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Encyclopedia > Alexander Kutepov

Alexander Pavlovich Kutepov (Александр Павлович Кутепов in Russian) (9.16(28).18821930) was a Russian counterrevolutionary in South Russia and White Army Infantry General (1920). Image File history File links General Alexander Kutepov, participant of World War I, the Russian civil war (Southern Volunteer White Army), and chairman of the Russian All-Military Union. ... 1882 was a common year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar). ... 1930 is a common year starting on Wednesday. ... A counterrevolutionary is anyone who opposes a revolution, particularly those who act after a revolution to try to overturn or reverse it, in full or in part. ... The White movement, whose military arm is known as the White Army (Белая Армия) or White Guard (Белая Гвардия, белогвардейцы) and whose members are known as Whites (Белые, or the derogatory Беляки) or White Russians (a term which has other meanings) comprised some of the Russian forces, both political and military, which opposed the Bolsheviks after the... 1920 is a leap year starting on Thursday (link will take you to calendar) // Events January January 7 - Forces of Russian White admiral Kolchak surrender in Krasnoyarsk. ...


Kutepov graduated from Junker Infantry School in St.Petersburg in 1904. He then participated in the Russo-Japanese War and World War I, commanding a company, a battalion and a regiment. Kutepov joined the Volunteer Army from the very start and held different military posts from company commander to commander of the 1st infantry division. After the Whites captured Novorossiysk in August of 1918, Kutepov was appointed governor general of the Black Sea region and began to administer harsh repressions against local population. Starting in January of 1919, he was a commander of the 1st army corps in the Denikin army. Later, Kutepov was put in charge of a corps and 1st Army in the Wrangel army. After Wrangel's army defeat, Kutepov and the remnants of his army evacuated to Gallipoli in November of 1920. He then moved to Bulgaria in the late 1921, but two years later was expelled from the country during an uprising, staged by the local communists. Kutepov settled down in Paris and headed a group of supporters of Grand Prince Nikolai Nikolayevich. After Wrangel's death in 1928, Kutepov became the leader of the Russian All-Military Union and continued its anti-Soviet activities. Junkers (English pronunciation: ; German pronunciation: ) were the landed aristocracy of Prussia and Eastern Germany. ... Saint Petersburg (Russian: Санкт-Петербу́рг, English transliteration: Sankt-Peterburg), colloquially known as Питер (transliterated Piter), formerly known as Leningrad (Ленингра́д, 1924–1991) and Petrograd (Петрогра́д, 1914–1924), is a city located in Northwestern Russia on the delta of the river Neva at the east end of the Gulf of Finland... 1904 is a leap year starting on a Friday (link will take you to calendar). ... Greater Manchuria, Russian (outer) Manchuria is region to upper right in lighter Red; Liaodong Peninsula is the wedge extending into the Yellow Sea The Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) was an extremely bloody conflict that grew out of the rival imperialist ambitions of Imperial Russia and Japan in Manchuria and... World War I was primarily a European conflict with many facets: immense human sacrifice, stalemate trench warfare, and the use of new, devastating weapons - tanks, aircraft, machineguns, and poison gas. ... A company in the broadest sense is an aggregation of people who stay together for a common purpose. ... In military terminology, a battalion consists of two to six companies typically commanded by a lieutenant colonel. ... // Size and Composition A regiment is a military unit, larger than a company and smaller than a division. ... The Volunteer Army (Добровольческая армия in Russian, or Dobrovolcheskaya armiya) was a counterrevolutionary army in South Russia during the Russian Civil War of 1918-1920. ... A division is a large military unit or formation usually consisting of around ten to fifteen thousand soldiers. ... Novorossiysk (Russian Новороссийск) - city in southern Russia, one of the main Russian ports on the Black Sea. ... Note: as an adjective (stressed on the second syllable instead of the first), august means honorable. ... 1918 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... Governor-General (or Governor General) is a term used both historically and currently to designate the appointed representative of a head of state or their government for a particular territory, historically in a colonial context, but no longer necessarily in that form. ... Map of the Black Sea. ... January is the first month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of seven Gregorian months with the length of 31 days. ... 1919 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar). ... Anton Denikin on the day of his resignation in 1920 Anton Ivanovich Denikin (Анто́н Ива́нович Дени́кин) (December 16, 1872 - August 8, 1947) was a Russian army officer before and during World War I. Following the Russian Revolution he was part of the counter-revolutionary White Russian forces in the civil... Baron Wrangel Baron Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel (Врангель, Пётр Николаевич in Russian) (August 15, 1878, Zarasai, Lithuania (then Imperial Russia) — April 25, 1928, Brussels, Belgium), was the one of the leaders of the White movement in Southern Russia, Lieutenant General (1917). ... Gallipoli, called Gelibolu in modern Turkish, is a town in northwestern Turkey. ... November is the eleventh month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of four Gregorian months with the length of 30 days. ... 1921 was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar). ... Communism - Wikipedia /**/ @import /w/skins-1. ... The Eiffel Tower has become a symbol of Paris throughout the world. ... The title Grand Prince (Latin, Magnus Princeps; German, Großfürst, Finnish Suuriruhtinas, Swedish Storfurste, Lithuanian Didysis kunigaikÅ¡tis, Russian Великий князь Velikii kniaz) ranks in honour below Emperor and Tsar but higher than a sovereign Prince (Fürst) or Royal Prince. ... 1928 was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will take you to calendar). ... The Russian All-Military Union (in Russian Русский Обще Воинский Союз, abbreviated as РОВС) was founded by White Army General Pyotr Wrangel in Yugoslavia on September 1st, 1924. ... Soviet redirects here. ...


On January 26, 1930, Kutepov was kidnapped by the OGPU agents (tied to the Inner Line organization) and secretly deported from Paris to Soviet Russia. He died in detention on his way to Novorossiysk. January 26 is the 26th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... Obedinennoe Gosudarstvennoe Politicheskoe Upravlenie (or OGPU) (Combined State Political Directorate, also translated as All Union State Political Board) was the name of the secret police in the Soviet Union in one of the stages of its development. ... The Inner Line (in Russian Внутренная Линия) was a secret intelligence organization started in the 1920s within the Russian emigre community living in Europe and controlled from within by the Soviet OGPU intelligence agency. ... Soviet Russia is sometimes used as a somewhat sloppy synonym to the Soviet Union — although the term Soviet Russia sometimes refers to Bolshevist Russia from the October Revolution in 1917 to 1922 (Although Russian communists officially formed RSFSR in 1918). ... In middle school and high school, detention very specifically refers to a period after the end of the school day (or sometimes, before the school day) when students who have misbehaved must remain in a designated classroom for a certain time period as punishment for their misbehavior. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Alexander Kutepov - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (300 words)
Kutepov joined the Volunteer Army from the very start and held different military posts from company commander to commander of the 1st infantry division.
After the Whites captured Novorossiysk in August of 1918, Kutepov was appointed governor general of the Black Sea region and began to administer harsh repressions against local population.
On January 26, 1930, Kutepov was kidnapped by the OGPU agents (tied to the Inner Line organization) and secretly deported from Paris to Soviet Russia.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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