Donbas-Don operation | |||||||
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Part of the Southern Front of the Russian Civil War | |||||||
Rudolf Sivers and a Red Guards detachment | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Russian Republic Don Host | Russian Soviet Republic Ukrainian People's Republic of Soviets | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Lavr Kornilov Mikhail Alekseyev Anton Denikin Alexander Kutepov Alexey Kaledin † Vasily Chernetsov † Anatoli Nazarov Pyotr Popov | Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko Yuriy Sablin Rudolf Sivers Mikhail Petrov Fyodor Podtiolkov Mikhail Krivoshlykov | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Volunteer Army Don Cossacks | Southern Revolutionary Front Red Cossacks |
The Donbas-Don operation was a military campaign of the Russian Civil War that lasted from January to February 1918, by forces of the Southern Revolutionary Front under the command of Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko, against the Cossack troops of Alexey Kaledin and Volunteer detachments on the territory of the Donbas and the Don Cossack region. It was the decisive operation in the complete conquest of Russia by the Bolsheviks following the October Revolution. [1]
In November 1917, Bolsheviks, Mensheviks and Socialist Revolutionaries created a joint revolutionary-military committee in Rostov-on-Don. At the call of the Bolsheviks, 2,000 sailors from the Black Sea Fleet, based in Sevastopol, [2] joined the Red Guards. [3] On 9 December 1917, the committee initiated an uprising in the city; the Socialist Revolutionaries and Mensheviks, who did not agree with this decision, subsequently left the committee. The uprising was a success and the Bolsheviks took control of Rostov. [2] Six days later, counter-revolutionary Cossack troops under the command of Alexei Kaledin attacked Rostov, defeating a numerically stronger, but less organized and commanded Red Guard. [4] The sailors in particular turned out to be of little value. After losing a clash with the Cossacks, the sailors shot one of their commanders at the station, accusing him of treason, before they returned to Crimea. [3]
In Rostov and Novocherkassk, the former Imperial Russian generals Lavr Kornilov and Mikhail Alekseyev initiated the creation of the counter-revolutionary Volunteer Army. [5] The Council of People's Commissars, headed by Vladimir Lenin, considered the mobilization over the Don to be the greatest threat to their government, due to the number of Cossacks who could join the counter-revolutionary troops, and also because the Volunteer Army and the Cossacks posed a direct threat to the Donbas, which had been sympathetic to the October Revolution. [6] Finally, control over Rostov and Novocherkassk would give the Red Guards a rail link to the Caucasus. [6] It was decided to transfer troops from central Russia to this region, led by Vladimir Antonov-Ovseenko, one of the commanders of the Bolshevik coup in Petrograd. [7] His hastily organized force consisted, in addition to units led from the north, of workers' units from Donbas. [6] At the end of December 1917, the army of Antonov-Ovseenko, together with local Bolshevik troops, captured Kharkiv. [8] On 24-25 December 1917, an All-Ukrainian Congress of Councils was held in the city, during which they proclaimed the creation of the Ukrainian People's Republic of Soviets. Part of Antonov-Ovseenko's troops was directed to support it in an armed struggle against the forces loyal to the Central Council of Ukraine, while the others continued the fight against Kaledin. [9]
In the fight against Kaledin and Kornilov, Antonov-Ovseenko intended to cooperate with the Red Cossacks, led by Fyodor Podtiolkov and Mikhail Krivoshlykov , as well as with Mikhail Petrov's red troops going south from Voronezh. [10] After taking control of Rostov-on-Don and Novocherkassk, he expected to march further south to join the troops of the 39th Infantry Division of the Russian Army, who had shown strong sympathies for the Bolsheviks prior to the revolution. [11] On 8 January 1918, Antonov-Ovseenko divided his forces into two groups: the first, headed by Rudolf Sivers, [11] numbering 10,000 soldiers, [12] was to attack Taganrog, and then Rostov, the second, under the command of Yuriy Sablin, was entrusted with the task of joining Petrov's troops. [11]
