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Russian Civil War

Russian Civil War
Part of the Russian Revolution, the aftermath of World War I, and the interwar period

Clockwise from top left:
Date7 November 1917 – 16 June 1923[1][2] (5 years, 7 months, 1 week and 2 days)
Location
Result
  • Bolshevik victory
  • Partial victory by independence movements (see § Aftermath)
Main belligerents
Also:



Also:

Also:
Also:
Commanders and leaders
Vladimir Lenin
Leon Trotsky
Yakov Sverdlov 
Jukums Vācietis
Sergey Kamenev
Nikolai Podvoisky
Nikolai Krylenko
Joseph Stalin
Yukhym Medvedev
Vilhelm Knorin
Alexander Krasnoshchyokov
Alexander Kerensky 
Alexander Kolchak 
Lavr Kornilov 
Anton Denikin
Pyotr Wrangel
Nikolai Yudenich
Grigory Semyonov
Yevgeny Miller
Mikhail Diterikhs
Pyotr Krasnov
Roman von Ungern-Sternberg 
Józef Piłsudski
Symon Petliura
C.G.E. Mannerheim
S. Bułak-Bałachowicz
Konstantin Päts
Jānis Čakste
Antanas Smetona
Ion Inculeț
Noe Zhordania
A. Khatisian
Nasib Yusifbeyli 
Enver Pasha 
Vladimir Volsky
Maria Spiridonova
Nykyfor Hryhoriv 
Nestor Makhno
Stepan Petrichenko
and others
Otani Kikuzo
Edmund Ironside
William S. Graves
Radola Gajda
Maurice Janin
Ludomir Junosza-Stępowski 
and others
H. von Eichhorn 
Nuri Pasha
Jan Sierada
Pavlo Skoropadskyi
P. Bermondt-Avalov
and others
Strength

Local forces:

Also:

Ottoman Army:
20,000 (peak)

Also:
Casualties and losses

  • 13,000 killed
  • 6,500 killed
  • 938+ killed[8]
  • 596 killed
  • 350 killed
  • 179 killed
  • ~250,000
  • 57,000 killed
  • 113,000 wounded
  • 50,000 POWs
  • ~125,000
  • 15,000 killed
  • ~5,000
  • 3,500 killed
  • 1,650 executed/dead

  • 500 killed

7,000,000–12,000,000 total casualties, including
civilians and non-combatants

1–2 million refugees outside Russia

The Russian Civil War[o] was a multi-party civil war in the former Russian Empire sparked by the overthrowing of the social-democratic Russian Provisional Government in the October Revolution, as many factions vied to determine Russia's political future. It resulted in the formation of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic and later the Soviet Union in most of its territory. Its finale marked the end of the Russian Revolution, which was one of the key events of the 20th century.

The Russian monarchy ended with the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II during the February Revolution, and Russia was in a state of political flux. A tense summer culminated in the October Revolution, where the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government of the new Russian Republic. Bolshevik seizure of power was not universally accepted, and the country descended into civil war. The two largest combatants were the Red Army, fighting for the establishment of a Bolshevik-led socialist state headed by Vladimir Lenin, and the loosely allied forces known as the White Army, which functioned as a political big tent for right- and left-wing opposition to Bolshevik rule. In addition, rival militant socialists, notably the Ukrainian anarchists of the Makhnovshchina and Left Socialist-Revolutionaries, were involved in conflict against the Bolsheviks. They, as well as non-ideological green armies, opposed the Bolsheviks, the Whites and the foreign interventionists.[10] Thirteen foreign nations intervened against the Red Army, notably the Allied intervention, whose primary goal was re-establishing the Eastern Front of World War I. Three foreign nations of the Central Powers also intervened, rivaling the Allied intervention with the main goal of retaining the territory they had received in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Soviet Russia.

The Bolsheviks initially consolidated control over most of the former empire. The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was an emergency peace with the German Empire, who had captured vast swathes of the Russian territory during the chaos of the revolution. In May 1918, the Czechoslovak Legion in Russia revolted in Siberia. In reaction, the Allies began their North Russian and Siberian interventions. That, combined with the creation of the Provisional All-Russian Government, saw the reduction of Bolshevik-controlled territory to most of European Russia and parts of Central Asia. In 1919, the White Army launched several offensives from the east in March, the south in July, and west in October. The advances were later checked by the Eastern Front counteroffensive, the Southern Front counteroffensive, and the defeat of the Northwestern Army.

By 1919, the White armies were in retreat and by the start of 1920 were defeated on all three fronts.[11] Although the Bolsheviks were victorious, the territorial extent of the Russian state had been reduced, for many non-Russian ethnic groups had used the disarray to push for national independence.[12] In March 1921, during a related war against Poland, the Peace of Riga was signed, splitting disputed territories in Belarus and Ukraine between the Republic of Poland and Soviet Russia. Soviet Russia sought to re-conquer all newly independent nations of the former Empire, although their success was limited. Estonia, Finland, Latvia, and Lithuania all repelled Soviet invasions, while Ukraine, Belarus (as a result of the Polish–Soviet War), Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia were occupied by the Red Army.[13][14] By 1921, Soviet Russia had defeated the Ukrainian national movements and occupied the Caucasus, although anti-Bolshevik uprisings in Central Asia lasted until the late 1920s.[15]

The armies under Kolchak were eventually forced on a mass retreat eastward. Bolshevik forces advanced east, despite encountering resistance in Chita, Yakut and Mongolia. Soon the Red Army split the Don and Volunteer armies, forcing evacuations in Novorossiysk in March and Crimea in November 1920. After that, anti-Bolshevik resistance was sporadic for several years until the collapse of the White Army in Yakutia in June 1923, but continued on with the Muslim Basmachi movement in Central Asia and Khabarovsk Krai until 1934. There were an estimated 7 to 12 million casualties during the war, mostly civilians.[16]

Background edit

World War I edit

The Russian Empire fought in World War I from 1914 alongside France and the United Kingdom (Triple Entente) against Germany, Austria-Hungary and Ottoman Empire (Central Powers).

February Revolution edit

The February Revolution of 1917 resulted in the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II of Russia. As a result, the social-democratic Russian Provisional Government was established, and soviets, elected councils of workers, soldiers, and peasants, were organized throughout the country, leading to a situation of dual power. The Russian Republic was proclaimed in September of the same year.

October Revolution edit

The Provisional Government, led by Socialist Revolutionary Party politician Alexander Kerensky, was unable to solve the most pressing issues of the country, most importantly to end the war with the Central Powers. A failed military coup by General Lavr Kornilov in September 1917 led to a surge in support for the Bolsheviks, who took control of the soviets, which until then had been controlled by the Socialist Revolutionaries. Promising an end to the war and "all power to the Soviets", the Bolsheviks then ended dual power by overthrowing the Provisional Government in late October, on the eve of the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, in what would be the second Revolution of 1917. Despite the Bolsheviks' seizure of power, they lost to the Socialist Revolutionary Party in the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly election, and the Constituent Assembly was dissolved by the Bolsheviks in retaliation. The Bolsheviks soon lost the support of other far-left allies, such as the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries, after their acceptance of the terms of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk presented by the German Empire.[17] Conversely, a number of prominent members of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries had assumed positions in Lenin's government and lead commissariats in several areas. This included agriculture (Kolegaev), property (Karelin), justice (Steinberg), post offices and telegraphs (Proshian) and local government (Trutovsky).[18] The Bolsheviks also reserved a number of vacant seats in the Soviets and Central Executive for the Menshevik and Left Socialist Revolutionaries parties in proportion to their vote share at the Congress.[19] The dissolution of the Constituent Assembly was also approved by the Left Socialist Revolutionaries and anarchists, both groups were in favour of a more radical democracy.[20]

Formation of the Red Army edit

From mid-1917 onwards, the Russian Army, the successor-organisation of the old Imperial Russian Army, started to disintegrate;[21] the Bolsheviks used the volunteer-based Red Guards as their main military force, augmented by an armed military component of the Cheka (the Bolshevik state secret police). In January 1918, after significant Bolshevik reverses in combat, the future Russian People's Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs Leon Trotsky headed the reorganization of the Red Guards into a Workers' and Peasants' Red Army in order to create a more effective fighting force. The Bolsheviks appointed political commissars to each unit of the Red Army to maintain morale and to ensure loyalty.

In June 1918, when it had become apparent that a revolutionary army composed solely of workers would not suffice, Trotsky instituted mandatory conscription of the rural peasantry into the Red Army.[22] The Bolsheviks overcame opposition of rural Russians to Red Army conscription units by taking hostages and shooting them when necessary in order to force compliance.[23] The forced conscription drive had mixed results, successfully creating a larger army than the Whites, but with members indifferent towards communist ideology.[17]

The Red Army also utilized former Tsarist officers as "military specialists" (voenspetsy);[24] sometimes their families were taken hostage in order to ensure their loyalty.[25] At the start of the civil war, former Tsarist officers formed three-quarters of the Red Army officer-corps.[25] By its end, 83% of all Red Army divisional and corps commanders were ex-Tsarist soldiers.[24]

Anti-Bolshevik movement edit

 
Admiral Alexander Kolchak (seated) and General Alfred Knox (behind Kolchak) observing military exercise, 1919

The White movement (Russian: pre–1918 Бѣлое движеніе / post–1918 Белое движение, tr. Beloye dvizheniye, IPA: [ˈbʲɛləɪ dvʲɪˈʐenʲɪɪ])[p] also known as the Whites (Белые, Beliye), was a loose confederation of anti-communist forces that fought the communist Bolsheviks, also known as the Reds, in the Russian Civil War and that to a lesser extent continued operating as militarized associations of rebels both outside and within Russian borders in Siberia until roughly World War II (1939–1945). The movement's military arm was the White Army (Бѣлая армія / Белая армия, Belaya armiya), also known as the White Guard (Бѣлая гвардія / Белая гвардия, Belaya gvardiya) or White Guardsmen (Бѣлогвардейцы / Белогвардейцы, Belogvardeytsi).

When the White Army was created, the structure of the Russian Army of the Provisional Government period was used, while almost every individual formation had its own characteristics. The military art of the White Army was based on the experience of World War I, which, however, left a strong imprint on the specifics of the Civil War.[26]

During the Russian Civil War, the White movement functioned as a big tent political movement representing an array of political opinions in Russia united in their opposition to the Bolsheviks—from the republican-minded liberals and Kerenskyite social-democrats on the left through monarchists and supporters of a united multinational Russia to the ultra-nationalist Black Hundreds on the right.

Dissolution of the Constituent Assembly, early Constituent Assembly rebellions edit

The Russian Constituent Assembly had been a demand of the Bolsheviks against the Provisional Government, which kept delaying it. After the October Revolution the elections were run by the body appointed by the previous Provisional Government. It was based on universal suffrage but used party lists from before the Left-Right SR split. The anti-Bolshevik Right SRs won the elections with the majority of the seats,[27] after which Lenin's Theses on the Constituent Assembly argued in Pravda that formal democracy was impossible because of class conflicts, conflicts with Ukraine and the Kadet-Kaledin uprising. He argued the Constituent Assembly must unconditionally accept sovereignty of the soviet government or it would be dealt with "by revolutionary means".[28]

On December 30, 1917, the SR Nikolai Avksentiev and some followers were arrested for organizing a conspiracy. This was the first time Bolsheviks used this kind of repression against a socialist party. Izvestia said the arrest was not related to his membership in the Constituent Assembly.[29]

 
Viktor Chernov

On January 4, 1918, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee made a resolution saying the slogan "all power to the constituent assembly" was counterrevolutionary and equivalent to "down with the soviets".[30]

 
Maria Spiridonova

The Constituent Assembly met on January 18, 1918. The Right SR Chernov was elected president defeating the Bolshevik supported candidate, the Left SR Maria Spiridonova (she would later break with the Bolsheviks and after the decades of gulag, she was shot on Stalin's orders in 1941). The Bolsheviks subsequently disbanded the Constituent Assembly and proceeded to rule the country as a one-party state with all opposition parties outlawed.[31][32] A simultaneous demonstration in favor of the Constituent Assembly was dispersed with force, but there was little protest afterwards.[33]

The first large Cheka repression involving the killing of libertarian socialists in Petrograd began in April 1918. On May 1, 1918, a pitched battle took place in Moscow between the anarchists and the Bolshevik police.[34]

Constituent Assembly uprising edit

The Union of Regeneration was founded in Moscow in April 1918 as an underground agency organizing democratic resistance to the Bolshevik dictatorship, composed of the Popular Socialists, Right Socialist Revolutionaries, and Defensists, among others. They were tasked with propping up anti-Bolshevik forces and to create a Russian state system based on civil liberties, patriotism, and state-consciousness with the goal to liberate the country from the "Germano-Bolshevik" yoke.[35][36][37]

On May 7, 1918, the Eighth Party Council of the Socialist Revolutionary Party commenced in Moscow and recognized the Union's leading role, putting aside political ideology and class for the purpose of Russia's salvation. They decided to start an uprising against the Bolsheviks with the goal of reconvening the Russian Constituent Assembly.[35] While preparations were under way, the Czechoslovak Legions overthrew Bolshevik rule in Siberia, the Urals and the Volga region in late May-early June 1918 and the center of SR activity shifted there. On June 8, 1918, five Constituent Assembly members formed the All-Russian Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly (Komuch) in Samara and declared it the new supreme authority in the country.[38] The Social Revolutionary Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia came to power on 29 June 1918, after the uprising in Vladivostok.

Exclusion of Mensheviks and SRs edit

At the 5th All-Russia Congress of Soviets of July 4, 1918, the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries had 352 delegates compared to 745 Bolsheviks out of 1132 total. The Left SRs raised disagreements on the suppression of rival parties, the death penalty, and mainly, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. The Bolsheviks excluded the Right SRs and Mensheviks from the government on 14 June for associating with counterrevolutionaries and seeking to "organize armed attacks against the workers and peasants" (though Mensheviks had not supported them), while the Left SRs advocated forming a government of all socialist parties. The Left SRs agreed with extrajudicial execution of political opponents to stop the counterrevolution, but opposed having the government legally pronouncing death sentences, an unusual position that is best understood within the context of the group's terrorist past. The Left SRs strongly opposed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and opposed Trotsky's insistence that no one try to attack German troops in Ukraine.[39]

According to historian Marcel Liebman, Lenin's wartime measures such as banning opposition parties was prompted by the fact that several political parties either took up arms against the new Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, or participated in sabotage, collaboration with the deposed Tsarists, or made assassination attempts against Lenin and other Bolshevik leaders.[40] Liebman noted that opposition parties such as the Cadets and Mensheviks who were democratically elected to the Soviets in some areas, then proceeded to use their mandate to welcome in Tsarist and foreign capitalist military forces.[40] In one incident in Baku, the British military, once invited in, proceeded to execute members of the Bolshevik Party who had peacefully stood down from the Soviet when they failed to win the elections. As a result, the Bolsheviks banned each opposition party when it turned against the Soviet government. In some cases, bans were lifted. This banning of parties did not have the same repressive character as later bans enforced under the Stalinist regime.[40]

Repression edit

In December 1917, Felix Dzerzhinsky was appointed to the duty of rooting out counter-revolutionary threats to the Soviet government. He was the director of the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission (aka Cheka), a predecessor of the KGB that served as the secret police for the Soviets.[41]

From early 1918, the Bolsheviks started physical elimination of opposition, other socialist and revolutionary fractions. Anarchists were among the first:

Of all the revolutionary elements in Russia it is the Anarchists who now suffer the most ruthless and systematic persecution. Their suppression by the Bolsheviki began already in 1918, when — in the month of April of that year — the Communist Government attacked, without provocation or warning, the Anarchist Club of Moscow and by the use of machine guns and artillery "liquidated" the whole organisation. It was the beginning of Anarchist hounding, but it was sporadic in character, breaking out now and then, quite planless, and frequently self-contradictory.

— Alexander Berkman, Emma Goldman, "Bolsheviks Shooting Anarchists"[34]

On 11 August 1918, prior to the events that would officially catalyze the Red Terror, Vladimir Lenin had sent telegrams "to introduce mass terror" in Nizhny Novgorod in response to a suspected civilian uprising there, and to "crush" landowners in Penza who resisted, sometimes violently, the requisitioning of their grain by military detachments:[42]

Comrades! The kulak uprising in your five districts must be crushed without pity ... You must make example of these people.

(1) Hang (I mean hang publicly, so that people see it) at least 100 kulaks, rich bastards, and known bloodsuckers.
(2) Publish their names.
(3) Seize all their grain.
(4) Single out the hostages per my instructions in yesterday's telegram.

Do all this so that for miles (versts) around people see it all, understand it, tremble, and tell themselves that we are killing the bloodthirsty kulaks and that we will continue to do so ...

Yours, Lenin.

P.S. Find tougher people.

In a mid-August 1920 letter, having received information that in Estonia and Latvia, with which Soviet Russia had concluded peace treaties, volunteers were being enrolled in anti-Bolshevik detachments, Lenin wrote to E. M. Sklyansky, deputy chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council of the Republic:[43]

Great plan! Finish it with Dzerzhinsky. While pretending to be the "greens" (we will blame them later), we will advance by 10–20 miles (versts) and hang kulaks, priests, landowners. Prize: 100.000 rubles for each hanged man.

Leonid Kannegisser, a young military cadet of the Imperial Russian Army, assassinated Moisey Uritsky on August 17, 1918, outside the Petrograd Cheka headquarters in retaliation for the execution of his friend and other officers.[44]

 
Vladimir Pchelin's depiction of the assassination attempt on Lenin

On August 30, the SR Fanny Kaplan unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate Lenin,[45] who sought to eliminate political dissent, opposition, and any other threat to Bolshevik power.[46] As a result of the failed attempt on Lenin's life, he began to crack down on his political enemies in an event known as the Red Terror. More broadly, the term is usually applied to Bolshevik political repression throughout the Civil War (1917–1922),[47][48][41]

During interrogation by the Cheka, she made the following statement:

My name is Fanya Kaplan. Today I shot Lenin. I did it on my own. I will not say from whom I obtained my revolver. I will give no details. I had resolved to kill Lenin long ago. I consider him a traitor to the Revolution. I was exiled to Akatui for participating in an assassination attempt against a Tsarist official in Kiev. I spent 11 years at hard labour. After the Revolution, I was freed. I favoured the Constituent Assembly and am still for it.[49]

Kaplan referenced the Bolsheviks' growing authoritarianism, citing their forcible shutdown of the Constituent Assembly in January 1918, the elections to which they had lost. When it became clear that Kaplan would not implicate any accomplices, she was executed in Alexander Garden. The order was carried out by the commander of the Kremlin, the former Baltic sailor P. D. Malkov and a group of Latvian Bolsheviks[50][page needed][non-primary source needed] on September 3, 1918, with a bullet to the back of the head.[51] Her corpse was bundled into a barrel and set alight. The order came from Yakov Sverdlov, who only six weeks earlier had ordered the murder of the Tsar and his family.[52][53]: 442 

These events persuaded the government to heed Dzerzhinsky's lobbying for greater terror against opposition. The campaign of mass repressions would officially begin thereafter.[45][41] The Red Terror is considered to have officially begun between 17 and 30 August 1918.[45][41]

Revolts against grain requisitioning edit

Protests against grain requisitioning of the peasantry were a major component of the Tambov Rebellion and similar uprisings; Lenin's New Economic Policy was introduced as a concession.

