Чирчиқ олий танк қўмондонлик-муҳандислик билим юрти Chirchiq oliy tank komandir-muhandislik bilim yurti | |
Tashkent Higher Tank Command School in the postwar period | |
Other name |
|
|---|---|
| Type | Military academy |
| Established | November 16, 1918 (1918-11-16) (as Nizhny Novgorod Infantry Courses) |
| Address | 15 Amir Temur ,,41°28′41″N69°34′16″E / 41.47807°N 69.571030°E /41.47807; 69.571030 |
![]() | |
TheChirchiq Higher Tank Command and Engineering School (Uzbek:Чирчиқ олий танк қўмондонлик-муҳандислик билим юрти), formerly theTashkent Order of Lenin Higher Tank Command School named after Pavel Rybalko (Russian:Ташкентское высшее танковое командное училище имени П. С. Рыбалко (ТВТКУ),romanized: Tashkentskoye vyssheye tankovoye komandnoye ordena Lenina uchilishche imeni dvazhdy Geroya Sovetskogo Soyuza marshala bronetankovykh voysk P. S. Rybalko (TVTKU)), is a military academy of theMinistry of Defense of Uzbekistan, responsible for training armored and engineering personnel of theUzbekistan Ground Forces.
Established in 1918 as theNizhny Novgorod Infantry Courses, it became an infantry school in 1921 and was converted into a tank school in 1932, training tank commanders for the expanding Soviet armored forces. It relocated to Kharkov in 1938 and was evacuated to Chirchiq in September 1941 followingOperation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union duringWorld War II. The school was renamed the Tashkent Higher Tank Command School in 1966.
Despite its name, the school was located inChirchiq rather thanTashkent. In 1993, following the independence of Uzbekistan and thedissolution of the Soviet Union, it was renamed the Chirchiq Higher Tank Command and Engineering School.
The school traces its origins to the creation of theNizhny Novgorod Infantry Courses of theRed Army command staff on 16 November 1918 during theRussian Civil War. The courses were taught in the building of the city's formereparchial school. Among the first cadets were workers from the city'sKrasnoye Sormovo Factory. The faculty were taken from experienced formerImperial Russian Army officers, known asMilitary specialists.Ippolit Zhilinsky taught tactics, B.N. Moravsky engineering, and K.I. Bussov shooting. The first head of the courses was former Colonel A.I. Goryachev, and the first head of training wasNikolay Pukhov. During the summer of 1919, the first group of cadets graduated and were sent into combat on theSouthern Front. In 1921, the courses became the 11th Nizhny Novgorod Infantry School[1] and the training period at the school expanded to three years.[2]
On 15 March 1932, the school was renamed the Nizhny Novgorod Tank School named forI.V. Stalin, and began training tank commanders for the Red Army's new armored forces. The 1st Tank Battalion, a training unit, was formed at the school, commanded byMakar Teryokhin. It became the Gorky Tank School that year when the city was renamed. In the fall of 1934 the first class of tank commanders graduated; they includedGeorgy Skleznyov, who was posthumously made aHero of the Soviet Union for his actions in theSpanish Civil War, and futureMarshal of the Soviet UnionSergey Sokolov. In March 1938 it was relocated toKharkov and renamed the Kharkov Tank School named for I.V. Stalin. The school was subsequently renamed the 1st Kharkov Tank School named for I.V. Stalin after a second tank school was established in Kharkov.[2]
Following the beginning ofOperation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, on 22 June 1941, 252 lieutenants graduated from the school and immediately sent to the front. In July, a consolidated cadet shock tank battalion under the command of a Major Grishin was formed from a selection of the remaining cadets and commanders, equipped with newT-34 andKV tanks fresh from factories in Kharkov, and sent to the front within three days. In September, as the front line approached Kharkov, the entire group of cadets and instructors from the school took up defensive positions at thestanitsa ofBuryn and thekhutor of Mikhailovsky, fighting alongside the Kharkov Infantry School. On 22 September the school was evacuated toChirchiq, where it was renamed the Tashkent Tank School. Two months later, it graduated another class of tank commanders. During the war, the school's training period was accelerated. In 1943, for "outstanding services in training command cadres", the school was awarded theOrder of Lenin. During World War II, the school graduated more than 7,000 tank commanders. For their actions, 74 graduates of the school became Heroes of the Soviet Union during the war.[2]
The school began transitioning back to a two-year period of study in 1946, and from 1949 had a three-year training period. In December 1961, as part ofDe-Stalinization, the school's honorific "named for I.V. Stalin" was replaced by "named for P.S. Rybalko" in honor of Soviet armor commanderPavel Rybalko. In April 1966, its training period was extended to four years, and the school was renamed the Tashkent Higher Tank Command School. Graduates now received a higher education diploma and a civilian engineer specialty.[2] In 1993, following the independence of Uzbekistan, the school was renamed the Chirchiq Higher Tank Command and Engineering School.[3] From 1997, the school trained tank platoon commanders in the operation and repair of armored vehicles and equipment, airborne platoon commanders in the operation and repair of armored and motor vehicles, and tactical short-range anti-aircraft systems commanders in radio engineering, as well as engineers for the operation and repair of armored vehicles and equipment, andpolitical officers in social sciences.[4][5]
The following officers commanded the school:[6]