fbpx
Wikipedia

Semyon Budyonny

Semyon Mikhailovich Budyonny[1] (Russian: Семён Миха́йлович Будённый, tr. Semyon Mikháylovich Budyonnyy, IPA: [sʲɪˈmʲɵn mʲɪˈxajləvʲɪdʑ bʊˈdʲɵnːɨj] (listen); 25 April [O.S. 13 April] 1883 – 26 October 1973) was a Soviet cavalryman, military commander during the Russian Civil War, Polish-Soviet War and World War II, and politician, who was a close political ally of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.

Semyon Budyonny
Birth nameSemyon Mikhailovich Budyonnyy
Born(1883-04-25)25 April 1883
Platovskaya, Don Host Oblast, Russian Empire
Died26 October 1973(1973-10-26) (aged 90)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Buried
Allegiance Russian Empire (1903–1917)
 Soviet Russia (1917–1922)
 Soviet Union (1922–1954)
Service/branchImperial Russian Army
Red Army
Years of service1903–1954
RankMarshal of the Soviet Union (1935–1954)
Commands held1st Cavalry Army
Moscow Military District
Southwestern Direction Reserve Front
North Caucasus Front
Battles/warsRusso-Japanese War
World War I
Russian Civil War
Polish-Soviet War
World War II
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union (thrice)
Cross of St. George, 1st–4th Classes
Other workCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (1919–1973)

Born to a poor peasant family from the Don Cossack region in southern Russia, Budyonny was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army in 1903. He served with distinction in a dragoon regiment during the First World War, earning all four classes of the Cross of St. George. When the Russian Civil War broke out Budyonny founded the Red Cavalry, which played an important role in the Bolshevik victory; Budyonny became renowned for his bravery and was the subject of several popular patriotic songs. In 1922 he also became commander of all the troops in the north Caucasian military district. While serving as inspector of the Red Army’s cavalry (1924–37) and commander of the Moscow military district (1937–40). As a political ally of Joseph Stalin, he became one of the original five Marshals of the Soviet Union. He was one of the two most senior army commanders that survived the Great Purge and in post at the time of German invasion of the USSR in 1941. After the Soviet forces under Budyonny's command were routed in the battles of Kiev and Uman, he was removed from frontline command. He received the blame for many of Stalin's military strategic errors in the early part of World War II, but he was retained in the Soviet high command. In 1953 he resumed his post of inspector of the cavalry.

Budyonny was a staunch proponent of horse cavalry. During the Great Purge, he testified against Mikhail Tukhachevsky's efforts to create an independent tank corps, claiming that it was so inferior to cavalry and illogical that it amounted to "wrecking" (sabotage). After being told of the importance of the tank in the coming war in 1939, he remarked, "You won't convince me. As soon as war is declared, everyone will shout, "Send for the Cavalry!"[2]

Early life Edit

Budyonny was born into a poor peasant family on the Kozyurin farmstead near the town of Salsk in the Don Cossack region of the southern Russian Empire (now Rostov Oblast). Although he grew up in a Cossack region, Budyonny's family were ethnic Russians from Voronezh province. He worked as a farm labourer, shop errand boy, blacksmith's apprentice, and driver of a steam-driven threshing machine, until the autumn of 1903, when he was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army.

He became a cavalryman reinforcing the 46th Cossack Regiment during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905. After the war, he was transferred to the Primorsk Dragoon Regiment. In 1907, he was sent to the Academy for Cavalry Officers in the St. Petersburg Riding School. He graduated first in his class after a year, becoming an instructor with the rank of junior non-commissioned officer. He returned to his regiment as a riding instructor with a rank of senior non-commissioned officer. At the start of World War I, he joined a reserve dragoon cavalry battalion.[3]: 9–12 

 
Budyonny in 1912

World War I Edit

During World War I, Budyonny was the 5th Squadron's non-commissioned troop officer in the Christian IX of Denmark 18th Seversky Dragoon Regiment, Caucasian Cavalry Division on the Eastern Front. He became famous for his attack on a German supply column near Brzezina, and was awarded the St. George Cross, 4th Class. However, there was general ineptitude among the officers under whom he served (primarily Caucasian aristocrats who received commissions based on their social standing).[3]: 12–16 

In November 1916, the Caucasian Cavalry Division was transferred to the Caucasus Front, to fight against the Ottoman Turks. He was involved in a heated confrontation with the squadron sergeant major regarding the officers' poor treatment of the soldiers and the continual lack of food. The sergeant major struck out at Budyonny, who retaliated by punching the ranking officer, knocking him down. The soldiers backed Budyonny during questioning, claiming that the sergeant major was kicked by a horse. Budyonny was stripped of his St. George Cross, though he could have faced a court martial and death.[3]: 16–22 

Budyonny would go on to be awarded the St. George Cross, 4th class, a second time, during the Battle of Van. He received the St. George Cross, 3rd class, fighting the Turks near Mendelij, on the way to Baghdad. He then received the St. George Cross, 2nd class, for operating behind Turkish lines for 22 days. He received the St. George Cross, 1st class, for capturing a senior non-commissioned officer and six men.[3]: 22–26 

The Red Cavalry Edit

 
Kliment Voroshilov, Budyonny, Mikhail Frunze and Nikolai Bukharin with the 1st Cavalry Army in Novomoskovsk, 1921

After the February Revolution overthrew the Tsarist regime in 1917, Budyonny was elected chairman of the squadron committee and a member of the regimental committee. When the Caucasian Cavalry Division was moved to Minsk, he was elected chairman of the regimental committee and deputy chairman of the divisional committee.[3]: 29–30 

Returning to Platovskaya, Budyonny was elected deputy chairman of the Stanista Soviet of Workers', Peasants', Cossacks' and Soldiers' Deputies on 12 January 1918. On 18 February, he was elected to be a member of the Salsk District Presidium and head of the District Land Department. On the night of 23 February, Budyonny organized a force of 24 men to retake Platovskaya from the white guards, but was soon joined by a large number of new recruits. By morning, they had freed 400 inhabitants and killed 350 White Russian soldiers. His force now consisted of 520 men, from whom, on 27 February, he formed what was later recognised[4] as the first 120-strong squadron of red cavalry. Eventually he was elected battalion commander. Budyonny met Stalin and Voroshilov in July 1918. Both supported the idea of creating a cavalry corps to fight on the Bolshevik side in the Russian Civil War; but when Leon Trotsky, the People's Commissar for War, visited south Russia soon afterward, he told Budyonny that cavalry was "a very aristocratic family of troops, commanded by princes, barons, and counts."