The policies of "food dictatorship" proclaimed by the Bolsheviks in May 1918 sparked violent resistance in numerous districts of European Russia: revolts and clashes between the peasants and the Red Army were reported in Voronezh, Tambov, Penza, Saratov and in the districts of Kostroma, Moscow, Novgorod, Petrograd, Pskov and Smolensk. The revolts were bloodily crushed by the Bolsheviks: in the Voronezh Oblast, the Red Guards killed sixteen peasants during the pacification of the village, while another village was shelled with artillery in order to force the peasants to surrender and in the Novgorod Oblast the rebelling peasants were dispersed with machine-gun fire from a train sent by a detachment of Latvian Red Army soldiers.[54] While the Bolsheviks immediately denounced the rebellion as orchestrated by the SRs, there is actually no evidence that they were involved into peasant violence, which they deemed as counterproductive.[55]

Allied intervention edit

The Western Allies armed and supported opponents of the Bolsheviks. They were worried about a possible Russo-German alliance, the prospect of the Bolsheviks making good on their threats to default on Imperial Russia's massive foreign debts and the possibility that Communist revolutionary ideas would spread (a concern shared by many Central Powers). Hence, many of the countries expressed their support for the Whites, including the provision of troops and supplies. Winston Churchill declared that Bolshevism must be "strangled in its cradle".[56] The British and French had supported Russia during World War I on a massive scale with war materials.

After the treaty, it looked like much of that material would fall into the hands of the Germans. To meet that danger, the Allies intervened with Great Britain and France sending troops into Russian ports. There were violent clashes with the Bolsheviks. Britain intervened in support of the White forces to defeat the Bolsheviks and prevent the spread of communism across Europe.[57]

Buffer states edit

 
Borders of the buffer states drawn by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

The German Empire created several short-lived buffer states within its sphere of influence after the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk: the United Baltic Duchy, Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, Kingdom of Lithuania, Kingdom of Poland,[58] the Belarusian People's Republic, and the Ukrainian State. Following Germany's Armistice in World War I in November 1918, the states were abolished.[59][60]

Finland was the first republic that declared its independence from Russia in December 1917 and established itself in the ensuing Finnish Civil War between pro-independence White Guards and pro-Russian Bolshevik Red Guards from January–May 1918.[61] The Second Polish Republic, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia formed their own armies immediately after the abolition of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty and the start of the Soviet westward offensive and subsequent Polish-Soviet War in November 1918.[62]

Geography and chronology edit

In the European part of Russia the war was fought across three main fronts: the eastern, the southern and the northwestern. It can also be roughly split into the following periods.

 
Anti-Bolshevik Volunteer Army in South Russia, January 1918

The first period lasted from the Revolution until the Armistice, or roughly March 1917 to November 1918. Already on the date of the Revolution, Cossack General Alexey Kaledin refused to recognize it and assumed full governmental authority in the Don region,[63] where the Volunteer Army began amassing support. The signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk also resulted in direct Allied intervention in Russia and the arming of military forces opposed to the Bolshevik government. There were also many German commanders who offered support against the Bolsheviks, fearing a confrontation with them was impending as well.

During the first period, the Bolsheviks took control of Central Asia out of the hands of the Provisional Government and White Army, setting up a base for the Communist Party in the Steppe and Turkestan, where nearly two million Russian settlers were located.[64]

Most of the fighting in the first period was sporadic, involved only small groups and had a fluid and rapidly shifting strategic situation. Among the antagonists were the Czechoslovak Legion,[65] the Poles of the 4th and 5th Rifle Divisions and the pro-Bolshevik Red Latvian riflemen.

The second period of the war lasted from January to November 1919. At first the White armies' advances from the south (under Denikin), the east (under Kolchak) and the northwest (under Yudenich) were successful, forcing the Red Army and its allies back on all three fronts. In July 1919 the Red Army suffered another reverse after a mass defection of units in the Crimea to the anarchist Insurgent Army under Nestor Makhno, enabling anarchist forces to consolidate power in Ukraine. Leon Trotsky soon reformed the Red Army, concluding the first of two military alliances with the anarchists. In June the Red Army first checked Kolchak's advance. After a series of engagements, assisted by an Insurgent Army offensive against White supply lines, the Red Army defeated Denikin's and Yudenich's armies in October and November.

The third period of the war was the extended siege of the last White forces in the Crimea in 1920. General Wrangel had gathered the remnants of Denikin's armies, occupying much of the Crimea. An attempted invasion of southern Ukraine was rebuffed by the Insurgent Army under Makhno's command. Pursued into Crimea by Makhno's troops, Wrangel went over to the defensive in the Crimea. After an abortive move north against the Red Army, Wrangel's troops were forced south by Red Army and Insurgent Army forces; Wrangel and the remains of his army were evacuated to Constantinople in November 1920.

Warfare edit

October Revolution edit

 
European theatre of the Russian Civil War

In the October Revolution, the Bolshevik Party directed the Red Guard (armed groups of workers and Imperial army deserters) to seize control of Petrograd and immediately began the armed takeover of cities and villages throughout the former Russian Empire. In January 1918 the Bolsheviks dissolved the Russian Constituent Assembly and proclaimed the Soviets (workers' councils) as the new government of Russia.

Initial anti-Bolshevik uprisings edit

The first attempt to regain power from the Bolsheviks was made by the Kerensky-Krasnov uprising in October 1917. It was supported by the Junker Mutiny in Petrograd but was quickly put down by the Red Guard, notably including the Latvian Rifle Division.

The initial groups that fought against the Communists were local Cossack armies that had declared their loyalty to the Provisional Government. Kaledin of the Don Cossacks and General Grigory Semenov of the Siberian Cossacks were prominent among them. The leading Tsarist officers of the Imperial Russian Army also started to resist. In November, General Mikhail Alekseev, the Tsar's Chief of Staff during the First World War, began to organize the Volunteer Army in Novocherkassk. Volunteers of the small army were mostly officers of the old Russian army, military cadets and students. In December 1917, Alekseev was joined by General Lavr Kornilov, Denikin and other Tsarist officers who had escaped from the jail, where they had been imprisoned following the abortive Kornilov affair just before the Revolution.[66] On 9 December, the Military Revolutionary Committee in Rostov rebelled, with the Bolsheviks controlling the city for five days until the Alekseev Organization supported Kaledin in recapturing the city. According to Peter Kenez, "The operation, begun on December 9, can be regarded as the beginning of the Civil War."[67]

Having stated in the November 1917 "Declaration of Rights of Nations of Russia" that any nation under imperial Russian rule should be immediately given the power of self-determination, the Bolsheviks had begun to usurp the power of the Provisional Government in the territories of Central Asia soon after the establishment of the Turkestan Committee in Tashkent.[68] In April 1917 the Provisional Government set up the committee, which was mostly made up of former Tsarist officials.[69] The Bolsheviks attempted to take control of the Committee in Tashkent on 12 September 1917 but it was unsuccessful, and many leaders were arrested. However, because the Committee lacked representation of the native population and poor Russian settlers, they had to release the Bolshevik prisoners almost immediately because of a public outcry, and a successful takeover of that government body took place two months later in November.[70] The Leagues of Mohammedam Working People (which Russian settlers and natives who had been sent to work behind the lines for the Tsarist government in 1916 formed in March 1917) had led numerous strikes in the industrial centers throughout September 1917.[71] However, after the Bolshevik destruction of the Provisional Government in Tashkent, Muslim elites formed an autonomous government in Turkestan, commonly called the "Kokand autonomy" (or simply Kokand).[72] The White Russians supported that government body, which lasted several months because of Bolshevik troop isolation from Moscow.[73] In January 1918 the Soviet forces, under Lt. Col. Muravyov, invaded Ukraine and invested Kiev, where the Central Council of Ukraine held power. With the help of the Kiev Arsenal Uprising, the Bolsheviks captured the city on 26 January.[74]

Peace with the Central Powers edit

 
Soviet delegation with Trotsky greeted by German officers at Brest-Litovsk, 8 January 1918

The Bolsheviks decided to immediately make peace with the Central Powers, as they had promised the Russian people before the Revolution.[75] Vladimir Lenin's political enemies attributed that decision to his sponsorship by the Foreign Office of Wilhelm II, German Emperor, offered to Lenin in hope that, with a revolution, Russia would withdraw from World War I. That suspicion was bolstered by the German Foreign Ministry's sponsorship of Lenin's return to Petrograd.[76] However, after the military fiasco of the summer offensive (June 1917) by the Russian Provisional Government had devastated the structure of the Russian Army, it became crucial that Lenin realize the promised peace.[77] Even before the failed summer offensive the Russian population was very skeptical about the continuation of the war. Western socialists had promptly arrived from France and from the UK to convince the Russians to continue the fight, but could not change the new pacifist mood of Russia.[78]

On 16 December 1917 an armistice was signed between Russia and the Central Powers in Brest-Litovsk and peace talks began.[79] As a condition for peace, the proposed treaty by the Central Powers conceded huge portions of the former Russian Empire to the German Empire and the Ottoman Empire, greatly upsetting nationalists and conservatives. Leon Trotsky, representing the Bolsheviks, refused at first to sign the treaty while continuing to observe a unilateral cease-fire, following the policy of "No war, no peace".[80]

Therefore, on 18 February 1918, the Germans began Operation Faustschlag on the Eastern Front, encountering virtually no resistance in a campaign that lasted 11 days.[80] Signing a formal peace treaty was the only option in the eyes of the Bolsheviks because the Russian Army was demobilized, and the newly formed Red Guard could not stop the advance. They also understood that the impending counter-revolutionary resistance was more dangerous than the concessions of the treaty, which Lenin viewed as temporary in the light of aspirations for a world revolution. The Soviets acceded to a peace treaty, and the formal agreement, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, was ratified on 3 March. The Soviets viewed the treaty as merely a necessary and expedient means to end the war.

Ukraine, South Russia, and Caucasus (1918) edit

 
February 1918 article from The New York Times showing a map of the Russian Imperial territories claimed by the Ukrainian People's Republic at the time, before the annexation of the Austro-Hungarian lands of the West Ukrainian People's Republic

In Ukraine, the German-Austrian Operation Faustschlag had by April 1918 removed the Bolsheviks from Ukraine.[81][82][83][84][85] The German and Austro-Hungarian victories in Ukraine were caused by the apathy of the locals and the inferior fighting skills of Bolsheviks troops to their Austro-Hungarian and German counterparts.[85]

Under Soviet pressure, the Volunteer Army embarked on the epic Ice March from Yekaterinodar to Kuban on 22 February 1918, where they joined with the Kuban Cossacks to mount an abortive assault on Yekaterinodar.[86] The Soviets recaptured Rostov on the next day.[86] Kornilov was killed in the fighting on 13 April, and Denikin took over command. Fighting off its pursuers without respite, the army succeeded in breaking its way through back towards the Don by May, where the Cossack uprising against the Bolsheviks had started.[87]

The Baku Soviet Commune was established on 13 April. Germany landed its Caucasus Expedition troops in Poti on 8 June. The Ottoman Army of Islam (in coalition with Azerbaijan) drove them out of Baku on 26 July 1918. Subsequently, the Dashanaks, Right SRs and Mensheviks started negotiations with Gen. Dunsterville, the commander of the British troops in Persia. The Bolsheviks and their Left SR allies were opposed to it, but on 25 July the majority of the Soviets voted to call in the British and the Bolsheviks resigned. The Baku Soviet Commune ended its existence and was replaced by the Central Caspian Dictatorship.

In June 1918 the Volunteer Army, numbering some 9,000 men, started its Second Kuban campaign, capturing Yekaterinodar on 16 August, followed by Armavir and Stavropol. By early 1919, they controlled the Northern Caucasus.[88]

On 8 October, Alekseev died. On 8 January 1919, Denikin became the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces of South Russia, uniting the Volunteer Army with Pyotr Krasnov's Don Army. Pyotr Wrangel became Denikin's Chief of Staff.[89]

In December, three-fourths of the army was in the Northern Caucasus. That included three thousand of Vladimir Liakhov's soldiers around Vladikavkaz, thirteen thousand soldiers under Wrangel and Kazanovich in the center of the front, Stankevich's almost three thousand men with the Don Cossacks, while Vladimir May-Mayevsky's three thousand were sent to the Donets basin, and de Bode commanded two thousand in Crimea.[90]

Eastern Russia, Siberia and the Far East (1918) edit

The revolt of the Czechoslovak Legion broke out in May 1918, and proceeded to occupy the Trans-Siberian Railway from Ufa to Vladivostok. Uprisings overthrew other Bolshevik towns. On 7 July, the western portion of the legion declared itself to be a new eastern front, anticipating allied intervention. According to William Henry Chamberlin, "Two governments emerged as a result of the first successes of the Czechs: the West Siberian Commissariat and the Government of the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly in Samara." On 17 July, shortly before the fall of Yekaterinburg, the former tsar and his family were murdered.[91]

 
Czechoslovak legionaries of the 8th Regiment at Nikolsk-Ussuriysky killed by Bolsheviks, 1918. Above them stand also members of the Czechoslovak Legion.

The Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries supported peasants fighting against Soviet control of food supplies.[92] In May 1918, with the support of the Czechoslovak Legion, they took Samara and Saratov, establishing the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly—known as the "Komuch". By July the authority of the Komuch extended over much of the area controlled by the Czechoslovak Legion. The Komuch pursued an ambivalent social policy, combining democratic and socialist measures, such as the institution of an eight-hour working day, with "restorative" actions, such as returning both factories and land to their former owners. After the fall of Kazan, Vladimir Lenin called for the dispatch of Petrograd workers to the Kazan Front: "We must send down the maximum number of Petrograd workers: (1) a few dozen 'leaders' like Kayurov; (2) a few thousand militants 'from the ranks'".

After a series of reverses at the front, the Bolsheviks' War Commissar, Trotsky, instituted increasingly harsh measures in order to prevent unauthorised withdrawals, desertions, and mutinies in the Red Army. In the field, the Cheka Special Investigations Forces (termed the Special Punitive Department of the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combat of Counter-Revolution and Sabotage or Special Punitive Brigades) followed the Red Army, conducting field tribunals and summary executions of soldiers and officers who deserted, retreated from their positions, or failed to display sufficient offensive zeal.[93][94] The Cheka Special Investigations Forces were also charged with the detection of sabotage and counter-revolutionary activity by Red Army soldiers and commanders. Trotsky extended the use of the death penalty to the occasional political commissar whose detachment retreated or broke in the face of the enemy.[95] In August, frustrated at continued reports of Red Army troops breaking under fire, Trotsky authorised the formation of barrier troops – stationed behind unreliable Red Army units and given orders to shoot anyone withdrawing from the battle line without authorisation.[96]

 
Admiral Alexander Kolchak reviewing the troops, 1919

In September 1918, the Komuch, the Siberian Provisional Government, and other anti-Bolshevik Russians agreed during the State Meeting in Ufa to form a new Provisional All-Russian Government in Omsk, headed by a Directory of five: two Socialist-Revolutionaries. Nikolai Avksentiev and Vladimir Zenzinov, the Kadet lawyer V. A. Vinogradov, Siberian Premier Vologodskii, and General Vasily Boldyrev.[97]

By the fall of 1918, anti-Bolshevik White forces in the east included the People's Army (Komuch), the Siberian Army (of the Siberian Provisional Government) and insurgent Cossack units of Orenburg, the Urals, Siberia, Semirechye, Baikal, and Amur and Ussuri Cossacks, nominally under the orders of Gen. V.G. Boldyrev, Commander-in-Chief, appointed by the Ufa Directorate.

On the Volga, Col. Kappel's White detachment captured Kazan on 7 August, but Red Forces recaptured the city on 8 September 1918 following a counteroffensive. On the 11th Simbirsk fell, and on 8 October Samara. The Whites fell back eastwards to Ufa and Orenburg.

In Omsk, the Russian Provisional Government quickly came under the influence and later the dominance of its new War Minister, the rear-admiral Kolchak. On 18 November, a coup d'état established Kolchak as supreme leader. Two members of the Directory were arrested, and subsequently deported, while Kolchak was proclaimed "Supreme Ruler", and "Commander-in-Chief of all Land and Naval Forces of Russia."[98] By mid-December 1918, the White armies had to leave Ufa, but they balanced that failure with a successful drive towards Perm, which they took on 24 December.

Barrier troops edit

In the Red Army, the concept of barrier troops first arose in August 1918 with the formation of the заградительные отряды (zagraditelnye otriady), translated as "blocking troops" or "anti-retreat detachments" (Russian: заградотряды, заградительные отряды, отряды заграждения).[99] The barrier troops comprised personnel drawn from the Cheka punitive detachments or from regular Red Army infantry regiments.

The first use of the barrier troops by the Red Army occurred in the late summer and fall of 1918 in the Eastern front during the Russian Civil War, when Leon Trotsky authorized Mikhail Tukhachevsky, the commander of the 1st Army, to station blocking detachments behind unreliable Red Army infantry regiments in the 1st Red Army, with orders to shoot if front-line troops either deserted or retreated without permission.[99]

In December 1918, Trotsky ordered that detachments of additional barrier troops be raised for attachment to each infantry formation in the Red Army. On December 18 he cabled:

How do things stand with the blocking units? As far as I am aware they have not been included in our establishment and it appears they have no personnel. It is absolutely essential that we have at least an embryonic network of blocking units and that we work out a procedure for bringing them up to strength and deploying them.[99]

The barrier troops were also used to enforce Bolshevik control over food supplies in areas controlled by the Red Army as part of Lenin's war communism policies, a role which soon earned them the hatred of the Russian civilian population.[100] These policies led to the Russian famine of 1921–1922, which killed about five million people.[101][102]

Central Asia (1918) edit

 
London Geographical Institute's 1919 map of Europe after Brest-Litovsk and Batum and before the treaties of Tartu, Kars, and Riga

In February 1918, the Red Army overthrew the White Russian-supported Kokand Autonomy of Turkestan.[103] Although that move seemed to solidify Bolshevik power in Central Asia, more troubles soon arose for the Red Army as the Allied Forces began to intervene. British support of the White Army provided the greatest threat to the Red Army in Central Asia during 1918. Britain sent three prominent military leaders to the area. One was Lieutenant Colonel Frederick Marshman Baile, who recorded a mission to Tashkent, from where the Bolsheviks forced him to flee. Another was General Wilfrid Malleson, leading the Malleson Mission, who assisted the Mensheviks in Ashkhabad (now the capital of Turkmenistan) with a small Anglo-Indian force. However, he failed to gain control of Tashkent, Bukhara and Khiva. The third was Major General Dunsterville, who was driven out by the Bolsheviks of Central Asia only a month after his arrival in August 1918.[104] Despite setbacks as a result of British invasions during 1918, the Bolsheviks continued to make progress in bringing the Central Asian population under their influence. The first regional congress of the Russian Communist Party convened in the city of Tashkent in June 1918 in order to build support for a local Bolshevik Party.[105]

Left SR Uprising edit

On 6 July 1918, two Left Socialist-Revolutionaries and Cheka employees, Yakov Blumkin and Nikolai Andreyev, assassinated the German ambassador, Count Mirbach. In Moscow a Left SR uprising was put down by the Bolsheviks, mass arrests of Socialist-Revolutionaries followed, and executions became more frequent. Chamberlin noted, "The time of relative leniency toward former fellow-revolutionists was over. The Left Socialist Revolutionaries, of course, were no longer tolerated as members of the Soviets; from this time the Soviet regime became a pure and undiluted dictatorship of the Communist Party." Similarly, Boris Savinkov's surprise attacks were suppressed, with many of the conspirators being executed, as "Mass Red Terror" became a reality.[106]

Estonia, Latvia and Petrograd edit

Estonia cleared its territory of the Red Army by January 1919.[107] Baltic German volunteers captured Riga from the Red Latvian Riflemen on 22 May, but the Estonian 3rd Division defeated the Baltic Germans a month later, aiding the establishment of the Republic of Latvia.[108]

 
General Nikolai Yudenich

That rendered possible another threat to the Red Army, from General Yudenich, who had spent the summer organizing the Northwestern Army in Estonia with local and British support. In October 1919, he tried to capture Petrograd in a sudden assault with a force of around 20,000 men. The attack was well-executed, using night attacks and lightning cavalry maneuvers to turn the flanks of the defending Red Army. Yudenich also had six British tanks, which caused panic whenever they appeared. The Allies gave large quantities of aid to Yudenich, but he complained of receiving insufficient support.

