After graduating as amining engineer, Wrangel volunteered for service in the Russo-Japanese War, where he decided on a military career. A graduate of theImperial General Staff Academy, he distinguished himself during World War I, becoming one of the first Russian officers to be awarded theOrder of St. George for heroism. He rose to the rank of major general.
After theOctober Revolution, Wrangel joined the Volunteer Army in August 1918 and was given command of major cavalry formations. He became known for his aggressive leadership and battlefield successes in the northernCaucasus. In 1919, he captured the strategic city ofTsaritsyn but soon clashed with his superior,Anton Denikin, over the latter'sMoscow Directive, a plan Wrangel considered strategically flawed. The growing rivalry led to his dismissal from command in December 1919.
Following Denikin's resignation in April 1920, Wrangel was elected commander-in-chief of the shattered White forces inCrimea. He established theGovernment of South Russia and attempted to win popular support with a wide-ranging series of reforms, including a radical land reform. After initial military successes against theRed Army, his forces were defeated, and he organizeda mass evacuation from Crimea in November 1920, successfully evacuating over 145,000 people. In exile, he remained a leader of the White movement and founded theRussian All-Military Union (ROVS) in 1924. He is remembered as the last commander of the White Army, a more able administrator and strategist than his predecessors, who took command when the White cause was already considered lost.
Pyotr Wrangel was born inNovalexandrovsk,Kovno Governorate in theRussian Empire (nowZarasai, Lithuania) on 28 August 1878, the eldest of three brothers.[1] He was a scion of theWrangel family, aBaltic German noble house of Swedish origin that had served the rulers of Sweden, Prussia, Austria and Russia for over 700 years.[2] The family produced seven field marshals, seven admirals, and dozens of generals.[3] His ancestor, the Swedish Field MarshalHerman Wrangel, was the father ofCarl Gustaf Wrangel, who builtSkokloster Castle.[4] By the nineteenth century, branches of the family had established themselves in the Russian Empire, including BaronFerdinand von Wrangel, the explorer and governor-general ofAlaska.[5]
Pyotr's father, BaronNikolai Egorovich Wrangel [ru], was a humanist, art connoisseur, and writer who had rebelled against the family's military tradition.[6] Nikolai later wrote a memoir,From Serfdom to Bolshevism, detailing his life and experiences.[7] Pyotr's mother, Maria Dimitrievna Dementieva-Maikova, was the daughter of an impoverished officer but was well-educated and interested in social reform.[8] The family lived in a liberal, cultured atmosphere inRostov-on-Don, where Nikolai was a director of several companies.[1]
Following his father's wishes, Wrangel was sent to a civilian school. His father, interested in gold mining inSiberia, decided that Pyotr should become amining engineer and enrolled him in theSchool of Mines inSaint Petersburg.[1] A dutiful son, Wrangel studied diligently and graduated first in his class, receiving a gold medal.[1] Before pursuing his engineering career, he was required to complete his compulsory military service. For the Wrangel family, this meant joining the prestigiousHorse Guards, which his father described as the "Family Regiment".[1]
He entered the army on 13 September 1901. Life in the Horse Guards appealed to him, and he decided to apply for a permanent commission.[9] As with all Guards regiments, a commission required a ballot vote by the regiment's officers. According to his son, on the eve of the ballot, Wrangel celebrated his expected promotion and, on returning home, drew his sword and decapitated a row of young trees planted outside the residence of his senior colonel, the humorless Prince Troubetzkoy. The Prince ensured Wrangel was blackballed, and he left for Siberia to begin his engineering career, reconciled to his new life.[9] He began work as a chemical engineer in eastern Siberia.[10]
Wrangel's life was changed by the outbreak of theRusso-Japanese War in 1904. As a reserve lieutenant, he volunteered for combat duty in the Far East.[11] Along with fifteen other officers from the Horse Guards, he was assigned to the 2nd Argun Cossack Regiment of theTrans-Baikal Cossack Host.[12] During the war, he wrote long, descriptive letters home, which his mother later had published in a historical journal. These letters reveal his keen powers of observation and his feel for the life of a combat officer.[11]
In one of his first actions, he led a scouting party deep intoManchuria to reconnoiter the town of Kindisian. After a perilous night mission, he confirmed the town was clear of large enemy forces.[13] He was awarded his first combat decorations for his bravery during the war. Having found his vocation in soldiering, he decided to stay in military service after the war ended.[10] He was transferred to the55th Dragoon Regiment, based in Finland.[14]
