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Lavr Kornilov

Lavr Georgiyevich Kornilov (Russian: Лавр Гео́ргиевич Корни́лов, IPA: [ˈlavr ɡʲɪˈorɡʲɪjɪvʲɪtɕ kɐrˈnʲiləf]; 30 August [O.S. 18 August] 1870 – 13 April 1918) was a Russian military intelligence officer, explorer, and general in the Imperial Russian Army during World War I and the ensuing Russian Civil War. Kornilov was of Siberian Cossack origin. Today he is best remembered for the Kornilov Affair, an unsuccessful endeavor in August/September 1917 that was intended to strengthen Alexander Kerensky's Provisional Government[dubious ], but which led to Kerensky eventually having Kornilov arrested and charged with attempting a coup d'état, and ultimately undermined Kerensky's rule.[1]

Lavr Georgiyevich Kornilov
Kornilov in 1916
Born(1870-08-30)30 August 1870
Ust-Kamenogorsk, Semirechye Oblast, Russian Turkestan, Russian Empire
Died13 April 1918(1918-04-13) (aged 47)
near Yekaterinodar, Russian SFSR
Allegiance Russian Empire (1892–1917)
White Movement (1917–1918)
Service/branch Imperial Russian Army
White Army
Years of service1892–1918
RankGeneral of the Infantry
Commands held
Battles/wars
Awards

Kornilov escaped from jail in November 1917 and subsequently became the military commander of the anti-Bolshevik Volunteer Army which took the charge of anti-Bolshevik opposition in the south of Russia. He and his troops were badly outnumbered in many of their encounters, and he was killed by a shell on 13 April 1918 while laying siege to Ekaterinodar, the capital of the Kuban Soviet Republic.

Pre-revolutionary career Edit

 
Kornilov as a teenager

One story relates how Kornilov was originally born as a Don Cossack Kalmyk named Lorya Dildinov and adopted in Ust-Kamenogorsk, Russian Turkestan (now Kazakhstan) by the family of his mother's brother, the Russian Cossack Khorunzhiy Georgy Nikolayevich Kornilov, whose wife was of Kazakh origin.[2][3] But his sister wrote that he had not been adopted, had not been a Don Cossack, and that their mother had Polish and Altai Oirot descent. (Though their language was not a Kalmyk/Mongolian one, but because of their Asian race and their history in the Jungar Oirot (Kalmyk) state, Altai Oirots were called Altai Kalmyks by Russians. They were not Muslims or Kazakhs.) But Boris Shaposhnikov, who served with Pyotr Kornilov, the brother of Lavr, in 1903, mentioned the "Kyrgyz" ancestry of their mother - this name was usually used in reference to Kazakhs in 1903.[4] Kornilov's Siberian Cossack father was a friend of Potanin (1835-1920), a prominent figure in the Siberian autonomy movement.[5]

Kornilov entered military school in Omsk in 1885 and went on to study at the Mikhailovsky Artillery School in St. Petersburg in 1889. In August 1892 he was assigned as a lieutenant to the Turkestan Military District, where he led several exploration missions in Eastern Turkestan, Afghanistan and Persia, learned several Central Asian languages, and wrote detailed reports about his observations.

Kornilov returned to St. Petersburg to attend the Nikolayev General Staff Academy and graduated as a captain in 1897. Again refusing a posting at St. Peterburg, he returned to the Turkestan Military District, where he resumed his duties as a military intelligence officer. Among his missions at this post was an attempt at traveling incognito to British India in 1904, though he was quickly discovered and subsequently kept under close surveillance.[6]

During the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 Kornilov became the Chief of staff of the 1st Infantry Brigade, and was heavily involved in the Battle of Sandepu (January 1905) and the Battle of Mukden (February/March 1905). He was awarded the Order of St. George (4th class) for bravery and promoted to the rank of colonel.

