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Kiev Arsenal January Uprising

The Kiev Arsenal January Uprising (Ukrainian: Січневе повстання, romanizedSichneve povstannya), sometimes simply called the January Uprising or the January Rebellion, was a Bolshevik-organized workers' armed revolt that started on January 29, 1918, at the Arsenal Factory in Kiev during the Soviet–Ukrainian War. The goal of the uprising was to sabotage the ongoing elections to the Ukrainian Constituent Assembly and to support the advancing Red Army.

January Uprising
Part of the Soviet–Ukrainian War

Participants of the January Uprising in Kiev
Date29 January 1918 – 4 February 1918 Storming of Arsenal Factory
Location
Result

UPR victory

Belligerents

Ukrainian People's Republic


Bolsheviks
Red Guards
Commanders and leaders

Government forces:
Mykhailo Kovenko
Symon Petliura
Yevhen Konovalets
Vsevolod Petriv


POW:

Leopold Lis-Kula[a]

Bolshevik Revkom:

Casualties and losses
unknown unknown
A monument to the Arsenal uprising in front of Arsenalna metro station, before it was vandalized by activists in June 2019[citation needed]

The beginning edit

January events in Russia and Ukraine edit

The long-anticipated 1918 Ukrainian Constituent Assembly election was to be held on January 9, 1918, where the Bolsheviks won only 10% of the total votes,[citation needed] but the elections were suspended due to the ongoing Ukrainian-Soviet War as practically all of left-bank Ukraine was occupied by the Soviet forces headed by Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko. According to the Third Declaration (Universal), the Constituent Assembly was planned to meet on January 22, but this was postponed until the end of military conflict. On January 19, the Soviet government dissolved the Russian Constituent Assembly, while just a day prior, the government state security forces (Cheka) opened fire on a peace demonstration in support of the constituent assembly.[citation needed] On January 22, another peace demonstration in Moscow was dispersed by gunfire as well.[citation needed]

Preceding revolutionary events edit

The Kievan Bolsheviks decided not to waste any more time and were planning for a revolt to support the invading Soviet forces in the Soviet–Ukrainian War. They decided to initiate it once the Soviet forces started to approach the city[citation needed] in order to draw away some of the Ukrainian military forces from the front lines and help the Red Army to advance. The Bolsheviks had used this tactic in other Ukrainian cities, such as Katerynoslav (current Dnipro), Odessa, Mykolaiv, and Yelizavetgrad (current Kropyvnytskyi). The Arsenal Factory was chosen to be the center of the riot. To prevent any riots on January 18, a few platoons of the Free Cossacks confiscated a great amount of weaponry from the factory and arrested several Communist activists. The Kievan Bolsheviks' propaganda newspaper, Golos Sotsial-Demokrata, was shut down. Later it was decided to confiscate the coal ore to completely shut down the factory.

Organisation of the revolt edit

On January 28, the Bolsheviks instigated a protest and decided to resist further developments against the factory. With the help of some of the soldiers from the Shevchenko Regiment that were guarding the warehouse of weapons confiscated earlier, they managed to retrieve them back to the factory. After a brief gathering, it was decided to start the revolt immediately. The leaders of the revolutionaries were Syla Mishchenko (commandant), Oleksandr Horwits, Mykola Kostyuk, and Ipolit Fialek. The city's Bolsheviks Jan Hamarnyk, Andriy Ivanov, Isaac Kreisberg, and others, who had been planning to delay the uprising until the Red Army would come closer to Kiev, had no other choice but to follow it.[citation needed] The headquarters of the revolt were established at 47 Velyka Vasylkivska Street. The same night on January 28, several factories, together with some of soldiers from the Bohdaniv Regiment, Shevchenko Regiment, and Sahaydachny Regiment, joined the Arsenal workers in the January Uprising. The goal of the uprising was to encircle the building of the Central Rada (today the Pedagogical museum) and then force the members of the Rada to resign. Along the way, they were joined by other Red Guards of Podil and Shulyavka, led by Arkadiy Dzedzievski (Left SR) with Makola Patlakh (Bolshevik) and Vasyl Bozhenko at Demiivka.