By 19 October, Yudenich's troops had reached the outskirts of the city. Some members of the Bolshevik central committee in Moscow were willing to give up Petrograd, but Trotsky refused to accept the loss of the city and personally organized its defenses. Trotsky himself declared, "It is impossible for a little army of 15,000 ex-officers to master a working-class capital of 700,000 inhabitants." He settled on a strategy of urban defense, proclaiming that the city would "defend itself on its own ground" and that the White Army would be lost in a labyrinth of fortified streets and there "meet its grave".[109]

Trotsky armed all available workers, men and women, and ordered the transfer of military forces from Moscow. Within a few weeks, the Red Army defending Petrograd had tripled in size and outnumbered Yudenich three to one. Yudenich, short of supplies, then decided to call off the siege of the city and withdrew. He repeatedly asked permission to withdraw his army across the border to Estonia. However, units retreating across the border were disarmed and interned by orders of the Estonian government, which had entered into peace negotiations with the Soviet Government on 16 September and had been informed by the Soviet authorities of their 6 November decision that if the White Army was allowed to retreat into Estonia, it would be pursued across the border by the Reds.[110] In fact, the Reds attacked Estonian army positions and fighting continued until a ceasefire went into effect on 3 January 1920. After the Treaty of Tartu, most of Yudenich's soldiers went into exile. Former Imperial Russian and then Finnish General Mannerheim planned an intervention to help the Whites in Russia capture Petrograd. However, he did not gain the necessary support for the endeavour. Lenin considered it "completely certain, that the slightest aid from Finland would have determined the fate of [the city]".

Northern Russia (1919) edit

The British occupied Murmansk and seized Arkhangelsk alongside United States forces. With the retreat of Kolchak in Siberia, they pulled their troops out of the cities before the winter trapped them in the port. The remaining White forces under Yevgeny Miller evacuated the region in February 1920.[111]

Siberia (1919) edit

 
Russian soldiers of the anti-Bolshevik Siberian Army in 1919

At the beginning of March 1919, the general offensive of the Whites on the eastern front began. Ufa was retaken on 13 March; by mid-April, the White Army stopped at the GlazovChistopolBugulmaBuguruslan–Sharlyk line. Reds started their counteroffensive against Kolchak's forces at the end of April. The Red 5th Army, led by the capable commander Tukhachevsky, captured Elabuga on 26 May, Sarapul on 2 June and Izevsk on the 7th and continued to push forward. Both sides had victories and losses, but by the middle of summer the Red Army was larger than the White Army and had managed to recapture territory previously lost.[112]

Following the abortive offensive at Chelyabinsk, the White armies withdrew beyond the Tobol. In September 1919 a White offensive was launched against the Tobol Front, the last attempt to change the course of events. However, on 14 October the Reds counterattacked, and thus began the uninterrupted retreat of the Whites to the east. On 14 November 1919 the Red Army captured Omsk.[113] Adm. Kolchak lost control of his government shortly after the defeat; White Army forces in Siberia had essentially ceased to exist by December. Retreat of the eastern front by White armies lasted three months, until mid-February 1920, when the survivors, after crossing Lake Baikal, reached the Chita area and joined Ataman Semenov's forces.

South Russia (1919) edit

 
Anti-Bolshevik propaganda poster "For united Russia" representing Soviet Russia as a fallen communist dragon and the White Cause as a crusading knight
 
Polonophobic Soviet propaganda poster, 1920

The Cossacks had been unable to organise and capitalise on their successes at the end of 1918. By 1919 they had begun to run short of supplies. Consequently, when the Soviet Russian counteroffensive began in January 1919 under the Bolshevik commander Antonov-Ovseenko, the Cossack forces rapidly fell apart. The Red Army captured Kiev on 3 February 1919.[114]

Denikin's military strength continued to grow in 1919, with significant munitions supplied by the British. In January, Denikin's Armed Forces of South Russia (AFSR) completed the elimination of Red forces in the northern Caucasus and moved north, in an effort to protect the Don district.[115]

On 18 December 1918, French forces landed in Odessa and Crimea, but evacuated Odessa on 6 April 1919, and the Crimea by the end of the month. According to Chamberlin, "France gave far less practical aid to the Whites than did England; its sole independent venture in intervention, at Odessa, ended in a complete fiasco."[116]

Denikin then reorganized the Armed Forces of South Russia under the leadership of Vladimir May-Mayevsky, Vladimir Sidorin, and Pyotr Wrangel. On 22 May, Wrangel's Caucasian army defeated the 10th Army (RSFSR) in the battle for Velikoknyazheskaya, and then captured Tsaritsyn on 1 July. Sidorin advanced north toward Voronezh, increasing his army's strength in the process. On 25 June, May–Mayevsky captured Kharkov, and then Ekaterinoslav on 30 June, which forced the Reds to abandon Crimea. On 3 July, Denikin issued his Moscow directive, in which his armies would converge on Moscow.[117]

Although Britain had withdrawn its own troops from the theatre, it continued to give significant military aid (money, weapons, food, ammunition and some military advisers) to the White Armies during 1919. Major Ewen Cameron Bruce of the British Army had volunteered to command a British tank mission assisting the White Army. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order[118] for his bravery during the June 1919 Battle of Tsaritsyn for single-handedly storming and capturing the fortified city of Tsaritsyn, under heavy shell fire in a single tank, which led to the capture of over 40,000 prisoners.[119] The fall of Tsaritsyn is viewed "as one of the key battles of the Russian Civil War" and greatly helped the White Russian cause.[119] The notable historian Sir Basil Henry Liddell Hart comments that Bruce's tank action during the battle is to be seen as "one of the most remarkable feats in the whole history of the Tank Corps".[120]

On 14 August, the Bolsheviks launched their Southern Front counteroffensive. After six weeks of heavy fighting the counteroffensive failed, and Denikin was able to capture more territory. By November, White Forces had reached the Zbruch, the Ukrainian-Polish border.[121]

 
General Pyotr Wrangel in Tsaritsyn, 15 October 1919

Denikin's forces constituted a real threat and for a time threatened to reach Moscow. The Red Army, stretched thin by fighting on all fronts, was forced out of Kiev on 30 August. Kursk and Orel were taken, on 20 September and 14 October, respectively. The latter, only 205 miles (330 km) from Moscow, was the closest the AFSR would come to its target.[122] The Cossack Don Army under the command of General Vladimir Sidorin continued north towards Voronezh, but Semyon Budyonny's cavalrymen defeated them there on 24 October. That allowed the Red Army to cross the Don River, threatening to split the Don and Volunteer Armies. Fierce fighting took place at the key rail junction of Kastornoye, which was taken on 15 November. Kursk was retaken two days later.[123]

 
Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge, a famous Bolshevik Constructivist propaganda poster by El Lissitzky, which abstractly represents the defeat of the Whites by the Red Army

Kenez states, "In October Denikin ruled more than forty million people and controlled the economically most valuable parts of the Russian Empire." Yet, "The White armies, which had fought victoriously during the summer and early fall, fell back in disorder in November and December." Denikin's front line was overstretched, while his reserves dealt with Makhno's anarchists in the rear. Between September and October, the Reds mobilized one hundred thousand new soldiers and adopted the Trotsky-Vatsetis strategy with the Ninth and Tenth armies forming V. I. Shorin's Southeastern Front between Tsaritsyn and Bobrov, while the Eighth, Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth armies formed A.I. Egorov's Southern Front between Zhitomir and Bobrov. Sergey Kamenev was in overall command of the two fronts. On Denikin's left was Abram Dragomirov, while in his center was Vladimir May-Mayevsky's Volunteer Army, Vladimir Sidorin's Don Cossacks were further east, with Pyotr Wrangel's Caucasian army at Tsaritsyn, and an additional was in the Northern Caucasus attempting to capture Astrakhan. On 20 October, May–Mayevsky was forced to evacuate Orel during the Orel-Kursk operation. On 24 October, Semyon Budyonny captured Voronezh, and Kursk on 15 November, during the Voronezh-Kastornoye operation (1919). On 6 January, the Reds reached the Black Sea at Mariupol and Taganrog, and on 9 January, they reached Rostov. According to Kenez, "The Whites had now lost all the territories which they had captured in 1919, and held approximately the same area in which they had started two years before."[124]

Central Asia (1919) edit

By February 1919 the British government had pulled its military forces out of Central Asia.[125] Despite the success for the Red Army, the White Army's assaults in European Russia and other areas broke communication between Moscow and Tashkent. For a time, Central Asia was completely cut off from Red Army forces in Siberia.[126] Although the communication failure weakened the Red Army, the Bolsheviks continued their efforts to gain support for the Bolshevik Party in Central Asia by holding a second regional conference in March. During the conference, a regional bureau of Muslim organisations of the Russian Bolshevik Party was formed. The Bolshevik Party continued to try to gain support among the native population by giving it the impression of better representation for the Central Asian population and throughout the end of the year could maintain harmony with the Central Asian people.[127]

Communication difficulties with Red Army forces in Siberia and European Russia ceased to be a problem by mid-November 1919. Red Army successes north of Central Asia caused communication with Moscow to be re-established and the Bolsheviks to claim victory over the White Army in Turkestan.[126]

In the Ural-Guryev operation of 1919–1920, the Red Turkestan Front defeated the Ural Army. During winter 1920, Ural Cossacks and their families, totaling about 15,000 people, headed south along the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea towards Fort Alexandrovsk. Only a few hundred of them reached Persia in June 1920.[128] The Orenburg Independent Army was formed from Orenburg Cossacks and other troops who rebelled against the Bolsheviks. During the winter 1919–20, the Orenburg Army retreated to Semirechye in what is known as the Starving March, as half of the participants perished.[129] In March 1920 her remnants crossed the border into the Northwestern region of China.

South Russia, Ukraine and Kronstadt (1920–21) edit

 
Polish anti-Soviet poster depicting Lev Trotsky.[q]

At the beginning of 1920, Denikin was reduced to defending Novorossia, the Crimean peninsula, and the Northern Caucasus. On 26 January, the Caucasian army retreated beyond the Manych. On 7 February, the Reds occupied Odessa, but then Makhno's anarchists started fighting the Fourteenth Red Army. On 20 February, Denikin succeeded in recapturing Rostov, his last victory, before giving it up soon after.[130]

By the beginning of 1920, the main body of the Armed Forces of South Russia was rapidly retreating towards the Don, to Rostov. Denikin hoped to hold the crossings of the Don, then rest and reform his troops, but the White Army was not able to hold the Don area, and at the end of February 1920 started a retreat across Kuban towards Novorossiysk. Slipshod evacuation of Novorossiysk proved to be a dark event for the White Army. Russian and Allied ships evacuated about 40,000 of Denikin's men from Novorossiysk to the Crimea, without horses or any heavy equipment, while about 20,000 men were left behind and either dispersed or were captured by the Red Army. Following the disastrous Novorossiysk evacuation, Denikin stepped down and the military council elected Wrangel as the new Commander-in-Chief of the White Army. He was able to restore order to the dispirited troops and reshape an army that could fight as a regular force again. It remained an organized force in the Crimea throughout 1920.[131]

 
The Tambov Rebellion was one of the largest and best-organised peasant rebellions challenging the Bolshevik regime

After Moscow's Bolshevik government signed a military and political alliance with Nestor Makhno and the Ukrainian anarchists, the Insurgent Army attacked and defeated several regiments of Wrangel's troops in southern Ukraine, forcing him to retreat before he could capture that year's grain harvest.[132]

Stymied in his efforts to consolidate his hold, Wrangel then attacked north in an attempt to take advantage of recent Red Army defeats at the close of the Polish–Soviet War of 1919–1920. The Red Army eventually halted the offensive, and Wrangel's troops had to retreat to Crimea in November 1920, pursued by both the Red and Black cavalry and infantry. Wrangel's fleet evacuated him and his army to Constantinople on 14 November 1920, ending the struggle of Reds and Whites in Southern Russia.[114]

After the defeat of Wrangel, the Red Army immediately repudiated its 1920 treaty of alliance with Nestor Makhno and attacked the anarchist Insurgent Army; the campaign to liquidate Makhno and the Ukrainian anarchists began with an attempted assassination of Makhno by Cheka agents. Anger at continued repression by the Bolshevik Communist government and at its liberal use of the Cheka to put down anarchist elements led to a naval mutiny at Kronstadt in March 1921, followed by peasant revolts – all of which were put down by the Bolsheviks. The outset of the year was marked by strikes and demonstrations – in both Moscow and Petrograd, as well as the countryside – due to discontent with the results of policies that made up war communism.[133][134] The Bolsheviks, in response to the protests, enacted martial law and sent the Red Army to disperse the workers.[135][136] This was followed up by mass arrests executed by the Cheka.[137] Repression and minor concessions only temporarily quelled the discontent as Petrograd protests continued that year in March. This time the factory workers were joined by sailors stationed on the nearby island-fort of Kronstadt.[138] Disappointed in the direction of the Bolshevik government, the rebels demanded a series of reforms including: reduction in Bolshevik privileges, newly elected soviets to include socialist and anarchist groups, economic freedom for peasants and workers, dissolution of the bureaucratic governmental organs created during the civil war, and the restoration of worker rights for the working class.[139] The workers and sailors of the Kronstadt rebellion were promptly crushed by Red Army forces, with a thousand rebels killed in battle and another thousand executed the following weeks, with many more fleeing abroad and to the countryside.[140][141][142] These events coincided with the 10th Congress of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks). There, Lenin argued that the soviets and the principle of democratic centralism within the Bolshevik party still assured democracy. However, faced with support for Kronstadt within Bolshevik ranks, Lenin also issued a "temporary" ban on factions in the Russian Communist Party. This ban remained until the revolutions of 1989 and, according to some critics, made the democratic procedures within the party an empty formality, and helped Stalin to consolidate much more authority under the party. Soviets were transformed into the bureaucratic structure that existed for the rest of the history of the Soviet Union and were completely under the control of party officials and the politburo.[r] Red Army attacks on the anarchist forces and their sympathisers increased in ferocity throughout 1921.[143]

Siberia and the Far East (1920–22) edit

In Siberia, Admiral Kolchak's army had disintegrated. He himself gave up command after the loss of Omsk and designated Gen. Grigory Semyonov as the new leader of the White Army in Siberia. Not long afterward, Kolchak was arrested by the disaffected Czechoslovak Legion as he traveled towards Irkutsk without the protection of the army and was turned over to the socialist Political Centre in Irkutsk. Six days later, the regime was replaced by a Bolshevik-dominated Military-Revolutionary Committee. On 6–7 February Kolchak and his prime minister Victor Pepelyaev were shot, and their bodies were thrown through the ice of the frozen Angara River, just before the arrival of the White Army in the area.[144]

Remnants of Kolchak's army reached Transbaikalia and joined Semyonov's troops, forming the Far Eastern army. With the support of the Japanese army, it was able to hold Chita, but after the withdrawal of Japanese soldiers from Transbaikalia, Semenov's position became untenable and in November 1920 he was driven by the Red Army from Transbaikalia and took refuge in China. The Japanese, who had plans to annex the Amur Krai, finally pulled their troops out as Bolshevik forces gradually asserted control over the Russian Far East. On 25 October 1922 Vladivostok fell to the Red Army, and the Provisional Priamur Government was extinguished.

Aftermath edit

 
A map of Europe in 1923 after the Russian Civil War, among other revolutions.

With the end of the war, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union no longer faced an acute military threat to its existence and power. However, the perceived threat of continued popular discontent, combined with the failure of socialist revolutions in other countries—most notably the German Revolution—contributed to the continued militarization of Soviet society.

The Bolsheviks managed to consolidate control over Russia, but were only partially successful at re-establishing territorial control of the other provinces of the former Russian Empire. The Peace of Riga, signed in March 1921 after the Polish–Soviet War, split the territories in Belarus and Ukraine between the Republic of Poland and Soviet Russia. Estonia, Finland, Latvia, and Lithuania all repelled Soviet invasions, while Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia were occupied by the Red Army.[13][14]

Evacuations edit

 
Refugees on flatcars

Around one to two million people known as the White émigrés fled Russia, many with General Wrangel, some through the Far East and others west into the newly independent Baltic countries. The émigrés included a large percentage of the educated and skilled population of Russia.[145]

Ensuing rebellion edit

In Central Asia, Red Army troops continued to face resistance into 1923, where basmachi (armed bands of Islamic guerrillas) had formed to fight the Bolshevik takeover. The Soviets engaged non-Russian peoples in Central Asia, like Magaza Masanchi, commander of the Dungan Cavalry Regiment, to fight against the Basmachis. The Communist Party did not completely dismantle the group until 1934.[146]

General Anatoly Pepelyayev continued armed resistance in the Ayano-Maysky District until June 1923. The regions of Kamchatka and Northern Sakhalin remained under Japanese occupation until their treaty with the Soviet Union in 1925, when their forces were finally withdrawn.

Casualties edit

 
Street children during the Russian Civil War

The results of the civil war were momentous. Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that 300,000 men were killed in action during the Civil War and Polish-Soviet War – 125,000 in the Red Army, 175,500 White armies and Poles – and the total number of military personnel from both sides dead from disease as 450,000.[147] Boris Sennikov estimated the total losses among the population of Tambov region in 1920 to 1922 resulting from the war, executions, and imprisonment in concentration camps as approximately 240,000.[148] By 1922, there were at least 7,000,000 street children in Russia as a result of nearly ten years of devastation from World War I and the civil war.[149]

At the end of the Civil War the Russian SFSR was exhausted and near ruin. The droughts of 1920 and 1921, as well as the Russian famine of 1921, worsened the disaster still further, killing roughly 5 million people. Disease had reached pandemic proportions, with 3,000,000 dying of typhus throughout the war. Millions more also died of widespread starvation, wholesale massacres by both sides and pogroms against Jews in Ukraine and southern Russia.

