Mikhail Alekseyev

Mikhail Alekseyev
Mikhail Alexeyev
Alekseev m v.jpg
General Mikhail Alekseyev
Born November 3, 1857(1857-11-03)
Tver, Russia
Died September 25, 1918(1918-09-25) (aged 60)
Ekaterinodar, Russia
Allegiance  Russian Empire
Service/branch Russian Imperial Army
Years of service 1876-1918
Rank General
Commands held Russian Imperial Army
Battles/wars Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)
Russo-Japanese War
World War I
Russian Civil War
Awards Order of Saint Stanislaus Ribbon.PNG Order of St. Stanislav
Orderglory rib.png Order of St. George
Saint vladimir (bande).png Order of St. Vladimir
Order of Saint Anne Ribbon.PNG Order of St. Anne

Mikhail Vasiliyevich Alekseyev (Russian: Михаил Васильевич Алексеев) (November 3, 1857 – September 25, 1918) was an Imperial Russian Army general during World War I and the Russian Civil War. Between 1915 and 1917 he was Chief of Staff to Tsar Nicholas II, and after the February Revolution, March–July 1917 the commander in chief of the Russian army. He later took charge of the Volunteer Army in the Russian Civil War and died in 1918 while fighting the Bolsheviks in the Volga region.[1]

Contents

Biography

Alekseyev was born in Tver. His father, Vasili Alekseyev, was an army captain in the 64th Kazan Regiment from a modest background. In 1873 Alekseyev entered as a volunteer in the 2md Grenadiers Regiment in Rostov. He graduated from the Moscow Infantry School in 1876 and was commissioned an ensign in the same 64th Kazan Regiment. He served as an orderly to General Mikhail Skobelev during the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), and was wounded in combat near Pleven, Bulgaria. He was promoted to lieutenant in January 1881, and captain in May 1883.

Completing his studies at the Nicholas General Staff Academy in 1890 with the rank of lieutenant colonel, he was posted as a senior adjutant in the headquarters of the 1st Army Corps in the St. Petersburg Military District. He served in this capacity and as a professor at the Academy's Department of Military History from 1898 to 1904. In March 1904, he was promoted to the rank of major general.

Russo-Japanese War

With the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War, in October 1904 Alekseyev was appointed Quartermaster General of the Russian 3rd Manchurian Army. During the war he was awarded a gold sword, the Order of St. Stanislav, and the Order of St. Anne.

After the war he became first senior quartermaster of the General Staff’s main directorate, while maintaining his position as professor at the General Staff Academy. In 1908 he was made Chief of Staff of the Kiev military district and promoted to lieutenant general. In 1912 Alekseyev was given command of the 13th Army Corps.

World War I

The beginning of World War I in August 1914 saw Alekseyev appointed Chief of Staff of the Southwestern Front (which held the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Armies), where he planned the Russian offensive into Galicia with the rank of General-of-Infantry. He was subsequently awarded the Order of St. George (4th class). In March 1915 Alekseyev became the overall commander of the Russian Northwestern Front.

When Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich of Russia stepped down as Russian supreme Commander-in-chief in August 1915 to be replaced by Tsar Nicholas II, Alekseyev was appointed as Chief of Staff of the General Headquarters (Stavka) and placed in charge of all military operations. He served in this capacity from August 1915 to March 1917.

In his capacity as Chief of Staff, Alekseyev proved to be a tradionalist, unable to adapt to tactical changes and the techniques of a modern war. He was also incapable of changing a political system which permitted to promotion of incompetent commanders, through nepotism, patronage and the use of court intrigue. The Great Retreat of 1915 was undertaken on his orders. After the failure of the Battle of Lake Naroch in the spring of 1916, he no longer believed in the ability of the Russian Army to mount an offensive, contributing to the apathy and paralysis which characterized the Russian officer corps towards the end of the war.

Russian Civil War

During the February Revolution of 1917, Alexeyev sent a telegram to the Tsar advising him to abdicate the throne. This telegram, combined with one from his uncle Grand Duke Nicholas, pressure from the Stavka and two representatives of the Duma, led to the Tsar's decision to abdicate on the 2 March 1917 in favour of his brother Grand Duke Michael, who ultimately refused the throne.

From March to May 1917, Alekseyev's position remained ambiguous. While he was the Commander-in-chief and later adviser to the Provisional Government, he spoke against the Soviets and democratization of the army. On August 30, 1917, Alekseyev became Chief of Staff of the Stavka under Commander-in-Chief Alexander Kerensky. His goal was to prevent the Kornilov movement (see Kornilov Affair) from developing into civil war. That same day, Alekseyev arrived at the General Headquarters, arrested General Lavr Kornilov and his men and sent them to prison in Bykhov (a town in Mogilev oblast in Belarus), from which they would "break away" with the help of General Nikolai Dukhonin. He then resigned his post in protest of Kerensky's policies.

After the October Revolution, Alekseyev fled to Novocherkassk, where he received the support of the leader of the Don Cossacks, General Alexey Kaledin. On November 15, 1917, he first formed "Alekseyev's Officer Organization", which would become the core of an anti-Bolshevek Volunteer Army. He was joined by General Kornilov, who never forgave him for his arrest in 1917, and the bad relations between the generals threatened to destroy the movement. In December 1917, Kornilov took command of the combat forces within the army and Alekseyev took charge of political and financial matters. After the death of Kornilov in April 1918 Alexeyev led Volunteer Army back in the Don region. He was appointed head of the Special Council, which would function as a government under Anton Denikin. However, Alekseyev, sick for some time, died of heart failure in Ekaterinodar in September 1918. He was first buried in the crypt of the Cossack host cathedral, but his family moved his remains to Belgrade, Serbia, where they remain to this day.

Awards

  • Order of St. Anne Grade 4 "for courage" (1878)
  • Order of St. Stanislav Grade 3, with swords and bow (1879)
  • Order of St. Anne Grade 3, with swords and bow (1879)
  • Order of St. Stanislav Grade 2 (1892)
  • Order of St. Anne Grade 2 (1896)
  • Order of St. Vladimir 4 degrees, with swords and bow (1900)
  • Order of St. Vladimir Grade 3 (1901)
  • Order of St. Stanislav Grade 1 with Swords (1905)
  • Golden Sword of St. George "for courage" (1906)
  • Order of St. Anne Grade 1 (1906)
  • Order of St. Vladimir Grade 2 (1911)
  • Order of St. George Grade 4 (1914)

See also

References

  1. ^ Stanley Rothman, George W. Breslauer (1978). Soviet Politics and Society. West Pub. Co.. ISBN 0829901469. 
  1. ^ Stanley Rothman, George W. Breslauer (1978). Soviet Politics and Society. West Pub. Co.. ISBN 0829901469. 

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