Despite Trotsky's objections, the 1st Socialist Cavalry Regiment was formed in Tsaritsyn in October 1918, commanded by Boris Dumenko, with Budyonny as deputy commander.[3]: 43–45, 50–53, 70, 79, 85, 89  Budyonny joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) in 1919. During the summer of 1919, while the Red Cavalry were in action against the White General Anton Denikin, Trotsky described them contempuously as "Budyonny's corps — a horde, and Budyonny — their Ataman ring leader...He is today's Stenka Razin, and where he leads his gang, there will they go: for the Reds today, tomorrow for the Whites."[5]

However, in October 1919, Budyonny pulled off a spectacular victory when, in the greatest cavalry battle of the civil war, he attacked and defeated the White army corps commanded by Konstantin Mamontov. On 25 October, Trotsky sent a dispatch forecasting that the White army in the south would never recover from this defeat, and hailing Budyonny as "a true warrior of the workers and peasants"[6]

During the Polish–Soviet War Edit

When Poland declared independence, there was no agreement between its government and the Soviet authorities over where the border would be. In April 1920, Budyonny's cavalry was assigned to driving the Polish army out of Ukraine. On 5 June, he took part in recapturing Kiev, and over the next few days successfully drove the Poles westward. At the start of the war with Poland, he was assigned to the southern front, which Stalin commanded. On 15 August, he asked the commander-in-chief of Soviet forces in Poland, Mikhail Tukhachevsky, for authority to swing north and assist in capturing Warsaw. With Stalin's agreement, he attempted to capture Lviv first. Unsuccessful, he eventually diverted to the North but by that time Tukhachevsky's forces had been driven back, forcing a general retreat. After Budyonny's army was defeated in the Battle of Komarów (one of the biggest cavalry battles in history), he was forced to withdraw onto Soviet-held territory.

Budyonny took part in the reconquest of Crimea, the final phase of the Russian Civil War.

Reputation Edit

Despite the defeat in Poland, Budyonny was one of Soviet Russia's military heroes by the end of the Civil War. With Semyon Timoshenko and Kliment Voroshilov he was one of the Cavalry Army clique leaders, and a supporter of Stalin.[citation needed]

In 1920, Soviet songwriter Dmitry Pokrass wrote the song "Budyonny's March", which was one of the first songs to become widely popular throughout the Soviet Union.[7]

The writer Isaac Babel rode with Budyonny's cavalry in Poland, and published a series of short stories about the experience, which achieved worldwide acclaim as one of the greatest contributions to Soviet literature - but which offended Budyonny, who made a "rare and furious foray into print" in March 1924, demanding that the Red Cavalry's reputation should be protected against "slander" by a "literary degenerate". This provoked a response from Maxim Gorky, then the most famous living Russian writer, defending Babel, but in 1928, Budyonny returned to the attack in an open letter to Gorky accusing Babel of "crude, deliberate and arrogant slander", which Gorky said was an "undeserved insult".[8]

William Reswick, a correspondent for the American agency AP, described a celebration backstage at an opera house around the 10th anniversary of the revolution, at which:

Budyonny, the celebrated cavalry, an amateur dancer and admirer of the ballet joined us. He was in high spirits. After helping himself to some vodka, he offered to outdance any professional in the Kamarinskaya. Ballerina Abramova took up the challenge. Thereupon Budyonny called over a harmonic player and went into a spin, cutting a Cossack caper with the ease and grace of a youngster.[9]

Later military career Edit

 
Semyon Budyonny celebrates International Women's Day at the House of Unions on March 8, 1924.

From 1921–1923, Budyonny was deputy commander of the North Caucasian Military District. In 1923, Budyonny arrived in Chechnya with a proclamation from the Central Executive Committee announcing the formation of the Chechen Autonomous Region. The same year, he was also appointed assistant commander of the Red Army's cavalry. During 1924-37, he was Inspector of Cavalry of the Red Army. He spent a great amount of time and effort in the organization and management of equestrian facilities and developing new breeds of horses.

Budyonny was considered a courageous and colourful cavalry officer, but displayed disdain for the tools of modern warfare, particularly tanks, which he, along with Grigory Kulik, saw as "incapable of ever replacing cavalry".[10] This brought him into direct conflict with Tukhachevsky, who was in charge of weapons developed, and foresaw the imminence of mechanized warfare. Even after Tukhachevsky's arrest, the Red Army never stopped developing large scale mechanized corps, and each front had numerous such corps attached as a second echelon force by 1940-41, but Budyonny was never criticised for being on the wrong side of the argument, being a faithful ally of Stalin and Voroshilov.

Budyonny graduated from the M. V. Frunze Military Academy in 1932. In 1934, he was made a candidate member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

 
The first five Marshals of the Soviet Union in November 1935, clockwise from top left: Semyon Budyonny, Vasily Blyukher, Alexander Ilyich Yegorov, Kliment Voroshilov and Mikhail Tukhachevsky. Only Budyonny and Voroshilov would survive Stalin's Great Purge.

