Psychology      01/23/2021

From "sea soldiers" to "black death. Why the Russian marines are called the "black death" During the Second World War, the Germans called the black death

The first Tuvan volunteers (about 200 people) joined the Red Army in May 1943. After a short training, they were enrolled in the 25th separate tank regiment (from February 1944 it was part of the 52nd army of the 2nd Ukrainian front). This regiment fought on the territory of Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Hungary and Czechoslovakia.

In September 1943, the second group of cavalry volunteers (206 people) was enrolled, after training in Vladimir region, in the 8th Cavalry Division.

The cavalry division took part in raids behind enemy lines in western Ukraine. After the battle near Durazhno in January 1944, the Germans began to call the Tuvans "der schwarze Tod" - "Black Death".

The captured German officer Hans Remke during interrogation said that the soldiers entrusted to him "subconsciously perceived these barbarians (Tuvans) as the hordes of Attila" and lost all combat capability.

Here it must be said that the first Tuvan volunteers were a typical national unit, they were dressed in national costumes and wore amulets. Only at the beginning of 1944 Soviet command asked the Tuvan warriors to send their "objects of the Buddhist and shamanic cult" to their homeland.

The Tuvans fought bravely. The command of the 8th Guards Cavalry Division wrote to the Tuvan government:

“With a clear superiority of the enemy, the Tuvans fought to the death. So in the battles near the village of Surmiche, 10 machine gunners, led by the commander of the Dongur-Kyzyl squad, and the calculation of anti-tank rifles, led by Dazhy-Seren, died in this battle, but did not retreat a single step, fighting to the last bullet. Over 100 enemy corpses were counted in front of a handful of brave men who died the death of heroes. They died, but where the sons of your Motherland stood, the enemy did not pass.

A squadron of Tuvan volunteers freed 80 Western Ukrainian settlements.

This year, the next, already 305th in a row, anniversary will be celebrated by one of the most famous branches of the Russian Armed Forces - the marines. Epochs changed, the political system in the country changed, the color of banners, uniforms and weapons changed. One thing remained the same - high skill and the high moral and psychological level of our marine, who was the image of a true hero, capable of breaking the will of the enemy with just a formidable look. For more than three centuries of existence, the Marine Corps, which has covered itself with unfading glory, has taken part in almost all major wars and armed conflicts waged by our state.

"Marine Regime"

The first regiment of marines in our country, called the "naval regiment" and formed under the command of General Admiral Franz Lefort during the famous Azov expedition conducted by Peter I in 1696, consisted of 28 companies and provided invaluable assistance during the siege of an enemy fortress. The tsar was listed only as a captain (commander) of the 3rd company of that same regiment. The “Naval Regime” was not a regular formation, it was formed only on a temporary basis, however, the experience gained prompted Peter I to make the final decision on the need to “officially” form marine corps units as part of Russian fleet. So, already in September-October 1704, in "Discourse on the Beginning Fleet on the Baltic Sea" Russian emperor pointed out: “It is necessary to make regiments of naval soldiers (depending on the number of the fleet) and divide them into captains forever, to which corporals and sergeants should be taken from old soldiers for the sake of better learning order and order."

However, the course of the hostilities of the summer campaign of 1705 that followed soon forced Peter I to change his mind and instead of disparate teams form a single naval regiment intended to serve in boarding and landing teams on warships of the Russian fleet. Moreover, given the complex nature of the tasks assigned to the "sea soldiers", it was decided to equip the regiment not with newly recruited recruits, but at the expense of already trained soldiers from army regiments. This case was entrusted to General-Admiral Count Fyodor Golovin, who on November 16, 1705, gave the order to the commander of the fleet on the Baltic Sea, Vice-Admiral Cornelius Kruys: so that he consisted of 1200 soldiers, and what belongs to that, what kind of gun and in other things, if you please, write to me and do not leave the others; and how many of all there are or a great reduction was composed, then we will try to find recruits. This date, November 16, according to the old style, or November 27, according to the new style, 1705, is considered the official birthday of the Russian Marine Corps.

Later, taking into account the experience of the Northern War, the marines were reorganized: instead of a regiment, several naval battalions were created - the "vice admiral's battalion" (tasks were assigned to serve as part of the boarding and landing teams on the ships of the squadron's avant-garde); "Admiral's battalion" (the same, but for the ships of the center of the squadron); "Rear Admiral's Battalion" (ships of the rear guard of the squadron); "galley battalion" (for the galley fleet), as well as the "admiralty battalion" (for guard duty and other tasks in the interests of the fleet command). By the way, during the Northern War, for the first time in the world, a large landing formation was formed in Russia - a corps of more than 20 thousand people. So in this we are ahead of even the Americans, who took similar steps only during the Second World War.

