Russkaya Starina, 2015, Vol. (15), Is. 3
Copyright © 2015 by Academic Publishing House Researcher
Published in the Russian Federation
Russkaya Starina
Has been issued since 1870.
ISSN: 2313-402x
E-ISSN: 2409-2118
Vol. 15, Is. 3, pp. 156–167, 2015
DOI: 10.13187/ rs.2015.15.156
www.ejournal15.com
Relevant Topic
UDC 94(470.47)
Three Stages of “Political Banditry” in the Territory of Kalmykia (1918–1927)
Utash B. Ochirov
Kalmyk Institute for Humanities of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russian Federation
8, Ilishkin Street, Elista
358000 Republic of Kalmykia
Dr (History), Associate Professor
E-mail: utash@elista.ru
Abstract
The article analyzes the peculiarities of the growth of so-called political banditry in the
territory of Kalmykia in the period from 1918 to 1927. In the beginning of the paper, the author
analyzes the validity of the term “political banditry” and comes to the conclusion that although this
term is not ethically perfect, being marked by a negative connotation, another term to define the
phenomenon is hard to find. Analyzing the development of “political banditry” in the territory of
Kalmykia from 1918 to 1927, the author comes to the conclusion that the phenomenon appeared
only since the beginning of the Civil war and has experienced three stages in its growth.
The first stage (1918 – beginning of 1919) was associated mostly with the Red Army and with
banditry of some Red Army units arrived from other regions, which in terms of chaos and impunity
during the first year of the Civil war went too far in not separating requisition and mobilization –
lawful from the point of view of the Soviet government – from outright robbery and violence. Some
of them were declared criminals by the Soviet power and destroyed by the Red Guards.
The second stage (1919–1920) is associated with the invasion of the White Guards in the
Lower Volga region. Regular troops conducted their operations in the outskirts of Kalmykia, the
steppe became an arena for action of small mobile groups, mostly White Guards or the people who
considered themselves as such. A significant part of these units had an “insurgent band” origin,
consisted of Kalmyks, dissatisfied with the Soviet government and was supported by the Whites,
both materially and financially. However, in the second half of 1919, the Soviet government with
considerable effort, managed to reverse the mood of the population in their favor. After the defeat
of the White Army, a significant part of the “gang” laid down their arms in exchange for Amnesty
and the insurgent movement in Kalmykia was destroyed.
The third stage (1921–1927) of “political banditry” in the territory of Kalmykia, as well as
throughout Russia, belonged to the “green” movement, which could be joined either by White
officers, or Red commanders. It was caused by the reaction of the population to the economic
policy of the “war communism”, and then to the excesses of local authorities in carrying out of the
NEP (the New Economic Policy), which were superimposed on the harsh conditions of the mass
156