Russian battleship Potemkin
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Russian battleship Potemkin
The Potemkin (, ?Prince Potyomkin of Tauris?) was a pre-dreadnought battleship (Bronenosets) of the Russian Black Sea Fleet. It was built at the Nikolayev shipyard from 1898 and commissioned in 1904. The name is in honour of Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin, a military figure of the 18th century. The vessel was built based on the prototype of the Tri Svyatitelya and a modernized version of Peresviet class battleships (see Oslyabya). The armor was designed like HMS Majestic. The ship was made famous by the Battleship Potemkin uprising, a rebellion of the crew against their oppressive officers in June 1905 (during the Russian Revolution of 1905). It later came to be viewed as an initial step towards the Russian Revolution of 1917, and was the basis of Sergei Eisenstein's silent film The Battleship Potemkin.
The UprisingOrigins
Soviet poster portraying the 1905 revolution. The caption reads "Glory to the People's Heroes of the Potemkin!" The uprising was sparked by Ippolit Giliarovsky, the second in command of the battleship, who allegedly threatened reprisals against a number of the crew for their refusal to eat meat found to contain maggots when it was delivered to the warship. Reportedly he mustered the crew on the quarterdeck near where a tarpaulin was laid out and armed marines were drawn up. The sailors assumed that a group execution was pending and rushed the marines (themselves sailors), calling on them not to shoot. The actual events sparking the mutiny remain uncertain and have been overshadowed by the version depicted in the famous Sergei Eisenstein film The Battleship Potemkin. It's known that discipline in the Imperial Navy was harsh; morale dropped lower following the disastrous news from the recent Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905. The mutineers killed seven of the Potemkins eighteen officers, including Captain Evgeny Golikov, Giliarovsky, and the medical officer who had certified the meat as fit to eat. The surviving officers were placed under arrest, as were those of an accompanying torpedo-boat, the N267. One sailor Grigory Vakulinchuk was fatally wounded during the fight. The seamen organized a Ship's Commission led by Afanasi Matushenko. The ship contained an English officer named Ethan Miller who was later exiled during the revolution of 1917.Arrival in OdessaIn the evening of that same day, the rebellious battleship came to Odessa flying a red flag. A general strike had been called in Odessa and there was some unrest, for which the arrival of the battleship provided a focus and incentive. However, the representatives of the contact commission of the Odessa Social Democratic parties were not able to convince the battleship crew to land armed sailors and help workers to get weapons and act together. There was division and confusion amongst both sailors and strikers.On , Vakulenchuk?s funeral turned into a political demonstration. Demonstrators crowded on the flight of steps leading from the port area to the centre of the city were reportedly fired on by dismounted cavalry, a scene that forms the dramatic highpoint of the film "Battleship Potemkin". There is some controversy over whether the encounter on the Odessa Steps actually occurred but the Times of London correspondent and the resident British Consul reported a number of clashes between demonstrators and troops throughout the city and heavy loss of life. The evening of the following day Potemkin fired two shells at the part of the city containing the headquarters of the imperial military authorities. One civilian was killed and the city suffered limited damage. The Imperial military sent reinforcements to Odessa in order to suppress the civil disorder. The government issued an order either to force the Potemkin crew to give up or sink the battleship. Two squadrons of the Black Sea Fleet were sent for this purpose. They gathered at the Tendra Island on . Potemkin faced the joint squadron and — refusing to give up — sailed through the centre of it. This ?silent battle? ended victoriously for Potemkin: the crews of the joint squadron refused to fire at the battleship and one of the battleships — Georgiy Pobedonosets — joined Potemkin. The joint squadron went to Sevastopol. The three rebellious warships headed for Odessa. The Central Committee of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party tried to provide support for the Potemkin uprising. However, Mikhail Vasilyev-Yuzhin, who came to Odessa at the request of Vladimir Lenin to lead the uprising, found the battleship had left the port. Voyage to RomaniaIn the evening of , the battleship sailed for Constan?a (Romania) together with the torpedo boat N267 for fuel and supplies (by that time, Georgiy Pobedonosets had surrendered to the authorities). On , the Ship?s Commission issued appeals ?To all civilized world? and ?To all European powers?, proclaiming the crew?s firm decision to fight against the Tsarist regime. Romanian authorities refused to permit supplies to be sent to the battleship. The same happened in the Russian port of Theodosia on where a landing party from the warship was fired on by troops. On , Potemkin returned to Constan?a and its crew handed the ship over to the Romanian authorities. AftermathThe Romanian government then returned the battleship to the Russian navy. In October 1905 it was renamed to Panteleimon (???????????).
The monument to the mutineers of the Battleship Potemkin in modern Zakataly, Azerbaijan. The majority of the mutineers chose to remain in Romania after 1905, at least until the revolution of February 1917. Of those who returned to Russia in the immediate aftermath of the mutiny, seven men were executed as ringleaders while fifty-six crewmen were sentenced to varying terms of imprisonment. A number of petty officers from the Potemkin were able to successfully argue that they had acted only under duress, while the crew of the Viekha, a support vessel caught up in the mutiny when it encountered the Potemkin, were acquitted after it was established that they had successfully argued for the release of their own officers. Amongst the six hundred former crewmen of the Potemkin who remained in Romania in 1905 and generally merged into the local population, was the leader Afanasy Matushenko. Together with four colleagues Matushenko returned to Russia under promise of an amnesty in 1907. He was however arrested and hanged. Another leader, Joseph Dymtchenko, fled Romania in 1908 with thirty-one other sailors and settled in Argentina. At least one sailor, Ivan Beshoff, made it to Ireland via Turkey and London (where he allegedly met Lenin). He set up Beshoff's fish and chips in Dublin, Ireland. He died on October 25, 1987, aged 102, likely to be the last survivor of the crew.[1] Lenin wrote that the Potemkin uprising had had a huge importance in terms of being the first attempt at creating the nucleus of a revolutionary army, especially since a part of the imperial armed forces had sided with the revolution. Lenin called Potemkin an "undefeated territory of the revolution." The Potemkin uprising had a significant influence on the revolutionizing process in the Russian army and fleet in 1917. See alsoNotesReferences
External links
bg:????????? de:Knjas Potjomkin Tawritscheski es:Potemkin (acorazado) fr:Potemkine (cuirassé) it:Potëmkin (nave da battaglia) he:???? ?? ?????? ???? ????????? nl:Pantserkruiser Potjomkin (schip) ja:????????????????????? (??) no:«Potemkin» pl:Potiomkin (1904) pt:Couraçado Potemkin ro:Cuirasatul rusesc Potiomkin ru:?????????? ???????? fi:Potemkin (laiva) sv:Potemkin (pansarkryssare) tr:Sava? Gemisi Potemkin uk:????????? «????? ?????????-????????????»
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