Bochkarev women's battalion history. Women's Death Battalion in World War I

Women and war - this combination of incongruous things was born at the very end of old Russia. The purpose of creating women's death battalions was to raise the patriotic spirit of the army and to shame by their own example male soldiers who refused to fight.

The initiator of the creation of the first women's battalion was senior non-commissioned officer Maria Leontyevna Bochkareva, holder of the St. George Cross and one of the first Russian female officers. Maria was born in July 1889 into a peasant family. In 1905, she married 23-year-old Afanasy Bochkarev. Marital life did not work out almost immediately, and Bochkareva broke up with her drunkard husband without regret.

On August 1, 1914, Russia entered the world war. The country was gripped by patriotic enthusiasm, and Maria Bochkareva decided to join the active army as a soldier. In November 1914, in Tomsk, she appealed to the commander of the 25th reserve battalion with a request to enlist her in the regular army. He invites her to go to the front as a sister of mercy, but Maria insists on her own. The annoying petitioner is given ironic advice - to turn directly to the emperor. For the last eight rubles, Bochkareva sends a telegram to the highest name and soon, to her great surprise, receives a positive response. She was enrolled as a civilian soldier. Maria fearlessly went into bayonet attacks, pulled the wounded out of the battlefield, and was wounded several times. “For outstanding valor” she received the St. George Cross and three medals. Soon she was awarded the rank of junior and then senior non-commissioned officer.

Maria Bochkareva

After the fall of the monarchy, Maria Bochkareva began the formation of women's battalions. Having secured the support of the Provisional Government, she spoke at the Tauride Palace calling for the creation of women's battalions to defend the Fatherland. Soon her call was published in newspapers, and the whole country learned about women's teams. On June 21, 1917, on the square near St. Isaac's Cathedral, a solemn ceremony was held to present the new military unit with a white banner with the inscription “The first women's military command of the death of Maria Bochkareva.” On the left flank of the detachment, in a brand new ensign’s uniform, stood an excited Maria: “I thought that all eyes were fixed on me alone. Petrograd Archbishop Veniamin and Ufa Archbishop bid our death battalion farewell with the image of the Tikhvin Mother of God. It’s finished, the front is ahead!”

The Women's Death Battalion goes to the front in World War I

Finally, the battalion marched solemnly through the streets of Petrograd, where it was greeted by thousands of people. On June 23, an unusual military unit went to the front, to the Novospassky forest area, north of the city of Molodechno, near Smorgon (Belarus). On July 9, 1917, according to the plans of the Headquarters, the Western Front was supposed to go on the offensive. On July 7, the 525th Kyuryuk-Darya Infantry Regiment of the 132nd Infantry Division, which included shock troops, received an order to take positions at the front near the town of Krevo.

The "death battalion" was on the right flank of the regiment. On July 8, 1917, he entered into battle for the first time, since the enemy, knowing about the plans of the Russian command, launched a preemptive strike and wedged itself into the location of the Russian troops. Over three days, the regiment repelled 14 attacks by German troops. Several times the battalion launched counterattacks and knocked the Germans out of the Russian positions occupied the day before. Many commanders noted the desperate heroism of the women's battalion on the battlefield. So Colonel V.I. Zakrzhevsky, in his report on the actions of the “death battalion,” wrote: “Bochkareva’s detachment behaved heroically in battle, always in the front line, serving on an equal basis with the soldiers. When the Germans attacked, on his own initiative he rushed as one into a counterattack; brought cartridges, went to secrets, and some to reconnaissance; With their work, the death squad set an example of bravery, courage and calmness, raised the spirit of the soldiers and proved that each of these female heroes is worthy of the title of warrior of the Russian revolutionary army.” Even General Anton Denikin, the future leader of the White movement, who was very skeptical of such “army surrogates,” recognized the outstanding valor of female soldiers. He wrote: “The women’s battalion, attached to one of the corps, valiantly went on the attack, not supported by the “Russian heroes.” And when the pitch hell of enemy artillery fire broke out, the poor women, having forgotten the technique of scattered combat, huddled together - helpless, alone in their section of the field, loosened by German bombs. We suffered losses. And the “heroes” partly returned, and partly did not leave the trenches at all.”


Bochkareva is first on the left.

There were 6 nurses, formerly actual doctors, factory workers, office workers and peasants who also came to die for their country.One of the girls was only 15 years old. Her father and two brothers died at the front, and her mother was killed when she was working in a hospital and came under fire. At 15 years old, they could only pick up a rifle and join the battalion. She thought she was safe here.

According to Bochkareva herself, out of 170 people who took part in the hostilities, the battalion lost up to 30 people killed and up to 70 wounded. Maria Bochkareva, herself wounded in this battle for the fifth time, spent a month and a half in the hospital and was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant. After recovery, she received an order from the new Supreme Commander-in-Chief Lavr Kornilov to inspect the women’s battalions, of which there were already almost a dozen.

After the October Revolution, Bochkareva was forced to disband her battalion home, and she again headed to Petrograd. In winter, she was detained by the Bolsheviks on the way to Tomsk. After refusing to cooperate with the new authorities, she was accused of counter-revolutionary activities, and the matter almost reached the tribunal. Thanks to the help of one of her former colleagues, Bochkareva broke free and, dressed as a sister of mercy, traveled across the country to Vladivostok, from where she sailed on a campaign trip to the USA and Europe. American journalist Isaac Don Levin, based on Bochkareva’s stories, wrote a book about her life, which was published in 1919 under the title “Yashka” and was translated into several languages. In August 1918, Bochkareva returned to Russia. In 1919 she went to Omsk to see Kolchak. Aged and exhausted from wanderings, Maria Leontyevna came to ask for resignation, but the Supreme Ruler persuaded Bochkareva to continue serving. Maria made passionate speeches in two Omsk theaters and recruited 200 volunteers in two days. But the days of the Supreme Ruler of Russia and his army were already numbered. Bochkareva’s detachment turned out to be of no use to anyone.

When the Red Army occupied Tomsk, Bochkareva herself came to the city commandant. The commandant took her undertaking not to leave the place and sent her home. On January 7, 1920, she was arrested and then sent to Krasnoyarsk. Bochkareva gave frank and ingenuous answers to all the investigator’s questions, which put the security officers in a difficult position. No clear evidence of her “counter-revolutionary activities” could be found; Bochkareva also did not participate in hostilities against the Reds. Ultimately, the special department of the 5th Army issued a resolution: “For more information, the case, along with the identity of the accused, should be sent to the Special Department of the Cheka in Moscow.”

Perhaps this promised a favorable outcome, especially since the death penalty in the RSFSR was once again abolished by a resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars. But, unfortunately, the deputy head of the Special Department of the Cheka, I.P., arrived in Siberia. Pavlunovsky, endowed with extraordinary powers. The “representative of Moscow” did not understand what confused the local security officers in the case of Maria Leontyevna. On the resolution, he wrote a short resolution: “Bochkareva Maria Leontievna - shoot.” On May 16, 1920, the sentence was carried out. On the cover of the criminal case, the executioner wrote a note in blue pencil: “The fast has been fulfilled. May 16th." But in the conclusion of the Russian prosecutor’s office on the rehabilitation of Bochkareva in 1992, it is said that there is no evidence of her execution. Russian biographer of Bochkareva S.V. Drokov believes that she was not shot: Isaac Don Levin rescued her from the Krasnoyarsk dungeons, and with him she went to Harbin. Having changed her last name, Bochkareva lived on the Chinese Eastern Railway until 1927, until she shared the fate of Russian families forcibly deported to Soviet Russia.

In the fall of 1917, there were about 5,000 female warriors in Russia. Their physical strength and abilities were similar to all women, ordinary women. There was nothing special about them. They just had to learn how to shoot and kill. The women trained 10 hours a day. Former peasants made up 40% of the battalion.

Women's Death Battalion soldiers receive a blessing before going into battle, 1917.

