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White movement

The White movement (Russian: pre–1918 Бѣлое движеніе / post–1918 Белое движение, tr. Beloye dvizheniye, IPA: [ˈbʲɛləɪ dvʲɪˈʐenʲɪɪ])[a], also known as the Whites (Бѣлые / 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 (1917–1923) 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).

White movement
Бѣлое движенiе
Белое движение
Russian flag commonly used by the Whites
Leaders Volunteer Army/AFSR:
Lavr Kornilov (1917–1918)
Anton Denikin (1918–1920)
Pyotr Wrangel (1920)
In Transbaikal:
Grigory Semyonov (1917–1921)
PA-RG:
Alexander Kolchak (1918–1920)
North-West Army:
Nikolai Yudenich (1919–1920)
Also:
Mikhail Diterikhs (1922)
Anatoly Pepelyayev (1923)
Dates of operation1917–1923
IdeologyMajority:

Factions:

Political positionLeft-wing to right-wing
Size3,400,000 (peak)
AlliesAllied interventionist states:
 United Kingdom
 United States
 Japan
China[1]
 France
 Czechoslovakia
 Canada
 Poland
 Greece
 Italy
 Romania
Serbia / Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Other states and factions:
Don cossacks
Kuban cossacks
 Estonia
 Latvia
Armenia
Mongolia
Landeswehr
Right SRs
Ukrainian State

Finnish Whites
Alash-Orda
Opponents Russian SFSR
 Far Eastern Republic
Ukrainian SSR
1922:
 Soviet Union

Latvian SSR
CWP of Estonia
Mongolian People's Party
Chinese communists Finnish Reds


Makhnovschyna
Green armies
Left SRs


Ukrainian People's Republic
Georgia
Battles and wars1917–1923: Russian Civil War 1921: Mongolian Revolution
1924: June Revolution in Albania[2]
1929: Sino-Soviet conflict
1934: Soviet invasion of Xinjiang[3]
1937: Islamic rebellion in Xinjiang[4]
Succeeded by
White émigrés

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.

Following the military defeat of the Whites, remnants and continuations of the movement remained in several organizations, some of which only had narrow support, enduring within the wider White émigré overseas community until after the fall of the European communist states in the Eastern European Revolutions of 1989 and the subsequent dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1990–1991. This community-in-exile of anti-communists often divided into liberal and the more conservative segments, with some still hoping for the restoration of the Romanov dynasty.

Structure and ideology edit

In the Russian context after 1917, "White" had three main connotations which were:

  1. Political contra-distinction to "the Reds", whose Red Army supported the Bolshevik government.
  2. Historical reference to absolute monarchy, specifically recalling Russia's first Tsar, Ivan III (reigned 1462–1505),[5] at a period when some styled the ruler of Muscovy Albus Rex ("the White King").[6]
  3. The white uniforms of Imperial Russia worn by some White Army soldiers.

Ideology edit

 
Female White officers in late 1917.

Above all, the White movement emerged as opponents of the Red Army.[7] The White Army had the stated aim to reverse the October Revolution and remove the Bolsheviks from power before a constituent assembly (dissolved by the Bolsheviks in January 1918) can be convened.[8] They worked to remove Soviet organizations and functionaries in White-controlled territory.[9]

Overall, the White Army was nationalistic[10] and rejected ethnic particularism and separatism.[11] The White Army generally believed in a united multinational Russia and opposed separatists who wanted to create nation-states.[12] British parliamentary influential leader Winston Churchill (1874–1965) personally warned General Anton Denikin (1872–1947), formerly of the Imperial Army and later a major White military leader, whose forces effected pogroms and persecutions against the Jews:

[M]y task in winning support in Parliament for the Russian Nationalist cause will be infinitely harder if well-authenticated complaints continue to be received from Jews in the zone of the Volunteer Armies.[13]

 
Coat of Arms of the Kolchak government

Aside from being anti-Bolshevik and anti-communist[14] and patriotic, the Whites had no set ideology or main leader.[15] The White Armies did acknowledge a single provisional head of state in a Supreme Governor of Russia in a Provisional All-Russian Government, but this post was prominent only under the leadership in the war campaigns during 1918–1920 of Admiral Alexander Kolchak, formerly of the previous Russian Imperial Navy.[16]

The movement had no set foreign policy. Whites differed on policies toward the German Empire in its extended occupation of western Russia, the Baltic states, Poland and Ukraine on the Eastern Front in the closing days of the World War, debating whether or not to ally with it. The Whites wanted to keep from alienating any potential supporters and allies and thus saw an exclusively monarchist position as a detriment to their cause and recruitment. White-movement leaders, such as Anton Denikin, advocated for Russians to create their own government, claiming the military could not decide in Russians' steads.[17] Admiral Alexander Kolchak succeeded in creating a temporary wartime government in Omsk, acknowledged by most other White leaders, but it ultimately disintegrated after Bolshevik military advances.[18]

Some warlords who were aligned with the White movement, such as Grigory Semyonov and Roman Ungern von Sternberg, did not acknowledge any authority but their own. Consequently, the White movement had no unifying political convictions, as members could be monarchists, republicans,[19] rightists, or Kadets.[20] Among White Army leaders, neither General Lavr Kornilov nor General Anton Denikin were monarchists, yet General Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel was a monarchist willing to soldier for a republican Russian government. Moreover, other political parties supported the anti-Bolshevik White Army, among them the Socialist Revolutionary Party, and others who opposed Lenin's Bolshevik coup in October 1917. Depending on the time and place, those White Army supporters might also exchange right-wing allegiance for allegiance to the Red Army.

