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Kerensky–Krasnov uprising

Kerensky–Krasnov uprising
Part of the Russian Civil War
Date8–13 November 1917 [O.S. 26–31 October]
Location
Result Bolshevik victory
Defeat of Kerensky
Belligerents
Soviet Russia Russian Republic
Commanders and leaders
Vladimir Lenin
Nikolai Krylenko
Vladimir Antonov-Ovseenko
Pavel Dybenko
Alexander Kerensky
Pyotr Krasnov
Strength
~5,000 men 700 men (of which 600 cavalry)
12 cannons
1 armoured vehicle

The Kerensky–Krasnov uprising was an attempt by Alexander Kerensky to crush the October Revolution and regain power after the Bolsheviks overthrew his government in Petrograd. It took place between 8 and 13 November 1917 [O.S. 26 and 31 October].

Following the October Revolution, Kerensky fled Petrograd, which fell to the Bolshevik-controlled Petrograd Soviet and went to Pskov, the headquarters of the Northern Front command. He did not get the support of its commander, General Vladimir Cheremisov, who prevented his attempts to gather units to march on Petrograd, but he did get the support of General Pyotr Krasnov, who advanced on the capital with about 700 Cossacks. In Petrograd, opponents of the October Revolution were preparing a revolt that would coincide with the attack on the city by Kerensky's forces.

The Soviets had to improvise the defense of the hills south of the city and wait for the attack of Kerensky's troops, who, despite the efforts of the high command, received no reinforcements. The clash in the Pulkovo Heights ended with the withdrawal of the Cossacks after the Junker mutiny, which failed prematurely, and they did not receive the necessary support from other units to force the defences. Talks between the sides ended with Kerensky's flight, fearful of being handed over to the Soviets by his own soldiers, effectively ending attempts to restore the overthrown Russian Provisional Government.

Background

 
General Vladimir Cheremisov, commander of the Northern Front. An antagonist of Kerensky with pro-Bolshevik troops, Cheremisov hampered Kerensky's efforts to regain power

Alexander Kerensky, who had left Petrograd during the October Revolution,[1] looked for troops that might come to the capital, but did not find them until he arrived to Pskov,[2] where he arrived around 9 pm on 25 October [O.S. 7 November].[3][4][5] In the first town with troops near the capital, Gatchina, the soldiers were pro-Bolshevik, and Kerensky narrowly escaped arrest.[3][5]

In Pskov was the headquarters of the Northern Front under the command of General Cheremisov;[3] there Kerensky came into contact with General Pyotr Krasnov, commander of the 3rd Cavalry Corps, which participated in the Kornilov putsch.[1][2][4][6][7][8] Together they gathered a Corps to march over the capital, despite the doubts of his commissar, who was suspicious of the reliability of some troops who were hostile to Kerensky.[2] Krasnov, a monarchist officer, was not a great a supporter of Kerensky, but believed his claim that the majority of the army would support him against the Bolsheviks.[8]

In turn, Cheremisov, whose troops were effectively under Bolshevik control and who had bad relations with Kerensky, had rescinded[4][8] the orders to help the Provisional Government by sending him to Petrograd.[3] Upon his arrival, I had informed him that he could not guarantee his safety if he remained in the city and that he had to leave immediately.[4] Cheremisov refused to help the former prime minister.[9][8] The local Military Revolutionary Committee controlled communications and transport and monitored the actions of the commanders.[4] Cheremisov had also obstructed Kerensky's communications with the others. commanders of the front and communicated to the high command his appointment as commander-in-chief and the order to stop the march of troops on the capital, both false reports.[10]

Military operations

On the night of 26 October [O.S. 8 November], Kerensky was again on the outskirts of the capital with little over six hundred Cossacks[11][8] — twelve and a half squads of sixty men[4] — some cannons,[2] an armored convoy and an armored car.[4] The dispersion of the III Corps and the lack of support for Kerensky among the troops prevented the assembly of larger forces,[4] and only those that were stationed in Ostrov marched towards the capital.[8] Krasnov, however, was confident that his cossack troops would receive reinforcements.[8] The few Cossacks crossed Pskov by train at full speed to avoid clashes with the troops occupying the station and continued towards Gatchina.[8]

 
The overthrown president of the Russian Provisional Government, Alexander Kerensky, who tried, in vain, to regain control of Petrograd with the few Cossack troops who agreed to march against the city.