Russian women's battalions could not go unnoticed in the world. Journalists (such as Bessie Beatty, Rita Dorr and Louise Bryant from America) would interview the women and photograph them to later publish a book.

Female soldiers of the 1st Russian female death battalion, 1917

Maria Bochkareva and her Women's Battalion

Women's battalion from Petrograd. They drink tea and relax in the field camp.

Maria Bochkareva with Emmeline Pankhurst

Women's Death Battalion" in Tsarskoe Selo.

Maria Bochkareva is in the center, teaching shooting.

female recruits in Petrograd in 1917

Death Battalion, soldier on duty, Petrograd, 1917.

They drink tea. Petrograd 1917

These girls defended the Winter Palace.

1st Petrograd Women's Battalion

Commander of the Petrograd Military District, General Polovtsev and Maria Bochkareva in front of the formation of the women's battalion

The investigative file of Maria Leontievna Bochkareva has been preserved in the archives of the FSB Directorate for the Omsk Region. 36 tattered leaves - the last point in the life of "Russian Zhanna" d"Ark "... Meanwhile, during her lifetime, the fame of this amazing woman was so great that many stars of modern politics and show business could envy her. Reporters vied with each other to interview her, Russian illustrated magazines published enthusiastic articles about the “woman hero” But, alas, several years later, from all this splendor, only Mayakovsky’s contemptuous lines about “were left in the memory of his compatriots.” Bochkarevsky fools ", stupidly trying to defend the last residence of the Provisional Government on the night of the October Revolution...
ADVENTURE STAGE

The real fate of Maria Bochkareva is akin to an adventure novel: the wife of a drunken worker, the girlfriend of a bandit, a “servant” in a brothel. And suddenly - a brave front-line soldier, non-commissioned officer and officer of the Russian army, one of the heroines of the First World War. A simple peasant woman, who only learned the basics of literacy towards the end of her life, had the opportunity in her lifetime to meet with the head of the Provisional Government A.F. Kerensky, two supreme commanders of the Russian army - A. A. Brusilov and L. G. Kornilov. "Russian Zhanna d"Ark "officially received by the President of the United States Woodrow Wilson and the English King George V.

Maria was born in July 1889 into a peasant family. In 1905, she married 23-year-old Afanasy Bochkarev. Married life did not work out almost immediately, and Bochkareva broke up with her drunkard husband without regret. Soon Maria met her “fatal love” in the person of a certain Yankel (Yakov) Buk, who, according to documents, was listed as a peasant, but in reality was engaged in robbery in a gang of Honghuz. When Yakov was finally arrested, Bochkareva decided to share the fate of her beloved and went after him along the convoy to Yakutsk. But even in the settlement, Yakov continued to do the same things - he bought stolen goods and even participated in an attack on the post office. To prevent Buk from being sent even further (to Kolymsk ), Maria agreed to give in to the harassment of the Yakut governor. Unable to survive the betrayal, she tried to poison herself, and then told Book everything. Yakov was with difficulty tied up in the governor's office: he did not have time to kill the seducer. As a result, Yakov was again convicted and sent to the remote Yakut village of Amga. Maria was the only Russian woman here. But the previous relationship with her lover has not been restored...

FEARLESS "YASHKA"

August 1, 1914 Russia


Entered the world war. The country was gripped by patriotic enthusiasm. Maria decided to break up with Yankel and join the active army as a soldier. In November 1914, in Tomsk, she addressed the commander of the 25th reserve battalion. He invites her to go to the front as a sister of mercy, but Maria insists on her own. The annoying petitioner is given ironic advice - to contact the emperor directly. For the last eight rubles, Bochkareva sends a telegram to the highest name and soon, to her great surprise, receives permission from Nicholas II. She was enrolled as a civilian soldier. According to an unwritten rule, soldiers gave each other nicknames. Remembering Buk, Maria asks to call herself “Yashka”.

“Yashka” fearlessly launched bayonet attacks, pulled the wounded out of the battlefield, and was wounded several times. "For outstanding valor" she received the St. George Cross and three medals. She is awarded the rank of junior and then senior non-commissioned officer.

The February Revolution turned upside down the world familiar to Maria: rallies took place in the positions, and fraternization with the enemy began. Thanks to an unexpected acquaintance with the Chairman of the Provisional Committee of the State Duma M.V. Rodzianko, who came to the front to speak, Bochkareva ended up in Petrograd in early May 1917. Here she is trying to implement an unexpected and bold idea - to create special military units of female volunteers and, together with them, continue to defend the Fatherland. Bochkareva’s initiative received the approval of the Minister of War Alexander Kerensky and the Supreme Commander-in-Chief Alexei Brusilov. In their opinion, the “female factor” could have a positive moral impact on the decaying army. Over two thousand women responded to Bochkareva’s call. By order of Kerensky, female soldiers were allocated a separate room on Torgovaya Street, and ten experienced instructors were sent to train them in military formation and handling of weapons. Initially, it was even assumed that Kerensky’s wife, Olga, would go to the front with the first detachment of female volunteers as a nurse, who gave an undertaking “if necessary, to remain in the trenches all the time.”

TALKERS IN STORY!

Maria established strict discipline in the battalion: getting up at five in the morning, studying until ten in the evening, short rest and a simple soldier's lunch. “Intelligent people” soon began to complain that Bochkareva was too rude and “hit people’s faces like a real sergeant of the old regime.” In addition, she prohibited the organization of any councils and committees in her battalion and the appearance of party agitators there. Supporters of “democratic reforms” even appealed to the commander of the Petrograd Military District, General P. A. Polovtsev, but in vain: “She (Bochkareva), fiercely and expressively waving her fist, says that let those who are dissatisfied get out, that she wants to have a disciplined unit.” In the end, a split occurred in the formed battalion - approximately 300 women remained with Bochkareva, and the rest formed an independent shock battalion. Ironically, it was this part of the shock workers, expelled by Bochkareva “for easy behavior,” that became the basis of the women’s battalion that defended the Winter Palace on October 25, 1917. They were captured in a rare photograph kept in the collections of the State Museum of Political History of Russia.

On June 21, 1917, on the square near St. Isaac's Cathedral, a solemn ceremony was held to present the new military unit with a white banner with the inscription "The first women's military command of the death of Maria Bochkareva." On the left flank of the detachment, in a brand new ensign's uniform, stood an excited Maria: “I thought that all eyes were fixed on me alone. The Petrograd Archbishop Veniamin and the Ufa Archbishop bid our battalion of death with the image of the Tikhvin Mother of God. It’s finished, the front is ahead!” Finally, the battalion marched solemnly through the streets of Petrograd, where it was greeted by thousands of people.

DISAPPOINTMENT IN THE SURROGATE



On June 23, an unusual military unit went to the front. Life immediately dispelled the romance. Initially, they even had to post sentries at the battalion barracks: the unbridled soldiers pestered the “women” with unambiguous proposals. The battalion received its baptism of fire in fierce battles with the Germans at the beginning of July 1917. One of the command reports said that “Bochkareva’s detachment behaved heroically in battle” and set an example of “bravery, courage and calm.” And even General Anton Denikin, very

Skeptical about such “army surrogates,” he admitted that the women’s battalion “valiantly went on the attack,” not supported by other units. In one of the battles, Bochkareva was shell-shocked and sent to a Petrograd hospital. After recovery, she received an order from the new Supreme Commander-in-Chief Lavr Kornilov to inspect the women’s battalions, of which there were already almost a dozen. A review of the Moscow battalion showed its complete incapacity for combat. Frustrated, Maria returned to her unit, firmly deciding for herself “not to take any more women to the front, because I was disappointed in women.”