In 1935 Budyonny was made one of the first five Marshals of the Soviet Union. Three of these five were executed in the Great Purge of the late 1930s, leaving only Budyonny and Voroshilov.

Role in the Great Purge Edit

Early in the Great Purge, Budyonny was appointed commander of the Moscow Military District, possibly because Stalin was nervous that there would be a military coup after he had decided to move against two of the most popular Bolsheviks, Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov. When Bukharin was trying to defend himself, during a plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, on 26 February 1937, Budyonny barracked him, calling him a Jesuit.[11]

On 24 May 1937, Budyonny was copied into a resolution proposing to arrest Marshal Tukhachevsky, and the high ranking party official Janis Rudzutaks. He wrote on it: "It's necessary to finish off this scum."[12]

On 11 June, he was one of the judges at the trial of Tukhachevsky and seven other Red Army commanders, whose execution was the start of a massive purge of the Red Army officer corps. At the trial, he provided testimony that Tukhachevsky's efforts to create an independent tank corps was so inferior to horse cavalry and so illogical that it amounted to deliberate "wrecking".[13] Half a century after the trial, the Soviet authorities admitted that all eight defendants were innocent. The 'evidence' consisted of confessions forced out of them under torture. Two weeks after their execution, Budyonny sent a memo to Voroshilov disclosing that Tukhachevsky initially withdrew his confession, yet Budyonny concluded that all eight were "patented spies ... since 1931, and a few of them even earlier were worming their way into our ranks ever since the beginning of the revolution" .[14]

Later, as the Great Purge continued, the NKVD came to interrogate and arrest Budyonny; Budyonny's response was to arm himself with his service Nagant M1895 revolver and call Stalin to demand he have the agents removed.[10] Stalin complied and the event was not discussed again.

By December 1937, Budyonny had been allocated a large dacha with orchards, raspberry and gooseberry bushes, a workhorse, a black cow and a pig weighing 250 kilograms (550 lb).[15]

Second World War service Edit

In July–September 1941, Budyonny was Commander-in-Chief (главком, glavkom) of the Soviet armed forces of the Southwestern Direction (Southwestern and Southern Fronts) facing the German invasion of Ukraine. This invasion began as part of Germany's Operation Barbarossa which was launched on June 22. Operating under strict orders from Stalin (who attempted to micromanage the war in the early stages) not to retreat under any circumstances, Budyonny's forces were eventually surrounded during the Battle of Uman and the Battle of Kiev by Nazi forces. The disasters which followed the encirclement cost the Soviet Union 1.5 million men killed or taken prisoner. This was the largest encirclement in military history.

 
Budyonny at the 1941 October Revolution Parade.

On 13 September 1941, Stalin sacked Budyonny as a scapegoat, replacing him with Semyon Timoshenko. He was never allowed to command troops in combat again. First he was put in charge of the Reserve Front (September–October 1941), then made Commander-in-Chief of the troops in the North Caucasus Direction (April–May, 1942), Commander of the North Caucasus Front (May–August, 1942) - but was removed from this post as the Germans approached, and appointed Cavalry Inspector of the Red Army (from 1943), as well as various honorific posts.

Despite his bravery as a cavalry commander, the view of his fellow officers was that Budyonny was demonstrably incompetent at commanding an army in a mechanized war. Soon after the war, Marshal Konev told the Yugoslav communist, Milovan Đilas: "Budyonny never knew much, and he never studied anything. He showed himself to be completely incompetent and permitted awful mistakes to be made."[16]

 
Budyonny's tomb in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis

Because of his exceptional Civil War record and public popularity, he continued to enjoy Stalin's patronage and suffered no real punishment for the disaster in Kiev.

Post-war career Edit

After the war, Budyonny was appointed Minister of Agriculture of the USSR, responsible, among other things, for horse breeding. When he retired, he retained his membership of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union.

Budyonny died of brain hemorrhage on 26 October 1973, at the age of 90. He was buried with full military honours in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis, in one of the twelve individual tombs located between the Lenin Mausoleum and the Kremlin wall. Pallbearers at his funeral included the General Secretary of the CPSU Leonid Brezhnev and the USSR Minister for Defence, Marshal Grechko.

Other contributions and legacy Edit

Budyonny wrote a five-volume memoir, in which he described the stormy years of civil war as well as the everyday life of the First Cavalry Army. He was frequently commemorated for his bravery in many popular Soviet military songs, including The Red Cavalry song (Konarmieyskaya) and The Budyonny March. Budenovka, a part of Soviet military uniform, is named after Semyon Budyonny. He was also frequently named in the cavalry-oriented works of Isaac Babel.[17] Babel had originally begun covering Budyonny as a writer for a Soviet newspaper during the Polish–Soviet War.[18]

Budyonny, who was a renowned horse breeder, also created a new horse breed that is still kept in large numbers in Russia: the Budyonny horse, which is famous for its high performance in sports and endurance.

Semyon Budyonny was also an amateur bayan player; a few instrumental vinyl records were issued in the USSR featuring a duo with his friend, cossack bayanist Grigory Zaytsev, titled as "Duo of bayanists" (Дуэт баянистов).[19]

The Military Academy of the Signal Corps in St. Petersburg carries the name of honour S. M. Budyonny.

Personal life Edit

Budyonny's first wife was an illiterate Cossack whose forename and patronymic were Nadezhda Ivanovna. They were married in 1903, immediately before he joined the army. He did not see her for seven years. After the Bolshevik revolution, she travelled with the Red Cavalry, organising food and medical supplies. In 1920-23, the couple lived with the Voroshilovs in Yekaterinoslav. They moved to Moscow in 1923.