During the1905 Russian Revolution, Wrangel was sent with a detachment under General Orlov to the Baltic region to quell nationalist unrest.[15] In 1907, he was temporarily attached to the Horse Guards in St. Petersburg, pending entry to theNicholas Imperial General Staff Academy.[15] According to his son, his previous indiscretion had been forgotten. During a regimental parade,Tsar Nicholas II, the regiment's honorary commander, noticed the tall officer in a line dragoon uniform with several combat decorations. Upon learning it was Captain Wrangel, the Tsar declared, "I want Captain Wrangel in my regiment." Wrangel became a full-fledged officer of the Horse Guards without the need for a ballot.[15]
Wrangel became known among his fellow officers as "Piper" for his taste forPiper-Heidsieck champagne.[15] In 1908, he married Olga Ivanenko, the daughter of a wealthy Ukrainian landowner. She was a well-educated woman who had trained as a nurse.[16] The couple had four children: Helen, Peter, Nathalie, and later a son, Alexis, born in exile.[17]
Wrangel entered the Staff College, where his previous degree in civil engineering made subjects like mathematics and engineering easy for him. He graduated among the top of his class.[18] In a characteristic move, he turned down the opportunity for a staff position, explaining, "I would be a poor staff officer...I am of too independent a mind!" He returned to a line command in the Horse Guards.[17]
At the start ofWorld War I, Wrangel, holding the rank of captain, was given command of a cavalry squadron. On 6 August 1914, his squadron participated in theattack on German positions at Kaushen inEast Prussia. The German artillery battery was well-camouflaged and inflicting heavy casualties on the Russian forces. After other officers had been killed, Wrangel took command and led a desperate cavalry charge against the battery.[19] The charge was largely successful, though most of the horses and many of the men were killed by gunfire. Wrangel's own horse was killed under him, but he survived to help capture the two remaining guns. For this act of heroism, he was one of the first Russian officers of the war to be awarded theOrder of St. George (4th class).[20]
This action brought him to prominence. In September 1914, he was made Chief of Staff of the Joint Guards Cavalry Division under GeneralPavel Skoropadsky.[20] In April 1915, he was awarded theSt. George Sword and promoted to colonel. He was offered the command of a line cavalry regiment, and to the surprise of many, he requested the Nertchinsk Trans-Baikal Cossack Regiment, with whom he had served in the Russo-Japanese War. He had great respect for the Cossacks' bravery and knew them well.[21] By 1916 he was commanding the Tsarevich's Own Regiment of Nerchinsk Cossacks.[10]
He led the regiment with customary energy. In theCarpathian Mountains, a successful attack earned new rewards: the regiment was awarded silver bugles, a regimental combat award dating from theNapoleonic wars.[21] As a mark of special distinction,Tsarevich Alexei was named honorary chief of the regiment. Wrangel led a deputation from the regiment to St. Petersburg to receive the honors. This led to a period of service as anaide-de-camp to Tsar Nicholas II.[22] During this time, he observed the growing turmoil in the capital and the "presentiment abroad of the nearness of the terrible events".[23]
After returning to the front, Wrangel was promoted to major general and given command of a brigade on the Romanian front.[24]
When news of theTsar's abdication reached the front in March 1917, Wrangel's divisional commander, GeneralAleksandr Krymov, a republican, read the manifesto. Wrangel turned to his chief of staff and said: "This is the end of everything — this is anarchy."[25] He believed that the disappearance of the monarchy would lead to the collapse of the army and the nation. After theOctober Revolution, he left the army and went to his family's villa inYalta,Crimea.[26]
In early 1918, Yalta was occupied by theRed Army. Wrangel was arrested by Red sailors, along with his wife and her brother. He was nearly executed but was saved by the intervention of his wife, who argued with the sailors, and by a fortuitous circumstance involving his family's laundress and the head of the local revolutionary tribunal.[27] After his release, he went into hiding with his family among the localTatar population, who were hostile to theBolsheviks.[28]
In August 1918, afterGerman troops had occupied Crimea, Wrangel travelled toEkaterinodar to join the anti-BolshevikVolunteer Army.[29] He was given command of the 1st Cavalry Division by GeneralAnton Denikin.[30] The division was small, consisting of only twelve hundred men, with minimal ammunition and equipment, facing Red forces that numbered between twelve and fifteen thousand.[31] Wrangel quickly established a reputation for bold leadership and for reviving the old cavalry tactic of charging in close order ("stirrup to stirrup"), a method that proved surprisingly effective against the less disciplined Red infantry.[32] He had an unpleasant experience in his early days, when his Cossacks broke before a Red cavalry charge and he had to escape by jumping onto a moving ambulance-car.[30] He also became known for his ruthless methods. After capturing a large group of Red Army prisoners, he ordered 370 of their officers and non-commissioned officers shot on the spot. He justified this as letting "those who had misled them take responsibility for their treason", while offering the remaining soldiers the chance to "atone for their crime" by joining the White army. According to Wrangel, this battalion later became one of his best units.[33]