After the October Revolution, Bochkareva, on the instructions of the Soviet government, was forced to disband her battalion home, and she herself again headed to Petrograd. In Smolny, one of the representatives of the new regime (according to one version - Lenin or Trotsky) spent a long time convincing Maria that she, as a representative of the peasantry, should defend the power of the working people. But she only persistently insisted that she was too exhausted and did not want to take part in the Civil War. Almost the same thing - “I don’t take part in combat during the civil war,” she said a year later to the White Guard commander in the North of Russia, General Marushevsky, when he tried to force Maria to engage in the formation of combat units. For refusal, the angry general ordered Bochkareva to be arrested, and he was stopped only by the intervention of the British allies. Perhaps Maria Leontyevna instinctively felt that both the Reds and the Whites wanted to use her authority in their incomprehensible game.

SUNSET STAR

Bochkareva still had to participate in political games. On behalf of General Kornilov, she, wearing forged documents and dressed as a nurse, made her way through Civil War-torn Russia to the general’s headquarters to make a propaganda trip to the USA and England in 1918. Later - a meeting with another “supreme” - Admiral Kolchak. She came to ask for resignation, but he persuaded Bochkareva to form a volunteer sanitary detachment. Maria made passionate speeches in two Omsk theaters and recruited 200 volunteers in two days. But the days of the “Supreme Ruler of Russia” himself and his army were already numbered. Bochkareva’s detachment turned out to be of no use to anyone.
When the Red Army occupied Tomsk, Bochkareva herself came to the commandant of the city, handed over a revolver to him and offered her cooperation to the Soviet authorities. The commandant refused the offer, took her undertaking not to leave the place and sent her home. On Christmas night 1920, she was arrested and then sent to Krasnoyarsk. Bochkareva gave frank and ingenuous answers to all the investigator’s questions, which put the security officers in a difficult position. No clear evidence of her “counter-revolutionary activities” could be found; Bochkareva also did not participate in hostilities against the Reds.
Ultimately, the special department of the 5th Army issued a resolution: “For more information, the case, along with the identity of the accused, should be sent to the Special Department of the Cheka in Moscow.” Perhaps this promised a favorable outcome, especially since the resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and The death penalty in the RSFSR was once again abolished by the Council of People's Commissars.
But, unfortunately, here the deputy head of the Special Department of the Cheka, I.P. Pavlunovsky, arrived in Siberia, endowed with emergency powers by F. Dzerzhinsky. The “representative of Moscow” did not understand what confused the local security officers in the case of our heroine. On the resolution, he wrote a short resolution: “Bochkareva Maria Leontievna - shoot.” On May 16, 1920, the sentence was carried out. “Russian Joan of Arc” was thirty-one years old.

source- http://kamin.nnm.ru/bochkareva_mariya_

The first women's battalion of death fought near Molodechno

95 years ago, in the summer of 1914, the First World War began. The dates associated with this war, unlike World War II, are not widely celebrated in Belarus. This seems understandable: Russia waged the war, there was no independent Belarusian state at that time, which means we had nothing to do with it. On the other hand, this is unfair - for more than two years the front between the Austro-German and Russian armies passed through the current Vitebsk, Grodno, Minsk and Brest regions. The Kaiser’s troops did not go further than present-day Belarus. Several of the largest military operations of that time took place here, and hundreds of thousands of soldiers remained lying here on Belarusian soil.

“I became interested in this topic five years ago,” says photographer and researcher-enthusiast Vladimir Bogdanov. - When I started, according to various sources, about 100 military graves of that

period. Today I know of more than 230 such places where I have personally visited. I realized that no war has left as much material evidence on the territory of Belarus as the First World War. Alas, these objects are not included in any lists of material assets. But in their complex they have, like that war, global significance. We haven't realized this yet.

Komsomolskaya Pravda decided to fill this gap at least a little and take a closer look at the history of the First World War. And here's what we found out.
Maria Bochkareva.

Russian women crushed two German defense lines near Smorgon

One of the most amazing facts of the First World War was the creation of a women's death battalion in the summer of 1917. No other army in the world knew such a female military formation. The initiator of their creation was a simple Russian peasant woman from the Novgorod province, and since 1915, a military servicewoman, Maria Bochkareva. She entered the army with the personal permission of Nicholas II. She went into bayonet attacks as equals, carried the wounded out from under fire, and was wounded four times. And she became, by the way, the first woman to become a full Knight of St. George.

After the war, in 1918, US President Wilson received her and kissed her hand. And King George V of England (also gave her an audience) called Maria Bochkareva the Russian Joan of Arc.

But that was later. And in 1917, when the morale of the Russian army was already at zero, Bochkareva decided to support it in an unusual way - to bring women to the front who, with their heroic example, would return weak-willed soldiers to the trenches. As she wrote to Petrograd, “the soldiers in this great war are tired, and they need to be helped... morally.”

Within a week, about two thousand volunteers signed up for the women's battalion. True, after a month of training, its ranks were greatly thinned - 1,500 women were expelled for “easy behavior”. Several volunteers found themselves in an interesting position. Of course, they too were expelled in disgrace. Another part of the ladies became interested in politics and Bolshevik ideas, and a split occurred. As a result, 200 people remained under Bochkareva’s command.

At first, the basics of military service were not easy for women. The officers jokingly took away the bolts of their rifles; only a few could shoot accurately. Bochkareva established strict discipline in her battalion: waking up at five in the morning, studying until ten in the evening and simple soldier food. She forced illiterate peasant women to learn to read and write; foul language was not allowed in the battalion. Women had their heads shaved. Black shoulder straps with a red stripe and an emblem in the form of a skull and two crossed bones symbolized “an unwillingness to live if Russia perishes.” However, the volunteers steadfastly endured these hardships (there were almost no deserters) and gradually improved their combat skills.

At the beginning of July 1917, the battalion received baptism of fire in the Rogachevo tract, in the Novospassky forest, 10 kilometers south of Smorgon. Over the course of two days, he repelled 14 enemy attacks and, despite heavy machine-gun fire, launched counterattacks several times. The reports said that “Bochkareva’s detachment behaved heroically in battle.” An eloquent fact of the heroism of women is reflected in one of the reports: there were cases when women stopped fleeing people, stopped robbery, took bottles of alcoholic drinks from soldiers and immediately broke them. Despite some irony, try to imagine what it meant (especially for a woman) to take a bottle of alcohol from an armed man and immediately break it, without fear of getting a bullet or a bayonet from the grateful defender of the Fatherland.

Bochkareva’s colleagues, alas, did not show their best side more than once. The soldiers besieged the volunteer women in droves, and no amount of persuasion could force them to disperse and give the women even a minute of peace. But when it came to battle, the men were blown away like the wind. In one of the attacks, the women's battalion crushed two German defense lines at once. But the soldiers left them alone, and the next morning the Germans drove the women out of their trenches.

Until November 1917, the women's battalion stood in positions near the village of Belaya (east of Smorgon). And after the revolution they were disbanded as unnecessary. One of the companies of the women's battalion, however, managed to take part in the defense of the Winter Palace during the revolution. And Maria Bochkareva herself later joined the White movement. On behalf of General Kornilov, she traveled to the United States to ask for help to fight the Bolsheviks. Upon returning to Russia (in 1919), she met with Admiral Kolchak. And on his instructions, she formed a women’s sanitary detachment of 200 people. After the capture of Omsk by the Red Army, the Bolsheviks arrested her and sentenced her to death. In May 1920, the sentence was carried out. The Russian Joan of Arc was thirty-one years old.

INTERESTING FACTS

There were no partisans in the First World War. The fact is that in 1914 the entire male population of the Russian Empire was drafted into the army. And when the Germans came, there was no one to fight the partisans. And the civilian population was forcibly removed to the East. And just as in 1812, during the retreat in 1915, a scorched earth tactic was carried out - the enemy should not get anything. By the way, all these losses were documented, and after the war the tsarist government compensated the injured owners for everything; by the way, they paid very good money.

Dr. Albert Ippel served in the German 10th Army. He became the first researcher of Belarusian folk art. In 1918, he even held two exhibitions - in Vilna and Minsk. Moreover, he was the first of all art historians to separate Belarusian art from Polish and Russian. A book about this was even published in Belarusian.