From Corfu to Borodino

Since then, our marines have taken part in many battles and wars that have become crucial for Russia. She fought in the Black and Baltic Seas, stormed the fortifications of the fortress of Corfu, which were considered impregnable, landed in Italy and the Balkans, even fought in battles for land plots hundreds and thousands of kilometers away from the sea coast. The commanders repeatedly used the battalions of the Marine Corps, famous for their swift onslaught and powerful bayonet strike, as assault detachments in the directions of the main attack in many battles.

The detachments of the marines took part in the famous assault on Izmail - three of the nine assault columns advancing on the fortress were made up of the personnel of the naval battalions and coastal grenadier regiments. Alexander Suvorov noted that the marines "showed amazing courage and zeal", and in his report he noted eight officers and one sergeant of naval battalions and almost 70 officers and sergeants of coastal grenadier regiments among those who especially distinguished themselves.

During the famous Mediterranean campaign of Admiral Fyodor Ushakov, there were no field troops on his squadron at all - all the tasks of storming coastal structures were solved by the marines of the Black Sea Fleet. Including - she took by storm from the sea the previously considered impregnable fortress of Corfu. Having received the news about the capture of Corfu, Alexander Suvorov wrote the famous lines: “Why was I not at Corfu, although a midshipman!”.

Even under the seemingly completely "land" village of Borodino, even the Marines managed to distinguish themselves and acquire the glory of formidable warriors - steadfast in defense and swift in the offensive. On the land fronts of the Patriotic War of 1812, two brigades formed from naval regiments fought, consolidated into the 25th Infantry Division. In the Battle of Borodino, after the wounding of Prince Bagration, the left flank of the Russian troops withdrew to the village of Semenovskoye, the Life Guards Light Company No. 1 and the artillery team of the Guards Naval Crew advanced here - for several hours the sailors, with only two guns, repelled powerful enemy attacks and fought a duel with the French artillerymen. For the battles at Borodino, artillery sailors were awarded the Order of St. Anna, 3rd degree (Lieutenant A.I. List and non-commissioned lieutenant I.P. Kiselev) and insignia of the Military Order of St. George (six sailors).

Few people know that in the battle of Kulm in 1813 Active participation received by soldiers and officers of the Guards Naval Crew, located in St. Petersburg and formed in 1810, the only formation in the history of our country, and, perhaps, Europe, that was not just a ship's team, but also an elite infantry battalion.

The marines did not stand aside in the Crimean War of 1854-1855, in Russian-Turkish war 1877-1878, in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 and, of course, in the First world war, during which a number of units and units of the marine corps distinguished themselves in the Baltic, taking part in operations to defend naval bases and islands and solving the tasks assigned to them as part of the landing forces. According to the experience of military operations in 1916-1917 in the Black and Baltic Seas, the formation of two divisions of the marine corps began, which, however, for well-known reasons, did not have time to implement.

At the same time, however, more than once, due to the short-sighted policy of the military-political leadership, especially the army command obsessed with the "land character of the country", the Marine Corps was subjected to disastrous reorganization and even complete liquidation, with the transfer of its units to the ground forces. For example, despite the high efficiency of the combat use of the Marine Corps units and the Guards Naval Crew during the wars with Napoleonic France, in 1813 the Marine Corps were transferred to the army department and over the next almost 100 years the Navy did not have any large formations of the Marine Corps. . Even Crimean War and the defense of Sevastopol could not convince the Russian leadership of the need to recreate the marines as a separate branch of the military. Only in 1911 did the Main Naval Staff develop a project for the creation of permanent "infantry units" at the disposal of the command of the main naval bases - a regiment in the Baltic Fleet and a battalion in the Black Sea Fleet and on Far East, in Vladivostok. Moreover, parts of the Marine Corps were divided into two types - for operations on land and for operations on naval theater of operations.

Soviet marines

And what about the events that we usually call the Kronstadt rebellion? There are marines and gunners coastal batteries, constituting the backbone of those dissatisfied with the anti-revolutionary, in their opinion, policy of the then leadership of the Soviet Republic, showed considerable stamina and courage, for a long time repelling the numerous and powerful attacks of a huge mass of troops thrown to suppress the uprising. Until now, there is no unambiguous assessment of those events: there are supporters of both. But no one doubts the fact that the detachments of sailors showed an unbending will and did not show a drop of cowardice and weakness even in the face of an enemy many times superior in strength.