Following the end of the war, Kornilov served as military attache in China from 1907 to 1911. He studied the Chinese language, travelled extensively (researching data on the history, traditions and customs of the Chinese, which he intended to use as material for a book about life in contemporary China), and regularly sent detailed reports to the General Staff and Foreign Ministry. Kornilov paid much attention to the prospects of cooperation between Russia and China in the Far East and met with the future president of China, Chiang Kai-shek. In 1910 Kornilov was recalled from Beijing but remained in St. Petersburg for only five months before departing for western Mongolia and Kashgar to examine the military situation along China's border with Russia. On 2 February 1911 he became Commander of the 8th Infantry Regiment of Estonia and was later appointed commander of the 9th Siberian Rifle Division, stationed in Vladivostok.

In 1914, at the start of World War I, Kornilov was appointed commander of the 48th Infantry Division, which saw combat in Galicia and the Carpathians. In 1915, he was promoted to the rank of major general. During heavy fighting, he was captured by the Austrians in April 1915, when his division became isolated from the rest of the Russian forces. After his capture, Field Marshal Conrad, the commander of the Austro-Hungarian Army, made a point of meeting him in person. As a major general, he was a high-value prisoner of war, but in July 1916 Kornilov managed to escape back to Russia and return to duty.

After the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II, he was given command of the Petrograd Military District in March 1917.[7] On 8 March, Kornilov placed the Empress Alexandra and her children under house arrest at the Alexander Palace (Nicholas was still held at Stavka), replacing the Tsar's Escort and Combined Regiments of the Imperial Guard with 300 revolutionary troops.[8] But when the Provisional Government declined to give him the authority he sought to deal with indiscipline, he was transferred at his request to command the Russian Eighth Army. His army inflicted a spectacular defeat on the Austrians, taking ten thousand prisoners - Russia's only notable military success in the year 1917 - though after five days, was forced to retreat. On 24 July, he was appointed commander of the southern front. A week later, he replaced Aleksei Brusilov as Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Provisional Government's armed forces.

Kornilov Affair Edit

 
Kornilov and Deputy War Minister Boris Savinkov in Moscow on 25 August [O.S. 12 August] 1917

In the mass discontent following the July Days, the Russian populace grew highly skeptical about the Provisional Government's abilities to alleviate the economic distress and social resentment among the lower classes. Pavel Milyukov, the Kadet leader, describes the situation in Russia in late July as,

"Chaos in the army, chaos in foreign policy, chaos in industry and chaos in the nationalist questions".[1]

Kornilov, appointed commander-in-chief of the Russian army in July 1917, considered the Petrograd Soviet responsible for the breakdown in the military in recent times and believed that the Provisional Government lacked the power and confidence to dissolve the Petrograd Soviet. Following several ambiguous correspondences between Kornilov and Alexander Kerensky, Kornilov commanded an assault on the Petrograd Soviet.[1]

Because the Petrograd Soviet was able to quickly gather a powerful army of workers and soldiers in defence of the Revolution, Kornilov's coup was an abysmal failure, and he was placed under arrest. The Kornilov Affair resulted in significantly increased distrust among Russians towards the Provisional Government.[9]

Russian Civil War Edit

 
Kornilov Shock Detachment flag bearer, 1917
 
Insignia of the Kornilov Shock Regiment

After the alleged coup collapsed as his troops disintegrated, Kornilov and his fellow conspirators were placed under arrest in the Bykhov jail. On 19 November, a few weeks after the proclamation of Soviet power in Petrograd, they escaped from their confinement (eased by the fact that the jail was guarded by Kornilov's supporters) and made their way to the Don region, which was controlled by the Don Cossacks. Here they linked up with General Mikhail Alekseev. Kornilov became the military commander of the anti-Bolshevik Volunteer Army with Alekseev as the political chief.[10]

The Kornilov Shock Detachment of the 8th Army was the most famous and longest-lived volunteer unit in the Russian Imperial Army. It was also the last regiment of the Russian Imperial Army and the first of the Volunteer Army.[11] In late 1917, the Kornilov Shock Regiment, one of the crack units of the Volunteer Army, was named after him, as well as many other autonomous White Army formations, such as the Kuban Cossack Kornilov Horse Regiment. Kornilov's forces became recognizable for their Totenkopf insignia, which appeared on the regiment's flags, pennants, and soldiers' sleeve patches.

