Nikolay Dukhonin

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Nikolay Nikolayevich Dukhonin
Born 13 December 1876
Smolensk Governorate, Russian Empire
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Mogilev, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
Allegiance  Russian Empire
Russian Empire Russian Republic
Service/branch Russian Empire Russian Imperial Army
Years of service 1894—1917
Rank General
Unit 3rd Army
Commands held Imperial Russian Army
Battles/wars World War I

Nikolay Nikolayevich Dukhonin (Russian: Никола́й Никола́евич Духо́нин; 13 December 1876 – 3 December 1917[1]) was a Russian general, the last commander-in-chief of the Russian Imperial Army.

Biography

Dukhonin was born in the Smolensk Governorate. He served in the Kiev Military District before the start of the First World War. There he gained some experience in intelligence work.

At the outset of the War, Dukhonin was given command of a Russian regiment. He was then assigned to the Third Army in Dubno under General Ruzsky as senior adjutant of the intelligence department. In August 1917, Dukhonin was Quartermaster General of the Southwestern Front, and was plucked from this relative obscurity by Kerensky to replace Alexeyev as Chief of Staff at GHQ in Mogilev, as Alexeyev had resigned as a result of Kornilov's failed coup. It was Alexeyev who had suggested Dukhonin as his successor so that he could continue to influence affairs at Stavka in Mogilev.

When Kerensky fled Petrograd and then Russia following the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks in the October Revolution, Dukhonin became de facto Supreme Commander, albeit of an army that was rapidly disintegrating, and over which he exercised very little control. During the initial stages of the Bolshevik seizure of power the Council of People's Commissars instructed Dukhonin to cease wartime hostilities and open negotiations with the Central Powers. Lenin and Krylenko visited Dukhonin in Petrograd to discuss an armistice proposal. Dukhonin's response was adamant: on 22 November he categorically declined the directive of the Council of People's Commissars. He had discussed such a development with diplomats from the Entente governments. Dukhonin told Lenin that such an order could only be issued by "a government sustained by the army and the country".

Lenin immediately proceeded to a wireless station and broadcast news of Dukhonin's dismissal as Commander-in-Chief and Krylenko's replacement in his stead. The following day a joint note was issued by the military missions of Britain, France, Italy, Japan and Roumania, citing the Treaty of 23 August 1914 by which the allies agreed not to conclude an armistice except by common consent. These missions were based at the General Headquarters in Mogilev.[2]

However, Dukhonin opened negotiations with General Kaledin, and asked for units from Kornilovs 'shock battalions' to be rushed to defend Mogilev against the units of the Red Army that were due to arrive by rail with Krylenko. Thanks to the efforts of the local Mogilev soviet and the garrison commander Mikhail Dmitriyevich Bonch-Bruyevich, these troops were sent south to the Don or west against the Poles at Zhlobin, and conflict was avoided. Dukhonin then decided to escape with Kerensky's commissar Stankovich, but was persuaded to stay by General Diterikhs. His last action was to order the release of the officers being held prisoner at Bikhov, most notably Kornilov and Denikin.

Dukhonin subsequently surrendered to Krylenko in Mogilev, but was murdered by Krylenko's Bolshevik military escort near the railway station on 3 December 1917. A mob of soldiers and sailors bayoneted him to death on the spot on order of red army officer Pavel Dybenko.[3] The next morning the Bolshevik soldiers and sailors amused themselves by using his (now stripped naked) corpse for target practice, which they had placed on the platform with a cigarette in its mouth.[4]

His family emigrated to Yugoslavia.

References

  1. Dates given in the Gregorian calendar
  2. Soviet Foreign Policy Vol. 1 1917 - 1945, ed Andrei Gromyko and Boris Ponomarev, Progress Publishers, 1980
  3. Andew Kalpaschnikoff, A prisoner of Trotsky's, 1920
  4. Andrew Kalpschnikoff, A prisoner of Trotsky's, 1920

External links