The Reds had an enormous numerical advantage over the Don, but they fought without enthusiasm or discipline. More than once, individual units on their own entered into local truces with the enemy forces and withdrew from the fight. This was the case with the soldiers of the 39th Division, who formed a truce on their own with the 8th Cossack Division. [11]
Sablin's group managed to connect with Petrov's troops, but on 31 January, they suffered a defeat at Licha in a battle against Vasily Chernetsov's Cossacks. Shortly thereafter, however, Chernetsov's unit broke the previously agreed local truce and was smashed on 3 February by Fyodor Podtiolkov's unit. This victory opened the way to Novocherkassk for Yuri Sablin's group. [11]
On 25 January, Sivers' group was defeated at Matvieyovy Kurgan by Alexander Kutepov's less numerous but more disciplined unit, in the first serious clashes with the Whites. [12] Two days later, however, the Whites had to withdraw some of their forces to Taganrog, where a workers' uprising had broken out. [12] On 2 February, the Bolsheviks took over the city, and a day later Sivers' troops began their march towards it, arriving on 8 February. [13]
Not wanting to completely destroy the newly-created anti-Bolshevik forces, Kornilov and Alekseyev decided to leave Rostov and Novocherkassk. [13] Kaledin refused to leave the Don and committed suicide on 12 May. [13] White forces left Rostov in an orderly manner on the night of 21-22 February, starting the Ice March towards Yekaterinodar. On 23 February, Sivers captured Rostov. [14] The Cossack troops from Novocherkassk did not manage to do the same, because on 25 February, the city was taken over by the reconstructed local revolutionary-military committee. Only 1,500 Cossacks, led by Pyotr Popov , fled the city chaotically and began their own Steppe March towards the Sal. Sablin's troops immediately entered the city in their wake. [14] Anatoli Nazarov and krug President Voloshinov were arrested and executed six days later. [1]
Lavr Georgiyevich Kornilov was a Russian military intelligence officer, explorer, and general in the Imperial Russian Army during World War I and the ensuing Russian Civil War. Kornilov was of Siberian Cossack origin. Today he is best remembered for the Kornilov Affair, an unsuccessful endeavor in August/September 1917 that was intended to strengthen Alexander Kerensky's Provisional Government, but which led to Kerensky eventually having Kornilov arrested and charged with attempting a coup d'état, and ultimately undermined Kerensky's rule.
The Russian Civil War was a multi-party civil war in the former Russian Empire sparked by the overthrowing of the social-democratic Russian Provisional Government in the October Revolution, as many factions vied to determine Russia's political future. It resulted in the formation of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic and later the Soviet Union in most of its territory. Its finale marked the end of the Russian Revolution, which was one of the key events of the 20th century.
The White movement, also known as the Whites, 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, also known as the White Guard or White Guardsmen.
Alexey Maksimovich Kaledin was a Don Cossack Cavalry General who commanded the 12th Cavalry Division and Russian Eight Army during World War I. He also led the Don Cossack White movement in the opening stages of the Russian Civil War.
Mikhail Vasilyevich Alekseyev was an Imperial Russian Army general during World War I and the Russian Civil War. Between 1915 and 1917 he served as Tsar Nicholas II's Chief of Staff of the Stavka, and after the February Revolution, was its commander-in-chief under the Russian Provisional Government from March to May 1917. He later played a principal role in founding the Volunteer Army in the Russian Civil War and died in 1918 of heart failure while fighting the Bolsheviks in the Volga region.
De-Cossackization was the Bolshevik policy of systematic repression against the Cossacks in the former Russian Empire between 1919 and 1933, especially the Don and Kuban Cossacks in Russia, aimed at the elimination of the Cossacks as a distinct collectivity by exterminating the Cossack elite, coercing all other Cossacks into compliance, and eliminating Cossack distinctness. Several scholars have categorised this as a form of genocide, whilst other historians have highly disputed this classification due to the contentious figures which range from "a few thousand to incredible claims of hundreds of thousands".