In 1924, Nadezhda Ivanovna was killed by a gunshot. Her death led to numerous stories. Mikhail Soloviev, a Soviet army officer who settled in the west after being captured early in the German-Soviet War, alleged that Budyonny killed his wife after she had confronted him over his infidelity.[20] Budyonny told his daughter by a subsequent marriage that she shot herself, possibly unintentionally, when their marriage was failing.[21]

In 1925, he married a singer, Olga Stefanovna Mikhailova, who was around half his age, the daughter of a railway worker from Kursk. After their marriage, she entered the Moscow Conservatory, graduating in 1930, then joined the Bolshoi Theatre. According to the Croatian communist, Ante Ciliga, members of the Communist Youth (Komsomol) were so shocked to see him with his new bride at a public banquet, kissing her hands, that they threatened to create a scandal which the party authorities "had to use a very heavy hand to stifle".[22][23] Budyonny divorced her before September 1937.[citation needed]

Next, Budyonny married Olga's cousin, Maria Vasilevna, a student 33 years his junior, who cooked for him after Olga's arrest. This marriage lasted until his death. They had two sons, Sergei, born 1938, and Mikhail, born 1944, and a daughter, Nina, born 1939.[24]

Honours and awards Edit

Russian Empire
  Cross of St. George, all four-classes (Full Cavalier).
  St. George Medal, all four-classes (Full Cavalier)
Soviet Union
    Hero of the Soviet Union, thrice (1 February 1958, 24 April 1963, 22 February 1968)
  Order of Lenin, eight times (23 February 1935, 17 November 1939, 24 April 1943, 21 February 1945, 24 April 1953, 1 February 1963, 22 February 1968, 24 April 1973)
  Order of the Red Banner, six times (29 March 1919, 13 March 1923, 22 February 1930, 8 January 1941, 3 November 1944, 24 June 1968)
  Order of Suvorov, 1st class (22 February 1944)
?
Order of the Red Banner of Azerbaijan SSR (29 November 1923)
?
Order of the Red Banner of Labour of Uzbek SSR (19 January 1930)
  Medal "For the Defence of Moscow" (1944)
  Medal "For the Defence of Sevastopol" (1942)
  Medal "For the Defence of Odessa" (1942)
  Medal "For the Defence of the Caucasus" (1944)
  Medal "For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945" (1945)
  Medal "For the Victory over Japan" (1945)
  Jubilee Medal "Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945" (1965)
  Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin" (1969)
  Jubilee Medal "XX Years of the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army" (1938)
  Jubilee Medal "30 Years of the Soviet Army and Navy" (1948)
  Jubilee Medal "40 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR" (1958)
  Jubilee Medal "50 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR" (1968)
  Medal "In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow" (1947)
  Medal "In Commemoration of the 250th Anniversary of Leningrad" (1957)
  •   Honorary weapon – sword inscribed with golden national emblem of the Soviet Union (1968)
  • Honorary weapon – sword inscribed with Order of the Red Banner
  • Honorary weapon – Mauser C96 inscribed with Order of the Red Banner
Foreign awards
  Medal of Sino-Soviet Friendship (China)
  Order of Sukhbaatar, twice (Mongolia)
  Order of the Red Banner, (Mongolia, 1936)
  Order of Friendship (Mongolia, 1967)
  Medal "50 years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" (Mongolia, 1970)
  Medal "50 years of the Mongolian People's Army" (Mongolia, 1970)
  Order of Polonia Restituta, 3rd class (Poland, 1973)

References Edit

  1. ^ Also transliterated as Budennyj, Budyonnyy, Budennii, Budyoni, Budyenny, or Budenny.
  2. ^ Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar (2003), p. 331,
  3. ^ a b c d e f Budyonny, Semyon (1972). The Path of Valour. Moscow: Progress Publishers.
  4. ^ Shmidt, O.Yu. (1927). Большая советская энциклопедия. Moscow. p. 804.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Erickson, John (1962). The Soviet High Command: a Military Political History, 1918-1941. London: Macmillan. p. 51.
  6. ^ Trotsky, Leon. "A Great Victory". Marxists archive. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  7. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich; Khrushchev, Serge (2004). Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev. Vol. 2. Penn State Press. p. 562. ISBN 0271028610.
  8. ^ McSmith, Andy (2015). Fear and the Muse Kept Watch, The Russian Masters - from Akhmatova and Pasternak to Shostakovich and Eisenstein - under Stalin. New York: New Press. p. 125. ISBN 978-1-62097-079-9.
  9. ^ Reswick, William (1952). I Dreamt Revolution. Chicago: Henry Regnery Company. p. 205.
  10. ^ a b Montefiore, Simon Sebag (September 14, 2005). Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar. Vintage. ISBN 1400076781.
  11. ^ Getty, J.Arch and Naumov, Oleg V. (1999). The Road to Terror, Stalin and the Self-Destruction of the Bolsheviks, 1932-1939. New Haven: Yale U.P. pp. 397, 412. ISBN 0-300-07772-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Getty, and Naumov. The Road to Terror. p. 448.
  13. ^ Hill, Alexander, 1974- (2017). The Red Army and the Second World War. Cambridge, United Kingdom. ISBN 9781107020795. OCLC 944957747.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Budyonny, Semyon. "Letter to Voroshilov, 26 June 1937". Retrieved 3 November 2019.
  15. ^ Slezkine, Yuri (2019). The House of Government, A Saga of the Russian Revolution. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton U.P. p. 549. ISBN 9780691192727.
  16. ^ Djilas, Milovan (1969). Conversations with Stalin. Penguin. p. 47.
  17. ^ Babel, Isaac (2002). The Complete Works of Isaac Babel. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 751. ISBN 0-393-04846-2. Semyon Mikhailovich Budyonny -wikipedia.
  18. ^ Richard Bernstein (May 31, 1995). "Books of the Times; A Meticulous Eye for War's Poetry and Brutality" (Web). The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  19. ^ "Дуэт Баянистов (2)". Discogs.
  20. ^ Soloviev, Mikhail (1955). My Nine Lives in the Red Army. New York: David McKay.
  21. ^ Vasilieva, Larissa (1994). Kremlin Wives. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 90–91. ISBN 0-297-81405-2.
  22. ^ Ciliga, Ante (1979). The Russian Enigma. London: Ink Links. pp. 65–66. ISBN 0-906-13322-X.
  23. ^ "A Legendary Marshal and His… Women". 24 December 2016.
  24. ^ Vasilieva. Kremlin Wives. pp. 92–94.

