Paul's Military School
The Paul's Military School or Pavel Military School (Russian: Павловское военное училище) (also translated as Pavlovsk Military School, Pavlovsk Military College) was a military school in St. Petersburg, Russia, established in 1863 on the basis of the Paul's Cadet Corps. It was closed in November 1917 after the October Revolution. It was named after emperor Paul I.
History of the school
[edit]On August 25, 1863, during the reorganization of military educational institutions, the Paul's Cadet Corps was abolished, and its seniority was transferred to the Paul's Military School. The first appointed head of school was Pyotr Vannovsky. The school was given the building and archives of the First Cadet Corps.[1]
Over the 50 years of its existence, the school trained 7,730 officers, 52 graduates became Knights of the Order of St. George, 124 graduates died on the battlefields. By 1913, 1/4 of the available officers of the General Staff consisted of graduates.[1]
The school did not take part in the October revolution, because on the night of October 25 it was surrounded by soldiers of the reserve Grenadier regiment and Red Guards of the Putilov and Obukhov factories, and disarmed under the threat of machine-gun fire. The entire command staff, together with the head of the school, General Melnikov, was arrested and sent to the Peter and Paul Fortress. On November 6, 1917, the school was disbanded.[2][1]
Location
[edit]Prior to September, 1864, the school was located in the building of the barracks of the Noble Regiment. From September 16, 1864 to November 24, 1887, the school was located in St. Petersburg, in the buildings of the 1st Cadet Corps on Vasilyevsky Island next to the Menshikov Palace.[3]
Due to renovation work in the palace, on November 24, 1887, the school was transferred back to the St. Petersburg side,[3] to the building of the former Noble Regiment, where it was located until disbandment in November 1917.[4]
Alumni
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Павловское военное училище" [Paul's Military School]. Russian Imperial Army (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2015-02-18. Retrieved 2015-01-10.
- ^ Греков, Ф.В. (1910). "Краткий исторический очерк военно-учебных заведений. 1700-1910" [A brief historical sketch of military educational institutions. 1700-1910.]. Национальная электронная библиотека [National Electronic Library] (in Russian). p. 150. Retrieved 2023-09-22.
- ^ a b Греков, Ф.В. (1910). "Краткий исторический очерк военно-учебных заведений. 1700-1910" [A brief historical sketch of military educational institutions. 1700-1910.]. Национальная электронная библиотека [National Electronic Library] (in Russian). p. 31. Retrieved 2023-09-22.
- ^ Беловинский, Леонид Васильевич (2007). "Павлон". Иллюстрированный энциклопедический историко-бытовой словарь русского народа. XVIII — начало XIX в. [Illustrated encyclopedic historical and everyday dictionary of the Russian people. XVIII - early XIX centuries.] (in Russian) (5000 экз ed.). М.: Эксмо. p. 456. ISBN 978-5-699-24458-4.
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