As part of the Armed Forces, young Soviet Russia officially, the Marine Corps did not exist, although in 1920 the 1st Marine Expeditionary Division was formed on the Sea of ​​\u200b\u200bAzov, which solved the tasks inherent in the Marine Corps, took an active part in eliminating the threat from the landing of General Ulagai and contributed to squeezing out the White Guard troops from the Kuban regions. Then, for almost two decades, there was no talk of the marines, only on January 15, 1940 (according to other sources, this happened on April 25, 1940), according to the order of the People's Commissar of the Navy, the separate special rifle brigade created a year earlier was reorganized into the 1st special marine brigade infantry of the Baltic Fleet, which took an active part in the Soviet-Finnish war: its personnel participated in landings on the islands of Gogland, Seskar, etc.

But most fully all the spiritual strength and military skill of our marines were revealed, of course, during the most bloody war in the history of mankind - World War II. On its fronts, 105 formations of marines (hereinafter referred to as MPs) fought: one division of the MP, 19 brigades of the MP, 14 regiments of the MP and 36 separate battalions of the MP, as well as 35 marine rifle brigades. It was then that our marines earned the nickname "black death" from the enemy, although in the first weeks of the war German soldiers, faced with fearless Russian soldiers who rushed to the attack in some vests, they gave the marines the nickname "striped death." During the years of the war, which had a predominantly land character for the USSR, the Soviet marines and naval infantry brigades landed 125 times as part of various assault forces, the total number of units participating in which reached 240 thousand people. Acting independently, the marines - on a smaller scale - landed 159 times during the war in the rear of the enemy. Moreover, the vast majority of landings landed at night, so that by dawn all units of the landing detachments were landed on the shore and took up their assigned positions.

people's war

Already at the very beginning of the war, in the most difficult and difficult for Soviet Union In 1941, the Soviet Navy allocated 146,899 people for operations on land, many of whom were qualified specialists in the fourth and fifth years of service, which, of course, was detrimental to the combat readiness of the fleet itself, but such was a severe need. In November - December of the same year, the formation of separate naval rifle brigades began, which were then formed by 25 with a total number of 39052 people. The main difference between a marine rifle brigade and a marine brigade was that the former was intended for combat operations as part of land fronts, and the latter for combat operations in coastal areas, mainly for the defense of naval bases, amphibious and antiamphibious tasks, etc. In addition, there were also formations and units of the ground forces, in the names of which there was no word "sea", but which were staffed mainly by sailors. Such units can also, without any reservations, be attributed to the marines: during the war years, on the basis of units and formations of the marines, a total of six guards rifle and 15 rifle divisions, two guards rifle, two rifle and four mountain rifle brigades were formed, and a significant number of sailors also fought in the 19 Guards Rifle and 41 Rifle Divisions.

In total, during 1941-1945, the command of the Soviet Navy formed and sent units and formations with a total number of 335,875 people (including 16,645 officers) to various sectors of the Soviet-German front, which amounted to almost 36 divisions in the army states of that time. In addition, units of the Marine Corps, numbering up to 100 thousand people, operated as part of the fleets and flotillas. Thus, almost half a million sailors fought shoulder to shoulder with the soldiers and commanders of the Red Army on the shore alone. And how it fought! According to the memoirs of many military leaders, the command always sought to use naval rifle brigades in the most critical sectors of the front, knowing for sure that the sailors would steadfastly hold their positions, causing great damage to the enemy with fire and counterattacks. The attack of the sailors was always swift, they "literally rammed the German troops."

During the defense of Tallinn, more than 16,000 marines fought on the coast, which accounted for more than half of the entire Tallinn group of Soviet troops, numbering 27,000 people. All in all Baltic Fleet During the Second World War, he formed one division, nine brigades, four regiments and nine battalions of marines with a total number of more than 120 thousand people. Northern Fleet over the same period of time, he formed and sent to various sectors of the Soviet-German front three brigades, two regiments and seven battalions of marines numbering 33,480 people. The Black Sea Fleet accounted for about 70 thousand marines - six brigades, eight regiments and 22 separate battalions. One brigade and two battalions of marines, formed in the Pacific Fleet and taking part in the defeat of militaristic Japan, were transformed into guards.

It was the units of the Marine Corps that thwarted the attempt of the 11th Army, Colonel General Manstein and the mechanized group of the 54th Army Corps, to take Sevastopol on the move at the end of October 1941 - by the time German troops found themselves under the city of Russian naval glory, the troops of the Primorsky Army, which was withdrawing through the Crimean Mountains, had not yet approached the naval base. At the same time, often the formations of the Soviet marines experienced a serious shortage of small arms and other weapons, ammunition and communications equipment. Thus, the 8th Marine Brigade, which took part in the defense of Sevastopol, at the very beginning of that illustrious defense for 3744 personnel, consisted of 3252 rifles, 16 easel and 20 light machine guns, as well as 42 mortars, and the newly formed and arrived at the front 1st Baltic the MP brigade was provided with rifles only by 50% of the supply norms, having no artillery, no cartridges, no grenades, not even sapper shovels at all!

The following record of the report of one of the defenders of the island of Gogland, dated March 1942, has been preserved: “The enemy stubbornly climbs our points in columns, they stuffed a lot of his soldiers and officers, and they all climb ... There is still a lot of enemy on the ice. Our machine gun had two belts of ammunition left. There were three of us left at the machine gun (in the bunker - Auth.), the rest were killed. What would you like to do?" To the order of the garrison commander to defend to the last, a laconic answer followed: “Yes, we don’t even think about retreating - the Baltics do not retreat, but destroy the enemy to the last.” People stood to death.

In the initial period of the battle for Moscow, the Germans managed to approach the Moscow-Volga canal and even force it north of the city. The 64th and 71st naval rifle brigades were sent to the canal area from the reserve, dropping the Germans into the water. Moreover, the first unit consisted mainly of Pacific sailors, who, like the Siberians of General Panfilov, helped defend the capital of the country. In the area of ​​the village of Ivanovskoye, the Germans several times tried to launch, ridiculous to say, “psychic” attacks against the sailors of the 71st Marine Brigade, Colonel Ya. Bezverkhov. The Marines calmly let the Nazis marching in full-length chains and then shot them almost point-blank, finishing off those who did not have time to escape in hand-to-hand combat.
About 100 thousand sailors took part in the grandiose Battle of Stalingrad, of which only in the 2nd guards army there were up to 20 thousand sailors with Pacific Fleet and the Amur Flotilla - that is, every fifth soldier of the army of Lieutenant General Rodion Malinovsky (the latter later recalled: “The Pacific sailors fought wonderfully. There was a fighting army! The sailors were brave warriors, heroes!”).

Self-sacrifice is the highest degree of heroism

“When the tank approached him, he freely and prudently lay down under the caterpillar” - these are lines from the work of Andrei Platonov, and they are dedicated to one of those marines who stopped the convoy near Sevastopol German tankshistorical fact, which formed the basis of the feature film.

The sailors stopped the German tanks with their bodies and grenades, which were exactly one per brother, and therefore each grenade had to fall into a German tank. But how to achieve 100% efficiency? A simple solution does not come from the mind, but from a heart overflowing with love for one's Motherland and hatred for the enemy: one must tie a grenade to one's body and lie exactly under the tank's caterpillar. Explosion - and the tank stood up. And after the commander of that combat barrier, political instructor Nikolai Filchenko, a second one rushes under the tanks, and after him a third one. And suddenly the unimaginable happens - the surviving Nazi tanks stood up and backed away. The German tankers simply could not stand the nerves - they gave up in the face of such a terrible and incomprehensible heroism for them! It turned out that the armor is not the high-quality steel of German tanks, the armor is Soviet sailors dressed in thin vests. Therefore, I would like to recommend to those of our compatriots who bow to the traditions and valor of the Japanese samurai to look at the history of their army and navy - there he can easily find all the qualities of professional fearless warriors in those officers, soldiers and sailors who for centuries protected from various adversary to our country. These, our own, traditions must be maintained and developed, and not bowed before a life alien to us.

By order of the People's Commissar of the Navy of the USSR dated July 25, 1942, a Northern defensive region of 32 thousand people was formed in the Soviet Arctic, which was based on three brigades of the marines and three separate machine-gun battalions of the marines and which for more than two years ensured the stability of the right flank of the Soviet German front. Moreover, in complete isolation from the main forces, the supply was carried out only by air and by sea. Not to mention the fact that a war in the harsh conditions of the Far North, when it is impossible to dig a trench in the rocks, or hide from aircraft or artillery fire, is a very difficult test. It is not for nothing that a saying was born in the North: “Where a reindeer passes, a marine will pass, and where a reindeer does not pass, a marine will still pass.” The first Hero of the Soviet Union in the Northern Fleet was senior sergeant of the Marine Corps V.P. Kislyakov, who was left alone at an important height and held back the onslaught of an enemy of more than a company for more than an hour.

Major Caesar Kunikov, well-known at the front, in January 1943 became the commander of a combined amphibious assault detachment. He wrote to his sister about his subordinates: “I command the sailors, if you could see what kind of people they are! I know that the accuracy of newspaper colors is sometimes doubted in the rear, but these colors are too pale to describe our people. A detachment of only 277 people, having landed in the Stanichki area (the future Malaya Zemlya), so frightened the German command (especially when Kunikov transmitted a false radio message in plain text: “The regiment landed successfully. We are moving forward. I am waiting for reinforcements”) that it hastily transferred units there as much two divisions!