External links Edit

semyon, budyonny, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, mikhailovich, family, name, budyonnyy, semyon, mikhailovich, budyonny, russian, Семён, Миха, йлович, Будённый, semyon, mikháylovich, budyonnyy, sʲɪˈmʲɵn, mʲɪˈxajləvʲ. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Mikhailovich and the family name is Budyonnyy Semyon Mikhailovich Budyonny 1 Russian Semyon Miha jlovich Budyonnyj tr Semyon Mikhaylovich Budyonnyy IPA sʲɪˈmʲɵn mʲɪˈxajlevʲɪdʑ bʊˈdʲɵnːɨj listen 25 April O S 13 April 1883 26 October 1973 was a Soviet cavalryman military commander during the Russian Civil War Polish Soviet War and World War II and politician who was a close political ally of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin Semyon BudyonnyBirth nameSemyon Mikhailovich BudyonnyyBorn 1883 04 25 25 April 1883Platovskaya Don Host Oblast Russian EmpireDied26 October 1973 1973 10 26 aged 90 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionBuriedKremlin Wall NecropolisAllegiance Russian Empire 1903 1917 Soviet Russia 1917 1922 Soviet Union 1922 1954 Service wbr branchImperial Russian Army Red ArmyYears of service1903 1954RankMarshal of the Soviet Union 1935 1954 Commands held1st Cavalry ArmyMoscow Military DistrictSouthwestern Direction Southern Front Southwestern FrontReserve FrontNorth Caucasus FrontBattles warsRusso Japanese WarWorld War IRussian Civil WarPolish Soviet WarWorld War II Battle of Uman Battle of KievAwardsHero of the Soviet Union thrice Cross of St George 1st 4th ClassesOther workCommunist Party of the Soviet Union 1919 1973 Born to a poor peasant family from the Don Cossack region in southern Russia Budyonny was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army in 1903 He served with distinction in a dragoon regiment during the First World War earning all four classes of the Cross of St George When the Russian Civil War broke out Budyonny founded the Red Cavalry which played an important role in the Bolshevik victory Budyonny became renowned for his bravery and was the subject of several popular patriotic songs In 1922 he also became commander of all the troops in the north Caucasian military district While serving as inspector of the Red Army s cavalry 1924 37 and commander of the Moscow military district 1937 40 As a political ally of Joseph Stalin he became one of the original five Marshals of the Soviet Union He was one of the two most senior army commanders that survived the Great Purge and in post at the time of German invasion of the USSR in 1941 After the Soviet forces under Budyonny s command were routed in the battles of Kiev and Uman he was removed from frontline command He received the blame for many of Stalin s military strategic errors in the early part of World War II but he was retained in the Soviet high command In 1953 he resumed his post of inspector of the cavalry Budyonny was a staunch proponent of horse cavalry During the Great Purge he testified against Mikhail Tukhachevsky s efforts to create an independent tank corps claiming that it was so inferior to cavalry and illogical that it amounted to wrecking sabotage After being told of the importance of the tank in the coming war in 1939 he remarked You won t convince me As soon as war is declared everyone will shout Send for the Cavalry 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 World War I 3 The Red Cavalry 4 During the Polish Soviet War 5 Reputation 6 Later military career 7 Role in the Great Purge 8 Second World War service 9 Post war career 10 Other contributions and legacy 11 Personal life 12 Honours and awards 13 References 14 External linksEarly life EditBudyonny was born into a poor peasant family on the Kozyurin farmstead near the town of Salsk in the Don Cossack region of the southern Russian Empire now Rostov Oblast Although he grew up in a Cossack region Budyonny s family were ethnic Russians from Voronezh province He worked as a farm labourer shop errand boy blacksmith s apprentice and driver of a steam driven threshing machine until the autumn of 1903 when he was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army He became a cavalryman reinforcing the 46th Cossack Regiment during the Russo Japanese War of 1904 1905 After the war he was transferred to the Primorsk Dragoon Regiment In 1907 he was sent to the Academy for Cavalry Officers in the St Petersburg Riding School He graduated first in his class after a year becoming an instructor with the rank of junior non commissioned officer He returned to his regiment as a riding instructor with a rank of senior non commissioned officer At the start of World War I he joined a reserve dragoon cavalry battalion 3 9 12 Budyonny in 1912World War I EditDuring World War I Budyonny was the 5th Squadron s non commissioned troop officer in the Christian IX of Denmark 18th Seversky Dragoon Regiment Caucasian Cavalry Division on the Eastern Front He became famous for his attack on a German supply column near Brzezina and was awarded the St George Cross 4th Class However there was general ineptitude among the officers under whom he served primarily Caucasian aristocrats who received commissions based on their social standing 3 12 16 In November 1916 the Caucasian Cavalry Division was transferred to the Caucasus Front to fight against the Ottoman Turks He was involved in a heated confrontation with the squadron sergeant major regarding the officers poor treatment of the soldiers and the continual lack of food The sergeant major struck out at Budyonny who retaliated by punching the ranking officer knocking him down The soldiers backed Budyonny during questioning claiming that the sergeant major was kicked by a horse Budyonny was stripped of his St George Cross though he could have faced a court martial and death 3 16 22 Budyonny would go on to be awarded the St George Cross 4th class a second time during the Battle of Van He received the St George Cross 3rd class fighting the Turks near Mendelij on the way to Baghdad He then received the St George Cross 2nd class for operating behind Turkish lines for 22 days He received the St George Cross 1st class for capturing a senior non commissioned officer and six men 3 22 26 The Red Cavalry Edit Kliment Voroshilov Budyonny Mikhail Frunze and Nikolai Bukharin with the 1st Cavalry Army in Novomoskovsk 1921After the February