The Southern Front was a military theatre of the Russian Civil War.
The Don Army was the military of the short lived Don Republic and a part of the White movement in the Russian Civil War. It operated from 1918 to 1920, in the Don region and centered in the town of Novocherkassk.
The Ice March, also called the First Kuban Campaign, a military withdrawal lasting from February to May 1918, was one of the defining moments in the Russian Civil War of 1917 to 1921. Under attack by the Red Army advancing from the north, the forces of the Volunteer Army, sometimes referred to as the White Guard, began a retreat from the city of Rostov south towards the Kuban, in the hope of gaining the support of the Don Cossacks against the Bolshevik government in Moscow.
The Volunteer Army was a White Army active in South Russia during the Russian Civil War from 1917 to 1920. The Volunteer Army fought against Bolsheviks and the Makhnovists on the Southern Front and the Ukrainian War of Independence. On 8 January 1919, it was made part of the Armed Forces of South Russia, becoming the largest force of the White movement until it was merged with the Army of Wrangel in March 1920.
Afrikan Petrovich Bogaewsky or Bogayevsky was a Russian military leader from the Don Cossack noble family of Bogaewsky. He served as a lieutenant general in the Imperial Russian Army and also served as the ataman of the Don Republic.
The Group of Forces for Combating Counter-Revolution in the South of Russia was a military formation of the Soviet Russian government created in the beginning of December 1917 to invade and occupy various autonomous state formations with a goal of establishing the Soviet government.
The Battle of Tsaritsyn was a military confrontation between the Red Army and the White Army during the Russian Civil War for control of Tsaritsyn, a significant city and port on the Volga River in southwestern Russia.
The Don Soviet Republic was a short-lived Soviet republic of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic that existed from March to May 1918.
The Steppe March was a successful military withdrawal by the Don Cossacks in Spring 1918, towards the steppe around the Sal River, to ensure their survival under attack from the Red Army.
The Voronezh–Povorino Operation, was a battle in January 1919 between the White and Red Armies during the Russian Civil War around the city of Voronezh and the railway station of Povorino. The Red Army defeated the Don Army under Pyotr Krasnov.
The Soviet invasion of Ukraine was a major offensive by the Ukrainian Front of the Red Army against the Ukrainian People's Republic (UPR) during the Soviet–Ukrainian War. The invasion was first planned in November 1918, after the Council of People's Commissars of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic annulled the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, and was launched in the first days of January 1919, with the occupation of Kharkiv. Its aim was to join Ukraine to the RSFSR, as the country was of significant economic, demographic and strategic importance for the Bolsheviks. In the longer term, the capture of the Black Sea coast was to prevent an intervention by the Allies in support of the Volunteer Army. Finally, the Bolsheviks intended to extend the area they control as far as possible to the west, in order to be able to support the other revolutionary movements in Europe.
The battle for Donbas was a military campaign of the Russian Civil War that lasted from January to May 1919, in which White forces repulsed attacks of the Red Army on the Don Host Oblast and occupied the Donbas region after heavy fighting.
The Advance on Moscow was a military campaign of the White Armed Forces of South Russia (AFSR), launched against the RSFSR in July 1919 during the Russian Civil War. The goal of the campaign was the capture of Moscow, which, according to the chief of the White Army Anton Denikin, would play a decisive role in the outcome of the Civil War and bring the Whites closer to the final victory. After initial successes, in which the city of Oryol at only 360 kilometres (220 mi) from Moscow was taken, Denikin's overextended Army was decisively defeated in a series of battles in October and November 1919.
The Establishment of Soviet power in Russia was the process of establishing Soviet power throughout the territory of the former Russian Empire, with the exception of areas occupied by the troops of the Central Powers, following the seizure of power in Petrograd on October 25, 1917, and in mostly completed by the beginning of the German offensive along the entire front on February 18, 1918.