In the village of Ganuta, a local historian discovered a whole stack of marriage licenses issued by the command of the Russian troops. Everything is as it should be - with regimental and unit stamps and an indication of who wants to marry and whom. These permits were introduced by order of the General Staff for a good purpose - so as not to breed fatherlessness. The command issued permits, the church made inquiries about the place of birth and checked whether the person was already married. Thus, the children were legitimate, and widows received a pension after the death of their husbands.

As you know, chemical weapons were used for the first time in World War I. The first, in 1915, were the Germans. A year later, Russian troops used gas for the first time. This happened near Smorgon. The gases caused very large losses - for example, in one gas attack near Smorgon in August 1916, 3 thousand people died.

In 1916, near the town of Boruny, the airship “Ilya Muromets No. 16” of Lieutenant Dmitry Moksheev was killed in battle. In an unequal battle, he shot down 3 German fighters, but he himself was shot down and fell on German territory. This was the only time during the entire war when a Russian bomber fell into the hands of the Germans. The Germans buried the fallen crew - four non-commissioned officers - with military honors in a cemetery near the village of Boruny, about which they informed the Russians through a newspaper and a note dropped by plane.

Smorgon is the only city on three fronts from the Baltic to the Black Seas, which was defended by Russian troops for a long time and persistently (810 days). And they did not surrender it until the truce. This year, for the first time, money has been allocated from the budget of the Union State for the construction of a memorial to the defenders of the Fatherland in the First World War in Smorgon. It is scheduled to open next year.

Trenches of a German fortified area in the Rassokh area

The most powerful artillery attack in the history of the First World War took place in Krevo. The famous Krevsky Castle took on the blow of Russian artillery in the summer of 1917.

Vladimir Bogdanov managed to buy several regimental histories in Germany via the Internet - original diaries of German regiments that were stationed on the territory of Belarus during the war. There's a lot of interesting information there. For example, when the Germans set up barriers before the Naroch operation of 1916, they ran out of barbed wire. What to do? Since the villages near Naroch were fishing, we went to the fishermen, collected nets from them and blocked the approaches to their positions with them. They write that during the fighting, about 60 Russian soldiers became entangled in these nets.

The headquarters of the Commander-in-Chief in Mogilev is a separate page of history. It was here that the history of Russian autocracy ended in the person of the last Russian emperor. Many buildings where Nicholas visited have been preserved; in the local museum (also a former headquarters building) they show the room where the tsar said goodbye to his officers.

WHAT PEOPLE FOUGHT!

The daughter of the writer Leo Tolstoy, Alexandra, with the rank of colonel, headed the military hospital on the estate of the composer Oginsky in Zalesye, near Smorgon.

The writer Mikhail Bulgakov, being a doctor by training, went to the front in 1916 and served as a surgeon near Baranovichi. Together with her husband, his first wife Tatyana Lappa went to the front. She assisted her husband in operations.

Russia's first female surgeon, Princess Vera Gedroits, ended the war with the rank of colonel. By the way, it was she who signed the diplomas conferring the qualifications of sisters of mercy to the Grand Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and her daughters, the Grand Duchesses. At the front, Vera Gedroits, for the first time in history, began to perform strip operations on abdominal wounds and thereby saved the lives of more than one hundred people.

The poet Nikolai Gumilyov and the writer Valentin Kataev visited the front near Molodechno. Yanka Kupala and Yakub Kolas also served in the Russian army. Konstantin Paustovsky was a medical orderly, he traveled all over the front, there is information about how he spent the night in Radoshkovichi. By the way, Paustovsky lost two brothers in this war - both on different fronts, but on the same day.

In November 1917, the brother of composer Sergei Rachmaninov died in an air battle.

The captain of the Preobrazhensky regiment, Kutepov, the future general of the White movement, personally led his battalion into attacks near Smorgon. Here Denikin commanded the July offensive in 1917.

HELP "KP"

The First World War (July 28, 1914 - November 11, 1918) is one of the most widespread armed conflicts in human history. The immediate cause of the war was the assassination of the Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo by a nineteen-year-old Serbian student, Gavrilo Princip, who fought for the unification of all South Slavic peoples into one state. As a result of the war, four empires ceased to exist: Russian, German, Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman. The participating countries lost about 10 million soldiers killed, 22 million people were wounded.

Photo by Vladimir BOGDANOV and from the archives. We thank historian Vladimir LIGUTA and artist Boris Tsitovich for their help.

Women's Death Battalion. (Maria Bochkareva).

Women and war - this combination of incongruous things was born at the very end of old Russia. The purpose of creating women's death battalions was to raise the patriotic spirit of the army and to shame by their own example male soldiers who refused to fight.

The initiator of the creation of the first women's battalion was senior non-commissioned officer Maria Leontyevna Bochkareva, holder of the St. George Cross and one of the first Russian female officers. Maria was born in July 1889 into a peasant family. In 1905, she married 23-year-old Afanasy Bochkarev. Marital life did not work out almost immediately, and Bochkareva broke up with her drunkard husband without regret.

On August 1, 1914, Russia entered the world war. The country was gripped by patriotic enthusiasm, and Maria Bochkareva decided to join the active army as a soldier. In November 1914, in Tomsk, she appealed to the commander of the 25th reserve battalion with a request to enlist her in the regular army. He invites her to go to the front as a sister of mercy, but Maria insists on her own. The annoying petitioner is given ironic advice - to turn directly to the emperor. For the last eight rubles, Bochkareva sends a telegram to the highest name and soon, to her great surprise, receives a positive response. She was enrolled as a civilian soldier. Maria fearlessly went into bayonet attacks, pulled the wounded out of the battlefield, and was wounded several times. “For outstanding valor” she received the St. George Cross and three medals. Soon she was awarded the rank of junior and then senior non-commissioned officer.

Maria Bochkareva

After the fall of the monarchy, Maria Bochkareva began the formation of women's battalions. Having secured the support of the Provisional Government, she spoke at the Tauride Palace calling for the creation of women's battalions to defend the Fatherland. Soon her call was published in newspapers, and the whole country learned about women's teams. On June 21, 1917, on the square near St. Isaac's Cathedral, a solemn ceremony was held to present the new military unit with a white banner with the inscription “The first women's military command of the death of Maria Bochkareva.” On the left flank of the detachment, in a brand new ensign’s uniform, stood an excited Maria: “I thought that all eyes were fixed on me alone. Petrograd Archbishop Veniamin and Ufa Archbishop bid our death battalion farewell with the image of the Tikhvin Mother of God. It’s finished, the front is ahead!”

The Women's Death Battalion goes to the front in World War I

Finally, the battalion marched solemnly through the streets of Petrograd, where it was greeted by thousands of people. On June 23, an unusual military unit went to the front, to the Novospassky forest area, north of the city of Molodechno, near Smorgon (Belarus). On July 9, 1917, according to the plans of the Headquarters, the Western Front was supposed to go on the offensive. On July 7, the 525th Kyuryuk-Darya Infantry Regiment of the 132nd Infantry Division, which included shock troops, received an order to take positions at the front near the town of Krevo.

The "death battalion" was on the right flank of the regiment. On July 8, 1917, he entered into battle for the first time, since the enemy, knowing about the plans of the Russian command, launched a preemptive strike and wedged itself into the location of the Russian troops. Over three days, the regiment repelled 14 attacks by German troops. Several times the battalion launched counterattacks and knocked the Germans out of the Russian positions occupied the day before. Many commanders noted the desperate heroism of the women's battalion on the battlefield. So Colonel V.I. Zakrzhevsky, in his report on the actions of the “death battalion,” wrote: “Bochkareva’s detachment behaved heroically in battle, always in the front line, serving on an equal basis with the soldiers. When the Germans attacked, on his own initiative he rushed as one into a counterattack; brought cartridges, went to secrets, and some to reconnaissance; With their work, the death squad set an example of bravery, courage and calmness, raised the spirit of the soldiers and proved that each of these female heroes is worthy of the title of warrior of the Russian revolutionary army.” Even General Anton Denikin, the future leader of the White movement, who was very skeptical of such “army surrogates,” recognized the outstanding valor of female soldiers. He wrote: “The women’s battalion, attached to one of the corps, valiantly went on the attack, not supported by the “Russian heroes.” And when the pitch hell of enemy artillery fire broke out, the poor women, having forgotten the technique of scattered combat, huddled together - helpless, alone in their section of the field, loosened by German bombs. We suffered losses. And the “heroes” partly returned, and partly did not leave the trenches at all.”


