Fedor Keller
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Count Feodor Keller (1850 - 31 July 1904) was a general in the Imperial Russian Army, noted for his role in the Battle of Motien Pass in the Russo-Japanese War.
Fedor Keller was from a family connected to both Austrian and French nobility, and had the title of count. He attended the prestigious Corps of Pages, the military school for the Russian aristocracy. After graduation in 1866, he was commissioned as an ensign in the premier cavalry regiment of the Imperial Russian Army, the Chevalier Guard Regiment.
As a volunteer on the staff of Major-General Cherniaev (nicknamed the 'Russian General Custer') Feller saw combat in the Serbo-Turkish War of 1876. The forces of Ottoman Empire defeated the Russian-led Serbians, thus leading to the subsequent Russo-Turkish War, 1877–1878. During this war, Count Keller served as the Chief-of-Staff to the Russian-led Bulgarian militia, and later as Chief-of-Staff for Russian Major-General Mikhail Skobelev, where he replaced the wounded Colonel Alexei Kuropatkin. After the war, Count Keller was promoted to colonel and served in various staff positions.
In 1882, Keller received command of the 4th Life Guard Rifle Battalion of the Imperial Guard. He was promoted to Major-General in 1890 and in 1893 he was selected by Tsar Alexander III to serve as the Director of the Corps of Pages. He held this prestigious post until 1900, when, after promotion to Lieutenant-General, he became Governor of Yekaterinoslav.
At the start of the Russo-Japanese War in 1904, he volunteered for a combat command, one of the few senior Russian officers to do so. His request was approved and he was placed at the disposal of the Minister of War, General Kuropatkin. Lieutenant-General Count Keller initially served as Intelligence Officer on General Kuropatkin's staff in Manchuria. After the Russian defeat at the Battle of the Yalu on 1 May 1904, General Kuropatkin decided Keller would replace Lieutenant-General Zassulitch as commander of the Eastern Detachment.
Keller's leadership skills quickly made a difference in restoring the confidence of the soldiers who had been severely mauled by General Kuroki Tamemoto's 1st Japanese Army. During the next month, the Eastern Detachment marched hundreds of miles, but did little fighting. Motien Pass, a strong defensive position, was abandoned by Keller on 26 May 1904 due to many factors not under his control. Several small operations followed over the next two months, but with limited scope.
On 31 July 1904, Keller established a strong defensive position north of Motien Pass to block the Japanese advance on Liaoyang. The Japanese 2nd and Guards Divisions attacked all day, but were unable break the Russian defense. In the late afternoon, the Japanese were surprised to see the Russians withdrawing from their positions. Later that evening, Chinese civilians informed them that Russian commander, Lieutenant-General Count Keller, had been killed by Japanese artillery fire at about 1400 that day.
While Lieutenant-General Count Keller lacked experience in the handling large bodies of troops, he was highly respected within the Russian Army as an aggressive leader; a quality sadly lacking in many Russian senior leaders during the war. His death was compared to the earlier loss of Admiral Stepan Makarov.