Battle of Lipyagi

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Battle of Lipyagi
Part of the Russian Civil War

Battle plan
Date4 June 1918
Location
Result Decisive Czechoslovak victory
Belligerents
Bohemia Czechoslovak Legion Soviet Union Red Army
Commanders and leaders
Bohemia Stanislav Čeček Kadomtsev
Strength
1,600 men[1] 4,000 men[2]
Casualties and losses
30 killed and 89 wounded[3] 1,800 killed (including 300 drowned in swamps) and 2,000 captured[4]

The Battle of Lipyagi[5] took place on 4 June 1918 at the Lipyagi railway station in the Volga region. Units of the Czechoslovak legion led by Stanislav Čeček defeated Bolshevik troops which opened their way to rest of the Czechoslovak troops. Legionnaires met with rest of Legion in on 6 July 1918 near Minyar and finally indirectly in the eastern part at the Olovjanaya station.[6] By blocking the Trans-Siberian highway of Czechoslovak legionnaires completely stopped the transport of German and Austro-Hungarian prisoners to the Western and Italian front.

Battle[edit]

Lipyagy is a railway station in the Volga region, west of Samara. After the conclusion of a separate peace between Bolshevik Russia and the Central Powers, representatives of Czechoslovak resistance signed an agreement with the new Russian government on the transfer of legionary units to France via Vladivostok. After the Bolshevik detachments ambushed the trains, legionnaires took control of most of the Trans-Siberian Highway. About 6,000 soldiers under the leadership of Stanislav Čeček remained cut off in European territory.

In May 1918, there were increasingly frequent attacks on the legionnaires, who began to arm themselves again and defend themselves against these raids. The legionnaires near the city of Penza found themselves in the most difficult situation. An attack by the Red Guards was launched against them, but thanks to their indiscipline, the Czechoslovaks overcame them, captured Penza on May 28, and three days later occupied the bridge over the Volga and advanced to Samara. However, the Samara Soviet was not going to accept any compromise and an agreement on the passage of trains, and had fortified positions set up in front of the city at the Lipyagi railway station. At the same time, other troops were called in to surround and eliminate the Czechoslovak legionnaires. Czechoslovak the commanders were aware of this, so they deployed only 1,600 soldiers in the main attack on Lipyagi against 4,000 Red Army soldiers, the rest were to secure additional positions or be in reserve. Thirty minutes after midnight on 4 June 1918, Czechoslovaks began a bypass of the Soviet positions, which in the morning separated the enemy from Samara. At this time there was an attack that completely disrupted the defense of the railway station. Legionnaires penetrated the Soviet positions and the station was occupied.

The battle ended in a major victory for the legions. On the Soviet side, there were 1,500 dead and over 2,000 captured. About 300 more Red Army men drowned in the swamps. The Czechoslovaks had only 30 dead and 89 wounded. They acquired all the weapons and equipment of the defeated. A few Red Army men who managed to escape to Samara caused panic among the Bolsheviks in the city, and they were no longer able to put up any resistance. The Legionnaires freed Samara. The path of the Czechoslovak legions to the east was thus free. The success of the troops on the highway completely stopped the agreed transport of German and Austro-Hungarian prisoners to the Western Front. Several hundred thousand prisoners thus never reinforced the German corps attacking Paris. Although Czechoslovaks, whose only goal was transportation to France, did not get to the Western Front from Russia (with the exception of less than 3 000 men who were transported to France by ship on the so-called "Northern route" via Archangelsk and Murmansk-Murmansk on Masaryk's order), but their activities on the highway helped the Allies of the Agreement to save this front.

Directly in connection with this victorious action Stanislav Čeček fought a successful Battle of Bezenchuk.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Na místě bitvy u Lipjag nás místní komunisté nevítali, říká vnuk generála Petříka". ČT24 (in Czech). Czech Television. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  2. ^ Panuš, Bernard. "Bitva u Lipjag". karelvasatko.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  3. ^ "Slavné bitvy čs. legií - bitva u Lipjag" (in Czech). ČSOL. 17 November 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  4. ^ "Lipjagy 1918". Valka.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  5. ^ "Bitva u Samary a Lipjag". legiefilm.cz (archived) (in Czech). 6 March 2017. Archived from the original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved 7 June 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ Preclík, Vratislav (2019). Masaryk a legie. Paris Karviná. p. 219. ISBN 978-80-87173-47-3.