Unlike the Bolsheviks, the White Armies did not share a single ideology, methodology, or political goal. They were led by conservative generals with different agendas and methods, and for the most part they operated quite independently of each other, with little coordination or cohesion. The composition and command structure of White armies also varied, some containing hardened veterans of World War I, others more recent volunteers. These differences and divisions, along with their inability to offer an alternative government and win popular support, prevented the White armies from winning the Civil War.[21][22]

Structure edit

White Army edit

 
"Why aren't you in the army?", Volunteer Army recruiting poster during the Russian Civil War
 
Kornilov's Shock Detachment (8th Army), later became the Volunteer Army's elite Shock Regiment

The Volunteer Army in South Russia became the most prominent and the largest of the various and disparate White forces.[7] Starting off as a small and well-organized military in January 1918, the Volunteer Army soon grew. The Kuban Cossacks joined the White Army and conscription of both peasants and Cossacks began. In late February 1918, 4,000 soldiers under the command of General Aleksei Kaledin were forced to retreat from Rostov-on-Don due to the advance of the Red Army. In what became known as the Ice March, they traveled to Kuban in order to unite with the Kuban Cossacks, most of whom did not support the Volunteer Army. In March, 3,000 men under the command of General Viktor Pokrovsky joined the Volunteer Army, increasing its membership to 6,000, and by June to 9,000. In 1919 the Don Cossacks joined the Army. In that year between May and October, the Volunteer Army grew from 64,000 to 150,000 soldiers and was better supplied than its Red counterpart.[23] The White Army's rank-and-file comprised active anti-Bolsheviks, such as Cossacks, nobles, and peasants, as conscripts and as volunteers.

The White movement had access to various naval forces, both seagoing and riverine, especially the Black Sea Fleet.

Aerial forces available to the Whites included the Slavo-British Aviation Corps (S.B.A.C.).[24] The Russian ace Alexander Kazakov operated within this unit.

Administration edit

The White movement's leaders and first members[25] came mainly from the ranks of military officers. Many came from outside the nobility, such as generals Mikhail Alekseyev and Anton Denikin, who originated in serf families, or General Lavr Kornilov, a Cossack.

The White generals never mastered administration;[26] they often utilized "prerevolutionary functionaries" or "military officers with monarchististic inclinations" for administering White-controlled regions.[27]

The White Armies were often lawless and disordered.[8] Also, White-controlled territories had multiple different and varying currencies with unstable exchange-rates. The chief currency, the Volunteer Army's ruble, had no gold backing.[28]

Ranks and insignia edit

Theatres of operation edit

 
Russian Civil War in the west

The Whites and the Reds fought the Russian Civil War from November 1917 until 1921, and isolated battles continued in the Far East until June 1923. The White Army—aided by the Allied forces (Triple Entente) from countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom, France, Greece, Italy and the United States and (sometimes) the Central Powers forces such as Germany and Austria-Hungary—fought in Siberia, Ukraine, and in Crimea. They were defeated by the Red Army due to military and ideological disunity, as well as the determination and increasing unity of the Red Army.

The White Army operated in three main theatres:

Southern front edit

 
In the summer of 1919, Denikin's troops captured Kharkiv

White organising in the South started on 15 November 1917, (Old Style) under General Mikhail Alekseyev. In December 1917, General Lavr Kornilov took over the military command of the newly named Volunteer Army until his death in April 1918, after which General Anton Denikin took over, becoming head of the "Armed Forces of the South of Russia" in January 1919.

The Southern Front featured massive-scale operations and posed the most dangerous threat to the Bolshevik Government. At first it depended entirely upon volunteers in Russia proper, mostly the Cossacks, among the first to oppose the Bolshevik Government. On 23 June 1918, the Volunteer Army (8,000–9,000 men) began its so-called Second Kuban Campaign with support from Pyotr Krasnov. By September, the Volunteer Army comprised 30,000 to 35,000 members, thanks to mobilization of the Kuban Cossacks gathered in the North Caucasus. Thus, the Volunteer Army took the name of the Caucasus Volunteer Army. On 23 January 1919, the Volunteer Army under Denikin oversaw the defeat of the 11th Soviet Army and then captured the North Caucasus region. After capturing the Donbas, Tsaritsyn and Kharkiv in June, Denikin's forces launched an attack towards Moscow on 3 July, (N.S.). Plans envisaged 40,000 fighters under the command of General Vladimir May-Mayevsky storming the city.

After General Denikin's attack upon Moscow failed in 1919, the Armed Forces of the South of Russia retreated. On 26 and 27 March 1920, the remnants of the Volunteer Army evacuated from Novorossiysk to the Crimea, where they merged with the army of Pyotr Wrangel.