In March 1944, a detachment under the command of senior lieutenant Konstantin Olshansky distinguished himself, consisting of 55 marines of the 384th marine battalion and 12 soldiers from one of the neighboring units. For two days, this “landing into immortality,” as it was later called, fettered the enemy in the port of Nikolaev with distracting actions, repelled 18 attacks by an enemy combat group of three infantry battalions supported by half a company of tanks and a gun battery, destroying up to 700 soldiers and officers, as well as two tanks and the entire artillery battery. Only 12 people survived. All 67 fighters of the detachment were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union - unique case even for the Great Patriotic War!

During the offensive of the Soviet troops in Hungary, the boats of the Danube Flotilla constantly provided fire support to the advancing troops, landed troops, including as part of units and units of the Marine Corps. So, for example, a marine battalion distinguished itself, landed on March 19, 1945 in the Tata region and cut off the enemy's retreat along the right bank of the Danube. Realizing this, the Germans threw large forces against a not very large landing, but the enemy did not manage to drop the paratroopers into the Danube.

For their heroism and courage, 200 marines were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, and the famous intelligence officer Viktor Leonov, who fought in the Northern Fleet and then stood at the origins of the creation of naval reconnaissance and sabotage units of the Pacific Fleet, was awarded this award twice. And, for example, the personnel of the landing force of Senior Lieutenant Konstantin Olshansky, after whom one of the large landing ships of the Russian Navy is named today, which landed in the port of Nikolaev in March 1944 and at the cost of his life fulfilled the task assigned to him, was awarded this high award in full. It is less known that of the full cavaliers of the Order of Glory - and there are only 2562 of them, there are also four Heroes of the Soviet Union, and one of these four is the marine foreman P. Kh. Dubinda, who fought as part of the 8th Marine Brigade of the Black Sea Fleet .

Separate units and formations were also noted. So, the 13th, 66th, 71st, 75th and 154th Marine Brigades and Marine Rifle Brigades, as well as the 355th and 365th Marine Battalions were transformed into Guards units, many units and formations became Red Banner, and the 83rd and the 255th brigade - even twice Red Banner. Huge contribution marines in achieving a common victory over the enemy was reflected in the order of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief No. 371 of July 22, 1945: “During the defense and offensive of the Red Army, our fleet reliably covered the flanks of the Red Army, resting on the sea, inflicted serious blows on the merchant fleet and enemy shipping and ensured the uninterrupted operation of their communications. combat activity Soviet sailors were distinguished by selfless stamina and courage, high combat activity and military skill.

It remains to be noted that many famous heroes of the Great Patriotic War and future commanders fought in the marines and marine rifle brigades. So, the creator of the airborne troops, Hero of the Soviet Union, Army General V.F. Margelov during the war years was one of the best commanders of marine regiments - he commanded the 1st Special Ski Regiment of the Marine Corps of the Leningrad Front. The commander of the 7th Airborne Division, Major General T. M. Parafilo, who at one time commanded the 1st Special (Separate) Marine Brigade of the Baltic Fleet, also left the Marine Corps, who died in 1943. IN different time such well-known military leaders as Marshal of the Soviet Union N. V. Ogarkov (in 1942 - brigade engineer of the 61st separate marine rifle brigade of the Karelian Front), Marshal of the Soviet Union S. F. Akhromeev fought in various formations of the Marine Corps during the Second World War (in 1941 - a first-year cadet of the VVMU named after M.V. Frunze - a fighter of the 3rd separate brigade of the Marine Corps), General of the Army N. G. Lyashchenko (in 1943 - commander of the 73rd separate marine rifle brigade of the Volkhov Front), Colonel General I. M. Chistyakov (in 1941-1942 - commander of the 64th marine rifle brigade ).

Marines The Russian Navy celebrates its professional holiday on November 27. Solemn events will be held in the brigades of the Pacific, Northern, Baltic and Black Sea fleets, as well as in two battalions of the Caspian Flotilla, separate companies and subunits.

Marine soldiers

Marine Corps Day was officially established by order of the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy in 1995. But the history of this kind of troops began in the second half of the 17th century. It was then that, as part of the crews of the ships of the flotilla, created by order of Ivan the Terrible, they formed special teams of archers - naval soldiers. And in 1669 the first Russian military sailing ship"Eagle" already had a similar team, there were 35 of them, for boarding and landing operations and guard duty.

