Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Roman Ungern-Sternberg

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
More languages
(Redirected from Baron Ungern)
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Roman Ungern-Sternberg
Born10 January 1886
Graz, Austria-Hungary
Died15 September 1921
Novonikolayevsk, RSFSR
Cause of deathExecution
NationalityGerman
Political orientationAbsolute monarchism


Nikolai Robert Maximilian Ungern-Sternberg (10 January 1886 – 15 September 1921), also known as Roman Ungern-Sternberg, was a German aristocrat and counterrevolutionary general in Russia and Mongolia during the Russian Civil War.

Russian Civil War

Ungern's forces fled into Manchuria and Mongolia after the Red Army defeated them in Siberia.[1]:283

Invasion of Mongolia

Ungern invaded Mongolia in October 1920, gaining the support of the Mongolian nobility against China, and created a pro-Japanese provisional government led by the nobles Luvsantseven and Zhamyan. He then allied with the Bogd Khan and defeated the Zhili clique in February 1921. He ruthlessly exploited the Mongolian peasants but did not take from the nobility. Ungern executed the Minister for the Western Province and removed the War Minister from office.[1]:283–5

Along with General Rezukhin, Ungern battled the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Army in July 1921. They fled into Russia on 24 July and fled back into Mongolia after the Red Army defeated them at Lake Gusinoye on 5 August. Ungern's own Mongolian troops disarmed him when he tried to advance into western Mongolia. The 35th Cavalry Regiment captured him and took him to Novosibirsk, where he was sentenced to death and executed.[2]:300–1

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 A. A. Guber, et al. (1973). History of the Mongolian People's Republic: 'The Mongolian People's Revolution and the Proclamation of the Mongolian People's Republic'.
  2. A. A. Guber, et al. (1973). History of the Mongolian People's Republic: 'The Mongolian People's Revolution and the Proclamation of the Mongolian People's Republic'.