Even before the Red Army was formed, Lavr Kornilov promised, "the greater the terror, the greater our victories."[12] He vowed that the goals of his forces must be fulfilled even if it was needed "to set fire to half the country and shed the blood of three-quarters of all Russians."[13] In the Don region village of Lezhanka alone, bands of Kornilov's officers killed more than 500 people.[14] On the other hand, Kornilov's adjutant recalled that the general "loved only the [Russia] itself" and served it for all his life, having no time to think about political systems. The Bolsheviks for him were dangerous traitors, who ruined Russia's unity and had to be stopped.[12]

On 24 February 1918, as Rostov and the Don Cossack capital of Novocherkassk fell to the Bolsheviks, Kornilov led the Volunteer Army on the epic 'Ice March' into the empty steppe towards the Kuban. Although badly outnumbered, he escaped destruction from pursuing Bolshevik forces and laid siege to Ekaterinodar, the capital of the Kuban Soviet Republic, on 10 April. However, in the early morning of 13 April, a Soviet shell landed on his farmhouse headquarters and killed him. He was quietly buried in nearby Gnadau (modern day Dolinovskoe).[15]

 
Kornilov's grave, prior to its desecration by the Bolsheviks.

A few days later, when the Bolsheviks gained control of the village, they unearthed Kornilov's coffin, dragged his corpse to the main square and burnt his remains on the local rubbish dump.[16]

Memorials Edit

In 13 April 2013, a monument to the late General was erected in Krasnodar.[17] Commemoration ceremonies took place with local cossacks, along with Cossacks from Don, Stavropol and Taman.[18]

Honours and awards Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c . Soviethistory.org. Archived from the original on 2014-03-30. Retrieved 2014-04-30.
  2. ^ A. L. Bauman. Governors of Saint-Petersburg. Saint-Petersburg, 2003. p. 409 Бауман А. Л. Руководители Санкт-Петербурга. стр. 409
  3. ^ . Reporter-ufo.ru. Archived from the original on 2014-01-06. Retrieved 2014-04-30.
  4. ^ Shaposhnikov. Memoirs. 1982. p. 92 (Шапошников Б. М. Воспоминания. М., 1982, с. 92).
  5. ^ "Цветков В. Ж. Лавр Георгиевич Корнилов. Часть 1". Dk1868.ru. Retrieved 2014-04-30.
  6. ^ Marshall, Alex (2006). The Russian General Staff and Asia, 1860-1917. Routledge. p. 154.
  7. ^ Preclík, Vratislav. Masaryk a legie (Masaryk and legions), váz. kniha, 219 pages, first issue vydalo nakladatelství Paris Karviná, Žižkova 2379 (734 01 Karvina, Czech Republic) ve spolupráci s Masarykovým demokratickým hnutím (Masaryk Democratic Movement, Prague), 2019, ISBN 978-80-87173-47-3, pages 15- 22, 36 - 39, 41 - 42, 111-112, 124–125, 128, 129, 132, 140–148, 184–199.
  8. ^ Rappaport, Four Sisters (2014), p. 295
  9. ^ "The Petrograd Soviet and the Kornilov affair, Revolution, The Russian Revolution, SOSE: History Year 9, NSW | Online Education Home Schooling Skwirk Australia". Skwirk.com.au. 1999-03-26. Archived from the original on 2013-04-10. Retrieved 2014-04-30.
  10. ^ Evan Mawdsley (2008) The Russian Civil War: 27
  11. ^ "Ударные части в русской армии. Article from the magazine "The New Watchman" 1994 No. 2. P. 130-140". The First World War. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  12. ^ a b "Цветков В. Ж. Лавр Георгиевич Корнилов. Часть 1". www.dk1868.ru. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
  13. ^ Mayer, Arno J. (2000). The Furies. Princeton University Press. p. 254. ISBN 0-691-09015-7.
  14. ^ Serge, Victor (1 January 1972). Serge, Year One of the Russian Revolution. Soviet Union: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. p. 299. ISBN 0-713-90135-7.
  15. ^ . bigenc.ru. Archived from the original on 2022-03-22. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  16. ^ Evan Mawdsley (2008) The Russian Civil War: 29.
  17. ^ Ридус. "Памятник Корнилову открыт на Кубани". Ридус (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  18. ^ "В Краснодаре около 5 тысяч человек почтили память генерала Корнилова". kubnews.ru (in Russian). 13 April 2019. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  19. ^ Gasparyan, AS. "Russians outside Russia: General Kornilov".[permanent dead link]

