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The Dagestan uprising of 1920-1921 was an event during the Russian Civil War (the Murid War of 1830-1859 took place in the same area).
By the spring of 1920 Bolshevik forces controlled most of the Caucasus area except Georgia. The uprising began in September 1920 and by the end of the year the rebels controlled most of mountain Dagestan. The Reds brought in more and more troops and defeated the rebels by March 1921, but fighting went on until the end of May.
The Bolshevik troops greatly outnumbered the rebels, but most were Russians who knew little of the mountains. The Red officers made a number of mistakes. The resistance was led by the same Naqshbandi brotherhood that had supported Shamil. Most of the native Bolsheviks had been killed earlier in the war.
The military geography had changed a good bit since the time of Shamil. Baku was now an oil boom town. There was a railroad up the coast from Baku which connected to the main rail network of Russia. Petrovsk (formerly Tarki, now Makhachkala) was an important port with a working class that might support the Bolsheviks. From Petrovsk there was a road and railroad to the military center of Temir-Khan-Shura (Buynaksk). From there a good road led south to the important road junction of Khanzhalmikhe. From it poorer roads led east and south. Also from Khanzhalmikhe a road led northwest to the Avar capital of Khunzakh and through Botlikh over the Andi ridge into Chechnya, Shamil’s old capital of Vedeno and Grozny. This U-shaped route avoided the Avar Koysu canyon. The road crossed the canyon at the Salti Bridge west of Khanzhalmikhe, south of which was the Russian fort of Gunib. Most of the fighting was along or inside this U-shape. There were now machine guns. Artillery was more effective and easier to move. Our writers say nothing about trucks, but they do mention armored cars, which the mountaineers could not deal with. The Russians would usually win when they stayed on the roads and relied on numbers and artillery. Their garrisons in the mountains could be surrounded but the mountaineers lacked the artillery and discipline for a proper siege or storm. The Chechens generally stayed out of the fight. They were now oriented towards Vladikavkaz, faced a denser Russian population and were more concerned with the Cossacks who had usually sided with the Whites.
1920[]
The mountaineers had usually supported the Reds against the Whites, but by March 1920 the Whites were driven out and cooperation changed to hostility. In August 1920 a meeting was called at Gidatl to organize resistance. Said Bey, Shamil’s (great-?) grandson, came from Turkey as nominal leader. Early in September rebel bands began crossing the main chain from ‘Menshevik’ Georgia into the upper valleys of the Andi and Avar Koysus. Originally about 600 men, their number soon increased to around 6000 and perhaps 9700 by January 1921. The Reds responded by moving an inadequate force of about 1000 men up to the line Botlikh-Khunzakh-Gunib. In late September much of the Botlikh force moved south and was destroyed. About the same time the Khunzakh force tried to move south and had to fight its way back with heavy loss. On 9 October the rebels captured the Salti bridge, cutting communication between Khunzakh and Gunib, partially besieging them. On 13 October a Red force was sent south from Temir-Khan-Shura to take Arikani but on 30 October it unwisely entered a narrow valley and all 700 men were trapped and killed. After 4 November the Reds brought 2 more regiments from Baku under Tadorsky and relieved Gunib and Khunzakh.
On 9–16 November the so-called First Model Revolutionary Discipline Rifle Regiment went south from Grozny and occupied Botlikh without much trouble. Two days later 250 men went east down the Andi Koysu to Muni, which they looted. They went further downstream to Ortakolo, were surrounded by rebels, including the enraged population of Muni, and were killed to the last man. Botlikh was surrounded, surrendered and all the disarmed Red soldiers were slaughtered, about 700 men, only a few escaping to Grozny. (Broxup says that all the commissars and officers were executed and the enlisted men stripped naked and left to freeze to death). In the second half of November Soviet forces spread out from Khunzakh and Gunib. On 7 December Red units in the Botlikh sector fell back on Khunzakh. On 10 December the rebels took Khanzhalmikhe, effectively besieging Khunzakh and Gunib for a second time. On 20–26 December an attempt to retake Khanzhalmikhe failed.
1921[]
More troops were brought in and on 2 January Khanzhalmikhe fell and 140 prisoners taken. This is the only mention of prisoners taken throughout the war. Gunib was relieved the next day. North up the canyon was Gerghebil which was considered the key to the relief of Kunzakh. On 7 or 8 January 2686 men began the attack. On 26 January the place fell to a night attack. Todorsky justified the heavy losses on the grounds that difficult victories demoralized the enemy. Two days later Khunzakh was relieved for a second time. The next move was north down the canyon to Arikani and Gimry. Arikani fell on 14 February. Gimry had been battered by artillery from late December, ninety percent of the village being destroyed. On 18 February it surrendered.[1] With the core area occupied other places began to surrender. On the 19th Ashitla west of Gimry was occupied by 125 officer cadets. All were killed during the night and the next day 52 mutilated bodies were found. It is not clear what provoked this unusual brutality. The area to the northwest to the Chechen border was occupied: Botlikh (5 March), Andi (9 March) and northward (13 March). On 9–13 March the Dagestan Reds linked up with those in Chechnya. On 15 March the Petrovsk Military Soviet declared the uprising liquidated. Meanwhile, on 25 February, Tiflis was occupied by the Red army. With Georgia now under Soviet control the remaining rebels in Dagestan were surrounded. The rebels made their last stand at Gidatl where the uprising was first organized. It fell in May. Small bands continued to resist until the end of May. The remaining insurgents dispersed to their villages. Said Bey fled to Turkey. The war took the lives of 5000 Reds and an unknown number of mountaineers.
References[]
- William Edward David Allen and Paul Muratoff, Caucasian Battlefields, Epilogue, 1953
- Marie Broxup, 'The Last Ghazawat' in 'The North Caucasus Barrier: The Russian Advance towards the Muslim World', 1992
- ↑ On this Allen/Muratoff contradict Broxup and Broxup contradicts herself several times (page 136-137). Thus neither account can be accepted and we need something better.
The original article can be found at Dagestan uprising and the edit history here.