Eastern (Siberian) front edit

The Eastern Front started in spring 1918 as a secret movement among army officers and right-wing socialist forces. In that front, they launched an attack in collaboration with the Czechoslovak Legions, who were then stranded in Siberia by the Bolshevik Government, who had barred them from leaving Russia, and with the Japanese, who also intervened to help the Whites in the east. Admiral Alexander Kolchak headed the eastern White Army and a provisional Russian government. Despite some significant success in 1919, the Whites were defeated being forced back to Far Eastern Russia, where they continued fighting until October 1922. When the Japanese withdrew, the Soviet army of the Far Eastern Republic retook the territory. The Civil War was officially declared over at this point, although Anatoly Pepelyayev still controlled the Ayano-Maysky District at that time. Pepelyayev's Yakut revolt, which concluded on 16 June 1923, represented the last military action in Russia by a White Army. It ended with the defeat of the final anti-communist enclave in the country, signalling the end of all military hostilities relating to the Russian Civil War.

Northern and Northwestern fronts edit

Headed by Nikolai Yudenich, Evgeni Miller, and Anatoly Lieven, the White forces in the North demonstrated less co-ordination than General Denikin's Army of Southern Russia. The Northwestern Army allied itself with Estonia, while Lieven's West Russian Volunteer Army sided with the Baltic nobility. Authoritarian support led by Pavel Bermondt-Avalov and Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz played a role as well. The most notable operation on this front, Operation White Sword, saw an unsuccessful advance towards the Russian capital of Petrograd in the autumn of 1919.

Post-Civil War edit

 
Blagoveshchensky Temple, a Russian Orthodox Church in Harbin
 
White propaganda poster

The defeated anti-Bolshevik Russians went into exile, congregating in Belgrade, Berlin, Paris, Harbin, Istanbul, and Shanghai. They established military and cultural networks that lasted through World War II (1939–1945), e.g. the Harbin and Shanghai Russians. Afterward, the White Russians' anti-Communist activists established a home base in the United States, to which numerous refugees emigrated.

 
Emblem used by white émigré volunteers in the Spanish Civil War

Moreover, in the 1920s and the 1930s the White Movement established organisations outside Russia, which were meant to depose the Soviet Government with guerrilla warfare, e.g., the Russian All-Military Union, the Brotherhood of Russian Truth, and the National Alliance of Russian Solidarists, a far-right anticommunist organization founded in 1930 by a group of young White emigres in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Some White émigrés adopted pro-Soviet sympathies and were termed "Soviet patriots". These people formed organizations such as the Mladorossi, the Eurasianists, and the Smenovekhovtsy. A Russian cadet corps was established to prepare the next generation of anti-Communists for the "spring campaign"—a hopeful term denoting a renewed military campaign to reclaim Russia from the Soviet Government. In any event, many cadets volunteered to fight for the Russian Protective Corps during World War II, when some White Russians participated in the Russian Liberation Movement.[29]

After the war, active anti-Soviet combat was almost exclusively continued by the National Alliance of Russian Solidarists. Other organizations either dissolved, or began concentrating exclusively on self-preservation and/or educating the youth. Various youth organizations, such as the Russian Scouts-in-Exteris, promoted providing children with a background in pre-Soviet Russian culture and heritage. Some supported Zog I of Albania during the 1920s and a few independently served with the Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War. White Russians also served alongside the Soviet Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Xinjiang and the Islamic rebellion in Xinjiang in 1937.

Prominent people edit

 
Alexander Kolchak decorating his troops in Siberia
 
The Government of South Russia created by Pyotr Wrangel in Sevastopol, Crimea in April 1920
 
Sergei Voitsekhovskii (seated center), Major-General in the White movement and later Czechoslovak Army general

Related movements edit

After the February Revolution, in western Russia, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania declared themselves independent, but they had substantial Communist or Russian military presence. Civil wars followed, wherein the anti-communist side may be referred to as White Armies, e.g. the White Guard-led, partially conscripted army in Finland (valkoinen armeija) who fought against Soviet Russia-sponsored Red Guards. However, since they were nationalists, their aims were substantially different from the Russian White Army proper; for instance, Russian White generals never explicitly supported Finnish independence. The defeat of the Russian White Army made the point moot in this dispute. The countries remained independent and governed by non-Communist governments.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The old spelling was retained by the Whites to differentiate from the Reds.

