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MICHAEL IVANOVICH DRAGOMIROV (1830-1905) , See also: Russian general and military writer, was See also: born on the 8th of See also: November 183o
.
He entered the Guard See also: infantry in 1849, becoming 2nd See also: lieutenant in 1852 and lieutenant in 1854
.
In the latter See also: year he was selected to study at the See also: Nicholas See also: Academy (staff See also: college), and here he distinguished himself so much that he received a gold medal, an honour which, it is stated, was paid to a student of the academy only twice in the 19th century
.
In 1856 he was promoted staff-captain and in 1858 full captain, being sent in the latter year to study the military methods in vogue in other countries
.
He visited See also: France, See also: England and Belgium, and wrote voluminous reports on the instructional and manoeuvre camps of these countries at Chalons, See also: Aldershot and Beverloo
.
In 1859 he was attached to the headquarters of the See also: king of
See also: Sardinia during the See also: campaign of See also: Magenta and See also: Solferino, and immediately upon his return to See also: Russia he was sent to the Nicholas Academy as professor of tactics
.
Dragomirov played a leading See also: part in the reorganization of the educational See also: system of the army, and acted also as instructor to several princes of the imperial See also: family
.
This See also: post he held until 1863, when, as a lieutenant-colonel, he took part in the suppression of the See also: Polish insurrection of 1863-64, returning to St See also: Petersburg in the latter year as colonel and chief of staff to one of the Guard divisions
.
During the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, Dragomirov was attached to the headquarters of the II
.
Prussian army
.
He was See also: present at the battles on the upper Elbe and at See also: Koniggratz, and his comments on the operations which he witnessed are of the greatest value to the student of tactics and of the war of 1866
.
In 1868 he was made a major-general, and in the following year became chief of the staff in the See also: Kiev military circumscription
.
In 1873 he was appointed to command the 14th division, and in this command he distinguished himself very greatly in the Russo-See also: Turkish War of 1877-78
.
The 14th division led the way at the See also: crossing of the Danube at Zimnitza, Dragomirov being in See also: charge of the delicate and difficult operation of crossing and landing under fire, and fulfilling his See also: mission with See also: complete success
.
Later, after the reverses before See also: Plevna, he, with the See also: cesarevich and Generals Todleben and Milutine, strenuously opposed the See also: suggestion of the See also: Grand-duke Nicholas that the Russian army should retreat into Rumania, and the demoralization of the greater part of the army was not permitted to spread to Dragomirov's division, which retained its discipline unimpaired and gave a splendid example to the rest
.
He was wounded at the Shipka Pass, and, though promoted lieutenant-general soon after this, was not able to see further active service
.
He was also made adjutant-general to the See also: tsar and chief of the 53rd See also: Volhynia regiment of his old division
.
For eleven years thereafter General Dragomirov was chief of the Nicholas Academy, and it was during this See also: period that he collated and introduced into the Russian army all the best military literature of See also: Europe, and in many other ways was active in improving the moral and technical efficiency of the Russian officer-corps, especially of the staff officer
.
In 1889 Dragomirov became See also: commander-in-chief of the Kiev military See also: district, and governor-general of Kiev, See also: Podolsk and Volhynia, retaining this post until 1903
.
He was promoted to the See also: rank of general of infantry in 1891
.
His advanced age and failing See also: health prevented his employment at the front during the Russo-See also: Japanese war of 1904-5, but his advice was continually solicited by the general headquarters at St Petersburg, and while he disagreed with
General Kuropatkin in many important questions of See also: strategy and military policy, they both recommended a repetition of the strategy of 1812, even though the See also: total abandonment of See also: Port Arthur was involved therein
.
General Dragomirov died at Konotop on the 28th of See also: October 1905
.
In addition to the orders which he already possessed, he received in 1901 the See also: order of St Andrew
.
His larger military See also: works were mostly translated into French, and his occasional papers, extending over a period of nearly fifty years, appeared chiefly in the Voienni Svornik and the Razoiedschik; his later articles in the last-named paper were, like the general orders he issued to his own troops, attentively studied throughout the Russian army
.
His critique of Tolstoy's War andSee also: Peace attracted even wider See also: attention
.
Dragomirov was, in formal tactics, the See also: head of the " orthodox " school
.
His conservatism was not, however, the result of habit and early training, but of deliberate reasoning and choice
.
His See also: model was, as he admitted in the war of 1866, the See also: British infantry of the See also: Peninsular War, but he sought to reach the ideal, not through the methods of repression against which the " advanced " tacticians revolted, but by means of thorough efficiency in the individual soldier and in the smaller See also: units
.
He inculcated the " offensive at all See also: costs," and the combination of crushing See also: short-range fire and the See also: bayonet charge
.
He carried out the ideas of See also: Suvarov to the fullest extent, and many thought that he pressed them to a theoretical extreme unattainable in practice
.
His critics, however, did not always realize that Dragomirov depended, for the efficiency his unit required, on the capacity of the See also: leader, and that an essential part of the self-sacrificing discipline he exacted from his See also: officers was the power of assuming responsibility
.
The details of his brilliant achievement of Zimnitza suffice to give a clear idea of Dragomirov's See also: personality and of the way in which his methods of training conduced to success
.
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