Bibliography Edit

  • Asher, Harvey. "The Kornilov Affair: A Reinterpretation." Russian Review (1970) 29#3 pp: 286-300. in JSTOR
  • Grebenkin, I. N. "General L.G. Kornilov: A Rough Sketch for a Character Portrait." Russian Studies in History 56.3 (2017): 188-211.
  • Katkov, George. Russia 1917, the Kornilov Affair: Kerensky and the Break-up of the Russian Army (Longman, 1980)
  • Mawdsley, Evan. The Russian Civil War (2008)
  • Moncure, James A. ed. Research Guide to European Historical Biography: 1450-Present (4 vol 1992) 3:1082-90
  • White, James D. "The Kornilov affair—a study in counter‐revolution," Europe‐Asia Studies (1968) 20#2 pp 187–205.
  • Yang, Ho-Hwan. "Different Ways of Interpreting the Kornilov Affair: A Review of George Katkov's The Kornilov Affair: Kerensky and the Break-up of the Russian Army, London and New York: Longman, 1980" The SNU Journal of Education Research (1993) pp 17–28. online

External links Edit

lavr, kornilov, lavr, georgiyevich, kornilov, russian, Лавр, Гео, ргиевич, Корни, лов, ˈlavr, ɡʲɪˈorɡʲɪjɪvʲɪtɕ, kɐrˈnʲiləf, august, august, 1870, april, 1918, russian, military, intelligence, officer, explorer, general, imperial, russian, army, during, world, . Lavr Georgiyevich Kornilov Russian Lavr Geo rgievich Korni lov IPA ˈlavr ɡʲɪˈorɡʲɪjɪvʲɪtɕ kɐrˈnʲilef 30 August O S 18 August 1870 13 April 1918 was a Russian military intelligence officer explorer and general in the Imperial Russian Army during World War I and the ensuing Russian Civil War Kornilov was of Siberian Cossack origin Today he is best remembered for the Kornilov Affair an unsuccessful endeavor in August September 1917 that was intended to strengthen Alexander Kerensky s Provisional Government dubious discuss but which led to Kerensky eventually having Kornilov arrested and charged with attempting a coup d etat and ultimately undermined Kerensky s rule 1 Lavr Georgiyevich KornilovKornilov in 1916Born 1870 08 30 30 August 1870Ust Kamenogorsk Semirechye Oblast Russian Turkestan Russian EmpireDied13 April 1918 1918 04 13 aged 47 near Yekaterinodar Russian SFSRAllegiance Russian Empire 1892 1917 White Movement 1917 1918 Service wbr branchImperial Russian Army White ArmyYears of service1892 1918RankGeneral of the InfantryCommands heldBlack Sea Fleet 1916 1917 Russian Army 1917 1918 Battles warsRusso Japanese War World War I Russian Civil WarAwardsOrder of St George twice Order of Saint Anna Order of Saint StanislausKornilov escaped from jail in November 1917 and subsequently became the military commander of the anti Bolshevik Volunteer Army which took the charge of anti Bolshevik opposition in the south of Russia He and his troops were badly outnumbered in many of their encounters and he was killed by a shell on 13 April 1918 while laying siege to Ekaterinodar the capital of the Kuban Soviet Republic Contents 1 Pre revolutionary career 2 Kornilov Affair 3 Russian Civil War 4 Memorials 5 Honours and awards 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksPre revolutionary career Edit nbsp Kornilov as a teenagerOne story relates how Kornilov was originally born as a Don Cossack Kalmyk named Lorya Dildinov and adopted in Ust Kamenogorsk Russian Turkestan now Kazakhstan by the family of his mother s brother the Russian Cossack Khorunzhiy Georgy Nikolayevich Kornilov whose wife was of Kazakh origin 2 3 But his sister wrote that he had not been adopted had not been a Don Cossack and that their mother had Polish and Altai Oirot descent Though their language was not a Kalmyk Mongolian one but because of their Asian race and their history in the Jungar Oirot Kalmyk state Altai Oirots were called Altai Kalmyks by Russians They were not Muslims or Kazakhs But Boris Shaposhnikov who served with Pyotr Kornilov the brother of Lavr in 1903 mentioned the Kyrgyz ancestry of their mother this name was usually used in