White movement
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Template:Armies of Russia 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 October Revolution and fought against the Red Army (as well as the nationalist Green Army and the anarchist Black Army) during the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1921. Image:Namoskvu.jpg The designation White had two meanings. First, it stood in contradistinction to the Reds—the revolutionary Red Army who supported the soviets and Communism. Second, the word "white" had monarchist associations: historically each Russian Tsar was solemnly called the white tsar, and the monarchist ideal during the civil war was known as the white idea.
Strictly speaking, no monolithic "White Army" existed; lacking central coordination, the White forces were never more than a loose confederation of counter-revolutionary forces. The officers who made up the core of the White Army mostly upheld monarchist ideals, but some elements of the White Army drew support from many other political movements, including democrats, social revolutionaries, and others who opposed the October Revolution; at other times and in other places, the same groups supported the Red Army instead. There was also a third group known as the Green Army who opposed both. The rank-and-file troops of the White Army included both active opponents of the Bolsheviks (many Cossacks, for example) and enlisted apolitical peasants. At times, the Western Allies of the Triple Entente and interventionist foreign forces provided substantial assistance to White Army units. This prompted some people to see the White Army as representing the interests of foreign powers.
The Russian Civil War between Whites and Reds raged until 1921. The White Army, in intermittent collaboration with interventionist forces from outside Russia (Japanese, British, Canadian, French, American) held sway in some areas (especially Siberia, Ukraine and the Crimea) for periods of time and put considerable bodies of troops into the field. But they failed to unite or to co-operate effectively amongst themselves, and the Bolshevik Red Army eventually gained the upper hand.
White activity re-concentrated in émigré circles. Considerable numbers of anti-Soviet Russians clustered in Berlin, Paris, Harbin, Istanbul, and Shanghai, setting up cultural networks which lasted until the time of World War II. There was also a sizable community of Harbin Russians in China. Thereafter White Russian activity found a new principal home in the United States.
Some leaders of the White movement, particularly General Wrangel, formulated political concepts based on Russian traditionalism that were taken up and developed in émigré circles after the end of the Civil War by Russian thinkers such as Ivan Ilyin; these thinkers were known as Slavophiles.
Monarchist tendencies were strongest amidst the veterans of the White movement, while republicanism was rarer. In August of 1922, two months before its defeat, the far eastern White Army of General Mikhail Ditterix went as far as to convene the Zemskiy Sobor of Preamursk, and elect (without his participation) Grand Duke Nikolai Nikoaievich Romanov as tsar of all Russia.
Prominent persons of the White movement
- Mikhail Vasilevich Alekseev
- Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz
- Anton Ivanovich Denikin
- Alexander Kutepov
- Mikhail Gordeevich Drozdovsky
- Alexander Ilyich Dutov
- Ivan Aleksandrovich Ilyin
- Aleksei Maksimovich Kaledin
- Aleksandr Vasilevich Kolchak
- Lavr Georgevich Kornilov
- Pyotr Nikolayevich Krasnov
- Alexander Pavlovich Kutepov
- Viacheslav Grigorevich Naumenko [1][2][3]
- Sergey Leonidovich Markov
- Vladimir Zinovyevich May-Mayevsky
- Evgenii Karlovich Miller
- Grand Duke Nicholas
- Viktor Leonidovich Pokrovsky
- Grigory Mikhailovich Semenov
- Andrei Grigoriyevich Shkuro
- Baron Roman von Ungern-Sternberg
- Ariadna Tyrkova-Williams
- Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel
- Nikolai Nikolaevich Yudenich
See also
- Volunteer Army
- Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War
- Russian All-Military Union
- Russian Liberation Army and the Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia
- Operation Keelhaul
- The Betrayal of Cossacks
- White-
External links
es:Movimiento Blanco et:Valgekaartlased fr:Russe blanc it:Armata Bianca fi:Venäjän valkoinen armeija he:הצבא הלבן nl:Witten (leger) pt:Exército Branco ja:白軍 ro:Mişcarea Albă ru:Белая армия zh:白军