South Russia (1919–1920)

South Russia or South of Russia (Russian: Юг Росси́и, romanizedYug Rossii), also known as White South (Russian: Белый Юг, romanizedBely Yug) was a short-lived military quasi-state that existed in Eastern Europe during the Southern Front of the Russian Civil War from 1919 to 1920.

South Russia / South of Russia
Юг России
1919–1920
Flag of
Flag
of
Coat of arms
Approximate territory of South Russia in 1919
CapitalEkaterinodar (January 1919–March 1920)
Novorossiysk (March 1920)
Sevastopol (from April 1920)
Common languagesRussian, Ukrainian
Religion
Orthodox Christianity
GovernmentMilitary dictatorship
Quasi-state
Commander-in-Chief 
• 8 Jan 1919–4 April 1920
Anton Denikin
• 4 April–21 November 1920
Pyotr Wrangel
Historical eraRussian Civil War
• Established
8 January 1919
• Disestablished
22 November 1920
CurrencyRuble
Preceded by
Succeeded by
General Command of the Armed Forces of South Russia
RSFSR
RSFSR
Makhnovshchina

South Russia was established on 8 January 1919 by the White movement after reorganization of their armed forces in the Southern Front, consisting of territory under their control in Ukraine, Crimea, Kuban, the North Caucasus, Black Earth region, Lower Volga, and the Don region. South Russia was an anti-Bolshevik military state under the Armed Forces of South Russia led by General Anton Denikin, and its borders were undefined, changing based on victories or defeats against the Red Army.[1] In March 1920, Denikin established the South Russian Government in Novorossiysk, an attempt at a civil government with the General Command of the Armed Forces of South Russia serving as the legislative body. Less than a month later, the Whites were forced to evacuate from Novorossiysk, the Armed Forces of South Russia and the South Russian Government were dissolved. Denikin resigned and delegated power to General Pyotr Wrangel, who established the new Government of South Russia in Sevastopol and the new Russian Army, commonly known as the Army of Wrangel in April.

During mid-1920, South Russia's territory had receded to the White stronghold on Crimea, a highly defensible location that had repelled several Red offensives. The Whites were defeated at the Siege of Perekop in November 1920, losing the highly strategic Perekop Isthmus and leaving Crimea vulnerable to Red invasion. Wrangel ordered the evacuation of Crimea, effectively ending his government and the Southern Front in Red Victory. South Russia ceased to exist after the Red conquest of Crimea, and its territory was divided between Soviet Russia, the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, and the territory controlled by the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine of Nestor Makhno.

In Soviet historiography, South Russia was called the White South or White South of Russia, in reference to the concept of the White Army.

Thousand Rubles of the Armed Forces of the South Russia

References

edit
  1. ^ Ушаков А. И., Федюк В. П. Белый Юг. Ноябрь 1919 — ноябрь 1920. — Москва: АИРО-XX, 1997. — ISBN 5-88735-045-8.