Lazar Fedorovich Bicherakhov (Russian: Лазарь Фёдорович Бичерахов; Ossetian: Бичерахты Федыры фырт Лазæр; 15 November 1882 – 22 June 1952) was a Russian army officer who participated in World War I and the Russian Civil War, as a member of the Imperial Russian and White Russian armies, respectively.
Biography
Bicherakhov hailed from a Cossack family of Ossetian descent. He graduated from the real school in St. Petersburg and Alekseevsky military school in Moscow.[1]
During World War I, Bicherakhov served in 1915–1918 in the expeditionary corps of General Nikolai Baratov in Persia as the commander of the Terek Cossack detachment with the rank of army starshina. He was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir of the 4th degree.[1]
Since Dunsterville had no troops available for immediate deployment to prevent the advance of the Ottoman army, it was agreed to allow Bicherakhov to temporarily cooperate with the Bolsheviks.[4] On 1 July 1918, by agreement with the leaders of the Baku Commune Bicherakhov arrived with a unit of 600 Cossacks to Baku to fight against the Islamic Army of the Caucasus under the command of Turkish general Nuri Pasha Killigil and the armed forces of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in the battle of Baku. However, battlefield failures forced Bicherakov to withdraw with his men to Petrovsk-Port. In October 1918, Bicherakhov declared allegiance to the Provisional All-Russian Government, and was conferred the rank of major-general in the white army.[1]
^ abcБезугольный А. Ю. Генерал Бичерахов и его Кавказская армия. 1917—1919. — М.: Центрполиграф, 2011. — (Россия забытая и неизвестная. Золотая коллекция). ISBN 978-5-227-02536-4, c.16-17
^Памятная книжка и адрес-календарь Карсской области на 1912 год. — Тифлис, 1911, c. 27
^Marshall, Alex (2012). The Caucasus under Soviet rule. London: Routledge. p. 93. ISBN9780415625425.
^Allen, William Edward David; Muratoff, Paul (2011). Caucasian Battlefields: a History of the Wars on the Turco-Caucasian Border 1828–1921. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 485. ISBN9780511708732.
^Smele, Jonathan (2015). Historical dictionary of the Russian civil wars, 1916–1926. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 200. ISBN978-1442252806.