Pavel Pappengut

Pavel Petrovich Pappengut (also Papengut; Russian: Па́вел Петро́вич Папенгут; 27 May 1894 – December 1933) was a colonel of the Russian Empire, later officer of the White Russian forces, member of the underground Turkestan Military Organization, comrade-in-arms of Alexander Dutov.

Pavel Petrovich Pappengut
Native name
Павел Петрович Папенгут
Born(1894-05-27)27 May 1894
DiedDecember 1933/January 1934 (aged 39)
Ürümqi, Xinjiang
AllegianceRussian Empire (191417)
Russian Republic (1917)
White movement (191722)
Xinjiang (192233)
Service/branchArmy
Years of service191433
RankColonel
Battles/wars

After the defeat of the White movement in the Russian Civil War, Pappengut settled in the Ili region in northern Xinjiang. There he commanded the White Russian forces,[1] who were known to be the most competent military force in Xinjiang due to their experience.[1] Pappengut fought against Ma Zhongying in Kumul Rebellion in 1931.[1] In late September or early October 1931, Pappengut commanded some 250 White Russians who headed the forces of Zhang Peiyuan moving from Ili towards the besieged garrison in Kumul Old City.[2] Ma's Dungan forces retreated westwards towards Qijiaojingzhen and the advancing White Russians. There were no serious battles between them. However, in one of the initial skirmishes in the village of Liao-tun, some 150km east from Qijiaojingzhen, the White Russian fources seriously wounded Ma, while the White Russians had one dead and two wounded. As a result of that injury, large portion of the Dungan forces retreated towards Gansu in northwest.[2] The garrison in Kumul Old City was finally relived on or around 1 November 1931.[3]

In the winter of 1932, Ma Shiming and his Dungan forces, joined by Ma Fuming and a large number of Turkic rebels, started advancing towards the provincial capital of Ürümqi. Soon, a full scale revolt occurred in Kucha and Khotan. Jin Shuren, Xinjiang's Governor, responded by expanding Pappengut's White Russian force from 250 to 1,500 men. The White Russian emigrants had no other choice but to enlist, since Jin threatened them with deportation to the Soviet Union and even arrest of their women to force them to recruit.[4] The Dungan forces reached the citiy defended by only 700 men on 21 February 1933. The city was closed and suffered food shortages, while tensions between the Han Chinese and Muslims were high. The fall of Ürümqi was seemingly eminent, but the arrival of some 300 White Russians changed the tide and the Dungan forces were driven back[5] some 1 km northwestwards[6] after two days of fighting.[5]

Sheng Shicai, Chief of Staff of the Xinjiang's Frontier Army, arrived with the strong and capable force from Turpan to help the besieged Ürümqi, forcing the Dungan insurgents to retreat to the countryside. The countryside fell to the hands of the insurgents and the Kazakh uprising also occurred in Shara Sume. Soviet Union sent additional reinforcement of some 2,000 Chinese experienced soldiers forced by the Japanese across the Soviet border who were interned by the Soviets. These soldiers were known as the North-East National Salvation Army. They arrived in Ürümqi on 27 March 1933 and strengthen the position of the provincial administration as well as Sheng Shicai's, who was their fellow Northeasterner. At the same time, Jin's authority was undermined.[7]

Even though the White Russian forces gave significant contribution to the Xinjiang's war efforts, they were irregularly paid and provided with the word horses and ammunition.[7] Pappengut and other White Russian officers approached the leaders of the National Salvation Army, and having been assured of their backing, mounted a coup against Jin on the night of 12 April. Jin escaped to the Soviet Union via Chuguchak and returned to China. His younger brother and a military commander Jin Shu-hsin was captured and executed.[8] Sheng, who was at the time in Uruba was appointed as Duban or Military Governor, while Liu Wenlong took the position of Provincial Chairman.[9]

Pappengut was executed in December 1933 or January 1934 under the orders of Sheng Shicai, Military Governor of Xinjiang by the request of Garegin Apresov, Soviet Consul General in Ürümqi.[1]

Footnotes

  1. Forbes 1986, p. 249.
  2. Forbes 1986, p. 61.
  3. Forbes 1986, p. 62.
  4. Forbes 1986, p. 100.
  5. Forbes 1986, p. 101.
  6. Forbes 1986, p. 102.
  7. Forbes 1986, p. 104.
  8. Forbes 1986, p. 104105.
  9. Forbes 1986, p. 105.
gollark: Program it yourself... IN POTATOASM™!
gollark: Hmm, this probably could be made TC if I have some mechanism for having different "processes" with different registers/memory space communicate.
gollark: I could probably have it share code with a disassembler, too, although even the ISA-as-currently-implemented allows a bunch of obfuscatory tricks.
gollark: I'm considering implementing the assembler in JS or Python or Rust or something, but it *would* be nice to have this available from within potatOS.
gollark: Honestly that's entirely unnecessary and I would probably only need simple splitting into lines and label handling, but you know.

References

Books

  • Forbes, Andrew D. W. (1986). Warlords and Muslims in Chinese Central Asia: A Political History of Republican Sinkiang 1911-1949. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521255141.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.