• Thumbnail for Komkor
    Komkor (Russian: комкор) is the abbreviation for corps commander (Russian: командир корпуса, romanized: komandir korpusa; lit. 'commander of the corps...
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  • Mikoyan. 11. Matvei Vasilenko, Komkor 16. Ilya Garkavyi, Komkor 17. Anatoliy Gekker, Komkor 20. Boris Gorbachyov, Komkor 82. Sergey Savitsky, divisional...
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  • Thumbnail for Soviet order of battle for invasion of Poland in 1939
    Third Army Komkor Vasily Kuznetsov 4th Rifle Corps 27th Rifle Division 50th Rifle Division Lepelska Group 5th Rifle Division 24th Cavalry Division 22nd...
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  • Thumbnail for Military ranks of the Soviet Union
    positional ranks, which were acronyms of the full position names. For example, KomKor was an acronym of Corps Commander, KomDiv was an acronym of Division Commander...
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  • Kasyan Chaykovsky (category Soviet komkors)
    February 1893 – 23 April 1938) was a Soviet military officer and Red Army Komkor. Born in the family of a lawyer, Chaykovsky became a law student at Moscow...
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  • Pumpur was made a Hero of the Soviet Union, and promoted to the rank of Komkor, skipping one grade, upon his return to the Soviet Union. He was arrested...
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    general (OF-8), and two to General of the Army (OF-9). Komkor. However, reprisals were made on 59 Komkor in the period 1937–1938. In line to the reintroduction...
    10 KB (1,087 words) - 10:23, 8 April 2023
  • Velikanov 31. Mikhail Viktorov, Soviet Navy 33. Yan Gaylit, Soviet Red Army Komkor 37. Sergei Gribov 40. Ivan Gryaznov 41. Yakov Davydov 42. Terenty Deribas...
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    Flagman Konstantin Dushenov, arrested May 1938 and shot February 1940; Komkor G. I. Bondar, arrested August 1938 and shot March 1939. All the aforementioned...
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  • Wehrmacht lieutenant general Konstantin Neumann (1897–1937), Soviet Army komkor (predecessor rank to colonel general) Werner Neumann (officer) (1905–1970)...
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  • Gorbachyov (disambiguation), various people Boris Gorbachyov (1892–1937), Soviet komkor Igor Gorbachyov (1927–2003), Russian stage and film actor Ivan Sergeyevich...
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  • Thumbnail for Komdiv
    level Division XX: Komdiv (Division commander) Command level Corps XXX: Komkor (Korps commander) Command level Field army XXXX: Komandarm 2nd rank (Army...
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  • Thumbnail for Roberts Eidemanis
    Roberts Eidemanis (category Soviet komkors)
    Robert Petrovich Eideman; May 9, 1895 – June 12, 1937) was a Latvian Soviet Komkor, writer and poet. Executed during the Latvian Operation of the Great Purge...
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  • The next chief of the GUGB from April 15, 1937, to September 8, 1938, was komkor Mikhail Frinovsky, who was succeeded by Lavrenty Beria, then just promoted...
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    time diaries Vladimir Gittis (1881–1938), Soviet military commander and komkor, one of the principal commanders of Battle for the Donbas (1919) and Latvian...
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  • Thumbnail for Mikhail Batorsky
    Mikhail Batorsky (category Soviet komkors)
    Александрович Баторский; 25 January 1890 – 8 February 1938) was a Red Army Komkor. The son of an officer and a member of the nobility, Batorsky fought in...
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  • Thumbnail for Gaia Gai
    Gaia Gai (category Soviet komkors)
    Hayk Bzhishkian (Armenian: Հայկ Բժշկյան, Russian: Гайк Бжишкян, also known as Guy Dmitrievich Guy, Gai Dmitrievich Gai (Гай Дмитриевич Гай), Gaya Gai (Гая...
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  • Thumbnail for Yelisey Goryachev
    Yelisey Goryachev (category Soviet komkors)
    Yelisey Ivanovich Goryachev (1892 – December 12, 1938) was a Soviet Komkor (corps commander). He fought in the Imperial Russian Army in World War I before...
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  • Thumbnail for Vasily Kuznetsov (general)
    he was transferred to head the 16th Rifle Corps. During September 1939, Komkor Kuznetsov participated in the Invasion of Poland as chief of the Vitebsk...
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  • Thumbnail for Battle of Grodno (1939)
    Polish units under Gen. Wacław Przeździecki and Soviet Red Army troops of Komkor Ivan Boldin's Dzerzhinsky Cavalry Mechanized Group, at the time in a non-aggression...
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  • Thumbnail for Kombat (military rank)
    Soviet government during the Stalin era such as Komdiv (Division Commander), Komkor (Corps Commander), Kombrig (Brigade Commander), and Komandarm (Army Commander)...
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  • Soviet composer Eduard Lepin (1889–1938), Soviet division commander and Komkor Kanstantsin Lepin (born 1988), Belarusian former professional footballer...
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  • American attorney Vladimir Gittis (1881–1938), Soviet military commander and komkor Gattis This page lists people with the surname Gittis. If an internal link...
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  • Ernest Appoga (category Soviet komkors)
    1937) was a Soviet general and revolutionary who was given the position of Komkor on November 11, 1935. He was born in present-day Latvia. He fought in the...
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  • Thumbnail for Eino Rahja
    rest of his life and became, for example, a commander of the army corps (komkor) in the Red Army. Eino Rahja was expelled from the Central Committee of...
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    "General" or "Admiral" replaced the senior functional ranks of Kombrig, Komdiv, Komkor, Komandarm; the other senior functional ranks ("Division Commissar", "Division...
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  • Kirill Stutzka (category Soviet komkors)
    May 1890 – 17 January 1938) was officer of Latvian Riflemen, later Soviet komkor. He was born Stāmeriena Parish, Governorate of Livonia. Stucka fought in...
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  • revolutionary Nikolay Kuibyshev (Kuybyshev) (1893–1938), Russian Red Army Komkor; brother of Valerian Several places in the Soviet Union were named after...
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  • Georgy Bondar (category Soviet komkors)
    (Russian: Гео́ргий Ио́сифович Бо́ндарь; 1893 – March 10, 1939) was a Soviet komkor (corps commander). He fought for the Imperial Russian Army before going...
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  • Mikhail Alafuso (category Soviet komkors)
    Алафузо; 1891 – 13 July 1937) was a Soviet general who received the title of Komkor on November 11, 1935. He was born in Nikolaev (now Mykolaiv, Ukraine). He...
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