Revolution overthrew the Tsarist regime in 1917 Budyonny was elected chairman of the squadron committee and a member of the regimental committee When the Caucasian Cavalry Division was moved to Minsk he was elected chairman of the regimental committee and deputy chairman of the divisional committee 3 29 30 Returning to Platovskaya Budyonny was elected deputy chairman of the Stanista Soviet of Workers Peasants Cossacks and Soldiers Deputies on 12 January 1918 On 18 February he was elected to be a member of the Salsk District Presidium and head of the District Land Department On the night of 23 February Budyonny organized a force of 24 men to retake Platovskaya from the white guards but was soon joined by a large number of new recruits By morning they had freed 400 inhabitants and killed 350 White Russian soldiers His force now consisted of 520 men from whom on 27 February he formed what was later recognised 4 as the first 120 strong squadron of red cavalry Eventually he was elected battalion commander Budyonny met Stalin and Voroshilov in July 1918 Both supported the idea of creating a cavalry corps to fight on the Bolshevik side in the Russian Civil War but when Leon Trotsky the People s Commissar for War visited south Russia soon afterward he told Budyonny that cavalry was a very aristocratic family of troops commanded by princes barons and counts Despite Trotsky s objections the 1st Socialist Cavalry Regiment was formed in Tsaritsyn in October 1918 commanded by Boris Dumenko with Budyonny as deputy commander 3 43 45 50 53 70 79 85 89 Budyonny joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union CPSU in 1919 During the summer of 1919 while the Red Cavalry were in action against the White General Anton Denikin Trotsky described them contempuously as Budyonny s corps a horde and Budyonny their Ataman ring leader He is today s Stenka Razin and where he leads his gang there will they go for the Reds today tomorrow for the Whites 5 However in October 1919 Budyonny pulled off a spectacular victory when in the greatest cavalry battle of the civil war he attacked and defeated the White army corps commanded by Konstantin Mamontov On 25 October Trotsky sent a dispatch forecasting that the White army in the south would never recover from this defeat and hailing Budyonny as a true warrior of the workers and peasants 6 During the Polish Soviet War EditWhen Poland declared independence there was no agreement between its government and the Soviet authorities over where the border would be In April 1920 Budyonny s cavalry was assigned to driving the Polish army out of Ukraine On 5 June he took part in recapturing Kiev and over the next few days successfully drove the Poles westward At the start of the war with Poland he was assigned to the southern front which Stalin commanded On 15 August he asked the commander in chief of Soviet forces in Poland Mikhail Tukhachevsky for authority to swing north and assist in capturing Warsaw With Stalin s agreement he attempted to capture Lviv first Unsuccessful he eventually diverted to the North but by that time Tukhachevsky s forces had been driven back forcing a general retreat After Budyonny s army was defeated in the Battle of Komarow one of the biggest cavalry battles in history he was forced to withdraw onto Soviet held territory Budyonny took part in the reconquest of Crimea the final phase of the Russian Civil War Reputation EditDespite the defeat in Poland Budyonny was one of Soviet Russia s military heroes by the end of the Civil War With Semyon Timoshenko and Kliment Voroshilov he was one of the Cavalry Army clique leaders and a supporter of Stalin citation needed In 1920 Soviet songwriter Dmitry Pokrass wrote the song Budyonny s March which was one of the first songs to become widely popular throughout the Soviet Union 7 The writer Isaac Babel rode with Budyonny s cavalry in Poland and published a series of short stories about the experience which achieved worldwide acclaim as one of the greatest contributions to Soviet literature but which offended Budyonny who made a rare and furious foray into print in March 1924 demanding that the Red Cavalry s reputation should be protected against slander by a literary degenerate This provoked a response from Maxim Gorky then the most famous living Russian writer defending Babel but in 1928 Budyonny returned to the attack in an open letter to Gorky accusing Babel of crude deliberate and arrogant slander which Gorky said was an undeserved insult 8 William Reswick a correspondent for the American agency AP described a celebration backstage at an opera house around the 10th anniversary of the revolution at which Budyonny the celebrated cavalry an amateur dancer and admirer of the ballet joined us He was in high spirits After helping himself to some vodka he offered to outdance any professional in the Kamarinskaya Ballerina Abramova took up the challenge Thereupon Budyonny called over a harmonic player and went into a spin cutting a Cossack caper with the ease and grace of a youngster 9 Later military career Edit Semyon Budyonny celebrates International Women s Day at the House of Unions on March 8 1924 From 1921 1923 Budyonny was deputy commander of the North Caucasian Military District In 1923 Budyonny arrived in Chechnya with a proclamation from the Central Executive Committee announcing the formation of the Chechen Autonomous Region The same year he was also appointed assistant commander of the Red Army s cavalry During 1924 37 he was Inspector of Cavalry of the Red Army He spent a great amount of time and effort in the organization and management of equestrian facilities and developing new breeds of horses Budyonny was considered a courageous and colourful cavalry officer but displayed disdain for the tools of modern warfare particularly tanks which he along with Grigory Kulik saw as incapable of ever replacing cavalry 10 This brought him into direct conflict with Tukhachevsky who was in charge of weapons developed and foresaw the imminence of mechanized warfare Even after Tukhachevsky s arrest the Red Army never stopped developing large scale mechanized corps and each front had numerous such corps attached as a second echelon force by 1940 41 but Budyonny was never criticised for being on the wrong side of the argument being a faithful ally of Stalin and Voroshilov