The next morning,[8] troops took Gatchina[11] without encountering resistance and prepared to assault the Bolshevik positions[2] while awaiting reinforcements.[12] Various circumstances, however, prevented the arrival of new forces to Kerensky: the neutrality of many officers in the conflict, such as the commander of the Northern Front, General Cheremisov, the refusal of the majority of the army to fight, the growing influence of the Bolsheviks in the troops and the reluctance of railway workers to collaborate in the operation.[2][11] Cheremisov, with bad relations with Kerensky due to a previous personal offense, had ordered that none troops were sent to the capital the day before, declaring that the army should not mix in politics.[13] Kerensky received only reinforcements from an armored convoy and a regiment from Luga.[13] In Gatchina, only a few officers from the aviation school joined Krasnov's Cossacks; contributed a couple of planes and an armored car and dropped leaflets over the capital.[8] After midnight on 28 October [O.S. 10 November], your small forces, whose size was exaggerated by the government of Lenin who believed they were much larger, took the Tsarskoye Selo.[14][15][1] Here the first fight took place; Krasnov, however, drove out the Red Guards with his light artillery.[8] His advance, however, was slow[7] due to lack of reinforcements,[16] especially infantry.[15] At Tsarskoye Selo, the great garrison — sixteen thousand men — who outnumbered Krasnov's forces twenty to one, declared his neutrality[17] in the confrontation.[15][8] In turn, the Bolshevik Revolutionary Military Committee prepared to defend the capital and sent forward the best troops it had in Petrograd.[14] Red Guards, civilians and sailors[16] joined the garrison units that departed south of the city to mount defenses.[18][17] The command has been placed in the hands of Colonel Muraviov,[16] to whom Chudnovsky was attached as a commissioner; Trotsky and Pavel Dybenko accompanied them to supervise the operation.[18]

Meanwhile, in Petrograd, ex-ministers Mensheviks encouraged officials to oppose the new Bolshevik government, the Sovnarkom, through strikes, and supporters of the old government, coordinated by the Committee for the Salvation of the Homeland and Revolution, controlled by the Socialist Revolutionary Party (PSR), planned a revolt simultaneously with Kerensky's impending attack.[18] The presidency of the dissolved Preparliament called for a revolt against the Lenin government.[18] The chief military commissar of the deposed Provisional Government, Stankevich, left to meet[16] with Kerensky in Gatchina to coordinate the revolt in the city and the advance of Kerensky's troops.[18]

After the failure of the junker mutiny in Petrograd, which had to be precipitated when it was discovered, some members of the PSR Central Committee joined Kerensky after fleeing the capital.[19][15] Krasnov's troops made no attempt to help the rebels in the capital.[16] Avram Gots supported the search for infantry to reinforce the Cossacks on their march on the capital, both at the front and in the garrisons around the city, which had thousands of soldiers.[20] At the front, the Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries predominated in the unit committees, but not among the soldiers, who were increasingly close to the Bolsheviks.[20] The army closest to the capital, the 12th, belonging to the Northern Front and with two pro-Bolshevik Latvian divisions selected, elected its council, which turned out to consist of supporters and opponents of the October Revolution; the few units sent to the capital refused to advance beyond Valka.[20] The other two armies on the Northern Front, the 1st and 5th. º, were even more pro-Bolshevik and opposed to Kerensky's support.[21] For their part, the Gatchina and Tsarskoye Selo garrisons had declared themselves neutral and did not support the attack by Kerensky to the capital.[22] In the end, various efforts to obtain more troops, either from the front or from the nearby garrisons, proved fruitless.[23]