reference to Kazakhs in 1903 4 Kornilov s Siberian Cossack father was a friend of Potanin 1835 1920 a prominent figure in the Siberian autonomy movement 5 Kornilov entered military school in Omsk in 1885 and went on to study at the Mikhailovsky Artillery School in St Petersburg in 1889 In August 1892 he was assigned as a lieutenant to the Turkestan Military District where he led several exploration missions in Eastern Turkestan Afghanistan and Persia learned several Central Asian languages and wrote detailed reports about his observations Kornilov returned to St Petersburg to attend the Nikolayev General Staff Academy and graduated as a captain in 1897 Again refusing a posting at St Peterburg he returned to the Turkestan Military District where he resumed his duties as a military intelligence officer Among his missions at this post was an attempt at traveling incognito to British India in 1904 though he was quickly discovered and subsequently kept under close surveillance 6 During the Russo Japanese War of 1904 1905 Kornilov became the Chief of staff of the 1st Infantry Brigade and was heavily involved in the Battle of Sandepu January 1905 and the Battle of Mukden February March 1905 He was awarded the Order of St George 4th class for bravery and promoted to the rank of colonel Following the end of the war Kornilov served as military attache in China from 1907 to 1911 He studied the Chinese language travelled extensively researching data on the history traditions and customs of the Chinese which he intended to use as material for a book about life in contemporary China and regularly sent detailed reports to the General Staff and Foreign Ministry Kornilov paid much attention to the prospects of cooperation between Russia and China in the Far East and met with the future president of China Chiang Kai shek In 1910 Kornilov was recalled from Beijing but remained in St Petersburg for only five months before departing for western Mongolia and Kashgar to examine the military situation along China s border with Russia On 2 February 1911 he became Commander of the 8th Infantry Regiment of Estonia and was later appointed commander of the 9th Siberian Rifle Division stationed in Vladivostok In 1914 at the start of World War I Kornilov was appointed commander of the 48th Infantry Division which saw combat in Galicia and the Carpathians In 1915 he was promoted to the rank of major general During heavy fighting he was captured by the Austrians in April 1915 when his division became isolated from the rest of the Russian forces After his capture Field Marshal Conrad the commander of the Austro Hungarian Army made a point of meeting him in person As a major general he was a high value prisoner of war but in July 1916 Kornilov managed to escape back to Russia and return to duty After the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II he was given command of the Petrograd Military District in March 1917 7 On 8 March Kornilov placed the Empress Alexandra and her children under house arrest at the Alexander Palace Nicholas was still held at Stavka replacing the Tsar s Escort and Combined Regiments of the Imperial Guard with 300 revolutionary troops 8 But when the Provisional Government declined to give him the authority he sought to deal with indiscipline he was transferred at his request to command the Russian Eighth Army His army inflicted a spectacular defeat on the Austrians taking ten thousand prisoners Russia s only notable military success in the year 1917 though after five days was forced to retreat On 24 July he was appointed commander of the southern front A week later he replaced Aleksei Brusilov as Supreme Commander in Chief of the Provisional Government s armed forces Kornilov Affair EditMain article Kornilov Affair nbsp Kornilov and Deputy War Minister Boris Savinkov in Moscow on 25 August O S 12 August 