Opposing forces edit

Bolsheviks edit

  • 1st battalion (kurin) of Sahaidachny Regiment (Syla Mishchenko)
  • Several units of Bohdaniv battalion (kurin) (Kysel)
  • Units of Shevchenko Regiment (warrant officer A. Port)
  • Red Guards units of Arsenal Factory
  • Red Guards units of Demiivka artillery factory (Vasyl Bozhenko)

Central Rada edit

  • Sich Riflemen battalion (kurin) (Yevhen Konovalets)
    • 2nd platoon (sotnia) – 200 soldiers
    • Machine-gun platoon (sotnia) – 150 soldiers
    • Reserve platoon (sotnia) – 100 soldiers
    • Artillery battery – 12 guns
  • Free Cossacks units
  • Haidamaka Brigade of Sloboda Ukraine (kish) (Symon Petlyura)
    • Black Haidamaka Battalion (kurin)
    • Red Haidamaka Battalion (kurin), also known as 3rd Haidamaka Regiment (Omelian Volokh)
    • 1st platoon (of Sich Riflemen battalion) – 200 soldiers
  • Hordiyenko Regiment (Vsevolod Petriv)
  • Some armored trains

Revolt edit

 
Photo of soldiers after the capture

On the morning of January 29, the representative of the Kievan council of worker and soldier deputies handed over an ultimatum to the Tsentralna Rada to surrender. In return, the Rada requested immediate capitulation of the revolutionaries, and by evening the city was engulfed in a series of skirmishes. The main forces of the mutineers were concentrated around the factory, although a few separate centers existed in the Shuliavka neighborhood (based on the recently liquidated Shuliavka Republic), Demiivka, and Podil. The revolutionaries managed to overtake the railroad freight station Kiev-Tovarniy and were moving towards the center of the city through Khreschatyk. The most dangerous were activities in Podil, when the mutineers managed to take the Starokiev police precinct and the hotel Prague (today 36 Volodymyr Street), which were close to the building of the Tsentralna Rada. The next day on January 30, the whole city was paralyzed and went on strike, stopping utility services and the city's transportation. The Rada had no influence over most of the military units, many of which decided not to intrude.[citation needed] The Ukrainian government was supported only by the separate platoons of the Bohdaniv Regiment, Polubotko Regiment, Bohun Regiment, a kurin of Sich Riflemen, and the Free Cossacks.

Storming the Arsenal edit

On February 1, the Rada announced that it had full control of the city and asked the workers to end the strike, as it harmed the civil population. It promised to come up with several socioeconomic reforms in the immediate future. The next day, the Sloboda Ukraine Kish (Haidamaky) of Symon Petliura entered the city, withdrawing from the attacks of the Colonel Muravyov. Also the Hordiyenko Regiment of Vsevolod Petrov was brought to the city from the north front. On February 2, most of the revolt was extinguished except for its main center – the Arsenal Factory. On the morning of February 4, the forces of Symon Petliura occupied the factory after a bloody assault that cost the lives of several kish soldiers and workers of Arsenal. Later, Soviets would claim that the Petliura forces killed 300 of the Arsenal's defenders in the yard of the factory.[citation needed]

Afterwards, Petliura's resistance was weakened greatly against the besieging Bolsheviks, who entered the city on February 4 (occupying the Darnytsia neighborhood) and captured the town on February 7 (although sporadic fighting continued for several days afterwards).[2]

Legacy edit

This event is generally regarded as "class-motivated" by historians,[according to whom?] similarly to other workers' movements of Russia at the time.

To commemorate the event, the historic defensive wall of the Arsenal Factory bearing the traces of shelling was preserved by Soviet authorities on the city's Moscow Street (near the Arsenalna metro station). The nearby street named for the event during Soviet times carried this name (January Uprising Street) until 2007.

The uprising is the subject of Arsenal (1929), a Soviet war film by the Ukrainian director Oleksandr Dovzhenko.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Commander of the POW in Kiev.

References edit

  1. ^ Position of the Polish Revolutionary Movement in the Dnieper Ukraine on matters of sovereignty of the Ukrainian People's Republic (1917–1918). Pavlo Hai-Nyzhnyk website.
  2. ^ Arsenal (1929): Ukraine in Revolution 2011-03-24 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • Yaroslav Tynchenko. First Ukrainian-Bolshevik War (December 1917 — March 1918) 2009-05-11 at the Wayback Machine — Kyiv-Lviv, 1996.
  • Manchuk, A. The January Uprising. The role of boys. (Січневе повстання. "Роля хлопчаків") 2018-04-11 at the Wayback Machine. Ukrayinska Pravda (Istorychna Pravda). 29 January 2011.
  • Derevyany, I. Sich Riflemen during the January Uprising ("Січові стрільці під час Січневого повстання"). Ukrayinska Pravda (Istorychna Pravda). 6 April 2012.
  • Zdorov, A. . Ukrayinska Pravda (Istorychna Pravda). 18 October 2010.
  • Kiev January Armed Uprising in 1918 at the Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia

