Background
Chibisov, Nikandr was born in 1892.
Chibisov, Nikandr was born in 1892.
Graduated from the Frunze Military Academy, 1935.
He participated in the 1st World War, Civil War, Soviet-Finnish 1939-1940 wars and the Great Patriotic War. In June 1942,he was Deputy Commander of the Bryansk Front. Temporarily commanded the Bryansk front. From July14 1942, again became deputy commander and at the same time commander of the operational group of the Bryansk Front, which was fighting on the outskirts of Voronezh. In August 1942, he was appointed commander of the 38th Army of the Bryansk (from September - Voronezh) Front. He took part in the Voronezh-Voroshilovgrad strategic defensive operation, the offensive operations of the Bryansk and Voronezh fronts in the summer and autumn of 1942, the Voronezh-Kastorno offensive operation of 1943. Furthermore he was a commander of the 3rd (November 1943 - April 1944), 1st (April - May 1944) Shock Army and head of the Frunze Military Academy (1944-1948), assistant Commander of the Forces of the Belorussian Military District (1949-1954).
Religious leaders contribute to secular and religious wars by endorsing or supporting the violence.
The emphasis on peaceful coexistence doesn’t mean that the Soviet Union accepted a static world with clear lines. Socialism is inevitable and the "correlations of forces" were moving towards socialism.
General Fotii Kobrisov, the protagonist of the 1994 novel The General and His Army by Georgi Vladimov, was based on Chibisov. The book focused on the Battle of Moscow (1941) and the Battle of Kiev (1943). The novel differed from the real-life biography of Chibisov in that he did not take part in the former.[1] The book was awarded the Russian Booker Prize in 1995 and the Sakharov Prize in 2000.