Boris Sergeyevich Permikin

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Boris Sergejewitsch Permikin ( Russian Борис Сергеевич Пермикин ; April 4, 1890 in Rewda ; † March 11, 1971 in Salzburg , Austria ) was a general in the White Army .

Life

Service in the Imperial Army

From 1912 he took part in the Balkan War as a volunteer . He was a participant in the First World War , first as a volunteer in the 9th Bugschen Ulan Regiment of the III. Army. On January 12, 1915 he was promoted to ensign and in June 1916 to lieutenant (Porutschik), in 1917 to staff captain and commander of the machine gun troop of his regiment. Permikin received the Order of St. George .

Participation in the civil war

1917–1918 Permikin was in Petrograd and joined the regiment of General Bulak-Balachowitsch , who had fought on the side of the Bolsheviks in Luga and Gdow. On October 26, 1918, in Pskow, the regiment took the side of the North Corps (Pskow Freikorps) of General Wandam (White Army). Since November 1918, Permikin and his battalion were in Estonia. In early 1919 he was promoted to lieutenant colonel. In May 1919 he took part in the first march to Petrograd with his regiment. On May 30, 1919, the Commander in Chief of the Northwestern Army, General Alexander Pavlovich Rodsyanko , promoted him to colonel.

Permikin was a founder and leader of the Talab Regiment, famous in the White Army, which played an important role in the Northwest Army's campaigns. Permikin had been in Estonia since December 1919 . At the beginning of 1920 he went to Poland and joined the Russian People's Army, where Bulak-Balachowitsch also commanded. Since August 1920 he was the commander in chief of the III. Russian army as lieutenant general. After the conclusion of the peace treaty between Poland and Soviet Russia , General Permikin stayed in Poland. During the Second World War he was part of the reserve of the Russian Liberation Army in Poland . After the war he moved to Austria and died in Salzburg on March 11, 1971.

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