Civilian casualties edit

 
Victims of the Russian famine of 1921

As many as 10 million lives were lost as a result of the Russian Civil War, and the overwhelming majority of these were civilian casualties.[150] There is no consensus among the Western historians on the number of deaths from the Red Terror. One source gives estimates of 28,000 executions per year from December 1917 to February 1922.[151] Estimates for the number of people shot during the initial period of the Red Terror are at least 10,000.[152] Estimates for the whole period go for a low of 50,000[153] to highs of 140,000[153][154] and 200,000 executed.[155] Most estimations for the number of executions in total put the number at about 100,000.[156] According to Vadim Erlikhman's investigation, the number of the Red Terror's victims is at least 1,200,000 people.[157] According to Robert Conquest, a total of 140,000 people were shot in 1917–1922, but Jonathan D. Smele estimates they were considerably fewer, "perhaps less than half that many".[158] Candidate of Historical Sciences Nikolay Zayats states that the number of people shot by the Cheka in 1918–1922 is about 37,300 people, shot in 1918–1921 by the verdicts of the tribunals — 14,200, i.e. about 50,000–55,000 people in total, although executions and atrocities were not limited to the Cheka, having been organized by the Red Army as well.[159][160] In 1924, an anti-Bolshevik Popular Socialist Sergei Melgunov (1879–1956) published a detailed account on the Red Terror in Russia, where he cited Professor Charles Saroléa's estimates of 1,766,188 deaths from the Bolshevik policies. He questioned the accuracy of the figures, but endorsed Saroléa's "chracterisation of terror in Russia", stating it matches reality.[161][162] Modern historian Sergei Volkov, assessing the Red Terror as the entire repressive policy of the Bolsheviks during the years of the Civil War (1917–1922), estimates the direct death toll of the Red Terror at 2 million people.[163] Volkov's calculations, however, do not appear to have been confirmed by other major scholars.[s]

Ethnic violence edit

 
Victims of a pogrom perpetrated by Ukrainian forces in Khodorkiv, 1919

Some 10,000–500,000 Cossacks were killed or deported during Decossackization, out of a population of around three million.[165] An estimated 100,000 Jews were killed in Ukraine.[166] Punitive organs of the All Great Don Cossack Host sentenced 25,000 people to death between May 1918 and January 1919.[167] Kolchak's government shot 25,000 people in Ekaterinburg province alone.[168] The White Terror, as it would become known, killed about 300,000 people in total.[169]

Economic Impact edit

The civil war had a devastating impact on the Russian economy. A black market emerged in Russia, despite the threat of martial law against profiteering. The ruble collapsed, with barter increasingly replacing money as a medium of exchange[170] and, by 1921, heavy industry output had fallen to 20% of 1913 levels. 90% of wages were paid with goods rather than money.[171] 70% of locomotives were in need of repair,[172] and food requisitioning, combined with the effects of seven years of war and a severe drought, contributed to a famine that caused between 3 and 10 million deaths.[173] Coal production decreased from 27.5 million tons (1913) to 7 million tons (1920), while overall factory production also declined from 10,000 million roubles to 1,000 million roubles. According to the noted historian David Christian, the grain harvest was also slashed from 80.1 million tons (1913) to 46.5 million tons (1920).[174]

War communism saved the Soviet government during the Civil War, but much of the Russian economy had ground to a standstill. Some peasants responded to food requisitions by refusing to till the land. By 1921, cultivated land had shrunk to 62% of the pre-war area, and the harvest yield was only about 37% of normal. The number of horses declined from 35 million in 1916 to 24 million in 1920 and cattle from 58 to 37 million. The exchange rate with the US dollar declined from two roubles in 1914 to 1,200 Rbls in 1920. Although Russia experienced extremely rapid economic growth[175] in the 1930s, the combined effect of World War I and the Civil War left a lasting scar on Russian society and had permanent effects on the development of the Soviet Union.

Political impact edit

The complete failure of the Communist International-inspired revolutions was a sobering experience in Moscow, and the Bolsheviks moved from world revolution to socialism in one country, the Soviet Union.[176]

The Treaty of Rapallo (1922) was an agreement signed on 16 April 1922 between the Weimar Republic and Soviet Union, under which both renounced all territorial and financial claims against each other and opened friendly diplomatic relations.[177]

In fiction edit

Literature edit

Film edit

Video games edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Viena expedition#British Intervention
  2. ^ De facto deposed after the Bolshevik Coup of November 1917; formally abolished in January 1918 after the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly. The White movement then promised to convey a new constituent assembly and reestablish the state accordingly with its decisions.
  3. ^ Also assisted Estonians, Karelians and Ingrians during Heimosodat of 1918–1922.
  4. ^ Finnish Civil War
  5. ^ Polish-Soviet War
  6. ^ Basmachi movement
  7. ^ Aligned with the Bolsheviks until March 1918, when they fell out over the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. Most Left SRs opposed the Bolsheviks afterward, but a minority of Left SRs remained allied to the Bolsheviks for years after.
  8. ^ Aligned with the Bolsheviks until 1919; opposed after.
  9. ^ Aligned with the Bolsheviks until 1920; opposed after.
  10. ^ Japan also stayed in North Sakhalin until 1925.
  11. ^ Official allegiance to the Russian State
    Unofficial allegiance to the German Empire
  12. ^ The Red Army peaked in October 1920 with 5,498,000: 2,587,000 in reserves, 391,000 in labor armies, 159,000 on the front and 1,780,000 drawing rations
  13. ^ 683,000 active
    340,000 reserve
  14. ^ There were an additional 6,242,926 hospitalizations from sickness.
  15. ^ Russian: Гражданская война в России, romanizedGrazhdanskaya voyna v Rossii
  16. ^ The old spelling was retained by the Whites to differentiate from the Reds.
  17. ^

    Small caption in the lower right corner reads:
    The Bolsheviks promised:
    We'll give you peace
    We'll give you freedom
    We'll give you land
    Work and bread
    Despicably they cheated
    They started a war
    With Poland
    Instead of freedom they brought
    The fist
    Instead of land – confiscation
    Instead of work – misery
    Instead of bread – famine.

  18. ^ See note regarding Library of Congress Country Studies. Chapter 7 – The Communist Party. Democratic Centralism.[citation needed]
  19. ^ In particular, they seem quite at odds with the demographic considerations elaborated by Italian historian and professor Andrea Graziosi [it] in the light of the good quality Tsarist and early Soviet statistics. According to him, the excess deaths between 1914 and 1922 were about 16 million, of which 4–5 were military, the rest civilian; the overwhelming majority of the latter resulted from "starvation, typhus, epidemics, the Spanish flu and the famine of 1921–22", the roughly number of "victims of the various kinds of terror, and red and white repressions" amounting to a few hundred thousand— which is indeed a dreadful number in itself, however.[164]

References edit

Citations edit

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  5. ^ Damien Wright, Churchill's Secret War with Lenin: British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1918–20, Solihull, UK, 2017, pp. 394, 526–528, 530–535; Clifford Kinvig, Churchill's Crusade: The British Invasion of Russia 1918–1920, London 2006, ISBN 1-85285-477-4, p. 297; Timothy Winegard, The First World Oil War, University of Toronto Press (2016), p. 229
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Bibliography edit

