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White Army

The White Army (Russian: Белая армия, romanizedBelaya armiya) or White Guard (Бѣлая гвардія/Белая гвардия, Belaya gvardiya),[3] also referred to as the Whites[4] or White Guardsmen (Бѣлогвардейцы/Белогвардейцы, Belogvardeytsi), was a common collective name for the armed formations of the White movement and anti-Soviet governments during the Russian Civil War.[5] They fought against the Red Army of the Bolsheviks.[4]

White Army
Бѣлая армія[a]
Белая армия
Coat of arms of the Russian State
Active1918–1923
Country Russian State, South Russia
SizeOverall:
~1,023,000 (May 1919)
In combat units:
~4,000 (December 1917)
~683,000[1] (June 1919)
~300,000[2] (December 1919)
~100,000 (Summer 1920)
~8,000 (September 1922)
~1,000 (1923)
Garrison/HQ former Russian Empire
Outer Mongolia (1920–21)
China
Persia
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Lavr Kornilov, Alexander Kolchak, Anton Denikin, Pyotr Wrangel, Nikolai Yudenich, Mikhail Drozdovsky, Mikhail Diterikhs, Anatoly Pepelyayev, Vladimir Kantakuzen
Insignia
Identification
symbol

When it 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 the First World War, which, however, left a strong imprint on the specifics of the Civil War.[6]

History

The name "White" is associated with white symbols of the supporters of the pre-revolutionary order, dating back to the time of the French Revolution,[7][b] in contrast to the name of the Red Guard detachments, and then the Red Army. For the first time, the name "White Guard" was used in Russia for Finnish police detachments created in 1906 to fight the revolutionary movement.[9] Their members wore white bandages on their sleeves; however, this did not have a direct connection with the White Army during the Civil War.

The White armies comprised a number of different groups, who operated independently and did not share a single ideology or political goal. Their leaders were conservative or moderate generals and political leaders, each with different goals and plans to achieve them, and most of these armies did not coordinate their actions. The chain of command in each, as well as individual members, differed, from experienced veterans of World War I to fresh volunteers.[4]

The White Guards, in addition to directly fighting with the Reds, as well as the Makhnovtsi, carried out the White Terror, while taking part in mass executions, including assisting foreign interventionists (for example, 257 civilians were killed in 1919 in the course of the struggle in the village of Ivanovka of the Japanese Army and the White Guards against the pro-Bolshevik detachments of partisans).[10]

Volunteer and Don Army

After the October Revolution, the arrested generals Lavr Kornilov, Anton Denikin, Sergey Markov and others were released by Commander-in-Chief Nikolay Dukhonin before his removal and went to Don to Ataman Alexey Kaledin. The Don Region abandoned the power of the Soviets and proclaimed independence "before the formation of a nation-wide, popularly recognized government".[11] The first white army was created by Mikhail Alekseyev, calling it the "Alekseyev Organization".[12] Officers were recruited there on a voluntary basis. A Volunteer Army was created from the members of this organization. Generals Alexey Kaledin and Lavr Kornilov joined him. Three months later, in April 1918, the Council of Defense of the Don Host formed the Don Army. In May 1918, the Drozdov brigade joined the Volunteer Army from the Romanian Front.

Among those who came to the Don were public figures. Boris Savinkov, the former head of the SR Combat Organization, who organized the Union for the Defense of the Motherland and Freedom under the Volunteer Army, was also there.[13] Military leaders and Cossacks reacted extremely negatively to his presence.[14]

One of the first to join the Alekseyev Organization was Vasily Shulgin, who later became a member of the Special Meeting under Denikin.

People's Army

On 8 June 1918, the uprising white Czechs took Samara. On the same day, the People's Army was organized under the command of Colonel Nikolai Galkin. It was formed by the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly.[15] On 9 June, after the arrival of Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Kappel in the army, the following were formed: 1st Volunteer Samara Squadron, Cavalry Squadron of Staff Captain Stafievsky, Volzhskaya Equestrian Battery of Captain Vyrypayev, horse reconnaissance, subversive command and economic unit. After the formation of the units, Kappel's troops occupy Syzran and Stavropol on June 11 and 12, respectively.[16]

On 10 July, the People's Army again entered Syzran, occupied by the Bolsheviks, and threw them back to Simbirsk. A few days later, Kappel's detachments occupied Simbirsk and from there they advanced in several directions: from Syzran to Volsk and Penza, from Simbirsk to Inza and Alatyr and along the banks of the Volga to the mouth of the Kama.