During the Azov campaigns, the most combat-ready Preobrazhensky and Semenovsky regiments created the Naval Regime - a regiment, it consisted of 4254 people. On November 16, 1705, according to the old style, and on November 27, according to the new one, Emperor Peter I issued a decree on the formation of a naval regiment. This day became the birthday of the Marine Corps of Russia. On account of the "sea soldiers" victories at Gangut and Chesma, the assaults on Ishmael and Corfu, the defense of Port Arthur and Sevastopol.

Marines also fought selflessly during the Great Patriotic War. They terrified the Nazis. The Germans nicknamed the Marines the "Black Death" because of their black pea coats and incredible courage. And even when all the fighters of the Red Army were dressed in combined arms uniforms, the Marines kept their vests and peakless caps. They went into battle wide open, biting the ribbons of their peakless caps in their teeth.

Marines fought bloody battles on the Khanko Peninsula, on the Kola Peninsula, blocking the way fascist troops to Murmansk, Polyarnoye, Kandalaksha. Immortal feats were performed by the marines in the battle for Moscow, where examples of courage and heroism were shown by seven naval rifle brigades, a separate detachment of sailors and two companies of cadets maritime schools. Ten brigades of marines and dozens of separate naval regiments and battalions participated in the battles for Leningrad, which, in the most difficult conditions, showed miracles of endurance and heroism in defending the city and breaking through its blockade.

By boat and parachute

For 73 days and nights, the marines, together with the army units, defended Odessa from enemy divisions. In November 1941, near Sevastopol, a group of five marines led by political instructor Nikolai Filchenkov stood in the way of German tanks breaking through to the city. At the cost of their lives, they did not let the tanks pass. Strapped with grenades, they rushed under the tanks. All five sailors were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. In general, 200 marines were awarded this high title for courage and heroism, and the famous intelligence officer Viktor Leonov, who fought in the Northern Fleet and then created naval reconnaissance and sabotage units of the Pacific Fleet, is twice a Hero. The personnel of the landing force of Senior Lieutenant Konstantin Olshansky, who landed in the port of Nikolaev in March 1944 and completed the task at the cost of their lives, were fully awarded this high award. By the way, one of the largest landing ships of the Russian Navy is named after Konstantin Olshansky.

And today the marines are elite military unit, to serve in which each of the sailors considers it a great honor. The Marines are armed with floating military equipment, portable anti-tank and anti-aircraft systems and automatic small arms. Marines land ashore from amphibious assault ships and boats, and are landed by ship-based and shore-based helicopters. Sometimes fighters can overcome water spaces on their own - on floating vehicles and armored personnel carriers. Marine units of the Russian Navy are equipped with new D-10 parachutes.

According to Lieutenant-General Oleg Makarevich, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Navy, in honor of Marine Corps Day, the "black berets" organized holidays, weapons exhibitions, and will demonstrate their skills.


The Germans during the Great Patriotic War called the Tuvans "Der Schwarze Tod" - "Black Death". The Tuvans fought to the death even with the obvious superiority of the enemy, they did not take prisoners.

"This is our war!"



Tuva people's republic became part of the Soviet Union already during the war, on August 17, 1944. In the summer of 1941, Tuva de jure was independent state. In August 1921, the White Guard detachments of Kolchak and Ungern were expelled from there. The capital of the republic was the former Belotsarsk, renamed Kyzyl (Red City). Soviet troops were withdrawn from Tuva by 1923, but the USSR continued to provide all possible assistance to Tuva, without claiming its independence. It is customary to say that Great Britain provided the first support for the USSR in the war, but this is not so. Tuva declared war on Germany and its allies on June 22, 1941, 11 hours before Churchill's historic announcement on the radio. Mobilization immediately began in Tuva, the republic announced its readiness to send its army to the front. 38,000 Tuvan arats in a letter to Joseph Stalin stated: “We are together. This is our war." There is a historical legend about Tuva's declaration of war on Germany that when Hitler found out about this, it amused him, he did not even bother to find this republic on the map. But in vain.

Everything for the front!