On 30 October [O.S. 12 November], 1917, faced with reports of excesses in the capital after the crushing the revolt of the cadets, tried to advance from the Tsarskoye Selo against the entrenched Bolshevik forces, which were twenty times as numerous.[23] Despite advancing easily against the Red Guards, the Cossacks found themselves in danger of being attacked on their flanks[24] by the marines[7][16] commanded by Dybenko.[24] The Cossacks were repulsed [17] in the Pulkovo Heights and had to evacuate Tsarskoye Selo and return to Gatchina to avoid being surrounded.[23][25][24][16] The confrontation had been messy and bloody.[24] The forces of Kerensky began to disperse in retreat and some of them fraternized with the Bolsheviks in hopes of returning home.[26] Lack of support had sapped the morale of Kerensky's few Cossack troops.[7]

By 1 November [O.S. 14 November], the situation had deteriorated to the point that Kerensky he was in danger of being arrested by his own men and handed over to the Bolsheviks; the leaders of the Socialist Revolutionary Party forced him to flee dressed [17] as a sailor.[26][25][24][27] Kerensky's escape ended hopes of restoring the Provisional Government;[25] after that the opponents of the October Revolution did not try to revive it, but to create a new alternative government to the Bolsheviks.[28] The defeat of Kerensky, together with the Bolshevik victory in the heavy fighting in Moscow, temporarily secured the power of Lenin and his supporters;[27] the capital was temporarily safe from military attack.[17]

In turn, Krasnov was captured, but soon released after promising not to fight the Soviet authorities, a promise he quickly broke[7][27] by becoming the leader of an anti-Bolshevik movement — the Don Republic.[27]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Wade 2000, p. 244.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Radkey 1963, p. 14.
  3. ^ a b c d Daniels 1997, p. 200.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Rabinowitch 1978, p. 305.
  5. ^ a b Chamberlin 1976, p. 329.
  6. ^ Daniels 1997, p. 201.
  7. ^ a b c d e Kenez 1971, p. 46.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Chamberlin 1976, p. 330.
  9. ^ Kenez 1971, p. 45.
  10. ^ Dani els 1997, p. 201.
  11. ^ a b c Daniels 1997, p. 203.
  12. ^ Rabinowitch 1978, p. 306.
  13. ^ a b Radkey 1963, p. 15.
  14. ^ a b Radkey 1963, p. 29.
  15. ^ a b c d Daniels 1997, p. 205.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Chamberlin 1976, p. 331.
  17. ^ a b c d e Wade 2000, p. 245.
  18. ^ a b c d e Daniels 1997, p. 204.
  19. ^ Radkey 1963, p. 39.
  20. ^ a b c Radkey 1963, p. 40.
  21. ^ Radkey 1963, p. 43.
  22. ^ Radkey 1963, p. 44.
  23. ^ a b c Radkey 1963, p. 45.
  24. ^ a b c d e Rabinowitch 1978, p. 308.
  25. ^ a b c Daniels 1997, p. 206.
  26. ^ a b Radkey 1963, p. 46.
  27. ^ a b c d Chamberlin 1976, p. 332.
  28. ^ Radkey 1963, p. 47.

References

  • Chamberlin, William Henry (1976). The Russian revolution, 1917-1918: from the overthrow of the czar to the assumption of power by the bolsheviks. New York: Grosset & Dunlap. pp. 511. ISBN 9780448001883.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Daniels, Robert Vincent (1997). Red October: the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. Boston: Beacon Press. p. 269. ISBN 9780807056455.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Kenez, Peter (1971). Civil War in Southern Russia 1918. California: University of California Press. p. 416. ISBN 9780520017092.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Rabinowitch, Alexander (1978). The bolsheviks come to power. The revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 393. ISBN 9780393008937.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Radkey, Oliver H. (1963). The sickle under the hammer; The Russian Socialist Revolutionaries in the early months of the Soviet rule. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 525. OCLC 422729.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Wade, Rex A. (2000). The Russian Revolution, 1917 (New Approaches to European History). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 337. ISBN 9780521425650.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)