After the capture of Kazan, the People's Army was reorganized. The Volga Front was created under the command of Stanislav Chechek. It was divided into several groups: Simbirsk, Kazan, Khvalynsk, Ufa, Nikolaev, Ural Cossack troops and the Orenburg Cossack troops.

Kappel suggested the command to take Nizhny Novgorod. He suggested that the occupation of the city would break the Bolshevik plans to sign additional agreements with the Kaiser of Germany in Berlin, as he would deprive them of money from the "pocket of Russia". However, the command and the Czechs abandoned these plans, citing a lack of reserves.[16]

Siberian Army

 
Appeal to volunteers, c. 1918–19
 
Anti–Bolshevik White Army poster encouraging people to enlist as volunteers

At the same time, in June 1918, the Provisional Siberian Government in Novo-Nikolaevsk created the Siberian Army.[17] Initially, it was called the West Siberian Volunteer Army. From June to December 1918, the headquarters of the Siberian Army was the general headquarters for the entire White Movement of Siberia.

In August 1918, the Supreme Administration of the Northern Region in Arkhangelsk created troops of the Northern Region, sometimes referred to as the Northern Army (not to be confused with General Rodzyanko's Northern Army).

In January 1919, the Don and Volunteer Armies were combined into the Armed Forces of the South of Russia.

In June 1919, the Northern Army was created from Russian officers and soldiers of the Northern Corps, who left the Estonian army. A month later, the army was renamed the Northwest.

Unification in the Russian Army

On 14 October 1918, Minister of War Alexander Kolchak arrived in Omsk. On 18 November 1918 he was proclaimed the Supreme Ruler of Russia, who also assumed the supreme command of all the land and naval forces of Russia. He made a substantial reorganization of the forces of the White movement and carried out its integration into a single Russian Army on 23 September 1918. On 4 November Kolchak became part of the Russian Government.

As the Supreme Ruler of Russia, Admiral Kolchak is recognized by all the commanders of the white armies both in the south and west of Russia, as well as in Siberia and the Far East; generals Anton Denikin, Yevgeny Miller, Nikolai Yudenich voluntarily submit to Alexander Kolchak and recognize his Supreme High Command over all armies in Russia. The supreme commander at the same time confirms the authority of the commanders. From this moment, the Armed Forces of the South of Russia, the Northwestern Army, the Northern Army, and the Eastern Front have been operating on the fronts of this single army.

The name "Russian Army" is approved as the union of all white fronts, the status of commanders of the fronts formally from the Supreme Commander-in-Chief is received by the commanders of the North and Northwest Armies Generals Yudenich and Miller. In April 1920, the Far Eastern Army was created in Transbaikalia from the remnants of the troops of the Eastern Front under the leadership of General Grigory Semenov.

Out of the remnants of the Armed Forces of the South of Russia that left for Crimea in May 1920, General Wrangel formed the armed forces that inherited the name "Russian Army" from the single Russian army of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief Admiral Kolchak of 1919 – as the last of its fronts.

In 1921, from the remnants of the Far Eastern Army of General Semyonov in Primorye, the White Rebel Army was formed, later renamed the Zemsky Army, since the Amur Zemsky Government was created in Vladivostok in 1922.

Composition

White armies drew both from volunteers and on the basis of mobilization.

On a voluntary basis, they were staffed not only from officers of the Russian Imperial Army and Navy, but also from all comers. It was both in the South – in the Volunteer Army, and in Siberia, for example – the division of the Labor Corps.[18]

On a mobilization basis, they drew from the population of controlled territories and from captured Red Army soldiers.

