Mikhail Abamielikov
September 13, 1893, died March 1, 1979 in Nyack) - Russian military officer (colonel), emigrant, officer of the Polish Army in the USSR, and then II Corps of Poland during the Second World War. II. Curriculum vitae
In 1911, he graduated from the cadet corps in Kiev, and in 1913, a Kiev military school. He served in the 44th Kamchatka Infantry Regiment. He participated in the First World War. During the front fights he was seriously wounded. After being cured, he was recruited as a training officer to a military school in Kiev. He then served in the Artillery School in Sergieje. In 1917 he went to the school of the Grandpa in Ekaterinodar. He reached the level of the bar.
He joined the newly formed White Army of General Den Denin. He participated in the 1st Cuban March. From autumn 1919 he served in the Drozdowska Artillery Brigade. In May 1920, he took command of the 8th Brigade Battery. He came to the rank of colonel. In November this year, along with the White troops, was evacuated from Crimea to Gallipoli.
He emigrated to Poland. He lived in Lutsk. After the Red Army attack in the autumn of 1939, he was arrested by the NKVD in the early 1940s. After the trial he was sentenced to a long prison sentence. He was put in a camp in Komi. After the conclusion of the Sikorski-Mayski agreement in the summer of 1941, he was released from the camp as captain of the reserve of the Polish Army. He joined the newly formed Polish Army in the USSR, General Wladyslaw Anders. He followed the fighting route of the II Corps of Poland. At the end of the war he left for Argentina. In 1975 he came to the USA. Bibliography
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