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Caucasus Front (Russian Republic)

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(Redirected from Caucasian Front (Russian Empire)) Major formation of the army of the Russian Republic This article is about the Russian Army formation in World War I. For the military theater of operations in World War I, see Caucasus Campaign. For other uses, see Caucasian Front (disambiguation).

The Caucasus Front (Russian: Кавказский фронт) was a major formation of the army of the Russian Republic (the successor to the Imperial Russian Army) during the First World War. It was established in April 1917 by reorganization of the Russian Caucasus Army and formally ceased to exist in March 1918.

Creation

The reorganization of the Caucasus Army into the Caucasus Front was undertaken by the Russian Provisional Government as part of the military reforms following the February Revolution. During its entire year of existence, the Front was in a process of disintegration as revolutionary propaganda, the weakening of military discipline, desertion, and disease sapped the Front's strength.

General Yudenich was the commander of the Front at its creation. On May 31, 1917, he was removed for refusing to obey the Provisional Government's orders to resume offensive operations against the Turks, and was replaced by General Przhevalsky.

Composition

  • Caucasus Army
    • 5th Caucasian Army Corps
      • other separate formations
    • 2nd Turkestani Army Corps
      • other separate formations
    • 1st Caucasian Army Corps
      • other separate formations
    • 6th Caucasian Army Corps
      • other separate formations
    • 4th Caucasian Army Corps
      • other separate formations
    • 2nd Caucasian Horse Corps
      • other separate formations
    • 1st Caucasian Horse Corps
      • other separate formations
  • Additional Front components
    • Trapezund Fortified District
      • other separate formations
    • Kars Fortress
      • other separate formations
    • Alexandropol Fortress
      • other separate formations
    • Reserve
      • other separate formations

Truce and dissolution

On December 5 1917 the Armistice of Erzincan was signed between the new Soviet government of Russia and the Turkish Third Army, formally ceasing fighting in the Caucasus. Nevertheless, the Turks continued some offensive operations, taking advantage of the fact that the Caucasus Front had effectively ceased to exist as a cohesive military force. Such resistance as the Turks met was offered by Armenian volunteer militia units. This was followed on March 3, 1918 by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ending all hostilities with the Turks.

Since the Caucasus Front dissolved, it did not have a true successor organization. The Army of the North Caucasus, which was renamed 11th Army on October 3, 1918, constituted the main Soviet army in the area during the Russian Civil War.

Sources

  • Peter Kenez (1971). Civil war in South Russia, 1918: the first year of the Volunteer Army. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-01709-2.

See also

See also

Russian Empire Ground forces of the Russian Empire during World War I
Senior administration
Fronts
Field armies
Numbered
Army corps
Guards
  • 1
  • 2
  • Grenadier
  • Army
    1st – 9th
    10th – 19th
    20th – 29th
    30th – 39th
    40th – 50th
    Caucasus
    Siberian
    Turkestan
    Polish
    Ukrainian
    Volunteer
    Cavalry
    Numbered
    Caucasus
    Miscellaneous
  • Gendarmes
  • Feldjäger
  • Expeditionary
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