Baratov's Corps Combat Record

Last of the Tsar's Armies Fought Long After Their War had Ended

© Christopher Eger

Oct 18, 2007
Baratov 1915, public domain
Baratov's cavalry corps in Persia, forgotten and far from home during the Russian Revolution, refused to stop fighting during World War One.

Lieutenant General Nikolai Baratov led a Russian expeditionary force known as the 1st Caucasian Cavalry Corps in Persia fighting the Ottoman Turks. He attempted to relieve the British forces under siege at Kut and indeed made it as far as Hamadan (some 100 miles away). Baratov fought Ottoman forces consisting of scattered Mesopotamian infantry, some Persian irregulars, and a handful of German officers. The Russians routed a Turkish force under German Count Kaunitz at Kangavar. Pushing on, they captured Kermanshah on February 26, 1916 and Kharind on March 12th where the army encamped and awaited an advance on Baghdad. It was not until the Turkish General Ali Ishan Bey's XIII Corps entered the theatre (June 1916) that Baratov was finally met by a sizable force. The two forces met at Khanaqin where Baratov withdrew after a sharp skirmish.

General Baratov led his force back into Persia to regroup and attempt to link up with British forces in northern Mesopotamia. In January 1917 the Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovich Romanov was sent to join Baratov’s unit as punishment for taking part in the assassination of Rasputin. The Grand Duke met the general at the Cavalry Corps headquarters at Kasvin in northern Persia. The two became fast friends and the young Romanov, who had represented Russia at the 1912 Olympics in equestrian events, served on the general’s staff. After the Russian Revolution (March 1917) Baratov's forces began to suffer terrible desertions. By the time the Bolsheviks opened peace negotiations with the Germans and Turks in November 1917, Baratov could barely field an effective regiment. Many of his cossacks would return hundreds of miles from Persia to their Stanisa villages only to join the new White cause in the brewing Russian Civil War.

Baratov did in fact meet with a force sent north from the British in April 1917 which included a Colonel Rowlandson, who would served as a liaison until the Caucasian Cavalry Corps linked with the British Dunsterforce in February 1918. By this time the Caucasian Cavalry Corps only consisted of Baratov, General Lastochkin, Colonel Bicherakov, Colonel Baron Meden and about 1000 loyal Kuban and Terek cossacks. The rest of the Russian soldiers had left for home or deserted and milled around the town on their own recognizance. Baratov and his men, largely a forgotten army with no home, assisted the British in Persia until the end of World War One. Many of the Russian officers found appointments as aides and eventually transitioned into the British Army. The Grand Duke Dimitri even came away with a commission as British captain at the time. When the last of Baratov's troops dissolved near Baku as part of Dunsterforce in August 1918, the old Ossetian general supported the fledging state of Georgia, which was briefly independent. He lost a leg to a terrorist's bomb there in 1919 and left the country just before the Red Army occupied it. He died in 1932 while in Paris in exile. While in France he worked as senior editor of the Russki Invalid newspaper and was president of the Union of White Officers veterans group. He is buried in the Russian cemetery in St-Genevieve de Bois and his diaries and correspondence are held at the Hoover Archives.

Sources:

Valeri Claving, Civil war in Russia : White Army. 2003.

Footman, David. Civil War in Russia. Faber and Faber, 1961.

Kenez, Peter. Civil War in South Russia, 1919-1920: Defeat of the Whites. University of California Press, 1977.

Mawdsley, Evan. The Russian Civil War. Allen & Unwin, 1987.

AI Deryabin The Russian Civil War (four volumes) by, AST Moscow, Translated by Thomas Hillman.

Wollenberg, Erich. The Red-Army: 1937

Radek, Karl. Trotsky and the Red Army 1923

S.N.Shishkin. "Civil War in the Far East" Military publishing house of the Defense Ministry OF THE USSR, Moscow, 1957.

Bennigsen Broxup ,Marie The North Caucasus Barrier: The Russian Advance towards the Muslim World. . New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992


The copyright of the article Baratov's Corps Combat Record in Modern War is owned by Christopher Eger. Permission to republish Baratov's Corps Combat Record in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Baratov 1915, public domain
Baratov 1920, public domain
Turkish troops 1914, public domain
Dunsterforce staff note British & Russian uniforms, public domain
 


Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo