1st Cavalry Army (Soviet Union)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2008) |
Part of a series of articles on |
Cossacks |
---|
Cossack hosts |
Don · Ural · Terek · Kuban · Orenburg ·Astrakhan · Siberian · Baikal · Amur · Semirechye · Ussuri |
Other groups |
Azov · Black Sea · Bug · Caucasus Line · Danube (Sich)· Danube (Host) · Hetmanate · Tatar Cossacks · Nekrasov · Turkey · Jewish Cossacks · Zaporozhia |
History of the Cossacks |
Colonisation of Siberia · Khmelnytsky Uprising · Treaty of Hadiach · Bulavin Rebellion · Pugachev's Rebellion · 1st Cavalry Army · Decossackization · Betrayal of the Cossacks · XVth SS Cossack Cavalry Corps · 1st Cossack Division |
Famous Cossacks |
Andrei Shkuro · Bohdan Khmelnytsky · Ivan Mazepa · Ivan Sirko · Pyotr Krasnov . Stenka Razin · Yemelyan Pugachev · Yermak Timofeyevich |
Cossack terms |
Ataman · Hetman · Papakha · Plastun · Shashka · Stanitsa |
|
The 1st Cavalry Army (Russian: Первая конная армия) was the most famous Red Army сavalry formation.[1] It was also known as Budyonny's Cavalry Army or simply as Konarmia ('Horsearmy').
When the Russian Civil War broke out in 1918, a popular Сossack leader named Budyonny organized a small cavalry force in the Don region out of local Cossacks and common-place criminals. This force rapidly grew in numbers, sided with the Bolsheviks and eventually became the 1st Cavalry Army. It was transformed from a guerrilla force into a proper military unit under the command of Semyon Budyonny, and the political guidance of Kliment Voroshilov.
This Army played an important role in winning the Civil War for the Bolsheviks, driving the White General Anton Denikin back from Moscow.
In 1920 Budyonny's Cavalry Army took part in the invasion of Poland during Polish-Bolshevik War, at first with remarkable success. The 1st Cavalry Army pushed Polish forces out of Ukraine and broke through Polish southern frontlines, but later was bogged down at Lviv. This in turn led to a heavy defeat of the rest of the Bolsheviks forces in the Battle of Warsaw. When Budyonny's Cavalry finally joined the battle it was also soundly defeated in the Battle of Komarów, known as the last great cavalry battle in history. At this point, the 1st Cavalry Army's morale and discipline were at a low point and robbery and violence against the civilian population became commonplace.
The remains of 1st Cavalry Army were sent south to fight the Wrangel’s White forces in Ukraine and the Crimea. At the final phase of Russian Civil War the 1st Cavalry Army was subsequently moved to Siberia, Central Asia, Altai Krai, Mongolia and ended its journey at Manchuria and Kamchatka. The Army's last combat operation was the conquest of the Chukchi Peninsula in September 1924. This legendary voyage through Eurasia was the basis of myth about the invincible 1st Cavalry Army, which has been cultivated by Soviet propaganda.
The march of the 1st Cavalry Army became popular after the Russian Civil War and was known as the song We are the Red Cavalry (Russian: Мы красная кавалерия) (however other names of the song were "Мы красная кавалеристы" (We, Red cavalrymen) and "Марш Буденного" (Budenny march), but earlier was known as "Марш красных конников" (March of the Red horsemen).
In commemoration, a monument to the 1st Cavalry Army was constructed in Lvov oblast, Ukraine.
[edit] Notable figures in 1st Cavalry Army
- Semyon Budyonny
- Kliment Voroshilov
- Georgy Zhukov, Soviet military commander, famous for his role in World War II.
- Grigory Kulik, Soviet military commander
- Kirill Meretskov, Soviet military commander
- Semyon Timoshenko, Soviet military commander
- Semyon Krivoshein, Soviet military commander
- Isaac Babel, journalist and writer, who wrote the book Red Cavalry based on his experiences
- Vadim Yakovlev, yesaul
[edit] External links
- ^ '1st Horse Army' can be seen as a better literal translation