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Nikolai Ruzsky
Vladimir Kappel
Nicholas Savich Bakulin
Alexander Kutepov
Mikhail Kvetsinsky
Anatoly Lieven
Sergey Markov
Evgeny Miller Vladimir May-Mayevsky
Konstantin Mamontov
Mikhail Drozdovsky Viktor Pokrovsky
Mikhail Diterikhs Aleksandr Rodzyanko
Alexander Dutov Grigory Semyonov
Stanisaw Buak-Baachowicz Andrei Shkuro
Pavel Bermondt-Avalov Roman Ungern von Sternberg
Ivan Ilyin Vladimir Antonov


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Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War
White migr
Russian All-Military Union
Basmachi movement
Estonian War of Independence
Finnish Civil War
Great Siberian Ice March
Czechoslovak Legions
Italian Legione Redenta
1st Infantry Brigade (South Africa)
White Terror (Russia)


Anti-Bolshevik Russia in pictures
Museum and Archives of the White Movement
(Russian) Memory and Honour Association
(Russian) History of the White Movement

6

Kenez, Peter (1980). "The Ideology of the White Movement". Soviet Studies (32): 5883.
Kenez, Peter (1977). Civil War in South Russia, 1919-1920: The Defeat of the Whites. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Kenez, Peter (1971). Civil War in South Russia, 1918: The First Year of the Volunteer Army. Berkeley: University of California
Press.

1
Joana Breidenbach (2005). Pl Nyri, Joana Breidenbach, ed. China inside out: contemporary Chinese nationalism
and transnationalism (illustrated ed.). Central European University Press. p. 90. ISBN 963-7326-14-6. Retrieved 18
March 2012. Then there occurred another story which has become traumatic, this one for the Russian nationalist
psyche. At the end of the year 1918, after the Russian Revolution, the Chinese merchants in the Russian Far East
demanded the Chinese government to send troops for their protection, and Chinese troops were sent to
Vladivostok to protect the Chinese community: about 1600 soldiers and 700 support personnel.
2
Sven Anders Hedin, Folke Bergman (1944). History of the expedition in Asia, 19271935, Part 3. Stockholm:
Gteborg, Elanders boktryckeri aktiebolag. pp. 113115. Retrieved 2010-11-28..
3
Great Britain. Foreign Office (1997). British documents on foreign affairsreports and papers from the Foreign
Office confidential print: From 1940 through 1945. Asia, Part 3. University Publications of America. p. 401. ISBN 1-
55655-674-8. Retrieved 2010-10-28.
4
Lehtovirta, Jaako (2002). "The Use of Titles in Heberstein's 'Commentarii'. Was the Muscovite Tsar a King or an
Emperor?". In von Gardner, Johann. Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des stlichen Europa [Essays on the
intellectual history of eastern Europe]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 190. ISSN 0340-6490.
Retrieved 2015-07-31. It was Ivan III (1462-1505) who is well known as the first one to present himself as a tsar to
foreigners, though it must be accepted that his use of the title was very sparse.
5
Lehtovirta, Jaako (2002). "The Use of Titles in Heberstein's 'Commentarii'. Was the Muscovite Tsar a King or an
Emperor?". In von Gardner, Johann. Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des stlichen Europa [Essays on the
intellectual history of eastern Europe]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 189. ISSN 0340-6490.
Retrieved 2015-07-31. [...] the brief mention that the Muscovite ruler is by some called 'the White King' ('albus
rex').
6
Kenez 1980.
7
Christopher Lazarski, "White Propaganda Efforts in the South during the Russian Civil War, 191819 (The
Alekseev-Denikin Period)", The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. 70, No. 4 (Oct., 1992), pp. 688707.
8
Viktor G. Bortnevski, "White Administration and White Terror (The Denikin Period)", Russian Review, Vol. 52,
No. 3 (Jul., 1993), pp. 354366.
9
Kenez 1980, p. 74.
10
Christopher Lazarski, "White Propaganda Efforts," 689.
11
Kenez 1980, p. 62.
12
Google Books https://books.google.com/books?id=8TZ4mHjG5sIC&printsec=frontcover#PPA56,M1
13
Kenez 1980, p. 6061.
14
Christopher Lazarski, "White Propaganda Efforts," 690.
15
Kenez 1980, p. 5859.
16
Kenez 1980, p. 69.
17
Kenez 1980, p. 59.
18
Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 90.
19
Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 1822.
20
"The R.A.F. in Russia". The Aeroplane. Temple Press. 17 (1): 82. 1919. Retrieved 2014-02-09. Soon after landing
we started to recruit for the Slavo-British Aviation Corps (S.B.A.C.) [...].
21
Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 18.
22
Kenez 1980, p. 65.
23
Viktor G. Bortnevski, White Administration and White Terror, 360.
24
Kenez, Peter, Civil War, 9495.
25
Oleg Beyda, 'Iron Cross of the Wrangel's Army': Russian Emigrants as Interpreters in the Wehrmacht, Journal of
Slavic Military Studies 27, no. 3 (2014): 430448.

White movement en.wikipedia.


: .
: 11/07/2017 Scribd.

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