Ivan Fyodorovich Golubew -monthkin

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Ivan Fedorovich Golubev-Monatkin ( Russian Иван Фёдорович Голубев-Монаткин ; born January 29 . Jul / 10. February  1897 greg. In the village Penkowo, Rajon plavsk , Tula Oblast ; † 10. August 1970 in Moscow ) was a Soviet Rear Admiral . From 1944 to 1949 he commanded the Caspian Higher Officers School of the Soviet Naval Fleet in Baku .

Life

Golubew -montkin served from 1916 as a radio operator in the Imperial Russian Navy in Petrograd and in a mine training group in Kronstadt . In July 1918 he was demobilized . He joined the Red Army in 1919 and fought as a radio operator in the Volga, Volga-Caspian and Dnieper flotilla during the Russian Civil War . In 1921 he became a member of the KPR (B) .

He graduated from Naval War School from September 1921 to May 1925 and served as second and first officer on the cruiser Comintern until November 1926 . From November 1926 to October 1927 he worked as an assistant to the course director of the FE Dzerzhinsky School of Naval Warfare . Golubew -montkin then graduated from the Naval War Academy by May 1930 . At the beginning of 1931 he was employed as chief of the operational department of the staff of the Caspian Flotilla . He served from 1931 to 1932 as an assistant to the sector chief and from 1932 to 1935 as sector chief of the operational leadership of the Red Army. From March 1935 to February 1937 he headed the 1st Department of the Navy in the General Staff of the Red Army. After working as chief of the operational department in the staff of the Caspian Flotilla, he was chief of staff of the Northern Fleet from 1938 to 1940 . From 1939 to 1940 he was a participant in the Winter War and from September 1940 became Deputy Chief of Operations in the Navy's main staff. In this role he saw the beginning of the Great Patriotic War . He became chief of the operational group in the operational leadership in the main staff of the Navy and later in the People's Commissariat for Naval Forces. From March to December 1943 he served as commander of the Tuapse naval base and in September 1943 took part in the Novorossiysk operation as part of Operation Don to liberate the Caucasus from the German armed forces . He made a decisive contribution to the establishment of the Ochakiv and Odessa military bases and to their preparation for the operational offensives. From December 1943 to January 1944 Golubew -montkin was commander of the Odessa naval base and then until November 1944 chief of staff of the Black Sea Fleet . Under his leadership, the naval headquarters, together with the headquarters of the 4th Ukrainian Front , planned and implemented the battle for the Crimea in 1944 , the conquest of the military bases of Romania and Bulgaria, the liberation of the coastal regions and the clearing of mines in the Black Sea. In the same year he was appointed rear admiral.

From June 1944 to April 1949 he took command of the Caspian Naval War School. He was then elected first deputy chairman for five months and chairman of the central committee of the DOSAAF council from August 1949 to August 1951 . From August 1951 to April 1953 he held the position of deputy chairman of the organizing committee of the DOSAAF. After working in the command of the naval forces, he worked from 1953 to 1954 at the chair for tactics at the Naval War Academy. From 1954 to 1955 he was head of the chair for the use of military resources in the Navy and from 1955 to 1959 of the chair of naval forces at the Lenin Academy of Military Politics . In July 1959 he was retired.

Golubev -montkin died in Moscow in 1970 and was buried in the Vvedenskoye Cemetery.

Awards

literature

  • Лурье, В. М .: Адмиралы и генералы Военно-Морского флота СССР в период Великой Отечественной и советско -японской войн (1941-1945) . In: Русско-балтийский информационный центр БЛИЦ . 2001, p. 58-59 .
  • Доценко, В.Д. u. a .: Словарь биографический морской . Logos, 2001, p. 106 .
  • Военный энциклопедический словарь . Воениздат, Moscow 1986, p. 201 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. GS Selkina: Headmaster of the KWWMKU
predecessor Office successor
FKpt Konstantin Suchiaschwili 5. Commander of the KWWMKU
1944–1949
KAdm Alexander Vanifatjew