Boris Palij-Nejiło


Berri Palij-Nejilo military.

In 1895 he graduated from the Piotwo cadet corps in Poltava, and in 1897 went to the Aleksandrów Military Academy. He served in the iangorodz artillery. In 1898 he went to the 48th Brigade of Artillery Brigade. From the end of 1899 he served in the 13th Artillery Brigade, from the summer of 1903 the 2nd Reserve Brigade of Artillery, from the summer of 1910 9th Artillery Brigade, and from the summer of 1913 the 12th Artillery Brigade. In the same year he was promoted to the rank of captain. He participated in the First World War. At the end of 1916, he was named Lieutenant Colonel, and was awarded the Order of Saint George for his battle honors. He participated in I and then II all-Ukrainian military congresses. He joined the Ukrainian Military General Committee. From the end of 1917, he was the commander of the 1st Artillery Division, which was genetically modified by the colonel. In 1918 he became the head of the organizational unit of the board of the artillery inspector of the Central Ukrainian Council. Then he became the general writer of the Ukrainian Cossack. At the turn of 1918/1919, he assumed the function of deputy atamana capital. From the beginning. In 1919, he was the state inspector of the junior high school. From the beginning. In July 1920, he served as an ataman for special relief at the main attack of Symon Petlur. From the mid. In September he was a lecturer at the joint junior school in Kamieniec Podolski. At the end of 1920, he was interned in Poland together with the remaining military forces of the People's Republic of Ukraine. From 1924 he lived in Przemysl. He had an iconographic workshop, drawing on icons for local churches. In the 1930s, he was awarded the rank of general in the exile by the Ukrainian authorities. In 1944 he left for the Third Reich. At the end of World War II he co-founded the Ukrainian Military Association. In 1950 he emigrated to the USA.

Biography of Boris Palij-Nejilo (Russian) Bibliography

Jarosław Tinczenko, Officers Corps of the Army of the Ukrainian People's Republic (1917-1921), 2007

wiki

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pupo Román

Myrmex Indikos

Names of streets and squares