kerensky, krasnov, uprising, part, russian, civil, wardate8, november, 1917, october, locationpetrograd, governorateresultbolshevik, victorydefeat, kerenskybelligerentssoviet, russiarussian, republiccommanders, leadersvladimir, lenin, nikolai, krylenko, vladim. Kerensky Krasnov uprisingPart of the Russian Civil WarDate8 13 November 1917 O S 26 31 October LocationPetrograd GovernorateResultBolshevik victoryDefeat of KerenskyBelligerentsSoviet RussiaRussian RepublicCommanders and leadersVladimir Lenin Nikolai Krylenko Vladimir Antonov Ovseenko Pavel DybenkoAlexander Kerensky Pyotr KrasnovStrength 5 000 men700 men of which 600 cavalry 12 cannons1 armoured vehicle The Kerensky Krasnov uprising was an attempt by Alexander Kerensky to crush the October Revolution and regain power after the Bolsheviks overthrew his government in Petrograd It took place between 8 and 13 November 1917 O S 26 and 31 October Following the October Revolution Kerensky fled Petrograd which fell to the Bolshevik controlled Petrograd Soviet and went to Pskov the headquarters of the Northern Front command He did not get the support of its commander General Vladimir Cheremisov who prevented his attempts to gather units to march on Petrograd but he did get the support of General Pyotr Krasnov who advanced on the capital with about 700 Cossacks In Petrograd opponents of the October Revolution were preparing a revolt that would coincide with the attack on the city by Kerensky s forces The Soviets had to improvise the defense of the hills south of the city and wait for the attack of Kerensky s troops who despite the efforts of the high command received no reinforcements The clash in the Pulkovo Heights ended with the withdrawal of the Cossacks after the Junker mutiny which failed prematurely and they did not receive the necessary support from other units to force the defences Talks between the sides ended with Kerensky s flight fearful of being handed over to the Soviets by his own soldiers effectively ending attempts to restore the overthrown Russian Provisional Government Contents 1 Background 2 Military operations 3 Citations 4 ReferencesBackground Edit General Vladimir Cheremisov commander of the Northern Front An antagonist of Kerensky with pro Bolshevik troops Cheremisov hampered Kerensky s efforts to regain power Alexander Kerensky who had left Petrograd during the October Revolution 1 looked for troops that might come to the capital but did not find them until he arrived to Pskov 2 where he arrived around 9 pm on 25 October O S 7 November 3 4 5 In the first town with troops near the capital Gatchina the soldiers were pro Bolshevik and Kerensky narrowly escaped arrest 3 5 In Pskov was the headquarters of the Northern Front under the command of General Cheremisov 3 there Kerensky came into contact with General Pyotr Krasnov commander of the 3rd Cavalry Corps which participated in the Kornilov putsch 1 2 4 6 7 8 Together they gathered a Corps to march over the capital despite the doubts of his commissar who was suspicious of the reliability of some troops who were hostile to Kerensky 2 Krasnov a monarchist officer was not a great a supporter of Kerensky but believed his claim that the majority of the army would support him against the Bolsheviks 8 In turn Cheremisov whose troops were effectively under Bolshevik control and who had bad relations with Kerensky had rescinded 4 8 the orders to help the Provisional Government by sending him to Petrograd 3 Upon his arrival I had informed him that he could not guarantee his safety if he remained in the city and that he had to leave immediately 4 Cheremisov refused to help the former prime minister 9 8 The local Military Revolutionary Committee controlled communications and transport and monitored the actions of the commanders 4 Cheremisov had also obstructed Kerensky s communications with the others commanders of the front and communicated to the high command his appointment as commander in chief and the order to stop the march of troops on the capital both false reports 10 Military operations EditOn the night of 26 October O S 8 November Kerensky was again on the outskirts of the capital with little over six hundred Cossacks 11 8 twelve and a half squads of sixty men 4 some cannons 