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Joana Breidenbach (2005). Pál Nyíri, Joana Breidenbach (ed.). China inside out: contemporary Chinese nationalism and transnationalism (illustrated ed.). Central European University Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-963-7326-14-1. Retrieved 18 March 2012. Then there occurred another story which has become traumatic, this one for the Russian nationalist psyche. At the end of the year 1918, after the Russian Revolution, the Chinese merchants in the Russian Far East demanded the Chinese government to send troops for their protection, and Chinese troops were sent to Vladivostok to protect the Chinese community: about 1600 soldiers and 700 support personnel.
  2. ^ "The Tragedy of Albania's Russian Community". Russkiy Mir Foundation. 19 September 2008. from the original on 12 July 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  3. ^ Sven Anders Hedin, Folke Bergman (1944). History of the expedition in Asia, 1927–1935, Part 3. Stockholm: Göteborg, Elanders boktryckeri aktiebolag. pp. 113–115. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
  4. ^ Great Britain. Foreign Office (1997). British documents on foreign affairs – reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print: From 1940 through 1945. Asia, Part 3. University Publications of America. p. 401. ISBN 1-55655-674-8. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  5. ^ Lehtovirta, Jaako (2002). "The Use of Titles in Heberstein's 'Commentarii'. Was the Muscovite Tsar a King or an Emperor?". In von Gardner, Johann (ed.). Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des östlichen Europa [Essays on the intellectual history of eastern Europe]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 190. ISSN 0340-6490. Retrieved 31 July 2015. It was Ivan III (1462–1505) who is well known as the first one to present himself as a tsar to foreigners, though it must be accepted that his use of the title was very sparse.
  6. ^ Lehtovirta, Jaako (2002). "The Use of Titles in Heberstein's 'Commentarii'. Was the Muscovite Tsar a King or an Emperor?". In von Gardner, Johann (ed.). Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des östlichen Europa [Essays on the intellectual history of eastern Europe]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 189. ISSN 0340-6490. Retrieved 31 July 2015. [...] the brief mention that the Muscovite ruler is by some called 'the White King' ('albus rex').
  7. ^ a b Kenez 1980.
  8. ^ a b Christopher Lazarski, "White Propaganda Efforts in the South during the Russian Civil War, 1918–19 (The Alekseev-Denikin Period)", The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. 70, No. 4 (Oct., 1992), pp. 688–707.
  9. ^ Viktor G. Bortnevski, "White Administration and White Terror (The Denikin Period)", Russian Review, Vol. 52, No. 3 (Jul., 1993), pp. 354–366.
  10. ^ Kenez 1980, p. 74.
  11. ^ Christopher Lazarski, "White Propaganda Efforts," 689.
  12. ^ Kenez 1980, p. 62.
  13. ^ Joseph Cohen, Michael (1985). Churchill and the Jews. Psychology Press. ISBN 9780714632544. from the original on 2016-05-21. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  14. ^ Christopher Lazarski, "White Propaganda Efforts," 690.
  15. ^ Kenez 1980, pp. 58–59.
  16. ^ Первая лекция историка К. М. Александрова о Гражданской войне. Часть первая. — Санкт-Петербург, 5 января 2010. // Сайт Общественно-исторического клуба «Белая Россия» (www.belrussia.ru) 18-01-2010.
  17. ^ Kenez 1980, p. 69.
  18. ^ Предисловие // Красный террор в годы Гражданской войны: По материалам Особой следственной комиссии по расследованию злодеяний большевиков. / Под ред. докторов исторических наук Ю. Г. Фельштинского и Г. И. Чернявского — London, 1992.
  19. ^ Kenez 1980, p. 59.
  20. ^ Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 90.
  21. ^ Двухнедѣльный военный и военно-морской журналъ «Часовой»: органъ связи русскаго воинства за рубежомъ подъ ред. В. В. Орѣхова и Евгенія Тарусскаго, — Paris, 1 мая 1932. — № 79. 2010-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Цветков В. Ж. (2005). "Белое движение" (Большая российская энциклопедия: В 30 т. Т. 3: «Банкетная кампания» 1904 — Большой Иргиз / Председатель Науч.-ред. совета Ю. С. Осипов, отв. ред. С. Л. Кравец ed.). М.: Большая Российская энциклопедия. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  23. ^ Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 18–22.
  24. ^ "The R.A.F. in Russia". The Aeroplane. 17 (1): 82. 1919. from the original on 27 June 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2014. Soon after landing we started to recruit for the Slavo-British Aviation Corps (S.B.A.C.) [...].
  25. ^ Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 18.
  26. ^ Kenez 1980, p. 65.
  27. ^ Viktor G. Bortnevski, White Administration and White Terror, 360.
  28. ^ Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 94–95.
  29. ^ [1] 2018-12-10 at the Wayback Machine Oleg Beyda, 'Iron Cross of the Wrangel's Army': Russian Emigrants as Interpreters in the Wehrmacht, Journal of Slavic Military Studies 27, no. 3 (2014): 430–448.

Bibliography edit

  • Kenez, Peter (1980). "The Ideology of the White Movement". Soviet Studies. 32 (32): 58–83. doi:10.1080/09668138008411280.
  • Kenez, Peter (1977). Civil War in South Russia, 1919–1920: The Defeat of the Whites. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Kenez, Peter (1971). Civil War in South Russia, 1918: The First Year of the Volunteer Army. Berkeley: University of California Press.

External links edit

  • Museum and Archives of the White Movement
  • (in Russian) Memory and Honour Association
  • (in Russian)