Bochkareva is first on the left.

There were 6 nurses, formerly actual doctors, factory workers, office workers and peasants who also came to die for their country.One of the girls was only 15 years old. Her father and two brothers died at the front, and her mother was killed when she was working in a hospital and came under fire. At 15 years old, they could only pick up a rifle and join the battalion. She thought she was safe here.

According to Bochkareva herself, out of 170 people who took part in the hostilities, the battalion lost up to 30 people killed and up to 70 wounded. Maria Bochkareva, herself wounded in this battle for the fifth time, spent a month and a half in the hospital and was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant. After recovery, she received an order from the new Supreme Commander-in-Chief Lavr Kornilov to inspect the women’s battalions, of which there were already almost a dozen.

After the October Revolution, Bochkareva was forced to disband her battalion home, and she again headed to Petrograd. In winter, she was detained by the Bolsheviks on the way to Tomsk. After refusing to cooperate with the new authorities, she was accused of counter-revolutionary activities, and the matter almost reached the tribunal. Thanks to the help of one of her former colleagues, Bochkareva broke free and, dressed as a sister of mercy, traveled across the country to Vladivostok, from where she sailed on a campaign trip to the USA and Europe. American journalist Isaac Don Levin, based on Bochkareva’s stories, wrote a book about her life, which was published in 1919 under the title “Yashka” and was translated into several languages. In August 1918, Bochkareva returned to Russia. In 1919 she went to Omsk to see Kolchak. Aged and exhausted from wanderings, Maria Leontyevna came to ask for resignation, but the Supreme Ruler persuaded Bochkareva to continue serving. Maria made passionate speeches in two Omsk theaters and recruited 200 volunteers in two days. But the days of the Supreme Ruler of Russia and his army were already numbered. Bochkareva’s detachment turned out to be of no use to anyone.

When the Red Army occupied Tomsk, Bochkareva herself came to the city commandant. The commandant took her undertaking not to leave the place and sent her home. On January 7, 1920, she was arrested and then sent to Krasnoyarsk. Bochkareva gave frank and ingenuous answers to all the investigator’s questions, which put the security officers in a difficult position. No clear evidence of her “counter-revolutionary activities” could be found; Bochkareva also did not participate in hostilities against the Reds. Ultimately, the special department of the 5th Army issued a resolution: “For more information, the case, along with the identity of the accused, should be sent to the Special Department of the Cheka in Moscow.”

Perhaps this promised a favorable outcome, especially since the death penalty in the RSFSR was once again abolished by a resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars. But, unfortunately, the deputy head of the Special Department of the Cheka, I.P., arrived in Siberia. Pavlunovsky, endowed with extraordinary powers. The “representative of Moscow” did not understand what confused the local security officers in the case of Maria Leontyevna. On the resolution, he wrote a short resolution: “Bochkareva Maria Leontievna - shoot.” On May 16, 1920, the sentence was carried out. On the cover of the criminal case, the executioner wrote a note in blue pencil: “The fast has been fulfilled. May 16th." But in the conclusion of the Russian prosecutor’s office on the rehabilitation of Bochkareva in 1992, it is said that there is no evidence of her execution. Russian biographer of Bochkareva S.V. Drokov believes that she was not shot: Isaac Don Levin rescued her from the Krasnoyarsk dungeons, and with him she went to Harbin. Having changed her last name, Bochkareva lived on the Chinese Eastern Railway until 1927, until she shared the fate of Russian families forcibly deported to Soviet Russia.

In the fall of 1917, there were about 5,000 female warriors in Russia. Their physical strength and abilities were similar to all women, ordinary women. There was nothing special about them. They just had to learn how to shoot and kill. The women trained 10 hours a day. Former peasants made up 40% of the battalion.

Women's Death Battalion soldiers receive a blessing before going into battle, 1917.

Russian women's battalions could not go unnoticed in the world. Journalists (such as Bessie Beatty, Rita Dorr and Louise Bryant from America) would interview the women and photograph them to later publish a book.

Female soldiers of the 1st Russian female death battalion, 1917

Maria Bochkareva and her Women's Battalion

Women's battalion from Petrograd. They drink tea and relax in the field camp.

Maria Bochkareva with Emmeline Pankhurst

Women's Death Battalion" in Tsarskoe Selo.

Maria Bochkareva is in the center, teaching shooting.

female recruits in Petrograd in 1917

Death Battalion, soldier on duty, Petrograd, 1917.

They drink tea. Petrograd 1917

These girls defended the Winter Palace.

1st Petrograd Women's Battalion

Commander of the Petrograd Military District, General Polovtsev and Maria Bochkareva in front of the formation of the women's battalion

MARIA BOCHKAREVA


Bochkareva Maria Leontievna (née Frolkova, July 1889 - May 1920) - often considered the first Russian female officer(produced during the 1917 revolution). Bochkareva created the first women's battalion in the history of the Russian army. Knight of the St. George's Cross.

In July 1889, the peasants of the village of Nikolskoye, Kirillovsky district, Novgorod province, Leonty Semenovich and Olga Eleazarovna Frolkova, had a third child - daughter Marusya. Soon the family, escaping poverty, moved to Siberia, where the government promised the settlers large plots of land and financial support. But, apparently, it was not possible to escape poverty here either. At the age of fifteen, Maria was married off. In the book of the Resurrection Church, the following entry dated January 22, 1905 was preserved: “In his first marriage, Afanasy Sergeevich Bochkarev, 23 years old, of the Orthodox religion, living in the Tomsk province, Tomsk district of the Semiluksk volost of the village of Bolshoye Kuskovo, married the girl Maria Leontyevna Frolkova, of the Orthodox religion...” . They settled in Tomsk. Married life almost immediately went wrong, and Bochkareva broke up with her drunkard husband without regret. Maria left him for the butcher Yakov Buk. In May 1912, Buk was arrested on charges of robbery and sent to serve his sentence in Yakutsk. Bochkareva followed him on foot to Eastern Siberia, where they opened a butcher shop as a cover, although in reality Buk lived in a gang of Honghuz. Soon the police were on the trail of the gang, and Buk was transferred to a settlement in the taiga village of Amga.

Although Bochkareva again followed in his footsteps, her betrothed started drinking and began to engage in assault. At this time the First World War broke out. Bochkareva decided to join the ranks of the active army and, parting with her Yashka, arrived in Tomsk. The military refused to enroll the girl in the 24th reserve battalion and advised her to go to the front as a nurse. Then Bochkareva sent a telegram to the Tsar, which unexpectedly received a positive response. That's how she got to the front.
At first, the woman in uniform caused ridicule and harassment from her colleagues, but her courage in battle brought her universal respect, the St. George Cross and three medals. In those years, the nickname “Yashka” stuck to her, in memory of her unlucky life partner. After two wounds and countless battles, Bochkareva was promoted to senior non-commissioned officer.

In 1917, Kerensky turned to Bochkareva with a request to organize a “women’s death battalion”; His wife and St. Petersburg institutes, totaling up to 2000 people, were involved in the patriotic project. In the unusual military unit, iron discipline reigned: subordinates complained to their superiors that Bochkareva was “beating people in the face like a real sergeant of the old regime.” Not many could withstand such treatment: in a short time the number of female volunteers was reduced to three hundred. The rest were assigned to a special women's battalion that defended the Winter Palace during the October Revolution.

In the summer of 1917, Bochkareva’s detachment distinguished itself at Smorgon; his tenacity made an indelible impression on the command (Anton Denikin). After a shell shock received in that battle, warrant officer Bochkareva was sent to recover in a Petrograd hospital, and in the capital she received the rank of second lieutenant, but soon after returning to her position she had to disband the battalion, due to the actual collapse of the front and the October Revolution.

