Background
KAZANSKIY, Yevgeniy was born on January 21, 1896 in village Naryshkino, Oryol Province. Son of a village priest.
KAZANSKIY, Yevgeniy was born on January 21, 1896 in village Naryshkino, Oryol Province. Son of a village priest.
1912 graduate Oryol Theological Seminary. 1913 graduate first course at Kiev Polytech School. 1914 graduate Pavel Military College.
1924 graduate Red Army High Command Military Academy Courses.
From 1913 in Russian Army. 1914-1918 platoon, then company commander. Commanded regt machine-gun unit
From 1918 in Red Army. 1918 machine-gunner; commanded squad, then armored car. 1919-1920 commanded rebel detachments in the Black Sea littoral behind the White lines.
Commander, Black Sea Soviet "Green” (partisan) Army. 1920-1925 assistant head, 6th Petrograd Infantry Courses. Commandant and comissar, Petrograd Sklyanskiy Infantry School.
1926-1931 commander, 2nd, then 1st Turkestani Division in Centr Asia, Stepin 2nd Caucasian Infantry Division, then 13th Dagestan Infantry Division in the Caucasus. 1932-1936 chief of staff for military training establishments, Main Red Army Board;head, Red Army Military Training Establishments Board. 1934-1936 simultaneously member, Military Council, Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics People's Commissariat of Defense.
1936-1937 commander, 5th Infantry Corps. After 1917 February Revol carried out Bolshevik work on soldiers’ comt in Batumi. August 1918 conducted underground Bolshevik work in Baku against local democratic authorities until he was tracked down and had to flee to Georgia
1919 arrested by Menshevik government organs and imprisoned. Liberated under Menshevik Geo pledge to Soviet Russia not to persecute Bolsheviks. March 1921 during suppression of Kronstadt Mutiny headed Northern Combat Sector, Soviet Punitive Force.
1926-1928 fought against Basmachi in Centr Asia. 1937 arrested by People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs.
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.
Communist Party member from 1917.