white, movement, confused, with, white, power, movement, white, russia, belarus, nuer, white, army, russian, 1918, Бѣлое, движеніе, post, 1918, Белое, движение, beloye, dvizheniye, ˈbʲɛləɪ, dvʲɪˈʐenʲɪɪ, also, known, whites, Бѣлые, Белые, beliye, loose, confede. Not to be confused with White Power Movement White Russia Belarus or Nuer White Army The White movement Russian pre 1918 Bѣloe dvizhenie post 1918 Beloe dvizhenie tr Beloye dvizheniye IPA ˈbʲɛleɪ dvʲɪˈʐenʲɪɪ a also known as the Whites Bѣlye 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 1917 1923 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 White movementBѣloe dvizhenie Beloe dvizhenieRussian flag commonly used by the WhitesLeadersVolunteer Army AFSR Lavr Kornilov 1917 1918 Anton Denikin 1918 1920 Pyotr Wrangel 1920 In Transbaikal Grigory Semyonov 1917 1921 PA RG Alexander Kolchak 1918 1920 North West Army Nikolai Yudenich 1919 1920 Also Mikhail Diterikhs 1922 Anatoly Pepelyayev 1923 Dates of operation1917 1923IdeologyMajority Anti Bolshevism Anti Sovietism Russian nationalism StatismFactions Monarchism Tsarism Republicanism Orthodox nationalism Pan Slavism Liberalism Democratic socialismPolitical positionLeft wing to right wingSize3 400 000 peak AlliesAllied interventionist states United Kingdom United States Japan China 1 France Czechoslovakia Canada Poland Greece Italy Romania Serbia Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes Other states and factions Don cossacks Kuban cossacks Estonia Latvia Armenia Mongolia Landeswehr Right SRs Ukrainian State Finnish Whites Alash OrdaOpponentsRussian SFSR Far Eastern Republic Ukrainian SSR1922 Soviet Union Latvian SSR CWP of Estonia Mongolian People s Party Chinese communists Finnish Reds Makhnovschyna Green armies Left SRs Ukrainian People s Republic GeorgiaBattles and wars1917 1923 Russian Civil War Southern Front Northern Front Eastern Front Yakut Revolt1921 Mongolian Revolution1924 June Revolution in Albania 2 1929 Sino Soviet conflict1934 Soviet invasion of Xinjiang 3 1937 Islamic rebellion in Xinjiang 4 Preceded byRussian Imperial ArmySucceeded byWhite emigresDuring 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 Following the military defeat of the Whites remnants and continuations of the movement remained in several organizations some of which only had narrow support enduring within the wider White emigre overseas community until after the fall of the European communist states in the Eastern European Revolutions of 1989 and the subsequent dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1990 1991 This community in exile of anti communists often divided into liberal and the more conservative segments with some still hoping for the restoration of the Romanov dynasty Contents 1 Structure and ideology 1 1 Ideology 1 2 Structure 1 2 1 White Army 1 2 2 Administration 1 2 3 Ranks and insignia 2 Theatres of operation 2 1 Southern front 2 2 Eastern Siberian front 2 3 Northern and Northwestern fronts 3 Post Civil War 4 Prominent people 5 Related movements 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksStructure and ideology editIn the Russian context after 1917 White had three main connotations which were Political contra distinction to the Reds whose Red Army supported the Bolshevik government Historical reference to absolute monarchy specifically recalling Russia s first Tsar Ivan III reigned 1462 1505 5 at a period when some styled the ruler of Muscovy Albus Rex the White King 6 The white uniforms of Imperial Russia worn by some White Army soldiers Ideology edit nbsp Female White officers in late 1917 Above all the White movement emerged as opponents of the Red Army 7 The White Army had the stated aim to reverse the October Revolution and remove the Bolsheviks from power before a constituent assembly dissolved by the Bolsheviks in January 1918 can be convened 8 They worked to remove Soviet organizations and functionaries in White controlled territory 9 Overall the White Army was nationalistic 10 and rejected ethnic particularism and separatism 11 The White Army generally believed in a united multinational Russia and opposed separatists who wanted to create nation states 12 British parliamentary influential leader Winston Churchill 1874 1965 personally warned General Anton Denikin 1872 1947 formerly of the Imperial Army and later a major White military leader whose forces effected pogroms and persecutions against the Jews M y task in winning support in Parliament for the Russian Nationalist cause will be infinitely harder if well authenticated complaints continue to be received from Jews in the zone of the Volunteer Armies 13 nbsp Coat of Arms of the Kolchak governmentAside from being anti Bolshevik and anti communist 14 and patriotic the Whites had no set ideology or main leader 15 The White Armies did acknowledge a single provisional head of state in a Supreme Governor of Russia in a Provisional All Russian Government but this post was prominent only under the leadership in the war campaigns during 1918 1920 of Admiral Alexander Kolchak formerly of the previous Russian Imperial Navy 16 The movement had no set foreign policy Whites differed on policies toward the German Empire in its extended occupation of western Russia the Baltic states Poland and Ukraine on the Eastern Front in the closing days of the World War debating whether or not to ally with it The Whites wanted to keep from alienating any potential supporters and allies and thus saw an exclusively monarchist position as a detriment to their cause and recruitment White movement leaders such as Anton Denikin advocated for Russians to create their own government claiming the military could not decide in Russians steads 17 Admiral Alexander Kolchak succeeded in creating a temporary wartime government in Omsk acknowledged by most other White leaders but it ultimately disintegrated after Bolshevik military advances 18 Some warlords who were aligned with the White movement