2 an armored convoy and an armored car 4 The dispersion of the III Corps and the lack of support for Kerensky among the troops prevented the assembly of larger forces 4 and only those that were stationed in Ostrov marched towards the capital 8 Krasnov however was confident that his cossack troops would receive reinforcements 8 The few Cossacks crossed Pskov by train at full speed to avoid clashes with the troops occupying the station and continued towards Gatchina 8 The overthrown president of the Russian Provisional Government Alexander Kerensky who tried in vain to regain control of Petrograd with the few Cossack troops who agreed to march against the city The next morning 8 troops took Gatchina 11 without encountering resistance and prepared to assault the Bolshevik positions 2 while awaiting reinforcements 12 Various circumstances however prevented the arrival of new forces to Kerensky the neutrality of many officers in the conflict such as the commander of the Northern Front General Cheremisov the refusal of the majority of the army to fight the growing influence of the Bolsheviks in the troops and the reluctance of railway workers to collaborate in the operation 2 11 Cheremisov with bad relations with Kerensky due to a previous personal offense had ordered that none troops were sent to the capital the day before declaring that the army should not mix in politics 13 Kerensky received only reinforcements from an armored convoy and a regiment from Luga 13 In Gatchina only a few officers from the aviation school joined Krasnov s Cossacks contributed a couple of planes and an armored car and dropped leaflets over the capital 8 After midnight on 28 October O S 10 November your small forces whose size was exaggerated by the government of Lenin who believed they were much larger took the Tsarskoye Selo 14 15 1 Here the first fight took place Krasnov however drove out the Red Guards with his light artillery 8 His advance however was slow 7 due to lack of reinforcements 16 especially infantry 15 At Tsarskoye Selo the great garrison sixteen thousand men who outnumbered Krasnov s forces twenty to one declared his neutrality 17 in the confrontation 15 8 In turn the Bolshevik Revolutionary Military Committee prepared to defend the capital and sent forward the best troops it had in Petrograd 14 Red Guards civilians and sailors 16 joined the garrison units that departed south of the city to mount defenses 18 17 The command has been placed in the hands of Colonel Muraviov 16 to whom Chudnovsky was attached as a commissioner Trotsky and Pavel Dybenko accompanied them to supervise the operation 18 Meanwhile in Petrograd ex ministers Mensheviks encouraged officials to oppose the new Bolshevik government the Sovnarkom through strikes and supporters of the old government coordinated by the Committee for the Salvation of the Homeland and Revolution controlled by the Socialist Revolutionary Party PSR planned a revolt simultaneously with Kerensky s impending attack 18 The presidency of the dissolved Preparliament called for a revolt against the Lenin government 18 The chief military commissar of the deposed Provisional Government Stankevich left to meet 16 with Kerensky in Gatchina to coordinate the revolt in the city and the advance of Kerensky s troops 18 After the failure of the junker mutiny in Petrograd which had to be precipitated when it was discovered some members of the PSR Central Committee joined Kerensky after fleeing the capital 19 15 Krasnov s troops made no attempt to help the rebels in the capital 16 Avram Gots supported the search for infantry to reinforce the Cossacks on their march on the capital both at the front and in the garrisons around the city which had thousands of soldiers 20 At the front the Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries predominated in the unit committees but not among the soldiers who were increasingly close to the Bolsheviks 20 The army closest to the capital the 12th belonging to the Northern Front and with two pro Bolshevik Latvian divisions selected elected its council which turned out to consist of supporters and opponents of the October Revolution the few units sent to the capital refused to advance beyond Valka 20 The other two armies on the