The 13th Rifle Corps (Russian: 13-й стрелковый корпус) was a rifle corps of the Red Army, first formed in 1922.
On October 12, 1922, the Corps began forming in the Turkestan Front. Alexander Todorsky became the corps commander. The corps participated in the suppression of the Basmachi movement and was disbanded in 1935.
On October 12, 1922, the commander of the Turkestan Front issued Order No. 1436/575, in which the headquarters of the abolished Bukhara group of troops turned on the formation of Management 13th RC.[3][4]
In April–May 1923, the Revolutionary Military Council in housing were subject to Bukhara of the Red Army.[3][4]
Corps units were involved in the fight against Basmachis in Bukhara and Samarkand Oblasts. The Turkestan Front became the Central Asian Military District in June 1926, and the corps its assignment with the latter. Its headquarters moved to Samarkand in October 1926.[2]
The corps headquarters was relocated to Kazan when it transferred to the Volga Military District in September 1927. Its headquarters was again shifted to Sverdlovsk in 1931 and there it briefly became part of the Ural Military District in July 1935 before being disbanded in the same month.[2]
First wartime formation (1936–1941)
The corps was reformed in the Kiev Military District (КВО) in accordance with Order No. 194 of the military district of December 5, 1936, assigned to the 12th Army. Headquarters was located in the city of Belaya Tserkov.
Reformed 1936, in 12th Army, Kiev Special Military District, under General Major N.K. Kirillov, with 44th, 58th, and 192nd Mountain Rifle Divisions on 22 June 1941. The corps headquarters was disbanded in August of that year.[2]
Second wartime formation (1942) and 31st Army Corps service
The corps headquarters was formed again on 13 October 1942 as part of the Transcaucasian Front, with which it spent the war.[5]
The 13th Mountain Rifle Corps was disbanded by being redesignated 31st Special Rifle Corps on 1 July 1956, and then successively 31st Special Army Corps (1 October 1957) and 31st Army Corps (9 May 1961).[5]
In February 1962 the 145th Mountain Rifle Division was renamed the 145th Motor Rifle Division.[5]
Stepanov, Alexey (2009). "Эмблемы и шифровки РККА 1922—1924. Часть I" [Badges and lettering on collar tabs of the Red Army, 1922–1924: Part I]. Старый Цейхгауз [Old Zeughaus] (in Russian) (4 (32)). Fond "Russkiye Vityazi": 47–66. ISSN2223-5175.
Further reading
Military Encyclopedic Dictionary. Moscow, Military Publishing House (Voenizdat), 1984 . S.757 -Turkestan Front.