In winter, she was detained by the Bolsheviks on the way to Tomsk. After refusing to cooperate with the new authorities, she was accused of having relations with General Kornilov, and the matter almost came to court. Thanks to the help of one of her former colleagues, Bochkareva broke free and, dressed as a sister of mercy, traveled across the country to Vladivostok, from where she sailed on a campaign trip to the USA and Europe.

In April 1918, Bochkareva arrived in San Francisco. With the support of the influential and wealthy Florence Harriman, the daughter of a Russian peasant crossed the United States and was granted an audience with President Woodrow Wilson at the White House on July 10. According to eyewitnesses, Bochkareva’s story about her dramatic fate and pleas for help against the Bolsheviks moved the president to tears.


After visiting London, where she met with King George V and secured his financial support, Bochkareva arrived in Arkhangelsk in August 1918. She hoped to rouse local women to fight the Bolsheviks, but things went poorly. General Marushevsky, in an order dated December 27, 1918, announced that conscripting women into military service unsuitable for them would be a disgrace for the population of the Northern Region, and forbade Bochkareva to wear the officer’s uniform self-proclaimed to her.

The following year she was already in Tomsk under the banner of Admiral Kolchak, trying to put together a battalion of nurses. She regarded Kolchak’s flight from Omsk as a betrayal and voluntarily came to the local authorities, who took her undertaking not to leave.

Siberian period (19th year, on the Kolchak fronts...)

A few days later, during a church service, 31-year-old Bochkareva was taken into custody by security officers. Clear evidence of her treason or collaboration with the whites could not be found, and the proceedings dragged on for four months. According to the Soviet version, on May 16, 1920, she was shot in Krasnoyarsk on the basis of a resolution by the head of the Special Department of the Cheka of the 5th Army, Ivan Pavlunovsky, and his deputy Shimanovsky. But the conclusion of the Russian prosecutor's office on the rehabilitation of Bochkareva in 1992 said that there was no evidence of her execution.


Women's battalions

M.V. Rodzianko, who arrived in April on a propaganda trip to the Western Front, where Bochkareva served, specifically asked for a meeting with her and took her with him to Petrograd to agitate “war to a victorious end” among the troops of the Petrograd garrison and among the delegates of the soldiers’ congress deputies of the Petrograd Soviet. In a speech to the delegates of the congress, Bochkareva first voiced her idea of ​​​​creating shock women’s “death battalions.” After this, she was invited to a meeting of the Provisional Government to repeat her proposal.

“They told me that my idea was great, but I needed to report to the Supreme Commander-in-Chief Brusilov and consult with him. Together with Rodzianka, I went to Brusilov’s Headquarters. Brusilov told me in his office that you hope for women, and that the formation of a women’s battalion is the first in the world. Can’t women disgrace Russia? I told Brusilov that I myself am not confident in women, but if you give me full authority, then I guarantee that my battalion will not disgrace Russia. Brusilov told me that he believes me, and will try in every possible way to help in the formation of a women’s volunteer battalion.”


Battalion recruits

On June 21, 1917, on the square near St. Isaac's Cathedral, a solemn ceremony was held to present the new military unit with a white banner with the inscription “The first female military command of the death of Maria Bochkareva.” On June 29, the Military Council approved the regulation “On the formation of military units from female volunteers.”

“Kerensky listened with obvious impatience. It was obvious that he had already made a decision on this matter. He doubted only one thing: whether I could maintain high morale and ethics in this battalion. Kerensky said that he would allow me to begin formation immediately<…>When Kerensky accompanied me to the door, his gaze settled on General Polovtsev. He asked him to provide me with any necessary assistance. I almost suffocated with happiness."

The appearance of Bochkareva’s unit served as an impetus for the formation of women’s units in other cities of the country (Kyiv, Minsk, Poltava, Kharkov, Simbirsk, Vyatka, Smolensk, Irkutsk, Baku, Odessa, Mariupol), but due to the intensifying processes of destruction of the entire state, the creation of these women’s units parts were never completed.


Recruit training

Officially, as of October 1917, there were: 1st Petrograd Women's Death Battalion, 2nd Moscow Women's Death Battalion, 3rd Kuban Women's Shock Battalion (infantry); Marine women's team (Oranienbaum); Cavalry 1st Petrograd Battalion of the Women's Military Union; Minsk separate guard squad of female volunteers. The first three battalions visited the front; only Bochkareva’s 1st battalion saw combat.

The mass of soldiers and the Soviets perceived the “women’s death battalions” (as well as all other “shock units”) with hostility. The front-line soldiers did not call the shock workers anything other than prostitutes. At the beginning of July, the Petrograd Soviet demanded that all “women’s battalions” be disbanded, both because they were “unsuitable for military service” and because the formation of such battalions “is a secretive maneuver of the bourgeoisie who want to wage the war to a victorious end.”



Ceremonial farewell to the front of the First Women's Battalion. Photo. Moscow, Red Square. summer 1917

On June 27, the “battalion of death” consisting of two hundred volunteers arrived in the active army - in the rear units of the 1st Siberian Army Corps of the 10th Army of the Western Front in the region of Molodechno. On July 7, the 525th Kyuryuk-Darya Infantry Regiment of the 132nd Infantry Division, which included shock troops, received an order to take positions at the front near the town of Krevo. The "Death Battalion" took up positions on the right flank of the regiment. On July 8, the first battle of Bochkareva’s battalion took place. 170 women took part in the bloody battles that lasted until July 10. The regiment repelled 14 German attacks. The volunteers launched counterattacks several times. Colonel V.I. Zakrzhevsky wrote in a report on the actions of the “death battalion”:

Bochkareva’s detachment behaved heroically in battle, always in the front line, serving on an equal basis with the soldiers. When the Germans attacked, on his own initiative he rushed as one into a counterattack; brought cartridges, went to secrets, and some to reconnaissance; With their work, the death squad set an example of bravery, courage and calmness, raised the spirit of the soldiers and proved that each of these female heroes is worthy of the title of warrior of the Russian revolutionary army.




Private of the Women's Battalion Pelageya Saigin

The battalion lost 30 people killed and 70 wounded. Maria Bochkareva, herself wounded in this battle for the fifth time, spent 1½ months in the hospital and was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant.

Such heavy losses of volunteers also had other consequences for the women’s battalions - on August 14, the new Commander-in-Chief L. G. Kornilov, by his Order, prohibited the creation of new women’s “death battalions” for combat use, and the already created units were ordered to be used only in auxiliary areas (security functions, communications , sanitary organizations). This led to the fact that many volunteers who wanted to fight for Russia with weapons in their hands wrote statements asking to be dismissed from the “death units”

One of the women's death battalions (1st Petrograd, under the command of the Life Guards Kexholm Regiment: 39 Staff Captain A.V. Loskov), together with cadets and other units loyal to the oath, took part in the defense of the Winter Palace in October 1917. , which housed the Provisional Government.
On November 7, the battalion, stationed near the Levashovo station of the Finnish Railway, was supposed to go to the Romanian Front (according to the command’s plans, each of the formed women’s battalions was supposed to be sent to the front to raise the morale of male soldiers - one to each of the four fronts of the Eastern Front) .



1st Petrograd Women's Battalion
large size

But on November 6, battalion commander Loskov received orders to send the battalion to Petrograd “for a parade” (in fact, to guard the Provisional Government). Loskov, having learned about the real task, not wanting to drag volunteers into a political confrontation, withdrew the entire battalion from Petrograd back to Levashovo, with the exception of the 2nd company (137 people).



2nd company of the 1st Petrograd women's battalion

The headquarters of the Petrograd Military District tried, with the help of two platoons of volunteers and units of cadets, to ensure the construction of the Nikolaevsky, Dvortsovy and Liteiny bridges, but the Sovietized sailors thwarted this task.