Northern Front the 1st and 5th º were even more pro Bolshevik and opposed to Kerensky s support 21 For their part the Gatchina and Tsarskoye Selo garrisons had declared themselves neutral and did not support the attack by Kerensky to the capital 22 In the end various efforts to obtain more troops either from the front or from the nearby garrisons proved fruitless 23 On 30 October O S 12 November 1917 faced with reports of excesses in the capital after the crushing the revolt of the cadets tried to advance from the Tsarskoye Selo against the entrenched Bolshevik forces which were twenty times as numerous 23 Despite advancing easily against the Red Guards the Cossacks found themselves in danger of being attacked on their flanks 24 by the marines 7 16 commanded by Dybenko 24 The Cossacks were repulsed 17 in the Pulkovo Heights and had to evacuate Tsarskoye Selo and return to Gatchina to avoid being surrounded 23 25 24 16 The confrontation had been messy and bloody 24 The forces of Kerensky began to disperse in retreat and some of them fraternized with the Bolsheviks in hopes of returning home 26 Lack of support had sapped the morale of Kerensky s few Cossack troops 7 By 1 November O S 14 November the situation had deteriorated to the point that Kerensky he was in danger of being arrested by his own men and handed over to the Bolsheviks the leaders of the Socialist Revolutionary Party forced him to flee dressed 17 as a sailor 26 25 24 27 Kerensky s escape ended hopes of restoring the Provisional Government 25 after that the opponents of the October Revolution did not try to revive it but to create a new alternative government to the Bolsheviks 28 The defeat of Kerensky together with the Bolshevik victory in the heavy fighting in Moscow temporarily secured the power of Lenin and his supporters 27 the capital was temporarily safe from military attack 17 In turn Krasnov was captured but soon released after promising not to fight the Soviet authorities a promise he quickly broke 7 27 by becoming the leader of an anti Bolshevik movement the Don Republic 27 Citations Edit a b c Wade 2000 p 244 a b c d e f Radkey 1963 p 14 a b c d Daniels 1997 p 200 a b c d e f g h Rabinowitch 1978 p 305 a b Chamberlin 1976 p 329 Daniels 1997 p 201 a b c d e Kenez 1971 p 46 a b c d e f g h i j k l Chamberlin 1976 p 330 Kenez 1971 p 45 Dani els 1997 p 201 sfn error no target CITEREFDani els1997 help a b c Daniels 1997 p 203 Rabinowitch 1978 p 306 a b Radkey 1963 p 15 a b Radkey 1963 p 29 a b c d Daniels 1997 p 205 a b c d e f g Chamberlin 1976 p 331 a b c d e Wade 2000 p 245 a b c d e Daniels 1997 p 204 Radkey 1963 p 39 a b c Radkey 1963 p 40 Radkey 1963 p 43 Radkey 1963 p 44 a b c Radkey 1963 p 45 a b c d e Rabinowitch 1978 p 308 a b c Daniels 1997 p 206 a b Radkey 1963 p 46 a b c d Chamberlin 1976 p 332 Radkey 1963 p 47 References EditChamberlin William Henry 1976 The Russian revolution 1917 1918 from the overthrow of the czar to the assumption of power by the bolsheviks New York Grosset amp Dunlap pp 511 ISBN 9780448001883 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Daniels Robert Vincent 1997 Red October the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 Boston Beacon Press p 269 ISBN 9780807056455 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Kenez Peter 1971 Civil War in Southern Russia 1918 California University of California Press p 416 ISBN 9780520017092 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Rabinowitch Alexander 1978 The bolsheviks come to power The revolution of 1917 in Petrograd New York W W Norton amp Company p 393 ISBN 9780393008937 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Radkey Oliver H 1963 The sickle under the hammer The Russian Socialist Revolutionaries in the early months of the Soviet rule New York Columbia University Press pp 525 OCLC 422729 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Wade Rex A 2000 The Russian Revolution 1917 New Approaches to European History Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 337 ISBN 9780521425650 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kerensky Krasnov uprising amp oldid 1123823074, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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