such as Grigory Semyonov and Roman Ungern von Sternberg did not acknowledge any authority but their own Consequently the White movement had no unifying political convictions as members could be monarchists republicans 19 rightists or Kadets 20 Among White Army leaders neither General Lavr Kornilov nor General Anton Denikin were monarchists yet General Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel was a monarchist willing to soldier for a republican Russian government Moreover other political parties supported the anti Bolshevik White Army among them the Socialist Revolutionary Party and others who opposed Lenin s Bolshevik coup in October 1917 Depending on the time and place those White Army supporters might also exchange right wing allegiance for allegiance to the Red Army Unlike the Bolsheviks the White Armies did not share a single ideology methodology or political goal They were led by conservative generals with different agendas and methods and for the most part they operated quite independently of each other with little coordination or cohesion The composition and command structure of White armies also varied some containing hardened veterans of World War I others more recent volunteers These differences and divisions along with their inability to offer an alternative government and win popular support prevented the White armies from winning the Civil War 21 22 Structure edit White Army edit Main articles White Army White Terror Russia and Pogroms during the Russian Civil War See also Russian Army 1919 Volunteer Army Siberian Army and West Russian Volunteer Army nbsp Why aren t you in the army Volunteer Army recruiting poster during the Russian Civil War nbsp Kornilov s Shock Detachment 8th Army later became the Volunteer Army s elite Shock RegimentThe Volunteer Army in South Russia became the most prominent and the largest of the various and disparate White forces 7 Starting off as a small and well organized military in January 1918 the Volunteer Army soon grew The Kuban Cossacks joined the White Army and conscription of both peasants and Cossacks began In late February 1918 4 000 soldiers under the command of General Aleksei Kaledin were forced to retreat from Rostov on Don due to the advance of the Red Army In what became known as the Ice March they traveled to Kuban in order to unite with the Kuban Cossacks most of whom did not support the Volunteer Army In March 3 000 men under the command of General Viktor Pokrovsky joined the Volunteer Army increasing its membership to 6 000 and by June to 9 000 In 1919 the Don Cossacks joined the Army In that year between May and October the Volunteer Army grew from 64 000 to 150 000 soldiers and was better supplied than its Red counterpart 23 The White Army s rank and file comprised active anti Bolsheviks such as Cossacks nobles and peasants as conscripts and as volunteers The White movement had access to various naval forces both seagoing and riverine especially the Black Sea Fleet Aerial forces available to the Whites included the Slavo British Aviation Corps S B A C 24 The Russian ace Alexander Kazakov operated within this unit Administration edit The White movement s leaders and first members 25 came mainly from the ranks of military officers Many came from outside the nobility such as generals Mikhail Alekseyev and Anton Denikin who originated in serf families or General Lavr Kornilov a Cossack The White generals never mastered administration 26 they often utilized prerevolutionary functionaries or military officers with monarchististic inclinations for administering White controlled regions 27 The White Armies were often lawless and disordered 8 Also White controlled territories had multiple different and varying currencies with unstable exchange rates The chief currency the Volunteer Army s ruble had no gold backing 28 Ranks and insignia edit Main article Ranks and insignia of the White MovementTheatres of operation edit nbsp Russian Civil War in the westThe Whites and the Reds fought the Russian Civil War from November 1917 until 1921 and isolated battles continued in the Far East until June 1923 The White Army aided by the Allied forces Triple Entente from countries such as Japan the United Kingdom France Greece Italy and the United States and sometimes the Central Powers forces such as Germany and Austria Hungary fought in Siberia Ukraine and in Crimea They were defeated by the Red Army due to military and ideological disunity as well as the determination and increasing unity of the Red Army The White Army operated in three main theatres Southern front edit Main article Southern Front of the Russian Civil War nbsp In the summer of 1919 Denikin s troops captured KharkivWhite organising in the South started on 15 November 1917 Old Style under General Mikhail Alekseyev In December 1917 General Lavr Kornilov took over the military command of the newly named Volunteer Army until his death in April 1918 after which General Anton Denikin took over becoming head of the Armed Forces of the South of Russia in January 1919 The Southern Front featured massive scale operations and posed the most dangerous threat to the Bolshevik Government At first it depended entirely upon volunteers in Russia proper mostly the Cossacks among the first to oppose the Bolshevik Government On 23 June 1918 the Volunteer Army 8 000 9 000 men began its so called Second Kuban Campaign with support from Pyotr Krasnov By September the Volunteer Army comprised 30 000 to 35 000 members thanks to mobilization of the Kuban Cossacks gathered in the North Caucasus Thus the Volunteer Army took the name of the Caucasus Volunteer Army On 23 January 1919 the Volunteer Army under Denikin oversaw the defeat of the 11th Soviet Army and then captured the North Caucasus region After capturing the Donbas Tsaritsyn and Kharkiv in June Denikin s forces launched an attack towards Moscow on 3 July N S Plans envisaged 40 000 fighters under the command of General