Eduard Pantserzhanskiy

Eduard Samuilovich Pantserzhanskiy (Russian: Эдуард Самуилович Панцержанский; 12 October [O.S. 30 September] 1887 – 26 September 1937) was a Russian military leader, Commander-in-Chief of the Soviet Naval Forces from December 1921 to December 1924.[1]

Eduard Pantserzhanskiy
Born(1887-10-12)12 October 1887
Liepāja, Courland Governorate, Russian Empire
Died26 September 1937(1937-09-26) (aged 49)
Kommunarka shooting ground, Moscow Oblast, Soviet Union
Allegiance Russian Empire
 Soviet Union
Service/branchImperial Russian Navy, Soviet Navy
Years of service1910–1937
RankVice Admiral
Commands heldSoviet Navy
Battles/warsWorld War I, Russian Civil War

Biography edit

Pantserzhanskiy was born in Liepāja, Latvia the son of a Polish nobleman and studied at the Riga Technical University. He graduated from the Naval Academy in 1910 and joined the Baltic Fleet. Pantserzhanskiy was an officer on the destroyer Grom and fought in the Battle of Moon Sound. During the Civil war he fought on riverine flotillas on Lake Onega and the Volga-Caspian front.

Between 1921 and 1924 Pantserzhanskiy was a commander of the Soviet Navy. From 1924 he joined the general staff holding various commands.

Pantserzhanskiy was denounced in 1937 by Boris Feldman and arrested in June. He was tried, sentenced to death and executed by a firing squad on 26 September 1937 at the Kommunarka shooting ground. Pantserzhanskiy was posthumously rehabilitated in 1956.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ A team of authors, editor-in-chief S. S. Khromov. Civil war and military intervention in the USSR. - M .: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1983 .-- 422 p.
  2. ^ Lazarev S.E. The fate of E.S.Pantserzhansky in the context of the tragic events of the 1930s // Scientific life of the Caucasus. Publishing house of the North Caucasus Scientific Center of Higher School of the Southern Federal University. 2011. No. 2. S. 125–129.
Military offices
Preceded by
Aleksandr Nemits as Commanders of Naval Forces of the Republic ("KoMorSi")
Chief of Naval Forces of U.S.S.R
December 1921 - 9 December 1924
Succeeded by