kiev, arsenal, january, uprising, january, rebellion, redirects, here, 19th, century, polish, uprising, january, uprising, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, un. January Rebellion redirects here For the 19th century Polish uprising see January Uprising This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kiev Arsenal January Uprising news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message The Kiev Arsenal January Uprising Ukrainian Sichneve povstannya romanized Sichneve povstannya sometimes simply called the January Uprising or the January Rebellion was a Bolshevik organized workers armed revolt that started on January 29 1918 at the Arsenal Factory in Kiev during the Soviet Ukrainian War The goal of the uprising was to sabotage the ongoing elections to the Ukrainian Constituent Assembly and to support the advancing Red Army January UprisingPart of the Soviet Ukrainian WarParticipants of the January Uprising in KievDate29 January 1918 4 February 1918 Storming of Arsenal FactoryLocationKievResultUPR victory Bolshevik uprising suppressed Start of the Battle of KievBelligerentsUkrainian People s Republic Polish Military Organisation 1 Bolsheviks Red GuardsCommanders and leadersGovernment forces Mykhailo Kovenko Symon Petliura Yevhen Konovalets Vsevolod Petriv POW Leopold Lis Kula a Bolshevik Revkom Syla Mishchenko Yan Gamarnik Mykola Kostyuk Oleksandr Horvits Casualties and lossesunknownunknown A monument to the Arsenal uprising in front of Arsenalna metro station before it was vandalized by activists in June 2019 citation needed Contents 1 The beginning 1 1 January events in Russia and Ukraine 1 2 Preceding revolutionary events 1 3 Organisation of the revolt 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Bolsheviks 2 2 Central Rada 3 Revolt 4 Storming the Arsenal 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksThe beginning editSee also Ukrainian Constituent Assembly January events in Russia and Ukraine edit The long anticipated 1918 Ukrainian Constituent Assembly election was to be held on January 9 1918 where the Bolsheviks won only 10 of the total votes citation needed but the elections were suspended due to the ongoing Ukrainian Soviet War as practically all of left bank Ukraine was occupied by the Soviet forces headed by Vladimir Antonov Ovseyenko According to the Third Declaration Universal the Constituent Assembly was planned to meet on January 22 but this was postponed until the end of military conflict On January 19 the Soviet government dissolved the Russian Constituent Assembly while just a day prior the government state security forces Cheka opened fire on a peace demonstration in support of the constituent assembly citation needed On January 22 another peace demonstration in Moscow was dispersed by gunfire as well citation needed Preceding revolutionary events edit The Kievan Bolsheviks decided not to waste any more time and were planning for a revolt to support the invading Soviet forces in the Soviet Ukrainian War They decided to initiate it once the Soviet forces started to approach the city citation needed in order to draw away some of the Ukrainian military forces from the front lines and help the Red Army to advance The Bolsheviks had used this tactic in other Ukrainian cities such as Katerynoslav current Dnipro Odessa Mykolaiv and Yelizavetgrad current Kropyvnytskyi The Arsenal Factory was chosen to be the center of the riot To prevent any riots on January 18 a few platoons of the Free Cossacks confiscated a great amount of weaponry from the factory and arrested several Communist activists The Kievan Bolsheviks propaganda newspaper Golos Sotsial Demokrata was shut down Later it was decided to confiscate the coal ore to completely shut down the factory Organisation of the revolt edit On January 28 the Bolsheviks instigated a protest and decided to resist further developments against the factory With the help of some of the soldiers from the Shevchenko Regiment that were guarding the warehouse of weapons confiscated earlier they managed to retrieve them back to the factory After a brief gathering it was decided to start the revolt immediately The leaders of the revolutionaries were Syla Mishchenko commandant Oleksandr Horwits Mykola Kostyuk and Ipolit Fialek The city s Bolsheviks Jan Hamarnyk Andriy Ivanov Isaac Kreisberg and others who had been planning to delay the uprising until the Red Army would come closer to Kiev had no other choice but to follow it citation needed The headquarters of the revolt were established at 47 Velyka Vasylkivska Street The same night on January 28 several factories together with some of soldiers from the Bohdaniv Regiment Shevchenko Regiment and Sahaydachny Regiment joined the Arsenal workers in the January Uprising The goal of the uprising was to encircle the building of the Central Rada today the Pedagogical museum and then force the members of the Rada to resign Along the way they were joined by other Red Guards of Podil and Shulyavka led by Arkadiy Dzedzievski Left SR with Makola Patlakh Bolshevik and Vasyl Bozhenko