  • Allworth, Edward (1967). Central Asia: A Century of Russian Rule. New York: Columbia University Press. OCLC 396652.
  • Avrich, Paul (1970). Kronstadt, 1921. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-08721-0.
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  • Chamberlin, William (1935). The Russian Revolution, 1917–1921. Vol. 2. New York: Macmillan.
    • The Russian Revolution, Volume II: 1918–1921: From the Civil War to the Consolidation of Power. Vol. 2. Princeton University Press. 1987 [1935]. ISBN 978-1-400-85870-5. Retrieved 27 December 2017 – via Project MUSE.
  • Coates, W. P.; Coates, Zelda K. (1951). Soviets in Central Asia. New York: Philosophical Library. OCLC 1533874.
  • Daniels, Robert V. (1993). A Documentary History of Communism in Russia: From Lenin to Gorbachev. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. ISBN 978-0-874-51616-6.
  • ——— (December 1951). "The Kronstadt Revolt of 1921: A Study in the Dynamics of Revolution". American Slavic and East European Review. 10 (4): 241–254. ISSN 1049-7544. JSTOR 2492031.
  • Eidintas, Alfonsas; Žalys, Vytautas; Senn, Alfred Erich (1999). Lithuania in European Politics: The Years of the First Republic, 1918–1940 (Paperback ed.). New York: St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-22458-3.
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russian, civil, other, uses, disambiguation, part, russian, revolution, aftermath, world, interwar, periodclockwise, from, left, soldiers, army, soldiers, siberian, army, bolshevik, suppression, kronstadt, rebellion, american, troops, vladivostok, during, alli. For other uses see Russian Civil War disambiguation Russian Civil WarPart of the Russian Revolution the aftermath of World War I and the interwar periodClockwise from top left Soldiers of the Don Army Soldiers of the Siberian Army Bolshevik suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion American troops in Vladivostok during the Allied intervention Victims of the Red Terror in Crimea Hanging of Bolsheviks in Yekaterinoslav by the Austrians A review of Red Army troops in MoscowDate7 November 1917 16 June 1923 1 2 5 years 7 months 1 week and 2 days LocationFormer Russian EmpireResultBolshevik victory Partial victory by independence movements see Aftermath Main belligerentsBolsheviks Russian SFSR 1917 22 Ukrainian SSR 1917 18 1918 1919 22 Byelorussian SSR 1919 1919 20 1920 22 Transcaucasian SFSR 1922 Soviet Union after 1922 Also Bessarabian SSR 1919 Finnish SWR 1918 D KRSR 1918 Harbin Soviet 1917 18 Odessa SR 1918 Taurida SSR 1918 Baku Commune 1918 Erzincan SovietEstonian Commune 1918 19 Latvian SSR 1918 20 Lithuanian SSR 1918 19 Iskolat 1917 18 Far Eastern Republic 1920 22 Galician SSR 1920 Polrewkom 1920 Persian SSR 1920 21 Armenian SSR 1920 22 Azerbaijan SSR 1920 22 Mughan Soviet Republic 1919 Georgian SSR 1921 22 SSR Abkhazia after 1921 Khorezm PSR after 1920 Bukharan PSR after 1920 Supported by Chinese communists 1917 23 Red Latvian Riflemen 1917 20 Mongolian People s Party 1920 23 Murmansk Legion a 1918 19 Russian Republic b 1917 18 Kadets Octobrists Progressive Party White movement South Russia 1917 19 Mar Apr Apr Nov 1920 Russian State 1918 20 Priamurye after 1921 Also Provisional Regional Government of the Urals 1918 Omsk Siberian Government 1918 Vladivostok Siberian Government 1918 Transcaspian Government 1918 20 Transbaikal Republic 1917 20 Komuch 1918 North Russia 1918 1918 20 Northwest Russia 1918 19 Crimea 1918 19 Provisional Military Dictatorship of Mughan 1918 19 Don Republic 1918 20 Kuban Republic 1918 20 Eastern Okraina 1920 Tambov Land 1921 Supported by Alash Orda 1917 18 Bashkurdistan 1917 19 Mongolia 1921 Persia 1919 20 Separatists Poland 1918 21 Ukraine 1917 18 1918 20 Finland c 1917 18 Belarus 1918 20 Estonia 1918 20 Latvia 1918 20 Lithuania 1918 20 Also Alash Orda 1917 18 Kyrgyz Rebel Army 1916 1918 Bashkurdistan 1917 19 West Ukraine 1918 19 Central Lithuania 1920 22 Moldavia 1917 18 Transcaucasia 1918 Georgia 1918 21 Armenia 1918 20 1921 Turkestan 1917 18 Centrocaspia 1918 Aras 1918 19 Caucasian Emirate 1919 20 Azerbaijan 1918 20 Northern Caucasus 1917 21 Green Ukraine 1918 22 Buryat Mongolia 1917 21 Yakutia 1918 Altai 1917 20 1921 22 Karelia 1918 20 1920 1920 23 North Ingria 1919 20 Basmachi 1918 22 Bukhara 1920 Khiva 1918 20 Supported by Sweden d 1918 Hungary e 1919 20 Afghanistan f until 1922 Anti Bolshevik left Left SRs g 1917 21 Green Army h 1918 21 Makhnovshchina i 1918 21 Kronstadt rebels 1921 Allied Powers Japanese Empire j 1918 22 United Kingdom 1918 20 United States 1918 20 France 1918 20 Czechoslovakia 1918 20 Also GreeceSerbia after 1918 Romania ItalyChina Canada 1918 19 Australia 1918 19 India South AfricaCentral Powers Germany 1917 18 1919 Austria Hungary 1917 18 Ottoman Empire 1917 18 1920 21 Freikorps 1918 19 Also Kingdom of Poland 1917 18 Kingdom of Finland 1918 Kingdom of Lithuania 1918 Belarus 1918 19 Ukrainian State 1918 Georgia 1918 Landeswehr 1918 20 Bermontians 1918 20 k Commanders and leadersVladimir Lenin Leon Trotsky Yakov Sverdlov Jukums VacietisSergey Kamenev Nikolai Podvoisky Nikolai Krylenko Joseph StalinYukhym Medvedev Vilhelm Knorin Alexander KrasnoshchyokovAlexander Kerensky Alexander Kolchak Lavr Kornilov Anton Denikin Pyotr Wrangel Nikolai Yudenich Grigory Semyonov Yevgeny Miller Mikhail Diterikhs Pyotr Krasnov Roman von Ungern Sternberg Jozef Pilsudski Symon PetliuraC G E Mannerheim S Bulak Balachowicz Konstantin Pats Janis CaksteAntanas Smetona Ion Inculeț Noe Zhordania A Khatisian Nasib Yusifbeyli Enver Pasha Vladimir Volsky Maria Spiridonova Nykyfor Hryhoriv Nestor Makhno Stepan Petrichenko and othersOtani Kikuzo Edmund Ironside William S Graves Radola Gajda Maurice Janin Ludomir Junosza Stepowski and othersH von Eichhorn Nuri Pasha Jan Sierada Pavlo SkoropadskyiP Bermondt Avalov and othersStrengthRed Army 5 498 000 peak 3 l Makhnovtsi 103 000 peak 4 Green Army 70 000 peak Kronstadt Mutineers 17 961White Army 1 023 000 peak m Local forces AFSR 270 000 peak Siberian Army 60 000 peak Komuch Army 30 000 peak Northwestern Army 18 500 peak Northern Army 54 700 peak Western Army 48 000 peak Orenburg Army 25 000 peak Ural Army 17 200 peak Japanese Army 70 000 peak Czechoslovak Legion 50 000 peak Also AEF Siberia 7 950British Army 57 636 5 Romanian Army 50 000French Army 15 600 Hellenic Army 23 000CSEF 5 000AEF North Russia 5 000Legione Redenta 2 500Beiyang Army 2 300Serbian Army 2 000British Indian Army 950Australian Army 150Polish Army 1 000 000 peak Ukrainian Army 100 000 peak Finnish Army 90 000 peak Also Belarusian Army 11 000 peak Supported by Hungarian Army 30 000 peak Latvian Army 69 232 peak Estonian Army 86 000 peak Lithuanian Army 43 996 peak Finnish Volunteers 8 000 peak Forest Guerrillas 2 000 peak Swedish Brigade 1 000 peak German Army 547 000 peak Ottoman Army 20 000 peak Also Saxon Volunteers 10 000 peak Turkish Army 20 000 peak Iron Division 14 000 peak Landeswehr 10 500 peak Bermontians 50 000 peak Casualties and losses 1 500 000 6 259 213 killed citation needed 60 059 missing citation needed 616 605 died of disease wounds citation needed 3 878 died in accidents suicides citation needed 548 857 wounded frostbitten 7 n 1 500 000 6 127 000 killed citation needed 784 000 executed dead citation needed 450 000 wounded sick citation needed 13 000 killed6 500 killed938 killed 8 596 killed350 killed179 killed 250 000 57 000 killed 113 000 wounded 50 000 POWs 125 000 15 000 killed 5 000 3 500 killed 1 650 executed dead 3 000 killed3 888 killed3 046 killed1 444 killed 9 55 killed citation needed 500 killed7 000 000 12 000 000 total casualties includingcivilians and non combatants 1 2 million refugees outside Russia The Russian Civil War o was a multi party civil war in the former Russian Empire sparked by the overthrowing of the social democratic Russian Provisional Government in the October Revolution as many factions vied to determine Russia s political future It resulted in the formation of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic and later the Soviet Union in most of its territory Its finale marked the end of the Russian Revolution which was one of the key events of the 20th century The Russian monarchy ended with the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II during the February Revolution and Russia was in a state of political flux A tense summer culminated in the October Revolution where the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government of the new Russian Republic Bolshevik seizure of power was not universally accepted and the country descended into civil war The two largest combatants were the Red Army fighting for the establishment of a Bolshevik led socialist state headed by Vladimir Lenin and the loosely allied forces known as the White Army which functioned as a political big tent for right and left wing opposition to Bolshevik rule In addition rival militant socialists notably the Ukrainian anarchists of the Makhnovshchina and Left Socialist Revolutionaries were involved in conflict against the Bolsheviks They as well as non ideological green armies opposed the Bolsheviks the Whites and the foreign interventionists 10 Thirteen foreign nations intervened against the Red Army notably the Allied intervention whose primary goal was re establishing the Eastern Front of World War I Three foreign nations of the Central Powers also intervened rivaling the Allied intervention with the main goal of retaining the territory they had received in the Treaty of Brest Litovsk with Soviet Russia The Bolsheviks initially consolidated control over most of the former empire The Treaty of Brest Litovsk was an emergency peace with the German Empire who had captured vast swathes of the Russian territory during the chaos of the revolution In May 1918 the Czechoslovak Legion in Russia revolted in Siberia In reaction the Allies began their North Russian and Siberian interventions That combined with the creation of the Provisional All Russian Government saw the reduction of Bolshevik controlled territory to most of European Russia and parts of Central Asia In 1919 the White Army launched several offensives from the east in March the south in July and west in October The advances were later checked by the Eastern Front counteroffensive the Southern Front counteroffensive and the defeat of the Northwestern Army By 1919 the White armies were in retreat and by the start of 1920 were defeated on all three fronts 11 Although the Bolsheviks were victorious the territorial extent of the Russian state had been reduced for many non Russian ethnic groups had used the disarray to push for national independence 12 In March 1921 during a related war against Poland the Peace of Riga was signed splitting disputed territories in Belarus and Ukraine between the Republic of Poland and Soviet Russia Soviet Russia sought to re conquer all newly independent nations of the former Empire although their success was limited Estonia Finland Latvia and Lithuania all repelled Soviet invasions while Ukraine Belarus as a result of the Polish Soviet War Armenia Azerbaijan and Georgia were occupied by the Red Army 13 14 By 1921 Soviet Russia had defeated the Ukrainian national movements and occupied the Caucasus although anti Bolshevik uprisings in Central Asia lasted until the late 1920s 15 The armies under Kolchak were eventually forced on a mass retreat eastward Bolshevik forces advanced east despite encountering resistance in Chita Yakut and Mongolia Soon the Red Army split the Don and Volunteer armies forcing evacuations in Novorossiysk in March and Crimea in November 1920 After that anti Bolshevik resistance was sporadic for several years until the collapse of the White Army in Yakutia in June 1923 but continued on with the Muslim Basmachi movement in Central Asia and Khabarovsk Krai until 1934 There were an estimated 7 to 12 million casualties during the war mostly civilians 16 Contents 1 Background 1 1 World War I 1 2 February Revolution 1 3 October Revolution 1 4 Formation of the Red Army 1 5 Anti Bolshevik movement 1 5 1 Dissolution of the Constituent Assembly early Constituent Assembly rebellions 1 5 2 Constituent Assembly uprising 1 5 3 Exclusion of Mensheviks and SRs 1 5 4 Repression 1 5 5 Revolts against grain requisitioning 1 6 Allied intervention 1 7 Buffer states 2 Geography and chronology 3 Warfare 3 1 October Revolution 3 2 Initial anti Bolshevik uprisings 3 3 Peace with the Central Powers 3 4 Ukraine South Russia and Caucasus 1918 3 5 Eastern Russia Siberia and the Far East 1918 3 5 1 Barrier troops 3 6 Central Asia 1918 3 7 Left SR Uprising 3 8 Estonia Latvia and Petrograd 3 9 Northern Russia 1919 3 10 Siberia 1919 3 11 South Russia 1919 3 12 Central Asia 1919 3 13 South Russia Ukraine and Kronstadt 1920 21 3 14 Siberia and the Far East 1920 22 4 Aftermath 4 1 Evacuations 4 2 Ensuing rebellion 4 3 Casualties 4 3 1 Civilian casualties 4 3 2 Ethnic violence 4 4 Economic Impact 4 5 Political impact 5 In fiction 5 1 Literature 5 2 Film 5 3 Video games 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksBackground editWorld War I edit Main article World War I The Russian Empire fought in World War I from 1914 alongside France and the United Kingdom Triple Entente against Germany Austria Hungary and Ottoman Empire Central Powers February Revolution edit Main article February Revolution The February Revolution of 1917 resulted in the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II of Russia As a result the social democratic Russian Provisional Government was established and soviets elected councils of workers soldiers and peasants were organized throughout the country leading to a situation of dual power The Russian Republic was proclaimed in September of the same year October Revolution edit Main article October Revolution The Provisional Government led by Socialist Revolutionary Party politician Alexander Kerensky was unable to solve the most pressing issues of the country most importantly to end the war with the Central Powers A failed military coup by General Lavr Kornilov in September 1917 led to a surge in support for the Bolsheviks who took control of the soviets which until then had been controlled by the Socialist Revolutionaries Promising an end to the war and all power to the Soviets the Bolsheviks then ended dual power by overthrowing the Provisional Government in late October on the eve of the Second All Russian Congress of Soviets of Workers and Soldiers Deputies in what would be the second Revolution of 1917 Despite the Bolsheviks seizure of power they lost to the Socialist Revolutionary Party in the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly election and the Constituent Assembly was dissolved by the Bolsheviks in retaliation The Bolsheviks soon lost the support of other far left allies such as the Left Socialist Revolutionaries after their acceptance of the terms of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk presented by the German Empire 17 Conversely a number of prominent members of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries had assumed positions in Lenin s government and lead commissariats in several areas This included agriculture Kolegaev property Karelin justice Steinberg post offices and telegraphs Proshian and local government Trutovsky 18 The Bolsheviks also reserved a number of vacant seats in the Soviets and Central Executive for the Menshevik and Left Socialist Revolutionaries parties in proportion to their vote share at the Congress 19 The dissolution of the Constituent Assembly was also approved by the Left Socialist Revolutionaries and anarchists both groups were in favour of a more radical democracy 20 Formation of the Red Army edit Main article Red Army From mid 1917 onwards the Russian Army the successor organisation of the old Imperial Russian Army started to disintegrate 21 the Bolsheviks used the volunteer based Red Guards as their main military force augmented by an armed military component of the Cheka the Bolshevik state secret police In January 1918 after significant Bolshevik reverses in combat the future Russian People s Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs Leon Trotsky headed the reorganization of the Red Guards into a Workers and Peasants Red Army in order to create a more effective fighting force The Bolsheviks appointed political commissars to each unit of the Red Army to maintain morale and to ensure loyalty In June 1918 when it had become apparent that a revolutionary army composed solely of workers would not suffice Trotsky instituted mandatory conscription of the rural peasantry into the Red Army 22 The Bolsheviks overcame opposition of rural Russians to Red Army conscription units by taking hostages and shooting them when necessary in order to force compliance 23 The forced conscription drive had mixed results successfully creating a larger army than the Whites but with members indifferent towards communist ideology 17 The Red Army also utilized former Tsarist officers as military specialists voenspetsy 24 sometimes their families were taken hostage in order to ensure their loyalty 25 At the start of the civil war former Tsarist officers formed three quarters of the Red Army officer corps 25 By its end 83 of all Red Army divisional and corps commanders were ex Tsarist soldiers 24 Anti Bolshevik movement edit Main articles White movement Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War and Pro independence movements in the Russian Civil War nbsp Admiral Alexander Kolchak seated and General Alfred Knox behind Kolchak observing military exercise 1919 The White movement Russian pre 1918 Bѣloe dvizhenie post 1918 Beloe dvizhenie tr Beloye dvizheniye IPA ˈbʲɛleɪ dvʲɪˈʐenʲɪɪ p also known as the Whites Belye Beliye was a loose confederation of anti communist forces that fought the communist Bolsheviks also known as the Reds in the Russian Civil War and that to a lesser extent continued operating as militarized associations of rebels both outside and within Russian borders in Siberia until roughly World War II 1939 1945 The movement s military arm was the White Army Bѣlaya armiya Belaya armiya Belaya armiya also known as the White Guard Bѣlaya gvardiya Belaya gvardiya Belaya gvardiya or White Guardsmen Bѣlogvardejcy Belogvardejcy Belogvardeytsi When the White Army was created the structure of the Russian Army of the Provisional Government period was used while almost every individual formation had its own characteristics The military art of the White Army was based on the experience of World War I which however left a strong imprint on the specifics of the Civil War 26 During the Russian Civil War the White movement functioned as a big tent political movement representing an array of political opinions in Russia united in their opposition to the Bolsheviks from the republican minded liberals and Kerenskyite social democrats on the left through monarchists and supporters of a united multinational Russia to the ultra nationalist Black Hundreds on the right Dissolution of the Constituent Assembly early Constituent Assembly rebellions edit The Russian Constituent Assembly had been a demand of the Bolsheviks against the Provisional Government which kept delaying it After the October Revolution the elections were run by the body appointed by the previous Provisional Government It was based on universal suffrage but used party lists from before the Left Right SR split The anti Bolshevik Right SRs won the elections with the majority of the seats 27 after which Lenin s Theses on the Constituent Assembly argued in Pravda that formal democracy was impossible because of class conflicts conflicts with Ukraine and the Kadet Kaledin uprising He argued the Constituent Assembly must unconditionally accept sovereignty of the soviet government or it would be dealt with by revolutionary means 28 On December 30 1917 the SR Nikolai Avksentiev and some followers were arrested for organizing a conspiracy This was the first time Bolsheviks used this kind of repression against a socialist party Izvestia said the arrest was not related to his membership in the Constituent Assembly 29 nbsp Viktor Chernov On January 4 1918 the All Russian Central Executive Committee made a resolution saying the slogan all power to the constituent assembly was counterrevolutionary and equivalent to down with the soviets 30 nbsp Maria Spiridonova The Constituent Assembly met on January 18 1918 The Right SR Chernov was elected president defeating the Bolshevik supported candidate the Left SR Maria Spiridonova she would later break with the Bolsheviks and after the decades of gulag she was shot on Stalin s orders in 1941 The Bolsheviks subsequently disbanded the Constituent Assembly and proceeded to rule the country as a one party state with all opposition parties outlawed 31 32 A simultaneous demonstration in favor of the Constituent Assembly was dispersed with force but there was little protest afterwards 33 The first large Cheka repression involving the killing of libertarian socialists in Petrograd began in April 1918 On May 1 1918 a pitched battle took place in Moscow between the anarchists and the Bolshevik police 34 Constituent Assembly uprising edit The Union of Regeneration was founded in Moscow in April 1918 as an underground agency organizing democratic resistance to the Bolshevik dictatorship composed of the Popular Socialists Right Socialist Revolutionaries and Defensists among others They were tasked with propping up anti Bolshevik forces and to create a Russian state system based on civil liberties patriotism and state consciousness with the goal to liberate the country from the Germano Bolshevik yoke 35 36 37 On May 7 1918 the Eighth Party Council of the Socialist Revolutionary Party commenced in Moscow and recognized the Union s leading role putting aside political ideology and class for the purpose of Russia s salvation They decided to start an uprising against the Bolsheviks with the goal of reconvening the Russian Constituent Assembly 35 While preparations were under way the Czechoslovak Legions overthrew Bolshevik rule in Siberia the Urals and the Volga region in late May early June 1918 and the center of SR activity shifted there On June 8 1918 five Constituent Assembly members formed the All Russian Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly Komuch in Samara and declared it the new supreme authority in the country 38 The Social Revolutionary Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia came to power on 29 June 1918 after the uprising in Vladivostok Exclusion of Mensheviks and SRs edit At the 5th All Russia Congress of Soviets of July 4 1918 the Left Socialist Revolutionaries had 352 delegates compared to 745 Bolsheviks out of 1132 total The Left SRs raised disagreements on the suppression of rival parties the death penalty and mainly the Treaty of Brest Litovsk The Bolsheviks excluded the Right SRs and Mensheviks from the government on 14 June for associating with counterrevolutionaries and seeking to organize armed attacks against the workers and peasants though Mensheviks had not supported them while the Left SRs advocated forming a government of all socialist parties The Left SRs agreed with extrajudicial execution of political opponents to stop the counterrevolution but opposed having the government legally pronouncing death sentences an unusual position that is best understood within the context of the group s terrorist past The Left SRs strongly opposed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk and opposed Trotsky s insistence that no one try to attack German troops in Ukraine 39 According to historian Marcel Liebman Lenin s wartime measures such as banning opposition parties was prompted by the fact that several political parties either took up arms against the new Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic or participated in sabotage collaboration with the deposed Tsarists or made assassination attempts against Lenin and other Bolshevik leaders 40 Liebman noted that opposition parties such as the Cadets and Mensheviks who were democratically elected to the Soviets in some areas then proceeded to use their mandate to welcome in Tsarist and foreign capitalist military forces 40 In one incident in Baku the British military once invited in proceeded to execute members of the Bolshevik Party who had peacefully stood down from the Soviet when they failed to win the elections As a result the Bolsheviks banned each opposition party when it turned against the Soviet government In some cases bans were lifted This banning of parties did not have the same repressive character as later bans enforced under the Stalinist regime 40 Repression edit In December 1917 Felix Dzerzhinsky was appointed to the duty of rooting out counter revolutionary threats to the Soviet government He was the director of the All Russian Extraordinary Commission aka Cheka a predecessor of the KGB that served as the secret police for the Soviets 41 From early 1918 the Bolsheviks started physical elimination of opposition other socialist and revolutionary fractions Anarchists were among the first Of all the revolutionary elements in Russia it is the Anarchists who now suffer the most ruthless and systematic persecution Their suppression by the Bolsheviki began already in 1918 when in the month of April of that year the Communist Government attacked without provocation or warning the Anarchist Club of Moscow and by the use of machine guns and artillery liquidated the whole organisation It was the beginning of Anarchist hounding but it was sporadic in character breaking out now and then quite planless and frequently self contradictory Alexander Berkman Emma Goldman Bolsheviks Shooting Anarchists 34 On 11 August 1918 prior to the events that would officially catalyze the Red Terror Vladimir Lenin had sent telegrams to introduce mass terror in Nizhny Novgorod in response to a suspected