Dmitry Nikolayevich Verderevsky | |
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Born | Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire | 4 November 1873
Died | 22 August 1947 Paris, France | (aged 73)
Allegiance | Russian Empire |
Service/ | Imperial Russian Navy |
Years of service | 1880–1915 |
Rank | Rear Admiral |
Commands held | Admiral Makarov Bogatyr |
Battles/wars | World War I |
Awards | Order of St Vladimir4th class Order of St. Stanislaus 2nd class Order of St. Anne 2nd class |
Other work | Navy Minister in the Russian Provisional Government |
Dmitry Nikolayevich Verderevsky (Russian: Дмитрий Николаевич Вердеревский) (4 November 1873 – 22 August 1947) was a Russian military leader and rear admiral. He served as Minister of the Navy in the Russian Provisional Government in 1917.
Verderevsky was from an ancient noble family. His father Nikolai Verderevsky was a barrister. His mother was Sophia Alexandrova Repins. He had two brothers: Vasily, an army officer and Roman, a navy officer who fought in the siege of Port Arthur. Verderevsky married Elena Mikhailovna Plen (died 1944) and they had one son, Pavel Dmitrievich (1896-1985), an engineer, who lived in exile in France and is buried next to his father.
After the February Revolution he was made chief of staff of the Baltic Fleet and subsequently fleet commander and assistant to Boris Dudorov, the first Navy minister of the Provisional Government, but failed to put down a mutiny. In July he was arrested, tried and acquitted of "disclosure of official secrets and disobeying the central authorities". As an admiral with a democratic reputation he was appointed Navy Minister in the Kerensky Government in August.
Many military leaders had a negative attitude to the activities of Verderevsky and the War Minister of the Provisional Government of General A. I. Verkhovskii. Their point of view was expressed by General Anton Denikin, who said that the Minister of Marine had utopian initiatives:
"Verderevsky preached that "discipline must be voluntary. We must come to terms with the mass (!) And on the basis of a common love of country to encourage it voluntarily to assume all the burdens of military discipline. It is essential that the discipline is no longer wearing a disagreeable nature of coercion. "
He was an advocate of Russia's withdrawal from the war. On 24 October, in solidarity with the Minister of War A. I. Verkhovsky, also an early supporter of an early peace, Verderevsky drafted his resignation, but had not submitted it by the time the October Revolution broke out. On 26 October 1917 he was arrested by the Bolsheviks in the Winter Palace, together with other members of the Provisional Government. The next day, was released on parole. He provided technical guidance on operational fleet actions to defend the country.
Verderevsky was not involved in the White movement. Initially moving to London in 1918, he settled in Paris in 1920 and was an active Freemason. After World War II he became reconciled with the Soviets and was granted Soviet citizenship in 1946. He was criticised for this by fellow exile Roman Gul. Verderevsky is buried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois Russian Cemetery.
Spouse: Elena Mikhailovna Plen (14.12.1871–12.4.1944, Potsdam).[1]
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