Johan Laidoner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johan Laidoner (February 12, 1884 – March 14, 1953) was one of the seminal figures of Estonian history between the World Wars. His highest position was Commander in Chief of the Estonian Army.
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[edit] Education
Laidoner was born in Viratsi, Estonia, then part of the Russian Empire. As a boy he worked as a herder during the summer and attended parish school during the year. In 1901, he volunteered for the army. He was first stationed in Kaunas, Lithuania as a member of an infantry regiment. In 1902 he entered the Vilnius military academy, where he met his wife, Maria. Laidoner continued his military education in 1909 at the Nikolai Military Academy in St. Petersburg.
[edit] Military Career
Following his graduation from the Nikolai Military Academy, Laidoner achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Russian Army. He received seven medals before the Russian Empire dissolved.
Afterwards he returned home and took command of the First Estonian Division, part of the national independence army in the Estonian War of Independence. In 1918 he was promoted to the Commander in Chief of the Estonian Armed Forces, and subsequently to the rank of major general. As such, he established an Estonian military academy in 1919.
In 1920, he was promoted to lieutenant general in the new official national army. After relinquishing his position as commander in chief, Laidoner went on to chair several government committees, including the Estonian Olympic Committee. He also represented Estonia in the League of Nations, in which he was known as an isolationist, even in the matters of German or Soviet expansion. Laidoner also took part, when he resumed his duties as Commander in Chief for the second time, in crushing the attempt by Estonian Communists, supported by the Soviet Union, to overthrow the government on 1 December 1924.
In 1934, during the international Great Depression, the League of Veterans, comprised mainly of veterans from the War of Independence (1918-1920), threatened Estonian political order with the imminent election of a radical right wing, quasi-fascist regime. To fend off the efforts of the veterans, known as the Vaps, Laidoner reclaimed his position as Commander in Chief at the request of President Konstantin Päts who assumed emergency powers under the new, Vaps constitution which had been approved by a large popular majority, and together they froze all political party activity.
[edit] Political Career
In 1935, Laidoner and President Konstantin Päts pushed constitutional reform through the government to remodel Estonia according to a strong-president model, citing national defense as the main reason (New York Times Archives). Many of the League of Veterans’ leaders were imprisoned. Päts ruled by decree, and elections were suspended without any plan for resumption. Though all of the League of Veterans’ leaders, sentenced to imprisonment in the two trials, were later freed, Päts and Laidoner had secured the future of their administration.
Included in the proposals of Päts’ and Laidoner’s reforms were military training in universities, as well as restrictions on free speech and freedom of the press. Though neither Päts nor Laidoner desired such freedoms, they recognized the need to establish a stable government before returning the peoples’ rights. Päts attempted to reform the government into a stable entity by broadening the representation of many of the segments of society. Parliamentary elections resumed in 1938. Laidoner became an ex officio member of the National Council.
On 24 February 1939, Laidoner was promoted to the rank of general.
In 1939, Laidoner put forward a plan to the government to modernize and upgrade the Estonian Army’s equipment in the face of rapid foreign expansion and upgrades, and to draft more soldiers. But when the Soviet Union occupied Estonia in July 1940, Laidoner, along with other Baltic leaders, was deported to Siberia. Laidoner died on March 14, 1953 in Vladimir prison, near the present-day city of Kirov, formerly Vjatka.
[edit] Recognition
During his lifetime, Laidoner earned medals of recognition for service and valor from Estonia as well as from Great Britain, Latvia, Finland, France, Poland, Sweden, and Germany. Many of these medals were preserved by the U.S. Army after being smuggled out from under communist control. They were formally returned to Estonia in 2004. There is a monument to Laidoner in the town of Viljandi, Estonia, which is close to his birthplace.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
Raun, Toivo U., Estonia and the Estonians, 2nd Ed., Stanford, Calif.: Hoover Institution Press, 1991
- New York Times Archives
- Estonian National War Museum
- Encyclopedia Britannica
- Clarence A. Manning, The Forgotten Republics. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press Publishers, 1952
- David Kirby, The Baltic World 1772-1993. New York: Longman Publishing, 1995