Budyonny graduated from the M V Frunze Military Academy in 1932 In 1934 he was made a candidate member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union The first five Marshals of the Soviet Union in November 1935 clockwise from top left Semyon Budyonny Vasily Blyukher Alexander Ilyich Yegorov Kliment Voroshilov and Mikhail Tukhachevsky Only Budyonny and Voroshilov would survive Stalin s Great Purge In 1935 Budyonny was made one of the first five Marshals of the Soviet Union Three of these five were executed in the Great Purge of the late 1930s leaving only Budyonny and Voroshilov Role in the Great Purge EditEarly in the Great Purge Budyonny was appointed commander of the Moscow Military District possibly because Stalin was nervous that there would be a military coup after he had decided to move against two of the most popular Bolsheviks Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov When Bukharin was trying to defend himself during a plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union on 26 February 1937 Budyonny barracked him calling him a Jesuit 11 On 24 May 1937 Budyonny was copied into a resolution proposing to arrest Marshal Tukhachevsky and the high ranking party official Janis Rudzutaks He wrote on it It s necessary to finish off this scum 12 On 11 June he was one of the judges at the trial of Tukhachevsky and seven other Red Army commanders whose execution was the start of a massive purge of the Red Army officer corps At the trial he provided testimony that Tukhachevsky s efforts to create an independent tank corps was so inferior to horse cavalry and so illogical that it amounted to deliberate wrecking 13 Half a century after the trial the Soviet authorities admitted that all eight defendants were innocent The evidence consisted of confessions forced out of them under torture Two weeks after their execution Budyonny sent a memo to Voroshilov disclosing that Tukhachevsky initially withdrew his confession yet Budyonny concluded that all eight were patented spies since 1931 and a few of them even earlier were worming their way into our ranks ever since the beginning of the revolution 14 Later as the Great Purge continued the NKVD came to interrogate and arrest Budyonny Budyonny s response was to arm himself with his service Nagant M1895 revolver and call Stalin to demand he have the agents removed 10 Stalin complied and the event was not discussed again By December 1937 Budyonny had been allocated a large dacha with orchards raspberry and gooseberry bushes a workhorse a black cow and a pig weighing 250 kilograms 550 lb 15 Second World War service EditIn July September 1941 Budyonny was Commander in Chief glavkom glavkom of the Soviet armed forces of the Southwestern Direction Southwestern and Southern Fronts facing the German invasion of Ukraine This invasion began as part of Germany s Operation Barbarossa which was launched on June 22 Operating under strict orders from Stalin who attempted to micromanage the war in the early stages not to retreat under any circumstances Budyonny s forces were eventually surrounded during the Battle of Uman and the Battle of Kiev by Nazi forces The disasters which followed the encirclement cost the Soviet Union 1 5 million men killed or taken prisoner This was the largest encirclement in military history Budyonny at the 1941 October Revolution Parade On 13 September 1941 Stalin sacked Budyonny as a scapegoat replacing him with Semyon Timoshenko He was never allowed to command troops in combat again First he was put in charge of the Reserve Front September October 1941 then made Commander in Chief of the troops in the North Caucasus Direction April May 1942 Commander of the North Caucasus Front May August 1942 but was removed from this post as the Germans approached and appointed Cavalry Inspector of the Red Army from 1943 as well as various honorific posts Despite his bravery as a cavalry commander the view of his fellow officers was that Budyonny was demonstrably incompetent at commanding an army in a mechanized war Soon after the war Marshal Konev told the Yugoslav communist Milovan Đilas Budyonny never knew much and he never studied anything He showed himself to be completely incompetent and permitted awful mistakes to be made 16 Budyonny s tomb in the Kremlin Wall NecropolisBecause of his exceptional Civil War record and public popularity he continued to enjoy Stalin s patronage and suffered no real punishment for the disaster in Kiev Post war career EditAfter the war Budyonny was appointed Minister of Agriculture of the USSR responsible among other things for horse breeding When he retired he retained his membership of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union Budyonny died of brain hemorrhage on 26 October 1973 at the age of 90 He was buried with full military honours in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in one of the twelve individual tombs located between the Lenin Mausoleum and the Kremlin wall Pallbearers at his funeral included the General Secretary of the CPSU Leonid Brezhnev and the USSR Minister for Defence Marshal Grechko Other contributions and legacy EditBudyonny wrote a five volume memoir in which he described the stormy years of civil war as well as the everyday life of the First Cavalry Army He was frequently commemorated for his bravery in many popular Soviet military songs including The Red Cavalry song Konarmieyskaya and The Budyonny March Budenovka a part of Soviet military uniform is named after Semyon Budyonny He was also frequently named in the cavalry oriented works of Isaac Babel 17 Babel had originally begun covering Budyonny as a writer for a Soviet newspaper during the Polish Soviet War 18 Budyonny who was a renowned horse breeder also created a new horse breed that is still kept in large numbers in Russia the Budyonny horse which is famous for its high performance in sports and endurance Semyon Budyonny was also an amateur bayan player a few instrumental vinyl records were issued in the USSR featuring a duo with his friend cossack bayanist Grigory Zaytsev titled as Duo of bayanists Duet bayanistov 19 The Military Academy of the Signal Corps in St Petersburg carries the name of honour S M Budyonny Personal life EditBudyonny s first wife was an illiterate Cossack whose forename and patronymic were Nadezhda Ivanovna