His successes led to his promotion to command the 1st Cavalry Corps. He won a series of victories in the northern Caucasus, culminating in a decisive victory at theUrup River in October 1918, where his forces routed the Reds, capturing 3,000 prisoners and 23 guns.[34] By the end of 1918, as part of a large-scale reorganization after the Don and Volunteer armies were unified as theArmed Forces of South Russia, Wrangel was given command of theCaucasian Volunteer Army, the main fighting force in the Northern Caucasus.[35]
Although an able and distinguished officer, Wrangel was also characterized by contemporaries as "boundlessly vain, ambitious, and given to histrionics and intrigues".[36] In early 1919, a major strategic disagreement emerged between Wrangel and Denikin, reviving a debate that had taken place in May 1918 between Denikin and the Don AtamanPyotr Krasnov.[37] At a Council of War in late January, Wrangel argued for a concentration of forces to strike north-east againstTsaritsyn (later Stalingrad) to link up with AdmiralAlexander Kolchak's White army advancing from Siberia. Denikin, however, insisted on concentrating forces in the Donets Basin to secure its coal resources and create a "jumping-off ground for the attack on Moscow". Denikin's view prevailed.[38] The conference where this was decided sowed the first seeds of discord between the two generals, with Denikin becoming wary of the aristocratic Wrangel.[39][40]
Wrangel heading a victory parade after the capture ofTsaritsyn, 30 June 1919
Despite his objections, Wrangel led the newly formed Caucasian Army towards Tsaritsyn. The campaign was arduous, conducted across a steppe with little water and facing numerically superior Red forces.[41] In June 1919, aftera fierce battle, Wrangel's troops stormed and captured the heavily fortified city, a major strategic victory for the White forces.[42] The victory was achieved through a bold plan, using a concentration of forces on one flank and the first coordinated use of tanks and aircraft by the White Army.[42]
Following the victory, Denikin arrived in Tsaritsyn and issued the Moscow Directive. Wrangel again voiced his concerns, calling the plan the "death-sentence for the Armies of Southern Russia" and arguing that the army should first secure its gains and link up with Kolchak.[43][44] Denikin famously replied, "Of course, you want to be the first to enter Moscow!"[45] As Denikin's armiesadvanced on Moscow, Wrangel's forces on theVolga flank were left with few reinforcements and faced mounting Red pressure. He successfully defended Tsaritsyn against four successive Red Army assaults but was eventually forced to retreat.[46] The ever-increasing rivalry with Denikin became public and harmed the White movement.[36] Wrangel attacked Denikin for his perceived weakness and indecisiveness and his failure to impose order in the rear.[47] In December 1919, after a series of military setbacks, Wrangel was dismissed from his command and went into exile inConstantinople.[48]
In March 1920, following the disastrous defeat of the Volunteer Army and its chaotic evacuation fromNovorossiysk, Denikin resigned. On 4 April, a military council elected Wrangel as the new Commander-in-Chief of theArmed Forces of South Russia.[49][50] He took command of a demoralized and shattered force, now confined to the Crimean peninsula, at a time when many, including the British, considered the White cause lost.[51] AdmiralJohn de Robeck, the British High Commissioner, informed him that British aid would cease. Wrangel's response was resolute: "If I am chosen, it is my duty to accept the command."[52]
Wrangel reorganized the remnants into a disciplined fighting force, which he renamed the "Russian Army" to distance it from the now-unpopular Volunteer Army and emphasize its national character.[53] He established a new civilian government, theGovernment of South Russia, bringing in experienced administrators likeAlexander Krivoshein, a former minister under Stolypin, and the liberal intellectualPeter Struve.[54][55] His government embarked on an ambitious program of reforms, described by his foreign minister Struve as an attempt "to make leftist policy with rightist hands".[56] This program included a sweeping land reform, which recognized the peasants' ownership of land they had seized in 1917 while providing for compensation to the original landowners.[57] It was the most radical land reform ever proposed by a White leader.[58] He also implemented policies to address workers' grievances, combat corruption, and grant autonomy to the Cossacks.[59] Unlike his predecessors, he did not believe that the people would support the Whites out of a sense of duty, but rather that the Whites had to create conditions that would generate such support.[60] Despite these measures, the land reform was too complex and was implemented too late to win over the peasantry, who remained deeply distrustful of the White government and expected the land for free from the Bolsheviks.[61]