Vladimir May Mayevsky storming the city After General Denikin s attack upon Moscow failed in 1919 the Armed Forces of the South of Russia retreated On 26 and 27 March 1920 the remnants of the Volunteer Army evacuated from Novorossiysk to the Crimea where they merged with the army of Pyotr Wrangel Eastern Siberian front edit Main articles Eastern Front of the Russian Civil War and White movement in Transbaikal The Eastern Front started in spring 1918 as a secret movement among army officers and right wing socialist forces In that front they launched an attack in collaboration with the Czechoslovak Legions who were then stranded in Siberia by the Bolshevik Government who had barred them from leaving Russia and with the Japanese who also intervened to help the Whites in the east Admiral Alexander Kolchak headed the eastern White Army and a provisional Russian government Despite some significant success in 1919 the Whites were defeated being forced back to Far Eastern Russia where they continued fighting until October 1922 When the Japanese withdrew the Soviet army of the Far Eastern Republic retook the territory The Civil War was officially declared over at this point although Anatoly Pepelyayev still controlled the Ayano Maysky District at that time Pepelyayev s Yakut revolt which concluded on 16 June 1923 represented the last military action in Russia by a White Army It ended with the defeat of the final anti communist enclave in the country signalling the end of all military hostilities relating to the Russian Civil War Northern and Northwestern fronts edit Main article North Russia Intervention Headed by Nikolai Yudenich Evgeni Miller and Anatoly Lieven the White forces in the North demonstrated less co ordination than General Denikin s Army of Southern Russia The Northwestern Army allied itself with Estonia while Lieven s West Russian Volunteer Army sided with the Baltic nobility Authoritarian support led by Pavel Bermondt Avalov and Stanislaw Bulak Balachowicz played a role as well The most notable operation on this front Operation White Sword saw an unsuccessful advance towards the Russian capital of Petrograd in the autumn of 1919 Post Civil War editMain article White emigre nbsp Blagoveshchensky Temple a Russian Orthodox Church in Harbin nbsp White propaganda posterThe defeated anti Bolshevik Russians went into exile congregating in Belgrade Berlin Paris Harbin Istanbul and Shanghai They established military and cultural networks that lasted through World War II 1939 1945 e g the Harbin and Shanghai Russians Afterward the White Russians anti Communist activists established a home base in the United States to which numerous refugees emigrated nbsp Emblem used by white emigre volunteers in the Spanish Civil WarMoreover in the 1920s and the 1930s the White Movement established organisations outside Russia which were meant to depose the Soviet Government with guerrilla warfare e g the Russian All Military Union the Brotherhood of Russian Truth and the National Alliance of Russian Solidarists a far right anticommunist organization founded in 1930 by a group of young White emigres in Belgrade Yugoslavia Some White emigres adopted pro Soviet sympathies and were termed Soviet patriots These people formed organizations such as the Mladorossi the Eurasianists and the Smenovekhovtsy A Russian cadet corps was established to prepare the next generation of anti Communists for the spring campaign a hopeful term denoting a renewed military campaign to reclaim Russia from the Soviet Government In any event many cadets volunteered to fight for the Russian Protective Corps during World War II when some White Russians participated in the Russian Liberation Movement 29 After the war active anti Soviet combat was almost exclusively continued by the National Alliance of Russian Solidarists Other organizations either dissolved or began concentrating exclusively on self preservation and or educating the youth Various youth organizations such as the Russian Scouts in Exteris promoted providing children with a background in pre Soviet Russian culture and heritage Some supported Zog I of Albania during the 1920s and a few independently served with the Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War White Russians also served alongside the Soviet Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Xinjiang and the Islamic rebellion in Xinjiang in 1937 Prominent people edit nbsp Alexander Kolchak decorating his troops in Siberia nbsp The Government of South Russia created by Pyotr Wrangel in Sevastopol Crimea in April 1920 nbsp Sergei Voitsekhovskii seated center Major General in the White movement and later Czechoslovak Army generalMikhail Alekseyev Vladimir Antonov Nicholas Savich Bakulin Pavel Bermondt Avalov Stanislaw Bulak Balachowicz Anton Denikin Mikhail Diterikhs Mikhail Drozdovsky Alexander Dutov Dmitrii Fedotoff White Ivan Ilyin Nikolay Iudovich Ivanov Alexey Kaledin Vladimir Kantakuzen Vladimir Kappel Alexander Kolchak Lavr Kornilov Pyotr Krasnov Mikhail Kvetsinsky Alexander Kutepov Anatoly Lieven Konstantin Mamontov Sergey Markov Vladimir May Mayevsky Evgeny Miller Konstantin Petrovich Nechaev Viktor Pokrovsky Leonid Punin Aleksandr Rodzyanko Grigory Semyonov Andrei Shkuro Roman von Ungern Sternberg Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel Sergei Wojciechowski Nikolai YudenichRelated movements editMain article Pro independence movements in Russian Civil War After the February Revolution in western Russia Finland Estonia Latvia and Lithuania declared themselves independent but they had substantial Communist or Russian military presence Civil wars followed wherein the anti communist side may be referred to as White Armies e g the White Guard led partially conscripted army in Finland valkoinen armeija who fought against Soviet Russia sponsored Red Guards However since they were nationalists their aims were substantially different from the Russian White Army