Battle of Kiev (1918)
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Battle of Kiev | |
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Part of | |
Result |
Bolshevik victory |
3 batteries
artillery battery
History of Ukraine |
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Ukraine portal |
The Battle of Kiev of January 1918 was a Bolshevik military operation of Petrograd and Moscow Red Guard formations directed to capture the capital of Ukraine. The operation was led by Red Guards commander
Background
The objective of the 1918 Battle of Kiev was to install Soviet power in Ukraine. During the winter of 1917/18 the revolutionary formations of Russia installed Soviet power in
Bolshevik forces attacked the city from Bakhmach and Lubny. On 8 February, the Ukrainian government was forced to abandon the city. On 9 February General Muravyov took control of the city and instituted a reign of terror[1] of brutal reprisals against Kiev's population[2] that would last twenty days.
Aftermath
On same the day Bolshevik forces captured Kiev, the Central Rada signed a
Order of battle
Muravyov Forces
- Commander in Chief Mikhail Artemyevich Muravyov
- 1st Army Colonel Pavel Yegorov
- 2nd Army Colonel Reingold Berzin
List of formations
- Red Guards of Bryansk 800 soldiers / Russians
- Red Guards of Moscow (Moscow river neighborhood) 200 soldiers / Latvians/ Russians
- Red Guards of Kharkiv 500 soldiers / Jews/ Russians
- Donbas Red Guards of Dmitry Zhloba 300 soldiers / Russians/ Ukrainians/ Jews
- Red Guards of Putilov Factory 60 soldiers / Jews/Russians/ Ukrainians
- 1st Petrograd Red Guard formation 1,000 soldiers / Latvians/ Russians
- Red Guards of Petrograd (Moscow district) 500 soldiers / Latvians/ Russians
- Kharkiv Red Guards of Aleksandr Belenkovich 150 soldiers / Jews/ Russians/ Ukrainians
- Vitaly Markovich Primakov198 soldiers / Russians/ Ukrainians
- Bryansk battery 92 soldiers / Russians
- Armoured train of Moscow 100 soldiers / Russians
- Red Guards formations of local settlements / Jews/ Russians
- Underground workers of Arsenal (Cave monastery) / Russians/ Ukrainians
Composition by nationality: Russians - 88%; Jews - 7%; Ukrainians - 5%
Ukrainian Forces
- City commandant Mykhailo Kovenko
- Haidamaka Host of Sloboda Ukraine Symon Petliura—400 soldiers
- 2nd Cadet School Battalion—110 "Black Haidamakas"
- Free Cossacks formations
- Artillery division—3 batteries
- Sich Riflemen of Halych Battalion Yevhen Konovalets—500 soldiers
- Doroshenko Regiment—200 soldiers
- Remnants of Bohdaniv Regiment Oleksandr Shapoval
- Haidamaka Host of Sloboda Ukraine Symon Petliura—400 soldiers
References
- Wikidata Q104049525.
- Wikidata Q87193076
- ^ (in Ukrainian) The world's first monument to Colonel of the UPR Army Bolbochan was unveiled in Kyiv, The Ukrainian Week (5 October 2020)
External links
- 1918 Chronicles. Institute of History of Ukraine.
- War between Russia and Ukraine in 1917-18. Institute of History of Ukraine
- War between Bolsheviks and the government of Ukraine in 1917-18. Military Literature.
- Great Britain. Parliament. The parliamentary debates from the year 1803 to the present time.
- Battle for Kiev: Petliura against Muravyov