Kolchak Coup

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Kolchak Coup
Part of the Russian Civil War

Admiral Kolchak at the center of his inner circle, 1918.
Date18 November 1918
Location
Status Admiral Kolchak becomes Supreme Ruler of Russia
Belligerents

Siberian Army

  • 1st Siberian Cossack Regiment

Russia Provisional All-Russian Government

  • Directory Security Battalion
Commanders and leaders
Russia Alexander Kolchak
Vyacheslav Volkov
Russia Nikolai Avksentiev
Casualties and losses
1 killed
batallion surrendered

The Kolchak Coup or Omsk Coup[1][2][3][4][5] refers to the events of 18 November 1918, when members associated with the left wing of the Directory (Provisional All-Russian Government) were arrested by members of the White Army in Omsk and the subsequent decision of the All-Russian Council of Ministers to transfer sole supreme power to Alexander Kolchak, the Minister of Military and Naval Affairs.

Context[edit]

According to Russian historian Valentina Dmitrievna Zimina [ru], the events that took place in Omsk on 18 November 1918 were generally the result of the struggle between two systems of government that unfolded after the overthrow of Soviet power in the Volga region and Siberia: the Omsk non-party “right” principle, personified by the Provisional Siberian Government, and the Samara narrow-party “left” principle represented by KOMUCH.[6][7]

Events of 18 November[edit]

On the night of 17 November, an incident occurred that seemed insignificant to eyewitnesses: at a city banquet in honor of the French General Janin, three high-ranking Cossack officers - the head of the Omsk garrison, Colonel of the Siberian Cossack Army Vyacheslav Ivanovich Volkov. The Directory, several of whom were members of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, was irritated as Russian military sergeants demanded the Russian Imperial Anthem "God Save the Tsar!" to be performed. The Directory ordered the arrest of the military sergeants for “inappropriate behavior”.

Without waiting for their own arrest, Volkov then carried out the arrest of the left wing of the Provisional All-Russian Government instead.

Not a single military unit came out in support of the Directory. The Directory security battalion, consisting of Socialist Revolutionaries, was proactively disarmed by military members as part of the coup. Kolchak did not personally participate in the coup, but was informed by the conspirators.[8]

The next morning, the Council of Ministers met after the arrest of the Social Revolutionaries, the ministers decided on the need to assume full supreme power and then transfer it to an elected person who would lead on the principles of unity of command. The election was held on a secret ballot using closed notes and Admiral Alexander Kolchak was chosen.[9]

Kolchak was promoted to full admiral, the exercise of supreme state power was transferred to him and he was awarded the title of Supreme Ruler. All the armed forces of the state were subordinate to him. The Supreme Ruler was given the authority to take any measures, even emergency ones, to ensure the armed forces, as well as to establish civil order and legality.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Nikolai Golovin. Russian Counter-Revolution in 1917-1918 (in Russian). ISBN 9785811243181.
  2. ^ Ivan Fedorovich Plotnikov (1998). Александр Васильевич Колчак. Жизнь и деятельность [Aleksandr Vasilʹevich Kolchak. Life and work] (in Russian). Phoenix Publishing House.
  3. ^ Vladimir Zenzinov (1919). The coup d'etat of Admiral Kolchak in Omsk, 18 November 1918. Collection of documents (in Russian).
  4. ^ "About the history of the Omsk coup d'état (November 18-19, 1918)". Sibirskaya-Zaimka (in Russian).
  5. ^ Vadim Zhuravlev. "'Having Given That Person the Name of the Supreme Governor': On the Title Assumed by Admiral A. V. Kolchak on 18th November 1918". CyberLeninka (in Russian).
  6. ^ Zimina, Valentina Dmitrievna (2006). The White movement of Russia in rebellion: political regimes of the civil war. 1917-1920 (in Russian). p. 145. ISBN 5-7281-0806-7.
  7. ^ "Encyclopedia Britannica | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  8. ^ "The White Movement in South Russia:", Civil War in South Russia, 1919-1920, University of California Press, pp. 309–320, 1 September 2023, ISBN 978-0-520-32780-1, retrieved 6 April 2024
  9. ^ Zyri︠a︡nov, Pavel (2012). Admiral Kolchak, verkhovnyĭ pravitelʹ Rossii. Zhiznʹ zamechatelʹnykh li︠u︡deĭ. Serii︠a︡ biografiĭ (in Russian). Moscow: Molodai︠a︡ gvardii︠a︡. ISBN 978-5-235-03375-7.