The strength of the white armies fighting against the Red Army, according to intelligence estimates, by June 1919 was about 683,000. However, together with auxiliary and staff units, it could exceed 1,023,000 people.[19] A significant part of the white forces was on contentment. Combat units amounted to only half of this figure.[18] After that, the number of white armies began to decline steadily.[20]

The White Army consisted of all kinds of troops for that period:

  • Air Units;
  • Cavalry;
  • Infantry;
  • Railway connections.
  • Tank Units;

All of them had their own uniforms and insignia, often copied from the uniform of the guard units of the Russian Imperial Army.

According to supporters of the White movement, the White Guard is a military man devoted to his ideals (even though the officer, though the ordinary), who was ready to defend his Motherland and his specific ideas about duty, honour and justice with arms in hand.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Pre-1918 spelling
  2. ^ In the historiography of the French Revolution, the 1793–1794 revolutionary republican Reign of Terror of Robespierre against any suspected supporter of the Ancien Régime is also known as the "Red Terror", whereas the reactionary/anti-revolutionary monarchist pro-Bourbon mass killings and persecutions of revolutionaries and ex-Jacobins (and in southern France, Protestants) are known as the 1794–1795 First White Terror and the 1815–1816 Second White Terror.[8]

References

  1. ^ Red Army Intelligence Assessment
  2. ^ Kolchak's Army – "Encyclopedia"
  3. ^ The White Guard // "Banquet Campaign" of 1904 – Big Irgiz – Moscow: The Great Russian Encyclopedia, 2005 – Page 190 – (The Great Russian Encyclopedia: in 35 Volumes / Editor-in-Chief Yury Osipov; 2004–2017, Volume 3) – ISBN 5-85270-331-1
  4. ^ a b c "The White armies". Alpha History. 15 August 2019. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  5. ^ Great Russian Encyclopedia 2005, p. 268.
  6. ^ Military Encyclopedic Dictionary / Editorial Board: Alexander Gorkin, Vladimir Zolotarev et al. – Moscow: Great Russian Encyclopedia, RIPOL Classic, 2002 – 1664 Pages
  7. ^ David Feldman (2006). . Literature Issues (Journal) (4). Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
  8. ^ "terreur". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 1993–2002.
  9. ^ . www.helsinki200.fi. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017.
  10. ^ Article by Elena Kiryakova. "In the Course of the White Terror, Everyone was Chopped Off, Including Women and Children"
  11. ^ "White Guard". Encyclopedia Krugosvet.
  12. ^ Roman Abinyakin (2005). The Officer Corps of the Volunteer Army: Social Composition, Worldview of 1917–1920 (Monograph ed.). Oryol: Alexander Vorobyov. p. 204. ISBN 5900901572. OCLC 60540889.
  13. ^ David Golinkov (2017). Covert operations of the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission. Litres. p. 257. ISBN 9785040514632.
  14. ^ Grigory Trubetskoy. "Creation of the Volunteer Army". white-force.ru.
  15. ^ "People's Army of Komuch". rustrana.rf.
  16. ^ a b Oleg Dankir. "Народная армия КОМУЧа - Казачий Порядник. О.Данкир" [People's Army of Komuch – Cossack Order].
  17. ^ White Guard. "Siberian Army. White Guard – Publicism". ruguard.ru.
  18. ^ a b Spiridonov (2008). Steel Fist of the White Guard. Impact Units in the South of Russia in 1918–1920. Taganrog.
  19. ^ Evgeny Volkov. The Population Dynamics of the Soviet Union Over Eighty Years
  20. ^ Kolchak Army // Kireev – Congo – Moscow: The Great Russian Encyclopedia, 2009 – Page 569 – (The Great Russian Encyclopedia: in 35 Volumes / Editor-in-Chief Yury Osipov; 2004–2017, Volume 14) – ISBN 978-5-85270-345-3