civilian uprising there and to crush landowners in Penza who resisted sometimes violently the requisitioning of their grain by military detachments 42 Comrades The kulak uprising in your five districts must be crushed without pity You must make example of these people 1 Hang I mean hang publicly so that people see it at least 100 kulaks rich bastards and known bloodsuckers 2 Publish their names 3 Seize all their grain 4 Single out the hostages per my instructions in yesterday s telegram Do all this so that for miles versts around people see it all understand it tremble and tell themselves that we are killing the bloodthirsty kulaks and that we will continue to do so Yours Lenin P S Find tougher people Lenin s Hanging Order In a mid August 1920 letter having received information that in Estonia and Latvia with which Soviet Russia had concluded peace treaties volunteers were being enrolled in anti Bolshevik detachments Lenin wrote to E M Sklyansky deputy chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council of the Republic 43 Great plan Finish it with Dzerzhinsky While pretending to be the greens we will blame them later we will advance by 10 20 miles versts and hang kulaks priests landowners Prize 100 000 rubles for each hanged man Leonid Kannegisser a young military cadet of the Imperial Russian Army assassinated Moisey Uritsky on August 17 1918 outside the Petrograd Cheka headquarters in retaliation for the execution of his friend and other officers 44 nbsp Vladimir Pchelin s depiction of the assassination attempt on Lenin This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is incomplete sentence starting with and sought to eliminate Next sentence explains the term which hasn t been introduced Please help improve this section if you can August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message On August 30 the SR Fanny Kaplan unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate Lenin 45 who sought to eliminate political dissent opposition and any other threat to Bolshevik power 46 As a result of the failed attempt on Lenin s life he began to crack down on his political enemies in an event known as the Red Terror More broadly the term is usually applied to Bolshevik political repression throughout the Civil War 1917 1922 47 48 41 During interrogation by the Cheka she made the following statement My name is Fanya Kaplan Today I shot Lenin I did it on my own I will not say from whom I obtained my revolver I will give no details I had resolved to kill Lenin long ago I consider him a traitor to the Revolution I was exiled to Akatui for participating in an assassination attempt against a Tsarist official in Kiev I spent 11 years at hard labour After the Revolution I was freed I favoured the Constituent Assembly and am still for it 49 Kaplan referenced the Bolsheviks growing authoritarianism citing their forcible shutdown of the Constituent Assembly in January 1918 the elections to which they had lost When it became clear that Kaplan would not implicate any accomplices she was executed in Alexander Garden The order was carried out by the commander of the Kremlin the former Baltic sailor P D Malkov and a group of Latvian Bolsheviks 50 page needed non primary source needed on September 3 1918 with a bullet to the back of the head 51 Her corpse was bundled into a barrel and set alight The order came from Yakov Sverdlov who only six weeks earlier had ordered the murder of the Tsar and his family 52 53 442 These events persuaded the government to heed Dzerzhinsky s lobbying for greater terror against opposition The campaign of mass repressions would officially begin thereafter 45 41 The Red Terror is considered to have officially begun between 17 and 30 August 1918 45 41 Revolts against grain requisitioning edit Protests against grain requisitioning of the peasantry were a major component of the Tambov Rebellion and similar uprisings Lenin s New Economic Policy was introduced as a concession The policies of food dictatorship proclaimed by the Bolsheviks in May 1918 sparked violent resistance in numerous districts of European Russia revolts and clashes between the peasants and the Red Army were reported in Voronezh Tambov Penza Saratov and in the districts of Kostroma Moscow Novgorod Petrograd Pskov and Smolensk The revolts were bloodily crushed by the Bolsheviks in the Voronezh Oblast the Red Guards killed sixteen peasants during the pacification of the village while another village was shelled with artillery in order to force the peasants to surrender and in the Novgorod Oblast the rebelling peasants were dispersed with machine gun fire from a train sent by a detachment of Latvian Red Army soldiers 54 While the Bolsheviks immediately denounced the rebellion as orchestrated by the SRs there is actually no evidence that they were involved into peasant violence which they deemed as counterproductive 55 Allied intervention edit Main article Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War The Western Allies armed and supported opponents of the Bolsheviks They were worried about a possible Russo German alliance the prospect of the Bolsheviks making good on their threats to default on Imperial Russia s massive foreign debts and the possibility that Communist revolutionary ideas would spread a concern shared by many Central Powers Hence many of the countries expressed their support for the Whites including the provision of troops and supplies Winston Churchill declared that Bolshevism must be strangled in its cradle 56 The British and French had supported Russia during World War I on a massive scale with war materials After the treaty it looked like much of that material would fall into the hands of the Germans To meet that danger the Allies intervened with Great Britain and France sending troops into Russian ports There were violent clashes with the Bolsheviks Britain intervened in support of the White forces to defeat the Bolsheviks and prevent the spread of communism across Europe 57 Buffer states edit nbsp Borders of the buffer states drawn by the Treaty of Brest Litovsk The German Empire created several short lived buffer states within its sphere of influence after the Treaty of Brest Litovsk the United Baltic Duchy Duchy of Courland and Semigallia Kingdom of Lithuania Kingdom of Poland 58 the Belarusian People s Republic and the Ukrainian State Following Germany s Armistice in World War I in November 1918 the states were abolished 59 60 Finland was the first republic that declared its independence from Russia in December 1917 and established itself in the ensuing Finnish Civil War between pro independence White Guards and pro Russian Bolshevik Red Guards from January May 1918 61 The Second Polish Republic Lithuania Latvia and Estonia formed their own armies immediately after the abolition of the Brest Litovsk Treaty and the start of the Soviet westward offensive and subsequent Polish Soviet War in November 1918 62 Geography and chronology editMain articles Southern Front of the Russian Civil War North Russia Campaign Eastern Front of the Russian Civil War Yakut Revolt and Finnish Civil War In the European part of Russia the war was fought across three main fronts the eastern the southern and the northwestern It can also be roughly split into the following periods nbsp Anti Bolshevik Volunteer Army in South Russia January 1918 The first period lasted from the Revolution until the Armistice or roughly March 1917 to November 1918 Already on the date of the Revolution Cossack General Alexey Kaledin refused to recognize it and assumed full governmental authority in the Don region 63 where the Volunteer Army began amassing support The signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk also resulted in direct Allied intervention in Russia and the arming of military forces opposed to the Bolshevik government There were also many German commanders who offered support against the Bolsheviks fearing a confrontation with them was impending as well During the first period the Bolsheviks took control of Central Asia out of the hands of the Provisional Government and White Army setting up a base for the Communist Party in the Steppe and Turkestan where nearly two million Russian settlers were located 64 Most of the fighting in the first period was sporadic involved only small groups and had a fluid and rapidly shifting strategic situation Among the antagonists were the Czechoslovak Legion 65 the Poles of the 4th and 5th Rifle Divisions and the pro Bolshevik Red Latvian riflemen The second period of the war lasted from January to November 1919 At first the White armies advances from the south under Denikin the east under Kolchak and the northwest under Yudenich were successful forcing the Red Army and its allies back on all three fronts In July 1919 the Red Army suffered another reverse after a mass defection of units in the Crimea to the anarchist Insurgent Army under Nestor Makhno enabling anarchist forces to consolidate power in Ukraine Leon Trotsky soon reformed the Red Army concluding the first of two military alliances with the anarchists In June the Red Army first checked Kolchak s advance After a series of engagements assisted by an Insurgent Army offensive against White supply lines the Red Army defeated Denikin s and Yudenich s armies in October and November The third period of the war was the extended siege of the last White forces in the Crimea in 1920 General Wrangel had gathered the remnants of Denikin s armies occupying much of the Crimea An attempted invasion of southern Ukraine was rebuffed by the Insurgent Army under Makhno s command Pursued into Crimea by Makhno s troops Wrangel went over to the defensive in the Crimea After an abortive move north against the Red Army Wrangel s troops were forced south by Red Army and Insurgent Army forces Wrangel and the remains of his army were evacuated to Constantinople in November 1920 Warfare editOctober Revolution edit Main article October Revolution nbsp European theatre of the Russian Civil War In the October Revolution the Bolshevik Party directed the Red Guard armed groups of workers and Imperial army deserters to seize control of Petrograd and immediately began the armed takeover of cities and villages throughout the former Russian Empire In January 1918 the Bolsheviks dissolved the Russian Constituent Assembly and proclaimed the Soviets workers councils as the new government of Russia Initial anti Bolshevik uprisings edit Main articles Kerensky Krasnov uprising Junker mutiny and Volunteer Army The first attempt to regain power from the Bolsheviks was made by the Kerensky Krasnov uprising in October 1917 It was supported by the Junker Mutiny in Petrograd but was quickly put down by the Red Guard notably including the Latvian Rifle Division The initial groups that fought against the Communists were local Cossack armies that had declared their loyalty to the Provisional Government Kaledin of the Don Cossacks and General Grigory Semenov of the Siberian Cossacks were prominent among them The leading Tsarist officers of the Imperial Russian Army also started to resist In November General Mikhail Alekseev the Tsar s Chief of Staff during the First World War began to organize the Volunteer Army in Novocherkassk Volunteers of the small army were mostly officers of the old Russian army military cadets and students In December 1917 Alekseev was joined by General Lavr Kornilov Denikin and other Tsarist officers who had escaped from the jail where they had been imprisoned following the abortive Kornilov affair just before the Revolution 66 On 9 December the Military Revolutionary Committee in Rostov rebelled with the Bolsheviks controlling the city for five days until the Alekseev Organization supported Kaledin in recapturing the city According to Peter Kenez The operation begun on December 9 can be regarded as the beginning of the Civil War 67 Having stated in the November 1917 Declaration of Rights of Nations of Russia that any nation under imperial Russian rule should be immediately given the power of self determination the Bolsheviks had begun to usurp the power of the Provisional Government in the territories of Central Asia soon after the establishment of the Turkestan Committee in Tashkent 68 In April 1917 the Provisional Government set up the committee which was mostly made up of former Tsarist officials 69 The Bolsheviks attempted to take control of the Committee in Tashkent on 12 September 1917 but it was unsuccessful and many leaders were arrested However because the Committee lacked representation of the native population and poor Russian settlers they had to release the Bolshevik prisoners almost immediately because of a public outcry and a successful takeover of that government body took place two months later in November 70 The Leagues of Mohammedam Working People which Russian settlers and natives who had been sent to work behind the lines for the Tsarist government in 1916 formed in March 1917 had led numerous strikes in the industrial centers throughout September 1917 71 However after the Bolshevik destruction of the Provisional Government in Tashkent Muslim elites formed an autonomous government in Turkestan commonly called the Kokand autonomy or simply Kokand 72 The White Russians supported that government body which lasted several months because of Bolshevik troop isolation from Moscow 73 In January 1918 the Soviet forces under Lt Col Muravyov invaded Ukraine and invested Kiev where the Central Council of Ukraine held power With the help of the Kiev Arsenal Uprising the Bolsheviks captured the city on 26 January 74 Peace with the Central Powers edit Main article Treaty of Brest Litovsk nbsp Soviet delegation with Trotsky greeted by German officers at Brest Litovsk 8 January 1918 The Bolsheviks decided to immediately make peace with the Central Powers as they had promised the Russian people before the Revolution 75 Vladimir Lenin s political enemies attributed that decision to his sponsorship by the Foreign Office of Wilhelm II German Emperor offered to Lenin in hope that with a revolution Russia would withdraw from World War I That suspicion was bolstered by the German Foreign Ministry s sponsorship of Lenin s return to Petrograd 76 However after the military fiasco of the summer offensive June 1917 by the Russian Provisional Government had devastated the structure of the Russian Army it became crucial that Lenin realize the promised peace 77 Even before the failed summer offensive the Russian population was very skeptical about the continuation of the war Western socialists had promptly arrived from France and from the UK to convince the Russians to continue the fight but could not change the new pacifist mood of Russia 78 On 16 December 1917 an armistice was signed between Russia and the Central Powers in Brest Litovsk and peace talks began 79 As a condition for peace the proposed treaty by the Central Powers conceded huge portions of the former Russian Empire to the German Empire and the Ottoman Empire greatly upsetting nationalists and conservatives Leon Trotsky representing the Bolsheviks refused at first to sign the treaty while continuing to observe a unilateral cease fire following the policy of No war no peace 80 Therefore on 18 February 1918 the Germans began Operation Faustschlag on the Eastern Front encountering virtually no resistance in a campaign that lasted 11 days 80 Signing a formal peace treaty was the only option in the eyes of the Bolsheviks because the Russian Army was demobilized and the newly formed Red Guard could not stop the advance They also understood that the impending counter revolutionary resistance was more dangerous than the concessions of the treaty which Lenin viewed as temporary in the light of aspirations for a world revolution The Soviets acceded to a peace treaty and the formal agreement the Treaty of Brest Litovsk was ratified on 3 March The Soviets viewed the treaty as merely a necessary and expedient means to end the war Ukraine South Russia and Caucasus 1918 edit Main articles Ukrainian People s Republic Kiev Arsenal January Uprising Ice March 26 Baku Commissars German Caucasus Expedition Battle of Baku Central Caspian Dictatorship and Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia nbsp February 1918 article from The New York Times showing a map of the Russian Imperial territories claimed by the Ukrainian People s Republic at the time before the annexation of the Austro Hungarian lands of the West Ukrainian People s Republic In Ukraine the German Austrian Operation Faustschlag had by April 1918 removed the Bolsheviks from Ukraine 81 82 83 84 85 The German and Austro Hungarian victories in Ukraine were caused by the apathy of the locals and the inferior fighting skills of Bolsheviks troops to their Austro Hungarian and German counterparts 85 Under Soviet pressure the Volunteer Army embarked on the epic Ice March from Yekaterinodar to Kuban on 22 February 1918 where they joined with the Kuban Cossacks to mount an abortive assault on Yekaterinodar 86 The Soviets recaptured Rostov on the next day 86 Kornilov was killed in the fighting on 13 April and Denikin took over command Fighting off its pursuers without respite the army succeeded in breaking its way through back towards the Don by May where the Cossack uprising against the Bolsheviks had started 87 The Baku Soviet Commune was established on 13 April Germany landed its Caucasus Expedition troops in Poti on 8 June The Ottoman Army of Islam in coalition with Azerbaijan drove them out of Baku on 26 July 1918 Subsequently the Dashanaks Right SRs and Mensheviks started negotiations with Gen Dunsterville the commander of the British troops in Persia The Bolsheviks and their Left SR allies were opposed to it but on 25 July the majority of the Soviets voted to call in the British and the Bolsheviks resigned The Baku Soviet Commune ended its existence and was replaced by the Central Caspian Dictatorship In June 1918 the Volunteer Army numbering some 9 000 men started its Second Kuban campaign capturing Yekaterinodar on 16 August followed by Armavir and Stavropol By early 1919 they controlled the Northern Caucasus 88 On 8 October Alekseev died On 8 January 1919 Denikin became the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces of South Russia uniting the Volunteer Army with Pyotr Krasnov s Don Army Pyotr Wrangel became Denikin s Chief of Staff 89 In December three fourths of the army was in the Northern Caucasus That included three thousand of Vladimir Liakhov s soldiers around Vladikavkaz thirteen thousand soldiers under Wrangel and Kazanovich in the center of the front Stankevich s almost three thousand men with the Don Cossacks while Vladimir May Mayevsky s three thousand were sent to the Donets basin and de Bode commanded two thousand in Crimea 90 Eastern Russia Siberia and the Far East 1918 edit Main articles Revolt of the Czechoslovak Legion Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly and Provisional All Russian Government The revolt of the Czechoslovak Legion broke out in May 1918 and proceeded to occupy the Trans Siberian Railway from Ufa to Vladivostok Uprisings overthrew other Bolshevik towns On 7 July the western portion of the legion declared itself to be a new eastern front anticipating allied intervention According to William Henry Chamberlin Two governments emerged as a result of the first successes of the Czechs the West Siberian Commissariat and the Government of the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly in Samara On 17 July shortly before the fall of Yekaterinburg the former tsar and his family were murdered 91 nbsp Czechoslovak legionaries of the 8th Regiment at Nikolsk Ussuriysky killed by Bolsheviks 1918 Above them stand also members of the Czechoslovak Legion The Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries supported peasants fighting against Soviet control of food supplies 92 In May 1918 with the support of the Czechoslovak Legion they took Samara and Saratov establishing the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly known as the Komuch By July the authority of the Komuch extended over much of the area controlled by the Czechoslovak Legion The Komuch pursued an ambivalent social policy combining democratic and socialist measures such as the institution of an eight hour working day with restorative actions such as returning both factories and land to their former owners After the fall of Kazan Vladimir Lenin called for the dispatch of Petrograd workers to the Kazan Front We must send down the maximum number of Petrograd workers 1 a few dozen leaders like Kayurov 2 a few thousand militants from the ranks After a series of reverses at the front the Bolsheviks War Commissar Trotsky instituted increasingly harsh measures in order to prevent unauthorised withdrawals desertions and mutinies in the Red Army In the field the Cheka Special Investigations Forces termed the Special Punitive Department of the All Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combat of Counter Revolution and Sabotage or Special Punitive Brigades followed the Red Army conducting field tribunals and summary executions of soldiers and officers who deserted retreated from their positions or failed to display sufficient offensive zeal 93 94 The Cheka Special Investigations Forces were also charged with the detection of sabotage and counter revolutionary activity by Red Army soldiers and commanders Trotsky extended the use of the death penalty to the occasional political commissar whose detachment retreated or broke in the face of the enemy 95 In August frustrated at continued reports of Red Army troops breaking under fire Trotsky authorised the formation of barrier troops stationed behind unreliable Red Army units and given orders to shoot anyone withdrawing from the battle line without authorisation 96 nbsp Admiral Alexander Kolchak reviewing the troops 1919 In September 1918 the Komuch the Siberian Provisional Government and other anti Bolshevik Russians agreed during the State Meeting in Ufa to form a new Provisional All Russian Government in Omsk headed by a Directory of five two Socialist Revolutionaries Nikolai Avksentiev and Vladimir Zenzinov the Kadet lawyer V A Vinogradov Siberian Premier Vologodskii and General Vasily Boldyrev 97 By the fall of 1918 anti Bolshevik White forces in the east included the People s Army Komuch the Siberian Army of the Siberian Provisional Government and insurgent Cossack units of Orenburg the Urals Siberia Semirechye Baikal and Amur and Ussuri Cossacks nominally under the orders of Gen V G Boldyrev Commander in Chief appointed by the Ufa Directorate On the Volga Col Kappel s White detachment captured Kazan on 7 August but Red Forces recaptured the city on 8 September 1918 following a counteroffensive On the 11th Simbirsk fell and on 8 October Samara The Whites fell back eastwards to Ufa and Orenburg In Omsk the Russian Provisional Government quickly came under the influence and later the dominance of its new War Minister the rear admiral Kolchak On 18 November a coup d etat established Kolchak as supreme leader Two members of the Directory were arrested and subsequently deported while Kolchak was proclaimed Supreme Ruler and Commander in Chief of all Land and Naval Forces of Russia 98 By mid December 1918 the White armies had to leave Ufa but they balanced that failure with a successful drive towards Perm which they took on 24 December Barrier troops edit In the Red Army the concept of barrier troops first arose in August 1918 with the formation of the zagraditelnye otryady zagraditelnye otriady translated as blocking troops or anti retreat detachments Russian zagradotryady zagraditelnye otryady otryady zagrazhdeniya 99 The barrier troops comprised personnel drawn from the Cheka punitive detachments or from regular Red Army infantry regiments The first use of the barrier troops by the Red Army occurred in the late summer and fall of 1918 in the Eastern front during the Russian Civil War when Leon Trotsky authorized Mikhail Tukhachevsky the commander of the 1st Army to station blocking detachments behind unreliable Red Army infantry regiments in the 1st Red Army with orders to shoot if front line troops either deserted or retreated without permission 99 In December 1918 Trotsky ordered that detachments of additional barrier troops be raised for attachment to each infantry formation in the Red Army On December 18 he cabled How do things stand with the blocking units As far as I am aware they have not been included in our establishment and it appears they have no personnel It is absolutely essential that we have at least an embryonic network of blocking units and that we work out a procedure for bringing them up to strength and deploying them 99 The barrier troops were also used to enforce Bolshevik control over food supplies in areas controlled by the Red Army as part of Lenin s war communism policies a role which soon earned them the hatred of the Russian civilian population 100 These policies led to the Russian famine of 1921 1922 which killed about five million people 101 102 Central Asia 1918 edit nbsp London Geographical Institute s 1919 map of Europe after Brest Litovsk and Batum and before the treaties of Tartu Kars and Riga In February 1918 the Red Army overthrew the White Russian supported Kokand Autonomy of Turkestan 103 Although that move seemed to solidify Bolshevik power in Central Asia more troubles soon arose for the Red Army as the Allied Forces began to intervene British support of the White Army provided the greatest threat to the Red Army in Central Asia during 1918 Britain sent three prominent military leaders to the area One was Lieutenant Colonel Frederick Marshman Baile who recorded a mission to Tashkent from where the Bolsheviks forced him to flee Another was General Wilfrid Malleson leading the Malleson Mission who assisted the Mensheviks in Ashkhabad now