Immediately after the start of the war, Tuva handed over to Moscow its gold reserves (about 30 million rubles) and the entire production of Tuvan gold (10-11 million rubles annually). The Tuvans really accepted the war as their own. This is evidenced by the amount of assistance that the poor republic provided to the front. From June 1941 to October 1944 Tuva supplied 50,000 war horses and 750,000 heads of cattle for the needs of the Red Army. Each Tuvan family gave the front from 10 to 100 heads of cattle. Tuvinians are in literally put the Red Army on skis, putting 52,000 pairs of skis on the front. The Prime Minister of Tuva, Saryk-Dongak Chimba, wrote in his diary: "they wiped out the entire birch forest near Kyzyl." In addition, the Tuvans sent 12,000 sheepskin coats, 19,000 pairs of mittens, 16,000 pairs of felt boots, 70,000 tons of sheep's wool, 400 tons of meat, melted butter and flour, carts, sledges, harnesses and other goods totaling about 66.5 million rubles. To help the USSR, the arats collected 5 echelons of gifts worth more than 10 million Tuvan akshas (the rate of 1 aksha is 3 rubles 50 kopecks), food for hospitals for 200,000 akshas. According to Soviet expert estimates, presented, for example, in the book "The USSR and Foreign States in 1941-1945", the total supplies of Mongolia and Tuva to the USSR in 1941-1942 were only 35% less in volume than the total volume of Western allied supplies in those years in the USSR - that is, from the USA, Canada, Great Britain, Australia, the Union of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand combined.

"Black Death"

The first Tuvan volunteers (about 200 people) joined the Red Army in May 1943. After a short training, they were enrolled in the 25th separate tank regiment (from February 1944 it was part of the 52nd army of the 2nd Ukrainian front). This regiment fought on the territory of Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. In September 1943, the second group of cavalry volunteers (206 people) was enrolled, after training in the Vladimir region, in the 8th cavalry division. The cavalry division took part in raids behind enemy lines in western Ukraine. After the battle near Durazhno in January 1944, the Germans began to call the Tuvans "Der Schwarze Tod" - "Black Death". The captured German officer G. Remke, during interrogation, said that the soldiers entrusted to him “subconsciously perceived these barbarians (Tuvans) as Attila’s hordes” and lost all combat effectiveness ... Here it must be said that the first Tuvan volunteers were a typical national unit, they were dressed in national costumes, wore amulets. Only at the beginning of 1944, the Soviet command asked the Tuvan soldiers to send their "objects of the Buddhist and shamanic cult" to their homeland. The Tuvans fought bravely. The command of the 8th Guards Cavalry Division wrote to the Tuvan government: “... with a clear superiority of the enemy, the Tuvans fought to the death. So in the battles near the village of Surmiche, 10 machine gunners, led by the commander of the Dongur-Kyzyl squad, and the calculation of anti-tank rifles, led by Dazhy-Seren, died in this battle, but did not retreat a single step, fighting to the last bullet. Over 100 enemy corpses were counted in front of a handful of brave men who died the death of heroes. They died, but where the sons of your Motherland stood, the enemy did not pass ... ". A squadron of Tuvan volunteers liberated 80 Western Ukrainian settlements.

Tuvan heroes

Of the 80,000 population of the Tuva Republic in the Great Patriotic war about 8,000 Tuvinian soldiers took part. 67 fighters and commanders were awarded orders and medals of the USSR. About 20 of them became holders of the Order of Glory, up to 5500 Tuvan soldiers were awarded other orders and medals of the Soviet Union and the Tuvan Republic. Two Tuvans were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union - Khomushka Churguy-ool and Tyulyush Kechil-ool.

Tuvan squadron



The Tuvans not only helped the front financially and bravely fought in tank and cavalry divisions, but also provided the Red Army with the construction of 10 Yak-7B aircraft. On March 16, 1943, at the Chkalovsky airfield near Moscow, the delegation of Tuva solemnly handed over the aircraft to the 133rd Fighter aviation regiment Air Force of the Red Army. The fighters were transferred to the commander of the 3rd aviation fighter squadron Novikov and assigned to the crews. On each was written in white paint "From the Tuvan people." Unfortunately, not a single aircraft of the “Tuvin squadron” survived until the end of the war. Of the 20 servicemen of the 133rd Aviation Fighter Regiment, who made up the crews of the Yak-7B fighters, only three survived the war.

"This is our war!"

The Tuvan People's Republic became part of the Soviet Union already during the war, on August 17, 1944. In the summer of 1941, Tuva was de jure an independent state. In August 1921, the White Guard detachments of Kolchak and Ungern were expelled from there. The capital of the republic was the former Belotsarsk, renamed Kyzyl (Red City).

Soviet troops were withdrawn from Tuva by 1923, but the USSR continued to provide all possible assistance to Tuva, without claiming its independence.

It is customary to say that Great Britain provided the first support for the USSR in the war, but this is not so. Tuva declared war on Germany and its allies on June 22, 1941, 11 hours before Churchill's historic announcement on the radio. Mobilization immediately began in Tuva, the republic announced its readiness to send its army to the front. 38,000 Tuvan arats in a letter to Joseph Stalin stated: “We are together. This is our war."