In June 1920, Wrangel launched his last major offensive, theNorthern Taurida Operation. His forces broke out of the Crimean bottleneck and captured a large territory to the north.[56][62] This success was aided by the diversion of Red Army forces to thePolish–Soviet War.[63] However, after Poland signed an armistice with the Soviets in October, the Red Army concentrated overwhelming forces against Wrangel. An amphibious landing in theKuban in August to raise a Cossack uprising failed disastrously.[64][65] In late October, the vastly outnumbered Russian Army was forced back into Crimea after a fierce fighting retreat across the Taurida.[66]
Facing certain defeat, Wrangel organizeda mass evacuation, for which he had been preparing since August.[67] In a final proclamation before leaving, he stated, "The Army, which has shed its blood in great torrents in fighting, not only for the Russian cause, but for the whole world, is now leaving its native shores, abandoned by everybody...We have the right to claim help from those who owe their continued freedom and even their continued existence to us; we have sacrificed much for their cause."[68] On 14 November 1920, 126 ships evacuated 145,693 soldiers and civilians from the ports of Crimea, without a single casualty. The evacuation was far more successful than Denikin's from Novorossiysk.[69] This fleet, later known asWrangel's fleet, sailed toConstantinople, marking the end of the White struggle in Southern Russia.[70]
After the evacuation, Wrangel and his army were interned in camps, primarily inGallipoli and on the island ofLemnos. Despite extreme hardship, starvation, and pressure from the French government to disband, Wrangel kept the army's morale and organization intact.[71] His staff was based on his yacht, theLucullus, in Constantinople. On 15 October 1921, theLucullus was rammed and sunk by an Italian freighter sailing from a Soviet port; Wrangel and his family were ashore at the time, but the incident was widely seen as a Soviet assassination attempt.[72]
The army was eventually resettled inYugoslavia andBulgaria.[73] In 1924, to unite all Russian military émigrés and continue the anti-Bolshevik struggle, Wrangel established theRussian All-Military Union (ROVS).[74] He remained its leader for the rest of his life. He spent his final years with his family inBrussels, living modestly and continuing to lead the White movement through voluminous correspondence.[75]
Wrangel died suddenly in Brussels in 1928, after a short and severe illness. His family and supporters believed that he had been poisoned by a Soviet agent.[76] According to historian Richard Luckett, it is "probable that Wrangel died a natural death – of an illness brought on by overwork".[77] His last words were reportedly, "Lord save the Army".[76]
In 1929, in accordance with his last wishes, his remains were transported to Yugoslavia. After a state funeral inBelgrade attended byKing Alexander I and representatives of the Russian émigré community, he was buried in the Russian Holy Trinity Church.[78]
Wrangel is remembered as the last commander of the White Army and a central figure of the Russian Civil War. HistorianPeter Kenez described him as a "more able politician, diplomat and general" than his predecessor Denikin, who possessed charisma and enacted a more realistic and enlightened policy. However, Kenez also argues that Wrangel assumed command when "the White cause was already lost" and that his personal mistakes, such as delaying the withdrawal from Northern Taurida, did not ultimately influence the outcome of the struggle.[79] For Wrangel, a key objective during his command was to lead his army out of a "hopeless position without loss of honour". His supporters believe that in this, he succeeded in redeeming the honour of the Imperial Russian Army from which the White movement had sprung.[68] His family motto,Rumpo non Plecto ("I break, I do not yield"), has often been seen as representative of his character and his role in the White struggle.[80]
Baroness Nathalie Petrovna Wrangel (11 October 1913Saint Petersburg, Russia – 9 August 2013,Cos Cob, Connecticut, United States); married to Alexis GeorgeBasilevski, a Russian nobleman and had issue
Baron Alexis Petrovich Wrangel (7 July 1922,Serbia – 27 May 2005County Meath, Republic of Ireland); married to Ekaterina Nikolaevna vonLambsdorff; no issue
His nephew, BaronGeorge Wrangell, became known by theDavid Ogilvy-created 1951ad campaign for theHathaway shirt company in which he was depicted in photos as "a white-shirted, debonair-looking fellow" with a black patch over his right eye, although both his eyes were "perfectly good."[81]
Kenez, Peter (1971).Civil War in South Russia, 1918: The First Year of the Volunteer Army. Berkeley: University of California Press.ISBN978-0-520-01709-2.
Kenez, Peter (1977).Civil War in South Russia, 1919–1920: The Defeat of the Whites. Berkeley: University of California Press.ISBN978-0-520-03346-7.
Williams, Harold (1928)."General Wrangel".The Slavonic and East European Review.7 (19). Modern Humanities Research Association:198–204.ISSN2222-4327.JSTOR4202254. Retrieved9 October 2023.