the capital of Turkmenistan with a small Anglo Indian force However he failed to gain control of Tashkent Bukhara and Khiva The third was Major General Dunsterville who was driven out by the Bolsheviks of Central Asia only a month after his arrival in August 1918 104 Despite setbacks as a result of British invasions during 1918 the Bolsheviks continued to make progress in bringing the Central Asian population under their influence The first regional congress of the Russian Communist Party convened in the city of Tashkent in June 1918 in order to build support for a local Bolshevik Party 105 Left SR Uprising edit Main articles Left SR uprising and Yaroslavl Uprising On 6 July 1918 two Left Socialist Revolutionaries and Cheka employees Yakov Blumkin and Nikolai Andreyev assassinated the German ambassador Count Mirbach In Moscow a Left SR uprising was put down by the Bolsheviks mass arrests of Socialist Revolutionaries followed and executions became more frequent Chamberlin noted The time of relative leniency toward former fellow revolutionists was over The Left Socialist Revolutionaries of course were no longer tolerated as members of the Soviets from this time the Soviet regime became a pure and undiluted dictatorship of the Communist Party Similarly Boris Savinkov s surprise attacks were suppressed with many of the conspirators being executed as Mass Red Terror became a reality 106 Estonia Latvia and Petrograd edit Main articles Estonian War of Independence Latvian War of Independence and Battle of Petrograd Estonia cleared its territory of the Red Army by January 1919 107 Baltic German volunteers captured Riga from the Red Latvian Riflemen on 22 May but the Estonian 3rd Division defeated the Baltic Germans a month later aiding the establishment of the Republic of Latvia 108 nbsp General Nikolai Yudenich That rendered possible another threat to the Red Army from General Yudenich who had spent the summer organizing the Northwestern Army in Estonia with local and British support In October 1919 he tried to capture Petrograd in a sudden assault with a force of around 20 000 men The attack was well executed using night attacks and lightning cavalry maneuvers to turn the flanks of the defending Red Army Yudenich also had six British tanks which caused panic whenever they appeared The Allies gave large quantities of aid to Yudenich but he complained of receiving insufficient support By 19 October Yudenich s troops had reached the outskirts of the city Some members of the Bolshevik central committee in Moscow were willing to give up Petrograd but Trotsky refused to accept the loss of the city and personally organized its defenses Trotsky himself declared It is impossible for a little army of 15 000 ex officers to master a working class capital of 700 000 inhabitants He settled on a strategy of urban defense proclaiming that the city would defend itself on its own ground and that the White Army would be lost in a labyrinth of fortified streets and there meet its grave 109 Trotsky armed all available workers men and women and ordered the transfer of military forces from Moscow Within a few weeks the Red Army defending Petrograd had tripled in size and outnumbered Yudenich three to one Yudenich short of supplies then decided to call off the siege of the city and withdrew He repeatedly asked permission to withdraw his army across the border to Estonia However units retreating across the border were disarmed and interned by orders of the Estonian government which had entered into peace negotiations with the Soviet Government on 16 September and had been informed by the Soviet authorities of their 6 November decision that if the White Army was allowed to retreat into Estonia it would be pursued across the border by the Reds 110 In fact the Reds attacked Estonian army positions and fighting continued until a ceasefire went into effect on 3 January 1920 After the Treaty of Tartu most of Yudenich s soldiers went into exile Former Imperial Russian and then Finnish General Mannerheim planned an intervention to help the Whites in Russia capture Petrograd However he did not gain the necessary support for the endeavour Lenin considered it completely certain that the slightest aid from Finland would have determined the fate of the city Northern Russia 1919 edit Main article North Russia intervention The British occupied Murmansk and seized Arkhangelsk alongside United States forces With the retreat of Kolchak in Siberia they pulled their troops out of the cities before the winter trapped them in the port The remaining White forces under Yevgeny Miller evacuated the region in February 1920 111 Siberia 1919 edit nbsp Russian soldiers of the anti Bolshevik Siberian Army in 1919 At the beginning of March 1919 the general offensive of the Whites on the eastern front began Ufa was retaken on 13 March by mid April the White Army stopped at the Glazov Chistopol Bugulma Buguruslan Sharlyk line Reds started their counteroffensive against Kolchak s forces at the end of April The Red 5th Army led by the capable commander Tukhachevsky captured Elabuga on 26 May Sarapul on 2 June and Izevsk on the 7th and continued to push forward Both sides had victories and losses but by the middle of summer the Red Army was larger than the White Army and had managed to recapture territory previously lost 112 Following the abortive offensive at Chelyabinsk the White armies withdrew beyond the Tobol In September 1919 a White offensive was launched against the Tobol Front the last attempt to change the course of events However on 14 October the Reds counterattacked and thus began the uninterrupted retreat of the Whites to the east On 14 November 1919 the Red Army captured Omsk 113 Adm Kolchak lost control of his government shortly after the defeat White Army forces in Siberia had essentially ceased to exist by December Retreat of the eastern front by White armies lasted three months until mid February 1920 when the survivors after crossing Lake Baikal reached the Chita area and joined Ataman Semenov s forces South Russia 1919 edit nbsp Anti Bolshevik propaganda poster For united Russia representing Soviet Russia as a fallen communist dragon and the White Cause as a crusading knight nbsp Polonophobic Soviet propaganda poster 1920 The Cossacks had been unable to organise and capitalise on their successes at the end of 1918 By 1919 they had begun to run short of supplies Consequently when the Soviet Russian counteroffensive began in January 1919 under the Bolshevik commander Antonov Ovseenko the Cossack forces rapidly fell apart The Red Army captured Kiev on 3 February 1919 114 Denikin s military strength continued to grow in 1919 with significant munitions supplied by the British In January Denikin s Armed Forces of South Russia AFSR completed the elimination of Red forces in the northern Caucasus and moved north in an effort to protect the Don district 115 On 18 December 1918 French forces landed in Odessa and Crimea but evacuated Odessa on 6 April 1919 and the Crimea by the end of the month According to Chamberlin France gave far less practical aid to the Whites than did England its sole independent venture in intervention at Odessa ended in a complete fiasco 116 Denikin then reorganized the Armed Forces of South Russia under the leadership of Vladimir May Mayevsky Vladimir Sidorin and Pyotr Wrangel On 22 May Wrangel s Caucasian army defeated the 10th Army RSFSR in the battle for Velikoknyazheskaya and then captured Tsaritsyn on 1 July Sidorin advanced north toward Voronezh increasing his army s strength in the process On 25 June May Mayevsky captured Kharkov and then Ekaterinoslav on 30 June which forced the Reds to abandon Crimea On 3 July Denikin issued his Moscow directive in which his armies would converge on Moscow 117 Although Britain had withdrawn its own troops from the theatre it continued to give significant military aid money weapons food ammunition and some military advisers to the White Armies during 1919 Major Ewen Cameron Bruce of the British Army had volunteered to command a British tank mission assisting the White Army He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order 118 for his bravery during the June 1919 Battle of Tsaritsyn for single handedly storming and capturing the fortified city of Tsaritsyn under heavy shell fire in a single tank which led to the capture of over 40 000 prisoners 119 The fall of Tsaritsyn is viewed as one of the key battles of the Russian Civil War and greatly helped the White Russian cause 119 The notable historian Sir Basil Henry Liddell Hart comments that Bruce s tank action during the battle is to be seen as one of the most remarkable feats in the whole history of the Tank Corps 120 On 14 August the Bolsheviks launched their Southern Front counteroffensive After six weeks of heavy fighting the counteroffensive failed and Denikin was able to capture more territory By November White Forces had reached the Zbruch the Ukrainian Polish border 121 nbsp General Pyotr Wrangel in Tsaritsyn 15 October 1919 Denikin s forces constituted a real threat and for a time threatened to reach Moscow The Red Army stretched thin by fighting on all fronts was forced out of Kiev on 30 August Kursk and Orel were taken on 20 September and 14 October respectively The latter only 205 miles 330 km from Moscow was the closest the AFSR would come to its target 122 The Cossack Don Army under the command of General Vladimir Sidorin continued north towards Voronezh but Semyon Budyonny s cavalrymen defeated them there on 24 October That allowed the Red Army to cross the Don River threatening to split the Don and Volunteer Armies Fierce fighting took place at the key rail junction of Kastornoye which was taken on 15 November Kursk was retaken two days later 123 nbsp Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge a famous Bolshevik Constructivist propaganda poster by El Lissitzky which abstractly represents the defeat of the Whites by the Red Army Kenez states In October Denikin ruled more than forty million people and controlled the economically most valuable parts of the Russian Empire Yet The White armies which had fought victoriously during the summer and early fall fell back in disorder in November and December Denikin s front line was overstretched while his reserves dealt with Makhno s anarchists in the rear Between September and October the Reds mobilized one hundred thousand new soldiers and adopted the Trotsky Vatsetis strategy with the Ninth and Tenth armies forming V I Shorin s Southeastern Front between Tsaritsyn and Bobrov while the Eighth Twelfth Thirteenth and Fourteenth armies formed A I Egorov s Southern Front between Zhitomir and Bobrov Sergey Kamenev was in overall command of the two fronts On Denikin s left was Abram Dragomirov while in his center was Vladimir May Mayevsky s Volunteer Army Vladimir Sidorin s Don Cossacks were further east with Pyotr Wrangel s Caucasian army at Tsaritsyn and an additional was in the Northern Caucasus attempting to capture Astrakhan On 20 October May Mayevsky was forced to evacuate Orel during the Orel Kursk operation On 24 October Semyon Budyonny captured Voronezh and Kursk on 15 November during the Voronezh Kastornoye operation 1919 On 6 January the Reds reached the Black Sea at Mariupol and Taganrog and on 9 January they reached Rostov According to Kenez The Whites had now lost all the territories which they had captured in 1919 and held approximately the same area in which they had started two years before 124 Central Asia 1919 edit By February 1919 the British government had pulled its military forces out of Central Asia 125 Despite the success for the Red Army the White Army s assaults in European Russia and other areas broke communication between Moscow and Tashkent For a time Central Asia was completely cut off from Red Army forces in Siberia 126 Although the communication failure weakened the Red Army the Bolsheviks continued their efforts to gain support for the Bolshevik Party in Central Asia by holding a second regional conference in March During the conference a regional bureau of Muslim organisations of the Russian Bolshevik Party was formed The Bolshevik Party continued to try to gain support among the native population by giving it the impression of better representation for the Central Asian population and throughout the end of the year could maintain harmony with the Central Asian people 127 Communication difficulties with Red Army forces in Siberia and European Russia ceased to be a problem by mid November 1919 Red Army successes north of Central Asia caused communication with Moscow to be re established and the Bolsheviks to claim victory over the White Army in Turkestan 126 In the Ural Guryev operation of 1919 1920 the Red Turkestan Front defeated the Ural Army During winter 1920 Ural Cossacks and their families totaling about 15 000 people headed south along the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea towards Fort Alexandrovsk Only a few hundred of them reached Persia in June 1920 128 The Orenburg Independent Army was formed from Orenburg Cossacks and other troops who rebelled against the Bolsheviks During the winter 1919 20 the Orenburg Army retreated to Semirechye in what is known as the Starving March as half of the participants perished 129 In March 1920 her remnants crossed the border into the Northwestern region of China South Russia Ukraine and Kronstadt 1920 21 edit nbsp Polish anti Soviet poster depicting Lev Trotsky q At the beginning of 1920 Denikin was reduced to defending Novorossia the Crimean peninsula and the Northern Caucasus On 26 January the Caucasian army retreated beyond the Manych On 7 February the Reds occupied Odessa but then Makhno s anarchists started fighting the Fourteenth Red Army On 20 February Denikin succeeded in recapturing Rostov his last victory before giving it up soon after 130 By the beginning of 1920 the main body of the Armed Forces of South Russia was rapidly retreating towards the Don to Rostov Denikin hoped to hold the crossings of the Don then rest and reform his troops but the White Army was not able to hold the Don area and at the end of February 1920 started a retreat across Kuban towards Novorossiysk Slipshod evacuation of Novorossiysk proved to be a dark event for the White Army Russian and Allied ships evacuated about 40 000 of Denikin s men from Novorossiysk to the Crimea without horses or any heavy equipment while about 20 000 men were left behind and either dispersed or were captured by the Red Army Following the disastrous Novorossiysk evacuation Denikin stepped down and the military council elected Wrangel as the new Commander in Chief of the White Army He was able to restore order to the dispirited troops and reshape an army that could fight as a regular force again It remained an organized force in the Crimea throughout 1920 131 nbsp The Tambov Rebellion was one of the largest and best organised peasant rebellions challenging the Bolshevik regime After Moscow s Bolshevik government signed a military and political alliance with Nestor Makhno and the Ukrainian anarchists the Insurgent Army attacked and defeated several regiments of Wrangel s troops in southern Ukraine forcing him to retreat before he could capture that year s grain harvest 132 Stymied in his efforts to consolidate his hold Wrangel then attacked north in an attempt to take advantage of recent Red Army defeats at the close of the Polish Soviet War of 1919 1920 The Red Army eventually halted the offensive and Wrangel s troops had to retreat to Crimea in November 1920 pursued by both the Red and Black cavalry and infantry Wrangel s fleet evacuated him and his army to Constantinople on 14 November 1920 ending the struggle of Reds and Whites in Southern Russia 114 After the defeat of Wrangel the Red Army immediately repudiated its 1920 treaty of alliance with Nestor Makhno and attacked the anarchist Insurgent Army the campaign to liquidate Makhno and the Ukrainian anarchists began with an attempted assassination of Makhno by Cheka agents Anger at continued repression by the Bolshevik Communist government and at its liberal use of the Cheka to put down anarchist elements led to a naval mutiny at Kronstadt in March 1921 followed by peasant revolts all of which were put down by the Bolsheviks The outset of the year was marked by strikes and demonstrations in both Moscow and Petrograd as well as the countryside due to discontent with the results of policies that made up war communism 133 134 The Bolsheviks in response to the protests enacted martial law and sent the Red Army to disperse the workers 135 136 This was followed up by mass arrests executed by the Cheka 137 Repression and minor concessions only temporarily quelled the discontent as Petrograd protests continued that year in March This time the factory workers were joined by sailors stationed on the nearby island fort of Kronstadt 138 Disappointed in the direction of the Bolshevik government the rebels demanded a series of reforms including reduction in Bolshevik privileges newly elected soviets to include socialist and anarchist groups economic freedom for peasants and workers dissolution of the bureaucratic governmental organs created during the civil war and the restoration of worker rights for the working class 139 The workers and sailors of the Kronstadt rebellion were promptly crushed by Red Army forces with a thousand rebels killed in battle and another thousand executed the following weeks with many more fleeing abroad and to the countryside 140 141 142 These events coincided with the 10th Congress of the Russian Communist Party Bolsheviks There Lenin argued that the soviets and the principle of democratic centralism within the Bolshevik party still assured democracy However faced with support for Kronstadt within Bolshevik ranks Lenin also issued a temporary ban on factions in the Russian Communist Party This ban remained until the revolutions of 1989 and according to some critics made the democratic procedures within the party an empty formality and helped Stalin to consolidate much more authority under the party Soviets were transformed into the bureaucratic structure that existed for the rest of the history of the Soviet Union and were completely under the control of party officials and the politburo r Red Army attacks on the anarchist forces and their sympathisers increased in ferocity throughout 1921 143 Siberia and the Far East 1920 22 edit Main article Far Eastern Front in the Russian Civil War In Siberia Admiral Kolchak s army had disintegrated He himself gave up command after the loss of Omsk and designated Gen Grigory Semyonov as the new leader of the White Army in Siberia Not long afterward Kolchak was arrested by the disaffected Czechoslovak Legion as he traveled towards Irkutsk without the protection of the army and was turned over to the socialist Political Centre in Irkutsk Six days later the regime was replaced by a Bolshevik dominated Military Revolutionary Committee On 6 7 February Kolchak and his prime minister Victor Pepelyaev were shot and their bodies were thrown through the ice of the frozen Angara River just before the arrival of the White Army in the area 144 Remnants of Kolchak s army reached Transbaikalia and joined Semyonov s troops forming the Far Eastern army With the support of the Japanese army it was able to hold Chita but after the withdrawal of Japanese soldiers from Transbaikalia Semenov s position became untenable and in November 1920 he was driven by the Red Army from Transbaikalia and took refuge in China The Japanese who had plans to annex the Amur Krai finally pulled their troops out as Bolshevik forces gradually asserted control over the Russian Far East On 25 October 1922 Vladivostok fell to the Red Army and the Provisional Priamur Government was extinguished Aftermath edit nbsp A map of Europe in 1923 after the Russian Civil War among other revolutions With the end of the war the Communist Party of the Soviet Union no longer faced an acute military threat to its existence and power However the perceived threat of continued popular discontent combined with the failure of socialist revolutions in other countries most notably the German Revolution contributed to the continued militarization of Soviet society The Bolsheviks managed to consolidate control over Russia but were only partially successful at re establishing territorial control of the other provinces of the former Russian Empire The Peace of Riga signed in March 1921 after the Polish Soviet War split the territories in Belarus and Ukraine between the Republic of Poland and Soviet Russia Estonia Finland Latvia and Lithuania all repelled Soviet invasions while Armenia Azerbaijan and Georgia were occupied by the Red Army 13 14 Evacuations edit Main article White emigre See also Evacuation of Novorossiysk 1920 and Evacuation of the Crimea nbsp Refugees on flatcars Around one to two million people known as the White emigres fled Russia many with General Wrangel some through the Far East and others west into the newly independent Baltic countries The emigres included a large percentage of the educated and skilled population of Russia 145 Ensuing rebellion edit In Central Asia Red Army troops continued to face resistance into 1923 where basmachi armed bands of Islamic guerrillas had formed to fight the Bolshevik takeover The Soviets engaged non Russian peoples in Central Asia like Magaza Masanchi commander of the Dungan Cavalry Regiment to fight against the Basmachis The Communist Party did not completely dismantle the group until 1934 146 General Anatoly Pepelyayev continued armed resistance in the Ayano Maysky District until June 1923 The regions of Kamchatka and Northern Sakhalin remained under Japanese occupation until their treaty with the Soviet Union in 1925 when their forces were finally withdrawn Casualties edit nbsp Street children during the Russian Civil War See also Red Terror Russia and White Terror Russia The results of the civil war were momentous Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that 300 000 men were killed in action during the Civil War and Polish Soviet War 125 000 in the Red Army 175 500 White armies and Poles and the total number of military personnel from both sides dead from disease as 450 000 147 Boris Sennikov estimated the total losses among the population of Tambov region in 1920 to 1922 resulting from the war executions and imprisonment in concentration camps as approximately 240 000 148 By 1922 there were at least 7 000 000 street children in Russia as a result of nearly ten years of devastation from World War I and the civil war 149 At the end of the Civil War the Russian SFSR was exhausted and near ruin The droughts of 1920 and 1921 as well as the Russian famine of 1921 worsened the disaster still further killing roughly 5 million people Disease had reached pandemic proportions with 3 000 000 dying of typhus throughout the war Millions more also died of widespread starvation wholesale massacres by both sides and pogroms against Jews in Ukraine and southern Russia Civilian casualties edit nbsp Victims of the Russian famine of 1921 As many as 10 million lives were lost as a result of the Russian Civil War and the overwhelming majority of these were civilian casualties 150 There is no consensus among the Western historians on the number of deaths from the Red Terror One source gives estimates of 28 000 executions per year from December 1917 to February 1922 151 Estimates for the number of people shot during the initial period of the Red Terror are at least 10 000 152 Estimates for the whole period go for a low of 50 000 153 to highs of 140 000 153 154 and 200 000 executed 155 Most estimations for the number of executions in total put the number at about 100 000 156 According to Vadim Erlikhman s investigation the number of the Red Terror s victims is at least 1 200 000 people 157 According to Robert Conquest a total of 140 000 people were shot in 1917 1922 but Jonathan D Smele estimates they were considerably fewer perhaps less than half that many 158 Candidate of Historical Sciences Nikolay Zayats states that the number of people shot by the Cheka in 1918 1922 is about 37 300 people shot in 1918 1921 by the verdicts of the tribunals 14 200 i e about 50 000 55 000 people in total although executions and atrocities were not limited to the Cheka having been organized by the Red Army as well 159 160 In 1924 an anti Bolshevik Popular Socialist Sergei Melgunov 1879 1956 published a detailed account on the Red Terror in Russia where he cited Professor Charles Sarolea s estimates of 1 766 188 deaths from the Bolshevik policies He questioned the accuracy of the figures but endorsed Sarolea s chracterisation of terror in Russia stating it matches reality 161 162 Modern historian Sergei Volkov assessing the Red Terror as the entire repressive policy of the Bolsheviks during the years of the Civil War 1917 1922 estimates the direct death toll of the Red Terror at 2 million people 163 Volkov s calculations however do not appear to have been confirmed by other major scholars s Ethnic violence edit See also Pogroms during the Russian Civil War nbsp Victims of a pogrom perpetrated by Ukrainian forces in Khodorkiv 1919 Some 10 000 500 000 Cossacks were killed or deported during Decossackization out of a population of around three million 165 An estimated 100 000 Jews were killed in Ukraine 166 Punitive organs of the All Great Don Cossack Host sentenced 25 000 people to death between May 1918 and January 1919 167 Kolchak s government shot 25 000 people in Ekaterinburg province alone 168 The White Terror as it would become known killed about 300 000 people in total 169 Economic Impact edit The civil war had a devastating impact on the Russian economy A black market emerged in Russia despite the threat of martial law against profiteering The ruble collapsed with barter increasingly