Английская Википедия:Battle of Kruty
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox military conflict Шаблон:Campaignbox Ukrainian-Soviet War Шаблон:History of Ukraine
The Battle of Kruty (Шаблон:Lang-uk, Шаблон:Lang) took place on January 29[1] or 30,[2] 1918 ,[2] near Kruty railway station (today the village of Pamiatne, Nizhyn Raion, Chernihiv Oblast), about Шаблон:Convert northeast of Kyiv, Ukraine, which at the time was part of Nezhinsky Uyezd of Chernigov Governorate.
Overview
Order of battle
- Ukrainian forces (D. Nosenko)[2]
- 1st Student CompanyШаблон:Efn (Sich Riflemen auxiliary kurin) - Petro Omelchenko[3] (fatally wounded) (116 soldiers) was split into four platoons
- Cadet Corps of the 1st Ukrainian military school of Bohdan KhmelnytskyiШаблон:Efn - Averkiy Honcharenko (~200 soldiers)
- Hlukhiv Free Cossacks (80 soldiers)
- Cavalry detachment
- Ad hoc armed train (consisted of artillery gun on a flatcar) - S.Loshchenko
- Armored train - M.Yartsev (wounded), withdrew to Nizhyn
- Russian forces (Mikhail Muravyov)[2]
- 1st Revolutionary Army (Komdiv Pavel Yegorov) - 1,500
- Baltic sailors of Remnyov
- 1st Petrograd Red Guards
- 1st battalion - Lifanov (wounded)
- 2nd battalion - Vorobyov
- 1st Moscow Red Guards - Ye.Lapidus
- Armored train No.2
- 2nd Revolutionary Army (Komdiv Reingold Berzin)
- 436th Novo-Ladoga Regiment
- 534th Novo-Kyiv Regiment
- detachment of Baltic sailors
- Lenin armored train
Brief description
As Bolshevik forces of about 4,000 men, commanded by Mikhail Muravyov, advanced toward Kyiv, a small Ukrainian unit of 400 soldiers of the Bakhmach garrison (about 300[4][5] of which were students), commanded initially by Captain F. Tymchenko, withdrew from Bakhmach to a small railroad station Kruty midway towards Nizhyn. The small unit consisted mainly of the Student Battalion (Kurin) of Sich Riflemen, a unit of the Khmelnytsky Cadet School, and a Free Cossacks company.[2]
Just before the assault Tymchenko was replaced by D. Nosenko. Tymchenko left for Nizhyn in attempt to recruit the locally quartered Shevchenko Regiment (800 soldiers) to the Ukrainian side.[2] On January 30, 1918 the Shevchenko regiment sided with the Soviet regime, the news of which forced the Ukrainian garrison of Kruty hastily to withdraw.[2] Over half of the 400 men were killed during the battle, which lasted up to five hours. In Soviet historiography, the battle is mistakenly dated on January 29, 1918[2] and confused with the Plysky rail station skirmish (uk:Плиски (станція)).[2]
The Haidamaka Kish of Symon Petlyura (300 soldiers) that rushed to reinforce[2] the Kruty garrison and was delayed[2] due to the Darnytsia railworkers sabotage[2] and stopped in close vicinity at Bobryk railway station.[2] They eventually turned back to Kyiv due to the Bolshevik Arsenal Uprising, which occurred on the same day.
Aftermath
Eighteen of the students were re-buried at Askold's Grave in the centre of Kyiv after the return of the Tsentralna Rada to the capital in March 1918. At the funeral the then President of the Ukrainian People's Republic, Mykhailo Hrushevsky, called every one of the 400 students who fought in the battle, heroes. Poet Pavlo Tychyna wrote "To the memory of the thirties" about the heroic death of the students.
After the fall of the Ukrainian People's Republic the bodies of the students were moved to the Lukyanivske Cemetery in Kyiv.
Ukrainian legacy
The true story of the battle was hidden by the Soviet Government. Only recently, a monument was set up to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Kruty at Askold's Grave, and a commemorative hryvnia coin was minted. In 2006, the Kruty Heroes Monument was erected on the site of the historic battle. The battle is remembered each year on or around January 29.[6]
On 1 March 2022, the armed forces of Ukraine successfully defended the area around Kruty from a Russian army attack during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, with the Russians losing nearly 200 men.[7] Before the fighting, Russian soldiers took photos near the Memorial to the Heroes of Kruty, and fired on it.[7]
Important personalities
- Leonid Butkevych, the youngest soldier who was in the sixth grade
- Yakiv Ryabokin-Rohoza-Rozanov
- Volodymyr Shulhyn, a brother of the Ukrainian statesman Oleksander Shulhyn
- Ivano Hrushetsky, later an Orthodox priest who eventually died in a Soviet prison in August 1940
- Mytrofan Shvydun, later continued to fight on the "Shooter" and "Free Ukraine" armored trains and in 1941 organized the Lutsk Battalion of OUN[3] (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists)
- Mykhailo Mykhailyk, later wrote a detailed memoir about the battle
- Numerous former students of Kruty became the base of the officer corps of the legendary Black Zaporizhians Cavalry Regiment
- Mykola Kryvopusk and Hnat Martynyuk in 1920-1921 served as personal bodyguards of Symon Petlyura, Martynyuk, after becoming a priest, perished in Volyn in 1943 under unknown circumstances
- Serhiy Zakhvalsky, eventually became an officer in the Polish Army, however, he was renowned for imprisoning a whole company of the Red Army in 1920, while heading one of the cavalry squads of the Zaliznyak Cavalry Regiment
- Averkiy Honcharenko, in 1943 became one of the organizers of the SS Halychyna[3] of which he was appointed a commander in 1945
- Petro Franchuk, one of the members of SS Halychyna
- Yuri Voronoy, son of Ukrainian mathematician Georgy Voronoy, performed the first human kidney transplant in 1933[8]
To the memory of the thirties
Gallery
-
Photo, mistakenly taken as photo of burial of the student fighters of the battle, 1918
-
A hryvnia coin commemorating the Battle of Kruty
-
Kruty monument on Askold's Grave
See also
- Kruty Heroes Memorial
- Kyiv Arsenal January Uprising
- Group of forces in fight with counter revolution in the South Russia
Notes
References
External links
- Шаблон:Cite web
- Шаблон:Cite web
- Життя після Крут. Як склалася доля учасників січневого бою
- www.kruty.org.ua/
- Чому «вороженьки» бояться пам’яті героїв Крут?
- The Battle of Kruty : the free world's first resistance to communism
- ↑ Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег
<ref>
; для сносокencycl_ukr
не указан текст - ↑ 2,00 2,01 2,02 2,03 2,04 2,05 2,06 2,07 2,08 2,09 2,10 2,11 2,12 Kovalchuk, M. Battle of Kruty: known and known pages. Ukrayinska Pravda (Historic Pravda). 29 January 2015 ([1] original source)]
- ↑ 3,0 3,1 3,2 Tynchenko, Ya. Life after Kruty. How turned out the fate of participants of January battle. Ukrayinska Pravda (Istorychna Pravda). 28 January 2011
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Zelensky commemorates Kruty Heroes, UNIAN (29 January 2020)
- ↑ 7,0 7,1 About 200 Russian invaders killed in new battle near Kruty in Chernihiv region, Ukrinform (2 March 2022)
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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