at Demiivka Opposing forces editBolsheviks edit 1st battalion kurin of Sahaidachny Regiment Syla Mishchenko Several units of Bohdaniv battalion kurin Kysel Units of Shevchenko Regiment warrant officer A Port Red Guards units of Arsenal Factory Red Guards units of Demiivka artillery factory Vasyl Bozhenko Central Rada edit Sich Riflemen battalion kurin Yevhen Konovalets 2nd platoon sotnia 200 soldiers Machine gun platoon sotnia 150 soldiers Reserve platoon sotnia 100 soldiers Artillery battery 12 guns Free Cossacks units Haidamaka Brigade of Sloboda Ukraine kish Symon Petlyura Black Haidamaka Battalion kurin Red Haidamaka Battalion kurin also known as 3rd Haidamaka Regiment Omelian Volokh 1st platoon of Sich Riflemen battalion 200 soldiers Hordiyenko Regiment Vsevolod Petriv Some armored trainsRevolt edit nbsp Photo of soldiers after the capture On the morning of January 29 the representative of the Kievan council of worker and soldier deputies handed over an ultimatum to the Tsentralna Rada to surrender In return the Rada requested immediate capitulation of the revolutionaries and by evening the city was engulfed in a series of skirmishes The main forces of the mutineers were concentrated around the factory although a few separate centers existed in the Shuliavka neighborhood based on the recently liquidated Shuliavka Republic Demiivka and Podil The revolutionaries managed to overtake the railroad freight station Kiev Tovarniy and were moving towards the center of the city through Khreschatyk The most dangerous were activities in Podil when the mutineers managed to take the Starokiev police precinct and the hotel Prague today 36 Volodymyr Street which were close to the building of the Tsentralna Rada The next day on January 30 the whole city was paralyzed and went on strike stopping utility services and the city s transportation The Rada had no influence over most of the military units many of which decided not to intrude citation needed The Ukrainian government was supported only by the separate platoons of the Bohdaniv Regiment Polubotko Regiment Bohun Regiment a kurin of Sich Riflemen and the Free Cossacks Storming the Arsenal editOn February 1 the Rada announced that it had full control of the city and asked the workers to end the strike as it harmed the civil population It promised to come up with several socioeconomic reforms in the immediate future The next day the Sloboda Ukraine Kish Haidamaky of Symon Petliura entered the city withdrawing from the attacks of the Colonel Muravyov Also the Hordiyenko Regiment of Vsevolod Petrov was brought to the city from the north front On February 2 most of the revolt was extinguished except for its main center the Arsenal Factory On the morning of February 4 the forces of Symon Petliura occupied the factory after a bloody assault that cost the lives of several kish soldiers and workers of Arsenal Later Soviets would claim that the Petliura forces killed 300 of the Arsenal s defenders in the yard of the factory citation needed Afterwards Petliura s resistance was weakened greatly against the besieging Bolsheviks who entered the city on February 4 occupying the Darnytsia neighborhood and captured the town on February 7 although sporadic fighting continued for several days afterwards 2 Legacy editThis event is generally regarded as class motivated by historians according to whom similarly to other workers movements of Russia at the time To commemorate the event the historic defensive wall of the Arsenal Factory bearing the traces of shelling was preserved by Soviet authorities on the city s Moscow Street near the Arsenalna metro station The nearby street named for the event during Soviet times carried this name January Uprising Street until 2007 The uprising is the subject of Arsenal 1929 a Soviet war film by the Ukrainian director Oleksandr Dovzhenko See also editKiev Bolshevik UprisingNotes edit Commander of the POW in Kiev References edit Position of the Polish Revolutionary Movement in the Dnieper Ukraine on matters of sovereignty of the Ukrainian People s Republic 1917 1918 Pavlo Hai Nyzhnyk website Arsenal 1929 Ukraine in Revolution Archived 2011 03 24 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editArsenal 1929 Ukraine in Revolution Yaroslav Tynchenko First Ukrainian Bolshevik War December 1917 March 1918 Archived 2009 05 11 at the Wayback Machine Kyiv Lviv 1996 Manchuk A The January Uprising The role of boys Sichneve povstannya Rolya hlopchakiv Archived 2018 04 11 at the Wayback Machine Ukrayinska Pravda Istorychna Pravda 29 January 2011 Derevyany I Sich Riflemen during the January Uprising Sichovi strilci pid chas Sichnevogo povstannya Ukrayinska Pravda Istorychna Pravda 6 April 2012 Zdorov A Who raised the armed revolt in Kiev in January of 1918 Ukrayinska Pravda Istorychna Pravda 18 October 2010 Kiev January Armed Uprising in 1918 at the Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kiev Arsenal January Uprising amp oldid 1225103018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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