Yakut revolt (1921)

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Yakut revolt
Part of the Eastern Front of the Russian Civil War
Date2 September 1921 – 16 June 1923
Location
Ayano-Maysky District of the Russian Far East
Result

Soviet victory

Territorial
changes
Dissolution of the Provisional Priamurye Government
Belligerents
 Russian SFSR
 Soviet Union (from 30 December 1922)

Russia Provisional Yakut Regional People's Government

Commanders and leaders
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Ivan Strod
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Stepan Vostretsov
Before 2 September 1921
Russia Mikhail Korobeinikov
After 2 September 1921
Russia Anatoly Pepelyayev
Strength
Before 2 September 1921
200
After 2 September 1921
950

The Yakut revolt (Russian: Якутский мятеж, romanizedYakutsky myatezh) or the Yakut expedition (Russian: Якутский поход, romanized: Yakutsky pokhod) was the last episode and final set of military engagements of the Russian Civil War. The hostilities took place between September 1921 and June 1923 and were centered on the Ayano-Maysky District of the Russian Far East.

An uprising flared up in this part of Yakutia in September 1921. About 200 White Russians were led by Cornet Mikhail Korobeinikov. In March 1922, they established the Provisional Yakut Regional People's Government in Churapcha. On 23 March, Korobeinikov's Yakut People's Army, armed with six machine guns, captured the major town of Yakutsk. The Red Army garrison was decimated.

In April, the White Army contacted the Provisional Priamurye Government in Vladivostok, asking for help. On 27 April, the Russian Bolshevik government declared the Yakut ASSR and sent an expedition to put down the uprising. In summer 1922, the Whites were ousted from Yakutsk and withdrew to the Pacific coast. They occupied the port towns of Okhotsk and Ayan and again asked Vladivostok for reinforcements.

On 30 August, the Pacific Ocean Fleet, crewed by about 750 volunteers under Lieutenant General Anatoly Pepelyayev, sailed from Vladivostok to assist the White Russian forces. Three days later, this force disembarked in Ayan and moved upon Yakutsk. By the end of October, when Pepelyayev captured the locality of Nelkan, he learned that the Bolsheviks had wrested Vladivostok from the White Army and the Civil War was over.

When the Soviet Union was formed on 30 December 1922, the only Russian territory still controlled by the White Movement was the region of the Pepelyayevshchina ("пепеляевщина"), so-called in the Soviet historiography, that is, Ayan, Okhotsk and Nelkan. A unit of Bolshevik forces under Ivan Strod was sent against Pepelyayev in February 1923. On 12 February, they defeated Pepelyayev's forces near Sasyl-Sasyg; in March, the White Army retreated from Amga.

On 24 April 1923, the ships Stavropol and Indigirka sailed from Vladivostok for Ayan. They contained a contingent of the Red Army under Stepan Vostretsov. Upon his arrival in Ayan on 6 April, Vostretsov learned that Pepelyayev had evacuated to Nelkan. The remainder of the White Army were defeated near Okhotsk on 6 June and near Ayan on 16 June. 103 White officers and 230 soldiers were taken prisoner and transported to Vladivostok. Pepelyayev himself was captured after the battle of Ayan, and he would spend the next 13 years in the gulag camps before being executed during the Stalinist purges in 1938.

References[edit]

  • Recent battles in the Far East. M., Centerpolygraph. 2005.
  • Petrushin, Alexander (1996). "Omsk, Ayan, Lubyanka. The Three lives of General Pepelyaev". "Homeland" No. 9. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Klipel, V.I. "Argonauts of the snow. About the failed campaign of General A. Pepelyaev". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Grachev, G.P. P.K. Konkin (ed.). "Yakut campaign of General Pepelyaev".