They were married in 1903 immediately before he joined the army He did not see her for seven years After the Bolshevik revolution she travelled with the Red Cavalry organising food and medical supplies In 1920 23 the couple lived with the Voroshilovs in Yekaterinoslav They moved to Moscow in 1923 In 1924 Nadezhda Ivanovna was killed by a gunshot Her death led to numerous stories Mikhail Soloviev a Soviet army officer who settled in the west after being captured early in the German Soviet War alleged that Budyonny killed his wife after she had confronted him over his infidelity 20 Budyonny told his daughter by a subsequent marriage that she shot herself possibly unintentionally when their marriage was failing 21 In 1925 he married a singer Olga Stefanovna Mikhailova who was around half his age the daughter of a railway worker from Kursk After their marriage she entered the Moscow Conservatory graduating in 1930 then joined the Bolshoi Theatre According to the Croatian communist Ante Ciliga members of the Communist Youth Komsomol were so shocked to see him with his new bride at a public banquet kissing her hands that they threatened to create a scandal which the party authorities had to use a very heavy hand to stifle 22 23 Budyonny divorced her before September 1937 citation needed Next Budyonny married Olga s cousin Maria Vasilevna a student 33 years his junior who cooked for him after Olga s arrest This marriage lasted until his death They had two sons Sergei born 1938 and Mikhail born 1944 and a daughter Nina born 1939 24 Honours and awards EditRussian Empire Cross of St George all four classes Full Cavalier St George Medal all four classes Full Cavalier Soviet Union Hero of the Soviet Union thrice 1 February 1958 24 April 1963 22 February 1968 Order of Lenin eight times 23 February 1935 17 November 1939 24 April 1943 21 February 1945 24 April 1953 1 February 1963 22 February 1968 24 April 1973 Order of the Red Banner six times 29 March 1919 13 March 1923 22 February 1930 8 January 1941 3 November 1944 24 June 1968 Order of Suvorov 1st class 22 February 1944 Order of the Red Banner of Azerbaijan SSR 29 November 1923 Order of the Red Banner of Labour of Uzbek SSR 19 January 1930 Medal For the Defence of Moscow 1944 Medal For the Defence of Sevastopol 1942 Medal For the Defence of Odessa 1942 Medal For the Defence of the Caucasus 1944 Medal For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 1945 Medal For the Victory over Japan 1945 Jubilee Medal Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 1965 Jubilee Medal In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin 1969 Jubilee Medal XX Years of the Workers and Peasants Red Army 1938 Jubilee Medal 30 Years of the Soviet Army and Navy 1948 Jubilee Medal 40 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR 1958 Jubilee Medal 50 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR 1968 Medal In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow 1947 Medal In Commemoration of the 250th Anniversary of Leningrad 1957 Honorary weapon sword inscribed with golden national emblem of the Soviet Union 1968 Honorary weapon sword inscribed with Order of the Red Banner Honorary weapon Mauser C96 inscribed with Order of the Red BannerForeign awards Medal of Sino Soviet Friendship China Order of Sukhbaatar twice Mongolia Order of the Red Banner Mongolia 1936 Order of Friendship Mongolia 1967 Medal 50 years of the Mongolian People s Revolution Mongolia 1970 Medal 50 years of the Mongolian People s Army Mongolia 1970 Order of Polonia Restituta 3rd class Poland 1973 References Edit Also transliterated as Budennyj Budyonnyy Budennii Budyoni Budyenny or Budenny Simon Sebag Montefiore Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar 2003 p 331 a b c d e f Budyonny Semyon 1972 The Path of Valour Moscow Progress Publishers Shmidt O Yu 1927 Bolshaya sovetskaya enciklopediya Moscow p 804 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Erickson John 1962 The Soviet High Command a Military Political History 1918 1941 London Macmillan p 51 Trotsky Leon A Great Victory Marxists archive Retrieved 31 October 2019 Khrushchev Nikita Sergeevich Khrushchev Serge 2004 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Vol 2 Penn State Press p 562 ISBN 0271028610 McSmith Andy 2015 Fear and the Muse Kept Watch The Russian Masters from Akhmatova and Pasternak to Shostakovich and Eisenstein under Stalin New York New Press p 125 ISBN 978 1 62097 079 9 Reswick William 1952 I Dreamt Revolution Chicago Henry Regnery Company p 205 a b Montefiore Simon Sebag September 14 2005 Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar Vintage ISBN 1400076781 Getty J Arch and Naumov Oleg V 1999 The Road to Terror Stalin and the Self Destruction of the Bolsheviks 1932 1939 New Haven Yale U P pp 397 412 ISBN 0 300 07772 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Getty and Naumov The Road to Terror p 448 Hill Alexander 1974 2017 The Red Army and the Second World War Cambridge United Kingdom ISBN 9781107020795 OCLC 944957747 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Budyonny Semyon Letter to Voroshilov 26 June 1937 Retrieved 3 November 2019 Slezkine Yuri 2019 The House of Government A Saga of the Russian Revolution Princeton N J Princeton U P p 549 ISBN 9780691192727 Djilas Milovan 1969 Conversations with Stalin Penguin p 47 Babel Isaac 2002 The Complete Works of Isaac Babel W W Norton amp Company pp 751 ISBN 0 393 04846 2 Semyon Mikhailovich Budyonny wikipedia Richard Bernstein May 31 1995 Books of the Times A Meticulous Eye for War s Poetry and Brutality Web The New York Times Retrieved 2007 12 01 Duet Bayanistov 2 Discogs Soloviev Mikhail 1955 My Nine Lives in the Red Army New York David McKay Vasilieva Larissa 1994 Kremlin Wives London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson pp 90 91 ISBN 0 297 81405 2 Ciliga Ante 1979 The Russian Enigma London Ink Links pp 65 66 ISBN 0 906 13322 X A Legendary Marshal and His Women 24 December 2016 Vasilieva Kremlin Wives pp 92 94 External links EditColour poster and biography from site of ETS Publishing House Archived 2009 02 14 at the Wayback Machine Newspaper clippings about Semyon Budyonny in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Semyon Budyonny amp oldid 1172366507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.