The Caucasus Army was formed in July 1914 from units of the Caucasus Military District. It ceased to exist in April 1917 when it was reorganized as the Caucasus Front, although this Front contained many of the same units and continued fighting in the same theater. This Front in turn formally ceased to exist in March 1918. It withdrew from Armenia that year.[1]
Organization
Order of Battle, 1914
The Caucasus Army was under the nominal command of the Governor General of the Caucasus Illarion Vorontsov-Dashkov at the start of hostilities.[2] His chief of command was Aleksandr Zakharevich Myshlayevsky. The Caucasus Army had 100 battalions of infantry, 117 sotnis (cavalry squadrons), and 256 guns for a total of 100,000 troops,[2] in other sources it had had 153 battalions of infantry, 175 sotnis, and 350 guns [3] Before the war the army was dispersed into two groups according to the two main operating areas: the Kars group (Kars - Erzurum) with 6 divisions in the region of Otu - Sarikamish and the Erivan group (Erivan - Alashkert) with 2 divisions, reinforced by a large number of cavalry, in the vicinity of Igdir.
The flanks were covered by small units formed from the Border Guard, the Cossacks, and the militia. Due to the defeats at the Battle of Tannenberg and the Masurian Lakes, the Russians redeployed almost half their forces to the Prussian front, leaving behind just 65,000 troops from the initial 100,000 to face the Ottoman army.[2]
Caucasus Army Corps from November 12, 1914 April 2, 1915 Berhman George E.
2 infantry divisions
2 cossack rifle brigades
1st Caucasian Cossack division under command of General Baratov
Turkistan Army Corps Lieutenant-General (from 23 October 1914, General of Infantry) Lesh, Leonid Vilgelmovich
It was under the nominal command of the Governor General of the Caucasus Nicholas Nikolaevich beginning with the January 1915.[2] His chief of command was Nikolai Yudenich.
Caucasus Army Corps from February 2, 1915 to 12. March 1917 Kalitin, Pyotr Petrovich
Turkistan Army Corps from February 3, 1915 to 3 April 1917 General of Infantry Przewalski, Michael A.
^ abcdeHinterhoff, Eugene (1984). The Campaign in Armenia. Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War I, vol ii. New York: Marshall Cavendish Corporation. p. 500. ISBN0-86307-181-3.
^«Кто был кто в Первой мировой войне» К. А. Залесский, 2003