y 2015 03 01 Military Service in Russia Retrieved from The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe http www yivoencyclopedia org article aspx Military Service in Russia a b c Petrovsky Shtern Y 2008 Jews in the Russian Army 1827 1917 Drafted into Modernity C Cambridge University Press Leeson D n d Military Conscription in 19th Century Russia Retrieved from JewishGen InfoFile http www jewishgen org InfoFiles ru mil txt Allen J Frank 1 January 2001 Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde 1780 1910 BRILL pp 61 ISBN 90 04 11975 2 Allen J Frank 1 January 2001 Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde 1780 1910 BRILL pp 79 ISBN 90 04 11975 2 Allen J Frank 1 January 2001 Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde 1780 1910 BRILL pp 86 ISBN 90 04 11975 2 Allen J Frank 1 January 2001 Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde 1780 1910 BRILL pp 87 ISBN 90 04 11975 2 Allen J Frank 1 January 2001 Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde 1780 1910 BRILL pp 122 ISBN 90 04 11975 2 Allen J Frank 1 January 2001 Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde 1780 1910 BRILL pp 170 ISBN 90 04 11975 2 Vershinin Alexander 29 July 2014 How Russia s steppe warriors took on Napoleon s armies Russia amp India Report John R Elting 1997 Swords Around a Throne Napoleon s Grande Armee Perseus Books Group pp 237 ISBN 978 0 306 80757 2 Michael V Leggiere 16 April 2015 Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany Volume 2 The Defeat of Napoleon The Franco Prussian War of 1813 Cambridge University Press pp 101 ISBN 978 1 316 39309 3 Michael V Leggiere 16 April 2015 Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany 1 Cambridge University Press pp 101 ISBN 978 1 107 08054 6 Janet M Hartley 2008 Russia 1762 1825 Military Power the State and the People ABC CLIO pp 27 ISBN 978 0 275 97871 6 Nasirov Ilshat 2005 Islam in the Russian Army Islam Magazine Makhachkala Alexander Mikaberidze 20 February 2015 Russian Eyewitness Accounts of the Campaign of 1807 Frontline Books pp 276 ISBN 978 1 4738 5016 3 Denis Vasilʹevich Davydov 1999 In the Service of the Tsar Against Napoleon The Memoirs of Denis Davidov 1806 1814 Greenhill Books p 51 ISBN 978 1 85367 373 3 Andreas Kappeler 27 August 2014 The Russian Empire A Multi ethnic History Routledge pp 129 ISBN 978 1 317 56810 0 Tove H Malloy Francesco Palermo 8 October 2015 Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non Territorial Autonomy OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 106359 6 Dominic Lieven 15 April 2010 Russia Against Napoleon The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace Penguin Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 101 42938 9 Dominic Lieven 15 April 2010 Russia Against Napoleon The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace Penguin Publishing Group pp 504 ISBN 978 1 101 42938 9 Bill Bowring 17 April 2013 Law Rights and Ideology in Russia Landmarks in the Destiny of a Great Power Routledge pp 129 ISBN 978 1 134 62580 2 Charles R Steinwedel 9 May 2016 Threads of Empire Loyalty and Tsarist Authority in Bashkiria 1552 1917 Indiana University Press pp 145 ISBN 978 0 253 01933 2 International Encyclopedia of Uniform Insignia Retrieved 30 August 2010 See also EditImperial Russian Air Service Imperial Russian Navy Military history of the Russian Empire Ranks and rank insignia of the Russian armed forces until 1917 Signal Corps of the Imperial Russian Army Svita Mikhail Krichevsky Ukrainian supercentenarian and last living veteran of the Russian Imperial ArmyReferences EditJerome Blum Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century Princeton University Press 1951 Chandler David G The Campaigns of Napoleon Simon amp Schuster New York 1995 ISBN 0 02 523660 1 Fisher Toddm Fremont Barnes Gregory The Napoleonic Wars The Rise and Fall of an Empire Osprey Publishing Ltd Oxford 2004 ISBN 1 84176 831 6 Harrison Richard W The Russian Way of War Operational Art 1904 1940 University Press of Kansas 2001 Menning Bruce W Bayonets before Bullets The Russian Imperial Army 1861 1914 Indiana U P 1992 Reese Roger R The Russian Imperial Army 1796 1917 Ashgate 2006 Summerfield Stephen 2005 Cossack Hurrah Russian Irregular Cavalry Organisation and Uniforms during the Napoleonic Wars Partizan Press ISBN 1 85818 513 0 Summerfield Stephen 2007 The Brazen Cross Brazen Cross of Courage Russian Opochenie Partizans and Russo German Legion during the Napoleonic Wars Partizan Press ISBN 978 1 85818 555 2 Wildman Allan K The End of the Russian Imperial Army The Old Army and the Soldiers Revolt March Apr 1917 Princeton University Press 1987 Deyo Daniel C Legions of the East A Compendium of the Russian Army in the First World War Counterintelligence Consulting LLC 2016 External links EditMark Conrad s Home Page Russian Military History Russian army during the Napoleonic Wars Anne S K Brown Military Collection Brown University Library Military history and graphics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Imperial Russian Army amp oldid 1123675178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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