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Stanislav Gilyarovich Poplavsky (Russian: Станислав Гилярович Поплавский, Polish: Stanisław Popławski) (22 April 1902 – 10 August 1973) was a general in the Soviet and Polish armies.
Stanislav Poplavsky | |
---|---|
Birth name | Stanislav Gilyarovich Poplavsky |
Born | Vendichany village, Mogilev district, Podolsk province, Russian Empire (now in Mogilev-Podolsky district, Vinnytsia region, Ukraine) | 22 April 1902
Died | 10 August 1973 71) Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union | (aged
Buried | |
Allegiance | Soviet Union Polish People's Republic |
Years of service | 1920–1963 |
Rank | Army General |
Commands |
|
Battles / wars | |
Awards | Hero of the Soviet Union Virtuti Militari Several others (see below) |
Poplavsky was born in Imperial Russia, in Podolia. His family (his father's name was Hilary) was ethnically Polish, and in his younger years he considered himself a Pole.
In February 1920, he was drafted into the Red Army, and participated in the Russian Civil War. He was a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1930 onwards.[1]
Poplavsky served for the first three years (until 1923) as a private, then for four years (until 1927) as an NCO, company commander in the 297th Rifle Regiment. Over the next few years he attended an officer school, and afterwards received his own commands: first of a platoon in the 137th Rifle Regiment (1930–1931), then a platoon (1931–1933) and later a company in the School for Infantry Officers in Kharkov (1933–1935).[2]
Before the Second World War he attended the Frunze Military Academy (1935–1938) where he became an instructor of military tactics (1938–1939) but in February 1939 he was relieved after a false accusation and given a manager's job at a sovkhoz in Tula region.
He returned to service shortly before the German invasion of the Soviet Union, as the head of the Operational Division of the Staff of the 162nd Rifle Division.
Poplavsky served as the commander of 720th Rifle Regiment (July–September 1941), and then Chief of Staff of 363rd Rifle Division (October 1941 – January 1942). During this time, he participated in the Białystok–Minsk and Smolensk battles. At the beginning of the Battle for Moscow, during the Vyazma and Bryansk defensive operation, his regiment was surrounded. But a few days later, on 6 October, he broke through the encirclement with a battle and withdrew his regiment along with several other units of the 19th Army. For distinctions in the battles of summer and autumn of 1941, he was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.[3]
Poplavsky, who distinguished himself in a difficult situation, was immediately appointed with a promotion as chief of staff of the 363rd Rifle Division, which was hastily formed in the Ural Military District, and already in December entered the battle as part of the 30th Army of the Kalinin Front, and took part in the Klin-Solnechnogorsk offensive operation. In January 1942, he was appointed as the commander of the 185th Rifle Division. During the Rzhev-Vyazma operation, his unit was assigned to 29th Army, Kalinin Front. During the battle, his unit pulled ahead and was surrounded by enemy forces. A month later, his unit was in a complete encirclement. But with air supply, the unit managed to organize an active defense using the terrain conditions, prevented the destruction of the division and at the end of February 1942, it successfully broke through the front line to join the main army forces.
In May 1942, he was appointed as the commander of the 256th Rifle Division, which was assigned to the 39th Army, Kalinin Front. From 16 to 29 June, he was the chief of staff of the unit, and then was appointed commander of the 220th Rifle Division on the Kalinin and Western Fronts. During the Rzhev-Vyazma Offensive in March 1943, his division fought over 170 kilometers and crossed six rivers on the move, preventing German troops from gaining a foothold along their lines.[3]
From June 1943 to September 1944, he commanded the 45th Rifle Corps in the Soviet 5th Army on the Western, 1st Belorussian and 3rd Belorussian Fronts. At the command of the corps, he participated in the Second Battle of Smolensk and Operation Bagration.
In September 1944 he was transferred to the Ludowe Wojsko Polskie (Polish People's Army) as one of the many Soviet officers who were to ensure that this allied formation remained loyal to communist ideals. As major general he commanded the Polish Second Army (26 September – 19 December 1944) and later the Polish First Army (until 10 September 1945). His units took parts in the breakthrough of the Pommernstellung (Pomerania Wall) fortification line, securing the Baltic Sea coast, crossing the Odra and Elbe rivers and the Battle of Berlin. He was wounded eight times in the war and showed high organizational skills in planning combat operations, and commanding troops. For his successful operations, he was noted 15 times in the orders of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief Joseph Stalin.
For skillful command and control of troops in breaking through enemy defenses on the Oder River and in the battles for Berlin on 29 May 1945, Poplavsky was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.
After the war he remained in the Polish army, along with thousands of other ethnically-Polish Soviet officers, including Konstantin Rokossovsky, who were put in charge of almost all Polish military units, either as commanding officers or as their advisors.[4] Poplavsky served as commander of the Polish forces occupying Germany, later being commander of the Silesian Military District (until 22 November 1947), Chief Commander of the Polish Land Forces (until 21 March 1950), and General Inspector of Military Training (until 2 April 1949). He also held political positions: on 2 April 1949 he became the 2nd Deputy Minister of National Defence and later was Deputy Minister himself. He was also a deputy to the Polish Sejm (1947–1956), and from 1949 to 1956 he was a member of the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers Party (PZPR). On 12 August 1955 he was appointed General of the Soviet Army. In 1950, he was seconded as president of the Legia Warsaw sports club. He replaced General Eugeniusz Luśniak in this position, who was forced to resign in a wave of purges in the army of pre-war officers. Luśniak was arrested shortly thereafter and charged with espionage. Sentenced to 15 years in prison, he died in 1954 in a prison in Wronki.[5]
From 1947 to 1956, he was a member of the Legislative Sejm on behalf of the People's Party, later the Polish United Workers' Party, and then a member of the Sejm of the Polish People's Republic of the first term. On 1949, he became a member of the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers' Party. From 1953 to 1956, he was the president of the Supreme Hunting Council of the Polish Hunting Association. Poplavsky served as the president of the sports club Legia Warsaw, from 1950 to 1957.
In 1956 he was commander of the military forces responsible for the suppression of the Poznań 1956 protests. Afterwards, with the beginning of the era of destalinization, he (together with a significant number of other Soviet officers) left the Polish Army, which was granted slightly increased independence, and returned to the Soviet Union, where he became the 1st Deputy of the Chief Inspector of Military Training of the Soviet Army, and from 1958 an advisor to the inspectors-general of the Soviet Ministry of Defense.
He retired in 1963 with the rank of army general.
Poplvasky was married to Maja Poplavska, née Terpilowska (1911–1991). They had a daughter, Izabela (1931–2011).
Poplavsky died on 10 August 1973 in Moscow. He was buried with full military honors at the Novodevichy Cemetery. His funeral was attended by a Polish delegation led by Minister of National Defense, General Wojciech Jaruzelski.
Major general, Red Army: 14 February 1943 | |
Major general, Polish Army: 3 December 1944 | |
Lieutenant general, Polish Army: 3 May 1945 | |
General, Polish Army: 12 August 1955 | |
Author of memoirs Comrades of the front roads (or Comrades of the struggle; Polish title: Towarzysze frontowych dróg, Warszawa 1964, 1966, 1970, 1973, 1983; Russian title: Товарищи в борьбе, Moskwa 1963, 1974; German title: Kampfgefährten, Berlin 1980). The original title was to be On the land of forefathers (Na ziemi przodków, За землю предков), but it was changed by the censors.
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