proper for instance Russian White generals never explicitly supported Finnish independence The defeat of the Russian White Army made the point moot in this dispute The countries remained independent and governed by non Communist governments See also editRussian State 1918 1920 1st Infantry Brigade South Africa Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War Basmachi movement Czechoslovak Legions Estonian War of Independence Finnish Civil War Grand Orient of Russia s Peoples Great Siberian Ice March Italian Legione Redenta Russian All Military Union Russian diaspora Red Terror Soviet Ukrainian War White Terror Russia Ukrainian War of IndependenceNotes edit The old spelling was retained by the Whites to differentiate from the Reds References editFootnotes edit Joana Breidenbach 2005 Pal Nyiri Joana Breidenbach ed China inside out contemporary Chinese nationalism and transnationalism illustrated ed Central European University Press p 90 ISBN 978 963 7326 14 1 Retrieved 18 March 2012 Then there occurred another story which has become traumatic this one for the Russian nationalist psyche At the end of the year 1918 after the Russian Revolution the Chinese merchants in the Russian Far East demanded the Chinese government to send troops for their protection and Chinese troops were sent to Vladivostok to protect the Chinese community about 1600 soldiers and 700 support personnel The Tragedy of Albania s Russian Community Russkiy Mir Foundation 19 September 2008 Archived from the original on 12 July 2018 Retrieved 12 July 2018 Sven Anders Hedin Folke Bergman 1944 History of the expedition in Asia 1927 1935 Part 3 Stockholm Goteborg Elanders boktryckeri aktiebolag pp 113 115 Retrieved 2010 11 28 Great Britain Foreign Office 1997 British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print From 1940 through 1945 Asia Part 3 University Publications of America p 401 ISBN 1 55655 674 8 Retrieved 28 October 2010 Lehtovirta Jaako 2002 The Use of Titles in Heberstein s Commentarii Was the Muscovite Tsar a King or an Emperor In von Gardner Johann ed Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des ostlichen Europa Essays on the intellectual history of eastern Europe Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 190 ISSN 0340 6490 Retrieved 31 July 2015 It was Ivan III 1462 1505 who is well known as the first one to present himself as a tsar to foreigners though it must be accepted that his use of the title was very sparse Lehtovirta Jaako 2002 The Use of Titles in Heberstein s Commentarii Was the Muscovite Tsar a King or an Emperor In von Gardner Johann ed Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des ostlichen Europa Essays on the intellectual history of eastern Europe Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 189 ISSN 0340 6490 Retrieved 31 July 2015 the brief mention that the Muscovite ruler is by some called the White King albus rex a b Kenez 1980 a b Christopher Lazarski White Propaganda Efforts in the South during the Russian Civil War 1918 19 The Alekseev Denikin Period The Slavonic and East European Review Vol 70 No 4 Oct 1992 pp 688 707 Viktor G Bortnevski White Administration and White Terror The Denikin Period Russian Review Vol 52 No 3 Jul 1993 pp 354 366 Kenez 1980 p 74 Christopher Lazarski White Propaganda Efforts 689 Kenez 1980 p 62 Joseph Cohen Michael 1985 Churchill and the Jews Psychology Press ISBN 9780714632544 Archived from the original on 2016 05 21 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Christopher Lazarski White Propaganda Efforts 690 Kenez 1980 pp 58 59 Pervaya lekciya istorika K M Aleksandrova o Grazhdanskoj vojne Chast pervaya Sankt Peterburg 5 yanvarya 2010 Sajt Obshestvenno istoricheskogo kluba Belaya Rossiya www belrussia ru 18 01 2010 Kenez 1980 p 69 Predislovie Krasnyj terror v gody Grazhdanskoj vojny Po materialam Osoboj sledstvennoj komissii po rassledovaniyu zlodeyanij bolshevikov Pod red doktorov istoricheskih nauk Yu G Felshtinskogo i G I Chernyavskogo London 1992 Kenez 1980 p 59 Kenez Peter Civil War 90 Dvuhnedѣlnyj voennyj i voenno morskoj zhurnal Chasovoj organ svyazi russkago voinstva za rubezhom pod red V V Orѣhova i Evgeniya Tarusskago Paris 1 maya 1932 79 Archived 2010 12 17 at the Wayback Machine Cvetkov V Zh 2005 Beloe dvizhenie Bolshaya rossijskaya enciklopediya V 30 t T 3 Banketnaya kampaniya 1904 Bolshoj Irgiz Predsedatel Nauch red soveta Yu S Osipov otv red S L Kravec ed M Bolshaya Rossijskaya enciklopediya a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint date and year link Kenez Peter Civil War 18 22 The R A F in Russia The Aeroplane 17 1 82 1919 Archived from the original on 27 June 2014 Retrieved 9 February 2014 Soon after landing we started to recruit for the Slavo British Aviation Corps S B A C Kenez Peter Civil War 18 Kenez 1980 p 65 Viktor G Bortnevski White Administration and White Terror 360 Kenez Peter Civil War 94 95 1 Archived 2018 12 10 at the Wayback Machine Oleg Beyda Iron Cross of the Wrangel s Army Russian Emigrants as Interpreters in the Wehrmacht Journal of Slavic Military Studies 27 no 3 2014 430 448 Bibliography edit See also Bibliography of the Russian Revolution and Civil War White armies Kenez Peter 1980 The Ideology of the White Movement Soviet Studies 32 32 58 83 doi 10 1080 09668138008411280 Kenez Peter 1977 Civil War in South Russia 1919 1920 The Defeat of the Whites Berkeley University of California Press Kenez Peter 1971 Civil War in South Russia 1918 The First Year of the Volunteer Army Berkeley University of California Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to White movement Anti Bolshevik Russia in pictures Museum and Archives of the White Movement in Russian Memory and Honour Association in Russian History of the White Movement Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title White movement amp oldid 1193788908, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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