1917In the mass discontent following the July Days the Russian populace grew highly skeptical about the Provisional Government s abilities to alleviate the economic distress and social resentment among the lower classes Pavel Milyukov the Kadet leader describes the situation in Russia in late July as Chaos in the army chaos in foreign policy chaos in industry and chaos in the nationalist questions 1 Kornilov appointed commander in chief of the Russian army in July 1917 considered the Petrograd Soviet responsible for the breakdown in the military in recent times and believed that the Provisional Government lacked the power and confidence to dissolve the Petrograd Soviet Following several ambiguous correspondences between Kornilov and Alexander Kerensky Kornilov commanded an assault on the Petrograd Soviet 1 Because the Petrograd Soviet was able to quickly gather a powerful army of workers and soldiers in defence of the Revolution Kornilov s coup was an abysmal failure and he was placed under arrest The Kornilov Affair resulted in significantly increased distrust among Russians towards the Provisional Government 9 Russian Civil War Edit nbsp Kornilov Shock Detachment flag bearer 1917 nbsp Insignia of the Kornilov Shock RegimentAfter the alleged coup collapsed as his troops disintegrated Kornilov and his fellow conspirators were placed under arrest in the Bykhov jail On 19 November a few weeks after the proclamation of Soviet power in Petrograd they escaped from their confinement eased by the fact that the jail was guarded by Kornilov s supporters and made their way to the Don region which was controlled by the Don Cossacks Here they linked up with General Mikhail Alekseev Kornilov became the military commander of the anti Bolshevik Volunteer Army with Alekseev as the political chief 10 The Kornilov Shock Detachment of the 8th Army was the most famous and longest lived volunteer unit in the Russian Imperial Army It was also the last regiment of the Russian Imperial Army and the first of the Volunteer Army 11 In late 1917 the Kornilov Shock Regiment one of the crack units of the Volunteer Army was named after him as well as many other autonomous White Army formations such as the Kuban Cossack Kornilov Horse Regiment Kornilov s forces became recognizable for their Totenkopf insignia which appeared on the regiment s flags pennants and soldiers sleeve patches Even before the Red Army was formed Lavr Kornilov promised the greater the terror the greater our victories 12 He vowed that the goals of his forces must be fulfilled even if it was needed to set fire to half the country and shed the blood of three quarters of all Russians 13 In the Don region village of Lezhanka alone bands of Kornilov s officers killed more than 500 people 14 On the other hand Kornilov s adjutant recalled that the general loved only the Russia itself and served it for all his life having no time to think about political systems The Bolsheviks for him were dangerous traitors who ruined Russia s unity and had to be stopped 12 On 24 February 1918 as Rostov and the Don Cossack capital of Novocherkassk fell to the Bolsheviks Kornilov led the Volunteer Army on the epic Ice March into the empty steppe towards the Kuban Although badly outnumbered he escaped destruction from pursuing Bolshevik forces and laid siege to Ekaterinodar the capital of the Kuban Soviet Republic on 10 April However in the early morning of 13 April a Soviet shell landed on his farmhouse headquarters and killed him He was quietly buried in nearby Gnadau modern day Dolinovskoe 15 nbsp Kornilov s grave prior to its desecration by the Bolsheviks A few days later when the Bolsheviks gained control of the village they unearthed Kornilov s coffin dragged his corpse to the main square and burnt his remains on the local rubbish dump 16 Memorials EditIn 13 April 2013 a monument