Sources

External links

  Media related to White Army at Wikimedia Commons

white, army, other, uses, disambiguation, russian, Белая, армия, romanized, belaya, armiya, white, guard, Бѣлая, гвардія, Белая, гвардия, belaya, gvardiya, also, referred, whites, white, guardsmen, Бѣлогвардейцы, Белогвардейцы, belogvardeytsi, common, collecti. For other uses see White Army disambiguation The White Army Russian Belaya armiya romanized Belaya armiya or White Guard Bѣlaya gvardiya Belaya gvardiya Belaya gvardiya 3 also referred to as the Whites 4 or White Guardsmen Bѣlogvardejcy Belogvardejcy Belogvardeytsi was a common collective name for the armed formations of the White movement and anti Soviet governments during the Russian Civil War 5 They fought against the Red Army of the Bolsheviks 4 White ArmyBѣlaya armiya a Belaya armiyaCoat of arms of the Russian StateActive1918 1923CountryRussian State South RussiaSizeOverall 1 023 000 May 1919 In combat units 4 000 December 1917 683 000 1 June 1919 300 000 2 December 1919 100 000 Summer 1920 8 000 September 1922 1 000 1923 Garrison HQformer Russian Empire Outer Mongolia 1920 21 China PersiaCommandersNotablecommandersLavr Kornilov Alexander Kolchak Anton Denikin Pyotr Wrangel Nikolai Yudenich Mikhail Drozdovsky Mikhail Diterikhs Anatoly Pepelyayev Vladimir KantakuzenInsigniaIdentificationsymbol When it 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 the First World War which however left a strong imprint on the specifics of the Civil War 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Volunteer and Don Army 1 2 People s Army 1 3 Siberian Army 1 4 Unification in the Russian Army 2 Composition 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory EditThe name White is associated with white symbols of the supporters of the pre revolutionary order dating back to the time of the French Revolution 7 b in contrast to the name of the Red Guard detachments and then the Red Army For the first time the name White Guard was used in Russia for Finnish police detachments created in 1906 to fight the revolutionary movement 9 Their members wore white bandages on their sleeves however this did not have a direct connection with the White Army during the Civil War The White armies comprised a number of different groups who operated independently and did not share a single ideology or political goal Their leaders were conservative or moderate generals and political leaders each with different goals and plans to achieve them and most of these armies did not coordinate their actions The chain of command in each as well as individual members differed from experienced veterans of World War I to fresh volunteers 4 The White Guards in addition to directly fighting with the Reds as well as the Makhnovtsi carried out the White Terror while taking part in mass executions including assisting foreign interventionists for example 257 civilians were killed in 1919 in the course of the struggle in the village of Ivanovka of the Japanese Army and the White Guards against the pro Bolshevik detachments of partisans 10 Volunteer and Don Army Edit Main articles Volunteer Army and Don Army After the October Revolution the arrested generals Lavr Kornilov Anton Denikin Sergey Markov and others were released by Commander in Chief Nikolay Dukhonin before his removal and went to Don to Ataman Alexey Kaledin The Don Region abandoned the power of the Soviets and proclaimed independence before the formation of a nation wide popularly recognized government 11 The first white army was created by Mikhail Alekseyev calling it the Alekseyev Organization 12 Officers were recruited there on a voluntary basis A Volunteer Army was created from the members of this organization Generals Alexey Kaledin and Lavr Kornilov joined him Three months later in April 1918 the Council of Defense of the Don Host formed the Don Army In May 1918 the Drozdov brigade joined the Volunteer Army from the Romanian Front Among those who came to the Don were public figures Boris Savinkov the former head of the SR Combat Organization who organized the Union for the Defense of the Motherland and Freedom under the Volunteer Army was also there 13 Military leaders and Cossacks reacted extremely negatively to his presence 14 One of the first to join the Alekseyev Organization was Vasily Shulgin who later became a member of the Special Meeting under Denikin People s Army Edit Main article People s Army On 8 June 1918 the uprising white Czechs took Samara On the same day the People s Army was organized under the command of Colonel Nikolai Galkin It was formed by the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly 15 On 9 June after the arrival of Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Kappel in the army the following were formed 1st Volunteer Samara Squadron Cavalry Squadron of Staff Captain Stafievsky Volzhskaya Equestrian Battery of Captain Vyrypayev horse reconnaissance subversive command and economic unit After the formation of the units Kappel s troops occupy Syzran and Stavropol on June 11 and 12 respectively 16 On 10 July the People s Army again entered Syzran occupied by the Bolsheviks and threw them back to Simbirsk A few days later Kappel s detachments occupied Simbirsk and from there they advanced in several directions from Syzran to Volsk and Penza from Simbirsk to Inza and Alatyr and along the banks of the Volga to the mouth of the Kama After the capture of Kazan the People s Army was reorganized The Volga Front was created under the command of Stanislav Chechek It was divided into several groups Simbirsk Kazan Khvalynsk Ufa Nikolaev Ural Cossack troops and the Orenburg Cossack troops Kappel suggested the command to take Nizhny Novgorod He suggested that the occupation of the city would break the Bolshevik plans to sign additional agreements with the Kaiser of Germany in Berlin as he would deprive them of money from the pocket of Russia However the command and the Czechs abandoned these plans citing a lack of reserves 16 Siberian Army Edit Main article Siberian Army Appeal to volunteers c 1918 19 Anti Bolshevik White Army poster encouraging people to enlist as volunteers At the same time in June 1918 the Provisional Siberian Government in Novo Nikolaevsk created the Siberian Army 17 Initially it was called the West Siberian Volunteer Army From June to December 1918 the headquarters of the Siberian Army was the general headquarters for the entire White Movement of Siberia In August 1918 the Supreme Administration of the Northern Region in Arkhangelsk created troops of the Northern Region sometimes referred to as the Northern Army not to be confused with General Rodzyanko s Northern Army In January 1919 the Don and Volunteer Armies were combined into the Armed Forces of the South of Russia In June 1919 the Northern Army was created from Russian officers and soldiers of the Northern Corps who left the Estonian army A month later the army was renamed the Northwest Unification in the Russian Army Edit Main article Russian Army 1919 On 14 October 1918 Minister of War Alexander Kolchak arrived in Omsk On 18 November 1918 he was proclaimed the Supreme Ruler of Russia who also assumed the supreme command of all the land and naval forces of Russia He made a substantial reorganization of the forces of the White movement and carried out its integration into a single Russian Army on 23 September 1918 On 4 November Kolchak became part of the Russian Government As the Supreme Ruler of Russia Admiral Kolchak is recognized by all the commanders of the white armies both in the south and west of Russia as well as in Siberia and the Far East generals Anton Denikin Yevgeny Miller Nikolai Yudenich voluntarily submit to Alexander Kolchak and recognize his Supreme High Command over all armies in Russia The supreme commander at the same time confirms the authority of the commanders From this moment the Armed Forces of the South of Russia the Northwestern Army the Northern Army and the Eastern Front have been operating on the fronts of this single army The name Russian Army is approved as the union of all white fronts the status of commanders of the fronts formally from the Supreme Commander in Chief is received by the commanders of the North and Northwest Armies Generals Yudenich and Miller In April 1920 the Far Eastern Army was created in Transbaikalia from the remnants of the troops of the Eastern Front under the leadership of General Grigory Semenov Out of the remnants of the Armed Forces of the South of Russia that left for Crimea in May 1920 General Wrangel formed the armed forces that inherited the name Russian Army from the single Russian army of the Supreme Commander in Chief Admiral Kolchak of 1919 as the last of its fronts In 1921 from the remnants of the Far Eastern Army of General Semyonov in Primorye the White Rebel Army was formed later renamed the Zemsky Army since the Amur Zemsky Government was created in Vladivostok in 1922 Composition EditWhite armies drew both from volunteers and on the basis of mobilization On a voluntary basis they were staffed not only from officers of the Russian Imperial Army and Navy but also from all comers It was both in the South in the Volunteer Army and in Siberia for example the division of the Labor Corps 18 On a