Volunteers on the square in front of the Winter Palace. November 7, 1917

The company took up defensive positions on the ground floor of the Winter Palace in the area to the right of the main gate to Millionnaya Street. At night, during the storming of the palace by the revolutionaries, the company surrendered, was disarmed and taken to the barracks of the Pavlovsky, then the Grenadier regiment, where some shockwomen were “treated badly” - as a specially created commission of the Petrograd City Duma established, three shockwomen were raped (although, perhaps, few dared to admit it), one committed suicide. On November 8, the company was sent to its previous location in Levashovo.

After the October Revolution, the Bolshevik government, which set a course for the complete collapse of the army, immediate defeat in the war and the conclusion of a separate peace with Germany, was not interested in preserving the “shock units.” On November 30, 1917, the Military Council of the still old War Ministry issued an order to disband the “women’s death battalions.” Shortly before this, on November 19, by order of the War Ministry, all female military personnel were promoted to officers, “for military merit.” However, many volunteers remained in their units until January 1918 and beyond. Some of them moved to the Don and took part in the fight against Bolshevism in the ranks of the White movement.

In the early morning of July 8, 1917, extraordinary excitement reigned at the location of the 525th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Siberian Corps near the Bogushevsky forest in the Molodechno region near Smorgon. Why, on this day the “women” should start fighting the Germans! Laughter, and that's all! They sent a whole battalion of living women - the soldiers were amused. "Women's Death Battalion" is a circus! There was no longer any discipline at the front, order number one of the Provisional Government made itself felt, allowing the privates to choose their own commanders and discuss whether to obey the orders of the officers or not. The commander of the women's battalion, in which iron discipline reigned, wrote this: “... never before have I met such a ragged, unbridled and demoralized bunch of people called soldiers.”

Suddenly, most of the corps refuses to go into battle at all. Endless rallies begin - to fight or not to fight. For the women's battalion such questions did not arise. They were volunteers and were ready to carry out orders at any time. Although artillery preparation had already been carried out and the front lines of the Germans were pretty battered, no one except the women’s battalion was going to attack. Meanwhile, 75 officers who remained faithful to the oath, led by the commander of the 525th regiment, Lieutenant Colonel Ivanov, approached them and asked to join the women's battalion.

Under desperate German fire, the combined unit took the first line of German trenches in the summer and continued to advance on the edge of the Novospassky and Bogushevsky forests. Seeing the heroism of women and officers, the shamed soldiers began to rise to the attack. As a result, the front was broken through for 4 versts and advanced 3.5 versts in depth. But, occupying the German trenches, the soldiers come across huge stocks of beer and vodka. That's all. Drunkenness and looting ensued. The offensive stalled. The regimental report said this:

“...the companies became sensitive and fearful even to their own shots, not to mention enemy fire. A striking example of this in this regard is the lagging position on the western edge of the Novospassky forest, which was abandoned only by rare enemy fire. Even the victory did not bring the soldiers to consciousness; they refused to remove the trophies, but at the same time, many remained on the battlefield and robbed their own comrades. Crowds of soldiers, loaded with German rubbish, went deep into the rear, where trade in German things took place during the battle. The women, judging by the reports, fought as follows: On July 7, the 525th Infantry Regiment of the 132nd Division received an order to move to a position in the Krevo area. The women's battalion included in the regiment was located on the right flank along with the 1st battalion. On the morning of July 9, the regiment reached the edge of the Novospassky forest and came under artillery fire. Over the course of two days, he repelled 14 enemy attacks and, despite heavy machine-gun fire, launched counterattacks several times. According to the testimony of the regiment's officers, the women's battalion behaved heroically in battle, always in the front line, serving on an equal basis with the soldiers. His losses in the battles of July 9-10 were: 2 killed, 33 wounded and shell-shocked, 5 of them seriously, 2 missing.”

General A.I. Denikin later wrote: “What can I say about the “women’s army”?.. I know the fate of Bochkareva’s battalion. He was met by the unbridled soldier environment mockingly and cynically. In Molodechno, where the battalion was originally stationed, at night it had to set up a strong guard to guard the barracks... Then the offensive began. The women's battalion, attached to one of the corps, valiantly went on the attack, not supported by the “Russian heroes.” And when the pitch hell of enemy artillery fire broke out, the poor women, having forgotten the technique of loose formation, huddled together - helpless, alone in their section of the field, loosened by German bombs. We suffered losses. And the “heroes” partly returned, and partly did not leave the trenches at all.”

Who is warrant officer Maria Bochkareva, by the way, who was wounded in that memorable battle near Molodechno and promoted to the rank of second lieutenant, and what kind of “women’s death battalion” did she lead?


Maria Bochkareva

In 1919, Bochkareva’s memoirs “Yashka. My life as a peasant, an officer and an exile.” The book is not a reliable source, because it was written from the words of a not particularly literate woman - only at the age of 26 she was able to read syllables for the first time in her life, and then write her name. The book she studied from was a popular detective story in Russia about the American detective Nick Carter.

Maria Bochkareva (Frolkova) was born in July 1889 in the family of Leonty Semenovich and Olga Eleazarovna Frolkova, in the village of Nikolskoye, Kirillovsky district, Novgorod province. Besides her, there were two more daughters in the family. When the girl turned six years old, the family moved to Siberia to receive a plot of land under the resettlement program. Marusya was sent to work as a servant, first to look after the child, then to the shop. At the age of 16, Maria gets married. There is an entry in the book of the Ascension Church dated January 22, 1905: “In his first marriage, Afanasy Sergeevich Bochkarev, 23 years old, of the Orthodox faith, living in the Tomsk province, Tomsk district, Semiluzhskaya volost, the village of Bolshoye Kuskovo,” married “the maiden Maria Leontyeva Frolkova. .. of the Orthodox religion, living in the Tomsk province, Tomsk district, Novo-Kuskovskaya volost, Ksenyevsky village.”

Mary's marriage was not easy. Afanasy drank, she worked hard. She laid pavements in Irkutsk. At first she was a worker, then an assistant foreman. She cannot stand her husband’s drinking bouts, breaks up with him, becomes seriously ill, and loses her job. He is hired again as a servant.

Later, she meets Yankel Buk, falls in love with him, and he becomes her common-law husband. Buk, considered a law-abiding peasant of the Chita district, was engaged in robbery together with Chinese Honghuz bandits. With this money he opens a butcher shop. Maria has a happy family life. She has no idea about her husband's criminal business. But in May 1912, Yakov (Yankel) Buk was arrested, exile or hard labor awaited him.

Maria decided to share the fate of her loved one and in May 1913 she went with him on a convoy to Yakutsk. The distribution list for the administrative exile Yankel Gershev Buk reports that by decree of the Irkutsk Governor-General of August 18, 1912, he was expelled “under the public supervision of the police to the Yakut region for the entire duration of martial law in the Trans-Baikal region. Arrived in Yakutsk on July 14, 1913. To prevent Buk from being sent further to Kolymsk, Maria surrendered to the Yakut governor I. Kraft. Having a hard time experiencing her betrayal, she tried to poison herself. Kraft released Buk from prison, but demanded a new meeting with Bochkareva. The unfortunate woman told about Governor Buku, and he decided to kill him. But Buk was arrested in the governor’s office and deported to the Yakut settlement of Amga. Maria followed him again. However, from the memoirs one can understand that the relationship between Mary and Jacob was very tense; he was capable of beating or even killing his faithful wife for the slightest reason.

Now it is difficult to judge the truth of this information; perhaps the real facts of the life of this amazing woman are intertwined with the journalistic speculation of the American authors of the book, recording the story of her life.


Volunteers

Meanwhile, in August 1914, the First World War began. His personal life did not work out; we know nothing more about the fate of the robber Buk. Maria decided to become a soldier. She recalled: “My heart strove there - into a boiling cauldron, to be baptized in fire, to be tempered in lava. The spirit of sacrifice entered into me. My country was calling me."

