Ivan Isakov
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Hovanness Stepanee Isakov | |
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August 22, 1894 - October 11, 1967 | |
Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union, Ivan Isakov. |
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Place of birth | Hadjikhend, Kars oblast, Russian Empire |
Place of death | Moscow, Soviet Union |
Allegiance | Soviet Union |
Service/branch | Soviet Navy |
Rank | Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union (March 3, 1955) |
Commands | Baltic Fleet |
Awards | -Order of Lenin (6) -Order of the Red Banner (3) -Order of Ushakov, First Class (2) -Order of the Patriotic War, 1st Class -Order of the Red Star -Hero of the Soviet Union (May 7, 1965) |
Hovanness Stepanee Isakov (In Armenian: Հովհաննես Սթեփանի Իսակով) (Russian: Иван Степанович Исаков) (22 August [O.S. 22 August 10] 1894 - October 11, 1967) was a Soviet Armenian military commander, chief of staff and Admiral of the Fleet (USSR) in the Soviet Navy. He played a crucial role in shaping the Soviet navy, particularly the Baltic and Black Sea flotillas during the Second World War. Asides from his military career, Isakov became a member and writer of the oceanographic committee of the Soviet Union Academy of Sciences in 1958 and in 1967, a reputed member of that of the Armenian SSR's PAN.
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[edit] Early life
Isakov was born in the family of an Armenian railway worker in the village of Hadjikhend in the Kars oblast in the Russian Empire (currently the Kars vilayet of Turkey). He went to Tiflis, Georgia where he studied and graduated in mathematical and science studies in 1913.
[edit] Military career
[edit] Early service
In 1917, Isakov traveled to Petrograd, Russia and entered the guardmarineskee of the Imperial Russian Navy and graduated as a warrant officer in March of that year. He continued his service after the Russian Revolution in the Baltic Sea fleet where he served on several warships including the Izyaslav, the Riga, the Kobchik and the Korshun. In 1918, he took part in several battles against the German Imperial Navy until the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which effectively ended the war between Russia and Germany, granting the Baltic Sea to the latter. In March 1918, Isakov participated in the Ice Cruise of the Baltic Fleet from the naval base at Helsingfors where Russian warships and icebreakers were transferred from the Baltic to the naval base in Krondstadt near Petrograd.
In 1920, Isakov was transferred and served on the destroyer Deyatelnee which patrolled from the Volga River down to the Caspian Sea and later shelled the positions of Allied interventionist forces in the midst of the Russian Civil War. Noted for his distinction during the battles, in 1921 he was made the gun battery commander of the destroyer Izyaslav. From 1922 to 1927, he served as a shtap operative or a member of the deputy chief of staff of naval forces in the Black Sea Fleet. In 1928, Isakov completed advanced courses on senior officer training from the Leningrad Naval Academy.
[edit] World War II
In 1932, Isakov became the professor and the overall art department head of the Soviet Naval Military Academyand taught as a professor for five years until being promoted commander of the Baltic Fleet. In 1938, he was made a podpolkovnik or lieutenant colonel and chief of main naval headquarters. During the Winter War, he coordinated not only the movement of naval warships in the Baltic Sea but also the Red Army in the Soviet war against Finland.
With the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, the Soviet Navy's manpower decreased substantially due to a need of men needed to help stave off advances made by Nazi Germany. Nevertheless, Isakov temporarily served in the Soviet Red Banner Northern Fleet until 1942 where he became a commander in the North Caucasus front where German forces were attempting to penetrate the oil fields of Baku. There, he was a member of the North-Caucasian Directive, a military council which planned operations and directed naval forces defending in the region. He was responsible for the successful naval landing by Soviet forces on the Kerch peninsula, then held by German forces. On October 4, 1942, Isakov was injured in a German bombing raid in Tuapse and had his foot amputated, spending the remainder of the war in a field hospital.
[edit] Admiralship
On May 31, 1944, Isakov was promoted to the service rank of admiral of the flotilla.
[edit] Scholarly work
After becoming a professor in 1932, Isakov spent much of his time researching military naval tactics and strategy. From 1932 to 1933, he participated in a Soviet military report which examined naval tactics used during battles in the First World War. In 1937, he became a kandidat after defending his dissertation on the routing of German forces by the Imperial Japanese Navy in the Battle of Tsingtao in 1914.
[edit] References
- (Armenian) Bagdasaryan A. and Haroutyounyan A. Isakov, Hovhanness. Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia. vol. IV Yerevan: Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic, 1974. pp. 389-390
- (Russian) Heroes of the Soviet Union: Ivan Isakov