General Military Academy of the Russian Armed Forces
General Military Academy of the Russian Armed Forces | |
---|---|
motto | no information (n / a) |
founding | 1918 |
Sponsorship |
Ministry of Defense , military college, Russian Federation |
place | Moscow |
Employee | k. A. |
including professors | k. A. |
Annual budget | k. A. |
The General Military Academy of the Russian Armed Forces ( Russian Общевойсковая академия Вооруженных Сил Российской Федерации ) was the oldest military academy of the Red Army . The academy is located in Moscow . This military academy is the scientific center for researching the problems of general combat and army operations in the Soviet and Russian armed forces.
history
The Academy was founded in Moscow in 1918 on the instructions of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin . Initially it was called the Academy of the General Staff , then in 1921 it was renamed the Military Academy of the Red Workers 'and Peasants' Army . In 1925 the academy was named after Mikhail Vasilyevich Frunze .
Up to and including 1936, middle and higher commanders were trained there. The higher cadres were trained at the operational faculty. Since 1936, training in commanders and staff officers for operational and tactical careers has been taking place here . According to Resolution of the Government of the Russian Federation No. 10.009 of October 29, 1998, the Malinovsky Military Academy of Armored Forces and the General Military Academy of the Russian Armed Forces were merged.
Awards
Order of Lenin Order of the October Revolution Order of the Red Banner Order of Suvorov 1st degree
She received nine orders of the ex-socialist countries, u. a. of the German Democratic Republic .
Well-known graduates
In German alphabetical order, academy year in brackets
- Blagoje Adžić (1969–1973), Yugoslav Defense Minister
- Jonas Andriškevičius (1973–1976), Lithuanian general
- Alexei Innokentjewitsch Antonow (1928/1932), Soviet general ( Operation Bagration )
- Hovhannes Baghramjan (1934), Marshal of the Soviet Union
- Yuri Nikolajewitsch Balujewski (1980), Chief of Staff of the Russian Armed Forces
- Iwan Wassiljewitsch Boldin , Soviet colonel general, head of the SMAD in Thuringia
- Gaik Bschischkjan (1929), Soviet commander
- Kurt Fischer (politician, 1900) (1932), German communist agitator and Saxon interior minister (1945)
- Filipp Iwanowitsch Golikow (1933), Marshal of the Soviet Union, Director of the military secret service GRU
- Pawel Sergejewitsch Grachev (1981), Army General , 1992–1996 Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation
- Andrei Antonowitsch Grechko (1936), Marshal of the Soviet Union, Soviet Defense Minister (1967–1976)
- Boris Vsevolodowitsch Gromow (1972), Soviet / Russian general and politician
- Andrei Ivanovich Jerjomenko (1935), Marshal of the Soviet Union, military theorist
- Mikhail Petrowitsch Kirponos (1927), Soviet Colonel General, killed in World War II as Mayor Southwest Front
- Ivan Stepanowitsch Konew (1932/1934), Soviet marshal, one of the most important commanders in World War II
- Semjon Moissejewitsch Kriwoschein (1931), Soviet lieutenant general, reformer of the armored force
- Fyodor Issidorovich Kuznetsov (1926), Soviet general
- Alexander Ivanovich Lebed (1982–1985), Russian general and politician
- Nikolai Yegorowitsch Makarow (1979), Russian Chief of Staff since 2008
- Rodion Jakowlewitsch Malinowski (1927), Marshal of the Soviet Union, Soviet Defense Minister, holder of the Order of Victory
- Dmitri Grigoryevich Pavlov (1928), Soviet Army General
- Alexander Ivanovich Pokryschkin (1948), Soviet Marshal of Aviators
- Markian Michailowitsch Popow (1936), Soviet Army General
- Lev Vladimirovich Rudnew , designer of the building of the Military Academy in Moscow
- Matwei Wassiljewitsch Sakharov (1936), Marshal of the Soviet Union, Chief of the General Staff
- Wassili Danilowitsch Sokolowski (1921), Marshal of the Soviet Union, Chief of the General Staff
- Wolfgang Steger (1955–1959), Lieutenant General of the National People's Army
- Karol Świerczewski (1928), Polish officer and general in the service of the Soviet Union
- Vasily Ivanovich Tschuikow (1925), Marshal of the Soviet Union
- Valdas Tutkus (1991), Commander of the Lithuanian Armed Forces, Lieutenant General
- Jukums Vācietis (professor from 1922), Latvian officer, briefly Commander-in-Chief of the Red Army in the Russian Civil War
- Valentin Ivanovich Varennikov (1954), Soviet general and Deputy Minister of Defense
Web links
- Official site (Russian)
Coordinates: 55 ° 44 ′ 16.1 ″ N , 37 ° 34 ′ 40.3 ″ E