There is a historical legend about Tuva's declaration of war on Germany that when Hitler found out about this, it amused him, he did not even bother to find this republic on the map. But in vain.

Everything for the front!


Immediately after the start of the war, Tuva handed over to Moscow its gold reserves (about 30 million rubles) and the entire production of Tuvan gold (10-11 million rubles annually).

The Tuvans really accepted the war as their own. This is evidenced by the amount of assistance that the poor republic provided to the front.

From June 1941 to October 1944 Tuva supplied 50,000 war horses and 750,000 heads of cattle for the needs of the Red Army. Each Tuvan family gave the front from 10 to 100 heads of cattle. The Tuvans literally put the Red Army on skis, supplying 52,000 pairs of skis to the front. The Prime Minister of Tuva, Saryk-Dongak Chimba, wrote in his diary: "they wiped out the entire birch forest near Kyzyl."

In addition, the Tuvans sent 12,000 sheepskin coats, 19,000 pairs of mittens, 16,000 pairs of felt boots, 70,000 tons of sheep's wool, 400 tons of meat, melted butter and flour, carts, sledges, harnesses and other goods totaling about 66.5 million rubles.

To help the USSR, the arats collected 5 echelons of gifts worth more than 10 million Tuvan akshas (the rate of 1 aksha is 3 rubles 50 kopecks), food for hospitals for 200,000 akshas.

According to Soviet expert estimates, presented, for example, in the book "The USSR and Foreign States in 1941-1945", the total supplies of Mongolia and Tuva to the USSR in 1941-1942 were only 35% less in volume than the total volume of Western allied supplies in those years in the USSR - that is, from the USA, Canada, Great Britain, Australia, the Union of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand combined.

"Black Death"


The first Tuvan volunteers (about 200 people) joined the Red Army in May 1943. After a short training, they were enrolled in the 25th separate tank regiment (from February 1944 it was part of the 52nd army of the 2nd Ukrainian front). This regiment fought on the territory of Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Hungary and Czechoslovakia.

In September 1943, the second group of cavalry volunteers (206 people) was enrolled, after training in the Vladimir region, in the 8th cavalry division.

The cavalry division took part in raids behind enemy lines in western Ukraine. After the battle near Durazhno in January 1944, the Germans began to call the Tuvans "Der Schwarze Tod" - "Black Death".

The captured German officer G. Remke during interrogation said that the soldiers entrusted to him “subconsciously perceived these barbarians (Tuvans) as the hordes of Attila” and lost all combat capability ...

Here it must be said that the first Tuvan volunteers were a typical national part, they were dressed in national costumes, wore amulets. Only at the beginning of 1944, the Soviet command asked the Tuvan soldiers to send their "objects of the Buddhist and shamanic cult" to their homeland.

The Tuvans fought bravely. The command of the 8th Guards Cavalry Division wrote to the Tuvan government:

“... with a clear superiority of the enemy, the Tuvans fought to the death. So in the battles near the village of Surmiche, 10 machine gunners, led by the commander of the Dongur-Kyzyl squad, and the calculation of anti-tank rifles, led by Dazhy-Seren, died in this battle, but did not retreat a single step, fighting to the last bullet. Over 100 enemy corpses were counted in front of a handful of brave men who died the death of heroes. They died, but where the sons of your Motherland stood, the enemy did not pass ... ".

A squadron of Tuvan volunteers liberated 80 Western Ukrainian settlements.

Tuvan heroes

Of the 80,000 population of the Tuva Republic, about 8,000 Tuvan soldiers took part in the Great Patriotic War.

67 fighters and commanders were awarded orders and medals of the USSR. About 20 of them became holders of the Order of Glory, up to 5500 Tuvan soldiers were awarded other orders and medals of the Soviet Union and the Tuvan Republic.

Two Tuvans were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union - Khomushka Churguy-ool and Tyulyush Kechil-ool.

Tuvan squadron


The Tuvans not only helped the front financially and bravely fought in tank and cavalry divisions, but also provided the Red Army with the construction of 10 Yak-7B aircraft for. On March 16, 1943, at the Chkalovsky airfield near Moscow, the delegation of Tuva solemnly handed over the aircraft to the 133rd Fighter Aviation Regiment of the Red Army Air Force.

The fighters were transferred to the commander of the 3rd aviation fighter squadron Novikov and assigned to the crews. On each was written in white paint "From the Tuvan people."

Unfortunately, not a single aircraft of the “Tuvin squadron” survived until the end of the war. Of the 20 servicemen of the 133rd Aviation Fighter Regiment, who made up the crews of the Yak-7B fighters, only three survived the war.