mobilization basis they drew from the population of controlled territories and from captured Red Army soldiers The strength of the white armies fighting against the Red Army according to intelligence estimates by June 1919 was about 683 000 However together with auxiliary and staff units it could exceed 1 023 000 people 19 A significant part of the white forces was on contentment Combat units amounted to only half of this figure 18 After that the number of white armies began to decline steadily 20 The White Army consisted of all kinds of troops for that period Air Units Cavalry Infantry Railway connections Tank Units All of them had their own uniforms and insignia often copied from the uniform of the guard units of the Russian Imperial Army According to supporters of the White movement the White Guard is a military man devoted to his ideals even though the officer though the ordinary who was ready to defend his Motherland and his specific ideas about duty honour and justice with arms in hand See also EditRussian All Military Union Russian State 1918 1920 White Army Black BaronNotes Edit Pre 1918 spelling In the historiography of the French Revolution the 1793 1794 revolutionary republican Reign of Terror of Robespierre against any suspected supporter of the Ancien Regime is also known as the Red Terror whereas the reactionary anti revolutionary monarchist pro Bourbon mass killings and persecutions of revolutionaries and ex Jacobins and in southern France Protestants are known as the 1794 1795 First White Terror and the 1815 1816 Second White Terror 8 References Edit Red Army Intelligence Assessment Kolchak s Army Encyclopedia The White Guard Banquet Campaign of 1904 Big Irgiz Moscow The Great Russian Encyclopedia 2005 Page 190 The Great Russian Encyclopedia in 35 Volumes Editor in Chief Yury Osipov 2004 2017 Volume 3 ISBN 5 85270 331 1 a b c The White armies Alpha History 15 August 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Great Russian Encyclopedia 2005 p 268 Military Encyclopedic Dictionary Editorial Board Alexander Gorkin Vladimir Zolotarev et al Moscow Great Russian Encyclopedia RIPOL Classic 2002 1664 Pages David Feldman 2006 Red White Soviet Political Terms in a Historical and Cultural Context Literature Issues Journal 4 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 terreur Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins in Dutch Microsoft Corporation Het Spectrum 1993 2002 1906 Viaporin kapina ja Hakaniemen mellakka Helsinki 200 vuotta paakaupunkina www helsinki200 fi Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Article by Elena Kiryakova In the Course of the White Terror Everyone was Chopped Off Including Women and Children White Guard Encyclopedia Krugosvet Roman Abinyakin 2005 The Officer Corps of the Volunteer Army Social Composition Worldview of 1917 1920 Monograph ed Oryol Alexander Vorobyov p 204 ISBN 5900901572 OCLC 60540889 David Golinkov 2017 Covert operations of the All Russian Extraordinary Commission Litres p 257 ISBN 9785040514632 Grigory Trubetskoy Creation of the Volunteer Army white force ru People s Army of Komuch rustrana rf a b Oleg Dankir Narodnaya armiya KOMUCha Kazachij Poryadnik O Dankir People s Army of Komuch Cossack Order White Guard Siberian Army White Guard Publicism ruguard ru a b Spiridonov 2008 Steel Fist of the White Guard Impact Units in the South of Russia in 1918 1920 Taganrog Evgeny Volkov The Population Dynamics of the Soviet Union Over Eighty Years Kolchak Army Kireev Congo Moscow The Great Russian Encyclopedia 2009 Page 569 The Great Russian Encyclopedia in 35 Volumes Editor in Chief Yury Osipov 2004 2017 Volume 14 ISBN 978 5 85270 345 3Sources EditOsipov Yury 2005 White Armies Moscow Great Russian Encyclopedia p 268 ISBN 5 85270 331 1 Valery Klaving 2003 Civil War in Russia White Armies Moscow Saint Petersburg AST Terra Fantastica p 637 ISBN 5 17 019260 6 White Army Funds Guide Russian State Military Archive Moscow Russian Bibliographic Society Oriental Literature Publishing Company Russian Academy of Sciences Compiled by N D Egorov N V Pulchenko L M Chizhova 1998 p 526 ISBN 5 02 018037 8 Archived from the original on 7 March 2012 Werth Nicolas Bartosek Karel Panne Jean Louis Margolin Jean Louis Paczkowski Andrzej Courtois Stephane 1999 Black Book of Communism Crimes Terror Repression Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 07608 7 External links Edit Media related to White Army at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title White Army amp oldid 1127915357, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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