to the late General was erected in Krasnodar 17 Commemoration ceremonies took place with local cossacks along with Cossacks from Don Stavropol and Taman 18 Honours and awards EditOrder of St Stanislaus third degree 1901 2nd degree 1904 and 1906 with swords Order of St Anne 3rd degree 1903 and 2nd degree 6 December 1909 Order of St George 4th degree 9 August 1905 and 3rd degree 28 April 1915 Gold Sword for Bravery 9 May 1907 Badge of the 1st Kuban Ice campaign 3 October 1918 issued posthumously No 1 out of 3 689 19 References Edit a b c Kornilov Affair Soviethistory org Archived from the original on 2014 03 30 Retrieved 2014 04 30 A L Bauman Governors of Saint Petersburg Saint Petersburg 2003 p 409 Bauman A L Rukovoditeli Sankt Peterburga str 409 Kalmyk ili ne kalmyk Obsherossijskaya nezavisimaya gazeta Yuzhnyj reporter Reporter ufo ru Archived from the original on 2014 01 06 Retrieved 2014 04 30 Shaposhnikov Memoirs 1982 p 92 Shaposhnikov B M Vospominaniya M 1982 s 92 Cvetkov V Zh Lavr Georgievich Kornilov Chast 1 Dk1868 ru Retrieved 2014 04 30 Marshall Alex 2006 The Russian General Staff and Asia 1860 1917 Routledge p 154 Preclik Vratislav Masaryk a legie Masaryk and legions vaz kniha 219 pages first issue vydalo nakladatelstvi Paris Karvina Zizkova 2379 734 01 Karvina Czech Republic ve spolupraci s Masarykovym demokratickym hnutim Masaryk Democratic Movement Prague 2019 ISBN 978 80 87173 47 3 pages 15 22 36 39 41 42 111 112 124 125 128 129 132 140 148 184 199 Rappaport Four Sisters 2014 p 295 The Petrograd Soviet and the Kornilov affair Revolution The Russian Revolution SOSE History Year 9 NSW Online Education Home Schooling Skwirk Australia Skwirk com au 1999 03 26 Archived from the original on 2013 04 10 Retrieved 2014 04 30 Evan Mawdsley 2008 The Russian Civil War 27 Udarnye chasti v russkoj armii Article from the magazine The New Watchman 1994 No 2 P 130 140 The First World War Retrieved 8 July 2018 a b Cvetkov V Zh Lavr Georgievich Kornilov Chast 1 www dk1868 ru Retrieved 2022 06 26 Mayer Arno J 2000 The Furies Princeton University Press p 254 ISBN 0 691 09015 7 Serge Victor 1 January 1972 Serge Year One of the Russian Revolution Soviet Union Holt Rinehart and Winston p 299 ISBN 0 713 90135 7 KORNILOV Bolshaya rossijskaya enciklopediya elektronnaya versiya bigenc ru Archived from the original on 2022 03 22 Retrieved 2021 11 17 Evan Mawdsley 2008 The Russian Civil War 29 Ridus Pamyatnik Kornilovu otkryt na Kubani Ridus in Russian Retrieved 2021 11 17 V Krasnodare okolo 5 tysyach chelovek pochtili pamyat generala Kornilova kubnews ru in Russian 13 April 2019 Retrieved 2021 11 17 Gasparyan AS Russians outside Russia General Kornilov permanent dead link Bibliography EditAsher Harvey The Kornilov Affair A Reinterpretation Russian Review 1970 29 3 pp 286 300 in JSTOR Grebenkin I N General L G Kornilov A Rough Sketch for a Character Portrait Russian Studies in History 56 3 2017 188 211 Katkov George Russia 1917 the Kornilov Affair Kerensky and the Break up of the Russian Army Longman 1980 Mawdsley Evan The Russian Civil War 2008 Moncure James A ed Research Guide to European Historical Biography 1450 Present 4 vol 1992 3 1082 90 White James D The Kornilov affair a study in counter revolution Europe Asia Studies 1968 20 2 pp 187 205 Yang Ho Hwan Different Ways of Interpreting the Kornilov Affair A Review of George Katkov s The Kornilov Affair Kerensky and the Break up of the Russian Army London and New York Longman 1980 The SNU Journal of Education Research 1993 pp 17 28 onlineExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lavr Georgevich Kornilov Danilov Yuri Vinogradoff Paul 1922 Kornilov Lavr Georgievich Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lavr Kornilov amp oldid 1177505217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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