replacing money as a medium of exchange 170 and by 1921 heavy industry output had fallen to 20 of 1913 levels 90 of wages were paid with goods rather than money 171 70 of locomotives were in need of repair 172 and food requisitioning combined with the effects of seven years of war and a severe drought contributed to a famine that caused between 3 and 10 million deaths 173 Coal production decreased from 27 5 million tons 1913 to 7 million tons 1920 while overall factory production also declined from 10 000 million roubles to 1 000 million roubles According to the noted historian David Christian the grain harvest was also slashed from 80 1 million tons 1913 to 46 5 million tons 1920 174 War communism saved the Soviet government during the Civil War but much of the Russian economy had ground to a standstill Some peasants responded to food requisitions by refusing to till the land By 1921 cultivated land had shrunk to 62 of the pre war area and the harvest yield was only about 37 of normal The number of horses declined from 35 million in 1916 to 24 million in 1920 and cattle from 58 to 37 million The exchange rate with the US dollar declined from two roubles in 1914 to 1 200 Rbls in 1920 Although Russia experienced extremely rapid economic growth 175 in the 1930s the combined effect of World War I and the Civil War left a lasting scar on Russian society and had permanent effects on the development of the Soviet Union Political impact edit Main article Revolutions of 1917 1923 See also Treaty of Rapallo 1922 The complete failure of the Communist International inspired revolutions was a sobering experience in Moscow and the Bolsheviks moved from world revolution to socialism in one country the Soviet Union 176 The Treaty of Rapallo 1922 was an agreement signed on 16 April 1922 between the Weimar Republic and Soviet Union under which both renounced all territorial and financial claims against each other and opened friendly diplomatic relations 177 In fiction editLiterature edit The Road to Calvary 1922 41 by Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy Chapaev 1923 by Dmitri Furmanov The Iron Flood 1924 by Alexander Serafimovich Red Cavalry 1926 by Isaac Babel The Rout 1927 by Alexander Fadeyev Conquered City 1932 by Victor Serge Futility 1922 by William Gerhardie How the Steel Was Tempered 1934 by Nikolai Ostrovsky Optimistic Tragedy 1934 by Vsevolod Vishnevsky And Quiet Flows the Don 1928 1940 by Mikhail Sholokhov The Don Flows Home to the Sea 1940 by Mikhail Sholokhov Doctor Zhivago 1957 by Boris Pasternak Holidays in Caucasus 1965 by Maria Iordanidou The White Guard 1966 by Mikhail Bulgakov Byzantium Endures 1981 by Michael Moorcock Chevengur written in 1927 first published in 1988 in the USSR by Andrei Platonov Fall of Giants 2010 by Ken Follett A Splendid Little War 2012 by Derek Robinson novelist Film edit Arsenal 1928 Storm Over Asia 1928 Chapaev 1934 Thirteen 1936 directed by Mikhail Romm We Are from Kronstadt 1936 directed by Yefim Dzigan Knight Without Armour 1937 The Year 1919 1938 directed by Ilya Trauberg The Baltic Marines 1939 directed by A Faintsimmer Shchors 1939 directed by Dovzhenko Pavel Korchagin 1956 directed by A Alov and V Naumov The Forty First 1956 directed by Grigori Chukhrai The Communist film 1957 directed by Yuli Raizman And Quiet Flows the Don 1958 directed by Sergei Gerasimov Doctor Zhivago 1965 directed by David Lean The Elusive Avengers 1966 The Red and the White 1967 White Sun of the Desert 1970 The Flight 1970 directed by A Alov and V Naumov Reds 1981 directed by Warren Beatty Corto Maltese in Siberia 2002 Nine Lives of Nestor Makhno 2005 2007 Admiral 2008 Sunstroke 2014 directed by Nikita Mikhalkov Video games edit Last Train Home video game 2023 Battlefield 1 In the Name of the Tsar 2017 178 See also edit nbsp Soviet Union portal Bibliography of the Russian Revolution and Civil War Index of articles related to the Russian Revolution and Civil War Nikolayevsk incident Revolutionary Mass Festivals Timeline of the Russian Civil War Pro independence movements in the Russian Civil WarNotes edit Viena expedition British Intervention De facto deposed after the Bolshevik Coup of November 1917 formally abolished in January 1918 after the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly The White movement then promised to convey a new constituent assembly and reestablish the state accordingly with its decisions Also assisted Estonians Karelians and Ingrians during Heimosodat of 1918 1922 Finnish Civil War Polish Soviet War Basmachi movement Aligned with the Bolsheviks until March 1918 when they fell out over the Treaty of Brest Litovsk Most Left SRs opposed the Bolsheviks afterward but a minority of Left SRs remained allied to the Bolsheviks for years after Aligned with the Bolsheviks until 1919 opposed after Aligned with the Bolsheviks until 1920 opposed after Japan also stayed in North Sakhalin until 1925 Official allegiance to the Russian StateUnofficial allegiance to the German Empire The Red Army peaked in October 1920 with 5 498 000 2 587 000 in reserves 391 000 in labor armies 159 000 on the front and 1 780 000 drawing rations 683 000 active340 000 reserve There were an additional 6 242 926 hospitalizations from sickness Russian Grazhdanskaya vojna v Rossii romanized Grazhdanskaya voyna v Rossii The old spelling was retained by the Whites to differentiate from the Reds Small caption in the lower right corner reads The Bolsheviks promised We ll give you peace We ll give you freedom We ll give you land Work and bread Despicably they cheated They started a war With Poland Instead of freedom they brought The fist Instead of land confiscation Instead of work misery Instead of bread famine See note regarding Library of Congress Country Studies Chapter 7 The Communist Party Democratic Centralism citation needed In particular they seem quite at odds with the demographic considerations elaborated by Italian historian and professor Andrea Graziosi it in the light of the good quality Tsarist and early Soviet statistics According to him the excess deaths between 1914 and 1922 were about 16 million of which 4 5 were military the rest civilian the overwhelming majority of the latter resulted from starvation typhus epidemics the Spanish flu and the famine of 1921 22 the roughly number of victims of the various kinds of terror and red and white repressions amounting to a few hundred thousand which is indeed a dreadful number in itself however 164 References editCitations edit Mawdsley 2007 pp 3 230 Poslednie boi na Dalnem Vostoke M Centrpoligraf 2005 Erickson 1984 p 763 Belash Victor amp Belash Aleksandr Dorogi Nestora Makhno p 340 Damien Wright Churchill s Secret War with Lenin British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 20 Solihull UK 2017 pp 394 526 528 530 535 Clifford Kinvig Churchill s Crusade The British Invasion of Russia 1918 1920 London 2006 ISBN 1 85285 477 4 p 297 Timothy Winegard The First World Oil War University of Toronto Press 2016 p 229 a b Smele 2016 p 160 Krivosheev 1997 p 7 38 Wright Damien 2017 Churchill s Secret War with Lenin British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 20 Solihull UK Helion and Company pp 490 492 498 500 504 ISBN 978 1911512103 Kinvig 2006 pp 289 315 Winegard Timothy 2016 The First World Oil War University of Toronto Press p 208 Eidintas Zalys amp Senn 1999 p 30 Russian Civil War Archived 26 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2012 Leggett 1981 p 184 Service 2000 p 402 Read 2005 p 206 Hall 2015 p 83 a b Lee 2003 pp 84 88 a b Goldstein 2013 p 50 Hall 2015 p 84 Mawdsley 2007 p 287 a b Stone David R 2011 Russian Civil War 1917 1920 In Martel Gordon ed The Encyclopedia of War Blackwell Publishing Ltd doi 10 1002 9781444338232 wbeow533 ISBN 978 1 4051 9037 4 S2CID 153317860 Abramovitch Raphael R 1985 The Soviet Revolution 1917 1939 International Universities Press p 130 Deutscher Isaac 1954 The Prophet Armed Trotsky 1879 1921 1954 Oxford University Press pp 330 336 Liebman Marcel 1975 Leninism under Lenin London J Cape p 237 ISBN 978 0 224 01072 6 Calder 1976 p 166 the Russian Army disintegrated after the failure of the Galician offensive in July 1917 Read 1996 p 237 By 1920 77 of the Red Army s enlisted ranks were peasant conscripts Williams Beryl The Russian Revolution 1917 1921 Blackwell Publishing Ltd 1987 ISBN 978 0 631 15083 1 Typically men of military age 17 to 40 years old in a village would vanish when Red Army draft units approached The taking of hostages and a few summary executions usually brought the men back a b Overy 2004 p 446 By the end of the civil war one third of all Red Army officers were ex Tsarist voenspetsy a b Williams Beryl The Russian Revolution 1917 1921 Blackwell Publishing Ltd 1987 ISBN 978 0 631 15083 1 Military Encyclopedic Dictionary Editorial Board Alexander Gorkin Vladimir Zolotarev et al Moscow Great Russian Encyclopedia RIPOL Classic 2002 1664 Pages Carr 1985 pp 111 112 Carr 1985 pp 113 115 Carr 1985 p 115 Carr 1985 pp 115 116 Koncepciya socialisticheskoj demokratii opyt realizacii v SSSR i sovremennye perspektivy v SNG Adam Bruno Ulam The Bolsheviks the intellectual and political history of the triumph of communism in Russia Harvard University Press p 397 Carr 1985 pp 120 121 a b Berkman Alexander Goldman Emma January 1922 Bolsheviks Shooting Anarchists Freedom 36 391 4 Retrieved 9 May 2023 a b Norman G O Pereira 1996 White Siberia the politics of civil war McGill Queen s University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 7735 1349 5 Christopher Lazarski 2008 The lost opportunity attempts at unification of the anti Bolsheviks 1917 1919 Moscow Kiev Jassy Odessa Lanham University Press of America pp 42 43 ISBN 978 0 7618 4120 3 Vladimir N Brovkin 1991 Dear comrades Menshevik reports on the Bolshevik revolution and the civil war Hoover Press p 135 ISBN 978 0 8179 8981 1 See Jonathan D Smele Op cit p 32 Op cit means to refer to a work cited earlier in the citations this means you copied it from a citation list and are citing something that you have not read instead you should cite what you read and say it refers to this or if you can get the original work and look at it then you can cite it directly Carr 1985 pp 161 164 a b c Liebman Marcel 1985 Leninism Under Lenin Merlin Press pp 1 348 ISBN 978 0 85036 261 9 a b c d Bird Danny 5 September 2018 How the Red Terror Exposed the True Turmoil of Soviet Russia 100 Years Ago Time Retrieved 24 March 2021 Werth et al 1999 Chapter 4 The Red Terror Alter Litvin ru Krasnyj i Belyj terror v Rossii v 1917 1922 godah Red and White terror in Russia in 1917 1922 in Russian ISBN 5 87849 164 8 Melgunov S P Red Terror in Russia in Russian a b c Wilde Robert 2019 February 20 The Red Terror ThoughtCo Retrieved March 24 2021 Llewellyn Jennifer McConnell Michael Thompson Steve 11 August 2019 The Red Terror Russian Revolution Alpha History Retrieved 4 August 2021 Melgunov Sergey 1925 1975 The Red Terror in Russia Hyperions ISBN 0 88355 187 X Melgunov Sergei 1927 The Record of the Red Terror Archived 21 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Current History November 1927 198 205 Fanya Kaplan Spartacus Educational Malkov P Notes of the Kremlin commandant M Molodaya gvardiya 1968 S 148 149 Donaldson Norman Donaldson Betty 1 January 1983 How Did They Die Greenwich House p 221 ISBN 9780517403020 Slezkine Yuri The house of government a saga of the Russian Revolution p 158 ISBN 978 1 5384 7835 6 OCLC 1003859221 Lyandres Semion Autumn 1989 The 1918 Attempt on the Life of Lenin A New Look at the Evidence Slavic Review 48 3 Cambridge University Press 432 448 doi 10 2307 2498997 JSTOR 2498997 S2CID 155228899 Smith Scott Baldwin 15 April 2011 Captives of Revolution The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik Dictatorship 1918 1923 University of Pittsburgh Press pp 68 70 ISBN 978 0 8229 7779 7 Smith Scott Baldwin 15 April 2011 Captives of Revolution The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik Dictatorship 1918 1923 University of Pittsburgh Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 8229 7779 7 Cover Story Churchill s Greatness Archived 2006 10 04 at the Wayback Machine Interview with Jeffrey Wallin The Churchill Centre Howard Fuller Great Britain and Russia s Civil War The Necessity for a Definite and Coherent Policy Journal of Slavic Military Studies 32 4 2019 553 559 Keith Bullivant Geoffrey J Giles and Walter Pape 1999 Germany and Eastern Europe Cultural Identity and Cultural Differences Rodopi pp 28 29 ISBN 90 420 0678 1 Mieczyslaw B Biskupski War and the Diplomacy of Polish Independence 1914 18 Polish Review 1990 5 17 online Archived 27 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine Timothy Snyder The Reconstruction of Nations Poland Ukraine Lithuania Belarus 1569 1999 Yale UP 2004 Kirby D G 1978 Revolutionary ferment in Finland and the origins of the civil war 1917 1918 Scandinavian Economic History Review 26 15 35 doi 10 1080 03585522 1978 10407894 Anatol Lieven The Baltic revolution Estonia Latvia Lithuania and the path to independence Yale UP 1993 pp 54 61 excerpt Archived 16 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine Kaledin Aleksej Maksimovich A biography of Kaledin in Russian Archived from the original on 8 November 2017 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Wheeler 1964 p 103 The Czech Legion h2g2 com Not Panicking Ltd 20 July 2005 Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Retrieved 29 October 2020 Mawdsley 2007 p 27 Kenez 2004a pp 64 67 Coates amp Coates 1951 p 72 Wheeler 1964 p 104 Coates amp Coates 1951 p 70 Coates amp Coates 1951 pp 68 69 Coates amp Coates 1951 p 74 Allworth 1967 p 226 Mawdsley 2007 p 35 Figes 1997 p 258 quotes such comments from the peasant soldiers during the first weeks of the war We have talked it over among ourselves if the Germans want payment it would be better to pay ten roubles a head than to kill people Or Is it not all the same what Tsar we live under It cannot be worse under the German one Or Let them go and fight themselves Wait a while we will settle accounts with you Or What devil has brought this war on us We are butting into other people s business Vladimir Lenin Spartacus Educational Archived from the original on 10 August 2020 Retrieved 29 October 2020 Figes 1997 p 419 It was partly a case of the usual military failings units had been sent into battle without machine guns untrained soldiers had been ordered to engage in complex maneuvers using hand grenades and ended up throwing them without first pulling the pins Figes 1997 p 412 This new civic patriotism did not extend beyond the urban middle classes although the leaders of the Provisional Government deluded themselves that it did Mawdsley 2007 p 42 a b Smith amp Tucker 2014 pp 554 555 Ukraine World War I and the struggle for independence Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 15 June 2008 Retrieved 30 January 2008 in Ukrainian 100 years ago Bakhmut and the rest of Donbas liberated Archived 1 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine Ukrayinska Pravda 18 April 2018 Tynchenko Yaros 23 March 2018 The Ukrainian Navy and the Crimean Issue in 1917 18 The Ukrainian Week archived from the original on 11 November 2019 retrieved 14 October 2018 Germany Takes Control of Crimea Archived 30 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine New York Herald 18 May 1918 a b War Without Fronts Atamans and Commissars in Ukraine 1917 1919 Archived 3 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine by Mikhail Akulov Harvard University August 2013 page 102 and 103 a b Mawdsley 2007 p 29 Kenez 2004a pp 115 118 Kenez 2004a pp 166 174 182 189 190 Kenez 2004a pp 195 204 267 270 Kenez 2004b pp 28 29 Chamberlin 1935 pp 6 12 91 Muldoon Amy Workers Organizations in the Russian Revolution International Socialist Review Archived from the original on 21 February 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2018 Chamberlin 1987 p 31 Frequently the deserters families were taken hostage to force a surrender a portion were customarily executed as an example to the others Daniels 1993 p 70 Volkogonov 1996 p 175 Volkogonov 1996 p 180 By December 1918 Trotsky had ordered the formation of special detachments to serve as blocking units throughout the Red Army Chamberlin 1935 pp 20 21 Chamberlin 1935 pp 177 178 a b c Dmitri Volkogonov Trotsky The Eternal Revolutionary transl and edited by Harold Shukman HarperCollins Publishers London 1996 p 180 Lih Lars T Bread and Authority in Russia 1914 1921 University of California Press 1990 p 131 The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 8 June 2023 War Communism Encyclopaedia Britannica dubious discuss Mawdsley 2007 p 287 Rakowska Harmstone 1970 p 19 Coates amp Coates 1951 p 75 Allworth 1967 p 232 Chamberlin 1935 pp 50 59 Baltic War of Liberation Archived 8 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia Britannica Generalkommando VI Reservekorps Axis History Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 11 April 2012 Williams Beryl The Russian Revolution 1917 1921 Blackwell Publishing 1987 ISBN 978 0 631 15083 1 ISBN 0 631 15083 8 Rosenthal 2006 p 516 Ian C D Moffat The Allies Act Murmansk and Archangel in Ian C D Moffat ed The Allied Intervention in Russia 1918 1920 Palgrave Macmillan 2015 68 82 Jonathan D Smele Civil war in Siberia the anti Bolshevik government of Admiral Kolchak 1918 1920 Cambridge UP 2006 Bolsheviki Grain Near Petrograd New York Tribune Washington DC Library of Congress 15 November 1919 p 4 Archived from the original on 12 October 2012 Retrieved 10 September 2010 a b Kenez 1977 p page needed Kenez 2004b pp 20 35 Chamberlin 1935 pp 151 165 167 Kenez 2004b pp 37 41 Distinguished Service Order citation for Bruce in the 1920 PDF London Gazette a b Kinvig 2006 p 225 Liddell Hart Basil The Tanks The History Of The Royal Tank Regiment And Its Predecessors Heavy Branch Machine Gun Corps Tank Corps And Royal Tank Corps 1914 1945 Vol I Cassell 1959 p 211 Kenez 2004b pp 43 154 Kenez 1977 p 44 Kenez 1977 p 218 Kenez 2004b pp 213 223 Allworth 1967 p 231 a b Coates amp Coates 1951 p 76 Allworth 1967 pp 232 233 Smele 2016 p 139 Smele 2015 pp 1082 1083 Kenez 2004b pp 236 239 Viktor G Bortnevski White Administration and White Terror the Denikin Period Russian Review 52 3 1993 354 366 online Archived 30 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine Berland Pierre Makhno Le Temps 28 August 1934 In addition to supplying White Army forces and their sympathizers with food a successful seizure of the 1920 Ukrainian grain harvest would have had a devastating effect on food supplies to Bolshevik held cities while depriving both Red Army and Ukrainian Insurgent Army troops of their usual bread rations Daniels 1951 p 241 Avrich 2004 p 41 Chamberlin 1987 p 440 Figes 1997 p 760 Avrich 2004 p 52 Avrich 2004 p 73 Berkman Alexander 1922 The Kronstadt Rebellion pp 10 11 Figes 1997 p 767 Avrich 1970 p 215 Avrich 1970 pp 210 211 Mentzel Peter C Fall 2017 Chaos and Utopia The Anarchists in the Russian Revolution and Civil War PDF Independent Review 22 2 173 181 Archived from the original PDF on 29 February 2020 and Skirda Alexandre 2004 Nestor Makhno Anarchy s Cossack The Struggle for Free Soviets in the Ukraine 1917 1921 Chico CA AK Press ISBN 9781902593685 Mawdsley 2007 pp 319 321 Collective of authors Revolution and Civil War in Russia 1917 1923 Encyclopedia in 4 volumes 2008 Wheeler 1964 p 107 Urlanis B Wars and Population Moscow Progress publishers 1971 Sennikov B V 2004 Tambov rebellion and liquidation of peasants in Russia Archived 2019 03 30 at the Wayback Machine Moscow Posev In Russian ISBN 5 85824 152 2 And Now My Soul Is Hardened Abandoned Children in Soviet Russia 1918 1930 Thomas J Hegarty Canadian Slavonic Papers Russian Civil War Foreign intervention Britannica Retrieved 31 January 2023 Ryan 2012 p 2 Ryan 2012 p 114 a b Stone Bailey 2013 The Anatomy of Revolution Revisited A Comparative Analysis of England France and Russia Cambridge University Press p 335 Pipes Richard 2011 The Russian Revolution Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 838 Lowe 2002 p 151 Lincoln W Bruce 1989 Red Victory A History of the Russian Civil War Simon amp Schuster p 384 ISBN 0671631667 the best estimates set the probable number of executions at about a hundred thousand Erlikhman Vadim Viktorovich 2004 Poteri narodonaseleniya v XX veke Population losses in the XX century PDF in Russian Moscow Russkaya panorama ISBN 5 93165 107 1 Smele 2015 p 934 K voprosu o masshtabah krasnogo terrora v gody Grazhdanskoj vojny Krasnyj terror 1918 The Red Terror 1918 Radio Svoboda 7 September 2018 Chast IV Na grazhdanskoj vojne Sergei Melgunov Krasnyj terror v Rossii 1918 1923 2 oe izd dop Berlin 1924 Melgunov Sergei Petrovich 2008 1924 Der rote Terror in Russland 1918 1923 reprint of the 1924 Olga Diakow edition in German Berlin OEZ p 186 note 182 ISBN 9783940452474 An online English translation of the second edition of Melgunov s work is accessible at Internet Archive whence the following translated text is drawn p 85 note n 128 Professor Charles Sarolea who published a series of articles about Russia in Edinburgh newspaper The Scotsman touched upon the death statistics in an essay on terror No 7 November 1923 He summarized the outcome of the Bolshevik massacre as follows 28 bishops 1219 clergy 6000 professors and teachers 9000 doctors 54 000 officers 260 000 soldiers 70 000 policemen 12 950 landowners 355 250 professionals 193 290 workers 815 000 peasants The author did not provide the sources of that data Needless to say that the precise counts seem too fictional but the author s characterisation of terror in Russia in general matches reality The note is somewhat abbreviated in the 1925 English edition indicated in the bibliography in particular there is no mention of the imaginative nature of the data p 111 note n 1 Perevozchikov Artyom 9 September 2010 Istorik Sergey Volkov Geneticheskomu fondu Rossii byl nanesen chudovishchnyy ne vospolnennyy do sego vremeni uron Historian Sergei Volkov Russia s genetic pool suffered monstrous damage so far not repaired interview with the famous historian of the Civil War Doctor of Historical Sciences Sergei Vladimirovich Volkov iskupitel info Monarxist Retrieved 9 May 2023 Graziosi 2007 pp 171 amp 570 Gellately 2007 pp 70 71 Kenez Peter 1991 The Prosecution of Soviet History A Critique of Richard Pipes The Russian Revolution Russian Review 50 3 345 351 doi 10 2307 131078 JSTOR 131078 Holquist 2002 p 164 Kolchakovshina Cult Info in Russian Archived from the original on 10 May 2005 Erlihman Vadim 2004 Poteri narodonaseleniya v XX veke Izdatelskij dom Russkaya panorama ISBN 5931651071 R W Davies Mark Harrison S G Wheatcroft 9 December 1993 The Economic Transformation of the Soviet Union 1913 1945 Cambridge University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 521 45770 5 Bread and Authority in Russia 1914 1921 publishing cdlib org Retrieved 27 October 2021 Russian Civil War Intervention Allies Bolsheviks Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 14 February 2024 Twentieth Century Atlas Death Tolls necrometrics com Retrieved 12 December 2017 Christian David 1997 Imperial and Soviet Russia London Macmillan Press Ltd p 236 ISBN 0 333 66294 6 The Soviet Union GDP growth 26 March 2016 Archived from the original on 17 May 2020 Rex A Wade The Revolution at One Hundred Issues and Trends in the English Language Historiography of the Russian Revolution of 1917 Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 1 2016 9 38 Mueller Gordon H 1976 Rapallo Reexamined A New Look at Germany s Secret Military Collaboration with Russia in 1922 Military Affairs 40 3 109 117 doi 10 2307 1986524 ISSN 0026 3931 JSTOR 1986524 Volga River All You Need to Know 4 September 2017 Bibliography edit See also Bibliography of the Russian Revolution and Civil War Allworth Edward 1967 Central Asia A Century of Russian Rule New York Columbia University Press OCLC 396652 Avrich Paul 1970 Kronstadt 1921 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08721 0 Kronstadt 1921 in Spanish Buenos Aires Libros de Anarres 2004 ISBN 9 872 08753 9 Andrew Christopher Mitrokhin Vasili 1999 The Sword and the Shield The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB New York Basic p 28 ISBN 978 0 465 00312 9 Bullock David 2008 The Russian Civil War 1918 22 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 846 03271 4 Retrieved 26 December 2017 Calder Kenneth J 1976 Britain and the Origins of the New Europe 1914 1918 International Studies Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20897 0 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Carr E H 1985 The Bolshevik Revolution 1917 1923 W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 30195 3 Chamberlin William 1935 The Russian Revolution 1917 1921 Vol 2 New York Macmillan The Russian Revolution Volume II 1918 1921 From the Civil War to the Consolidation of Power Vol 2 Princeton University Press 1987 1935 ISBN 978 1 400 85870 5 Retrieved 27 December 2017 via Project MUSE Coates W P Coates Zelda K 1951 Soviets in Central Asia New York Philosophical Library OCLC 1533874 Daniels Robert V 1993 A Documentary History of Communism in Russia From Lenin to Gorbachev Hanover NH University Press of New England ISBN 978 0 874 51616 6 December 1951 The Kronstadt Revolt of 1921 A Study in the Dynamics of Revolution American Slavic and East European Review 10 4 241 254 ISSN 1049 7544 JSTOR 2492031 Eidintas Alfonsas Zalys Vytautas Senn Alfred Erich 1999 Lithuania in European Politics The Years of the First Republic 1918 1940 Paperback ed New York St Martin s ISBN 0 312 22458 3 Erickson John 1984 The Soviet High Command A Military Political History 1918 1941 A Military Political History 1918 1941 Westview ISBN 978 0 367 29600 1 bd, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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