Arriving in Tomsk in November 1914, Bochkareva turned to the commander of the 25th reserve battalion with a request to enroll her as a volunteer. Naturally, she is refused. Then she sends a telegram to the Tsar with her last money and, miraculously, receives the highest approval. In February 1915, the regiment formed in Siberia, together with the civilian Bochkareva, was assigned to the 2nd Army near Molodechno. Bochkareva ended up at the front line of the 5th Army Corps, in the 28th Polotsk Regiment of the 7th Division. When asked by her colleagues what to call her, short names and nicknames were then accepted in the army, Maria, remembering Buk, answered: “Yashka.” This name became her pseudonym for many years.

Maria turned out to be a brave soldier: she pulled the wounded from the battlefield, once pulled fifty people from the battlefield, and she herself was wounded four times. Moreover, she herself went on bayonet attacks in the advanced detachments! She was given the ranks of junior non-commissioned officer and senior non-commissioned officer and was entrusted with platoon command. She was awarded two St. George's crosses, two St. George's medals and the medal "For Bravery".


At the training camp in Levashovo

The February Revolution of 1917 brought discord among the troops and endless glorification of rallies. At one of these events, Bochkareva, who had already become a legendary war hero, met the Chairman of the IV State Duma M.V. Rodzianko, who invites her to Petrograd. There, during the congress of soldiers' delegates in the Tauride Palace, the idea came to her (or maybe it was suggested to her) about creating a women's battalion. Bochkareva, known throughout the front, is invited by A.F. Kerensky, she discusses her project with General A.A. Brusilov. Maria spoke at the Mariinsky Palace with an appeal:

“Citizens, everyone who values ​​the freedom and happiness of Russia, hurry into our ranks, hurry, before it’s too late, to stop the decay of our dear homeland. By direct participation in hostilities, not sparing our lives, we, citizens, must raise the spirit of the army and through educational and propaganda work in its ranks, instill a reasonable understanding of the duty of a free citizen to his homeland... The following rules are mandatory for all members of the detachments:

1. Honor, freedom and the good of the homeland are in the foreground;
2. Iron discipline;
3. Firmness and steadfastness of spirit and faith;
4. Courage and bravery;
5. Accuracy, accuracy, perseverance and speed in executing orders;
6. Impeccable honesty and serious attitude to business;
7. Cheerfulness, politeness, kindness, friendliness, cleanliness and accuracy;
8. Respect for other people's opinions, complete trust in each other and the desire for nobility;
9. Quarrels and personal scores are unacceptable, as they degrade human dignity.”

Bochkareva speaks:

“If I undertake the formation of a women’s battalion, I will be responsible for every woman in it. I will introduce strict discipline and will not allow them to speak or roam the streets. When Mother Russia dies, there is neither time nor need to control the army through committees. Even though I am a simple Russian peasant, I know that only discipline can save the Russian army. In the battalion I propose, I will have complete sole authority and seek obedience. Otherwise, there is no need to create a battalion.”

Soon her appeal was published in the newspapers. Many women had a great desire to enlist in the army; soon about two thousand applications fell on the table of the founders of the women's battalion. The Main Directorate of the General Staff took the initiative to divide all volunteers into three categories. The first was to include those who directly fight at the front; the second category is auxiliary units made up of women (communications, railway security); and finally, the third is nurses in hospitals. According to the conditions of admission, any woman aged 16 years (with parental permission) to 40 years old could become a volunteer. At the same time, she had to have an educational qualification and pass a medical examination, which identified and screened out pregnant women.

Women underwent a medical examination and had their hair cut almost bald. On the first day, Bochkareva expels 30 people from the battalion, and on the second - 50. The reasons are usual - giggling, flirting with male instructors, failure to follow orders. She constantly encourages women to remember that they are soldiers and take their responsibilities more seriously.


1st Petrograd Women's Battalion

The recruits were quite educated, unlike the bulk of the army, where only a few were literate. And here up to 30 percent turned out to be student students (there were also Bestuzhevkas, graduates of the most prestigious women's educational institution) and up to 40 percent had a secondary education. There were sisters of mercy, domestic servants, peasants and bourgeois women, and university graduates. There were also representatives of very famous families - Princess Tatueva from a famous Georgian family, Dubrovskaya - the daughter of a general, N.N. was the battalion adjutant. Skrydlova is the daughter of an admiral of the Black Sea Fleet.

On June 21, the “Women's Battalion of Death” - as it was called because of strict discipline and a sincere desire not to spare life to defend the Motherland - was presented with a banner. General L.G. Kornilov presented Maria Bochkareva with a revolver and a saber with a gold hilt, Kerensky read out the order to promote her to ensign. 300 women from the initial recruitment went to the front lines on June 23, being assigned to the 172nd division of the 1st Siberian Corps.

Similar women's volunteer groups began to emerge everywhere. 1st Petrograd Women's Death Battalion, 2nd Moscow Women's Death Battalion, 3rd Kuban Women's Shock Battalion (infantry); Women's naval team in Oranienbaum; Cavalry 1st Petrograd Battalion of the Women's Military Union; Minsk separate guard squad of female volunteers.

At the beginning of 1918, all these formations were disbanded by the Soviet government.

Maria Bochkareva lived another fantastic few years. After the collapse of the Provisional Government and the Bolsheviks coming to power, she, on instructions from Lavr Kornilov, went to the United States to ask for help from the allies to fight the new government. The poorly literate woman did not understand the intricacies of big politics, but she sincerely loved her Motherland. She achieved a meeting with US President Woodrow Wilson, and in Great Britain she met with King George the Fifth. This is how she very naively later talks about this audience during interrogation at the Cheka:

“In mid-August 1918, the king’s secretary arrived in a car and handed me a piece of paper that said that the King of England was receiving me for 5 minutes, and I put on a military officer’s uniform, put on the orders I received in Russia and, with my translator Robinson, went to king's palace She entered the hall, and a few minutes later the door opened and the King of England came out. He bore a great resemblance to Tsar Nicholas II. I went to meet the king. He told me that he was very glad to see the second Joan of Arc and as a friend of Russia, I greet you as a woman who has done a lot for Russia. In response, I told him that I consider it a great happiness to see the king of free England. The king invited me to sit down and sat down opposite me. The king asked what party I belonged to and whom I believed; I said that I don’t belong to any group, but that I only believe in General Kornilov. The king told me the news that Kornilov had been killed; I told the king that I don’t know who to believe now, and I don’t think about fighting in a civil war. The king told me: “You are a Russian officer,” I answered him yes; the king then said that “You have a direct duty to go to Russia, to Arkhangelsk, in four days, and I hope for you that you will work.” I told the King of England: “I obey!”

Energetic Maria travels to Arkhangelsk, Siberia, where she organizes combat battalions and medical teams, meets with Kolchak and other leaders of the White movement. But it is very difficult for a rather naive but honest woman to fully understand where the enemies are and where the friends are. Almost unbearable. The cunning British and other yesterday's allies are turning away from her.

When Soviet power was established in Toska, Maria Bochkareva “Yashka” came to the city commandant in December 1919, handed over a revolver to him and offered her services. The commandant sent her home. However, on January 7, 1920, she was arrested and put in prison, from where she was transferred to Krasnoyarsk in March.

In the conclusion to the final protocol of her interrogation dated April 5, 1920, investigator Pobolotin noted that “Bochkareva’s criminal activities before the RSFSR have been proven by the investigation... I believe that Bochkareva, as an irreconcilable and worst enemy of the workers’ and peasants’ republic, will be transferred to the disposal of the head of the special department of the Cheka of the 5th army.” .

On April 21, 1920, a resolution was passed: “For more information, the case, together with the identity of the accused, should be sent to the Special Department of the Cheka in Moscow.” On May 15, this resolution was revised and a new decision was made: Bochkareva should be shot.

March forward, forward to battle,
Women soldiers!
The dashing sound calls you into battle,
The adversaries will tremble!

(From the song of the 1st Petrograd Women's Battalion)

Vladimir Kazakov



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