The Russian Revolution: How the Tsars Lost Everything — Fexingo History

The Siberian Ice March: Kolchak's White Army Retreat

5 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Siberian Ice March: Kolchak's White Army Retreat

Descripción

In the winter of 1919-20, as the Red Army closed in, Admiral Alexander Kolchak's White forces began a desperate retreat across Siberia. This episode follows the Siberian Ice March—a catastrophic 2,000-kilometer trek along the Trans-Siberian Railway from Omsk to Irkutsk. Temperatures plunged to minus 50 degrees Celsius. Typhus ravaged the ranks. Kolchak's gold reserve, 500 tons of bullion, became a burden and a target. We explore the collapse of the Omsk government, the betrayal by the Czech Legions, and the harrowing fate of the civilians who fled east. Key figures include Admiral Kolchak, General Vladimir Kappel (whose frostbitten feet were amputated without anesthesia), and the socialist-revolutionary Political Centre that seized power in Irkutsk. We also discuss the legend of the lost Kolchak gold—did it vanish into Lake Baikal, or was it divided among the Czechs? This is a story of idealism frozen solid, of a white movement that couldn't outrun the winter. #SiberianIceMarch #Kolchak #WhiteMovement #RussianCivilWar #TransSiberianRailway #Omsk #Irkutsk #VladimirKappel #CzechLegions #LakeBaikal #KolchakGold #1919 #EasternFront #Siberia #Typhus #FexingoHistory #History #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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156 episodios

episode The Siberian Ice March: Kolchak's White Army Retreat artwork

The Siberian Ice March: Kolchak's White Army Retreat

In the winter of 1919-20, as the Red Army closed in, Admiral Alexander Kolchak's White forces began a desperate retreat across Siberia. This episode follows the Siberian Ice March—a catastrophic 2,000-kilometer trek along the Trans-Siberian Railway from Omsk to Irkutsk. Temperatures plunged to minus 50 degrees Celsius. Typhus ravaged the ranks. Kolchak's gold reserve, 500 tons of bullion, became a burden and a target. We explore the collapse of the Omsk government, the betrayal by the Czech Legions, and the harrowing fate of the civilians who fled east. Key figures include Admiral Kolchak, General Vladimir Kappel (whose frostbitten feet were amputated without anesthesia), and the socialist-revolutionary Political Centre that seized power in Irkutsk. We also discuss the legend of the lost Kolchak gold—did it vanish into Lake Baikal, or was it divided among the Czechs? This is a story of idealism frozen solid, of a white movement that couldn't outrun the winter. #SiberianIceMarch #Kolchak #WhiteMovement #RussianCivilWar #TransSiberianRailway #Omsk #Irkutsk #VladimirKappel #CzechLegions #LakeBaikal #KolchakGold #1919 #EasternFront #Siberia #Typhus #FexingoHistory #History #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode The Czech Legions: An Army's Odyssey Across Russia artwork

The Czech Legions: An Army's Odyssey Across Russia

In the chaos of the Russian Civil War, a force of former prisoners of war became one of the most extraordinary fighting forces in modern history. The Czechoslovak Legions — some 50,000 men who had surrendered or defected from the Austro-Hungarian army — found themselves stranded in a collapsing empire, desperate to reach the distant Pacific and sail home to a homeland that didn't yet exist. This episode follows their epic 8,000-kilometer odyssey along the Trans-Siberian Railway, from the Battle of Zborov where they first proved themselves, to their clash with Bolshevik forces that triggered a full-scale uprising, to their fateful role in seizing the Tsar's gold reserve and inadvertently shaping the fate of the Romanovs. We explore the legions' internal politics, their iconic armored train 'Orlik', the controversial figure of General Radola Gajda, and how this army of exiles helped spark the Allied intervention in Siberia. Their journey — part military campaign, part desperate refugee march — is one of the strangest and least-told stories of the revolutionary era. #CzechLegions #RussianCivilWar #TransSiberianRailway #BattleOfZborov #RadolaGajda #Orlik #TsarGold #Masaryk #SiberianIntervention #WhiteArmy #Bolsheviks #Czechoslovakia #History #FexingoHistory #WWI #EasternFront #Kolchak #Legionnaires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer10 min
episode The Latvian Riflemen: Lenin's Shock Troops artwork

The Latvian Riflemen: Lenin's Shock Troops

Before the Red Army had a unified command, Lenin relied on a single, fiercely loyal unit: the Latvian Riflemen. Originally formed by the Tsarist army to fight the Germans, these six regiments from the Baltic provinces became the Bolsheviks' most trusted force. They guarded the Kremlin, suppressed the Left SR uprising in July 1918, and fought on every major front of the Civil War—from Kazan to the Donbass. Their commander, Jukums Vācietis, was the first Soviet commander-in-chief, and his successor, Sergey Kamenev (not the Bolshevik politician), kept the Riflemen at the center of operations. Yet by 1920, their political reliability became a liability: Lenin feared a 'Latvian Bonaparte,' and the unit was slowly disbanded. This episode traces their journey from imperial cannon fodder to revolutionary elite, and asks whether they were heroes of the Revolution or instruments of terror. We also explore the strange fate of Vācietis, who survived the Cheka's prisons only to die in Stalin's purges. #LatvianRiflemen #JukumsVācietis #SergeyKamenev #RussianCivilWar #KremlinGuard #Cheka #RevolutionaryTerror #LeftSRUprising #Kazan #Donbass #Siberia #Latvia #Bolsheviks #Lenin #EasternEurope #History #FexingoHistory #RedArmy Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11 de jul de 20267 min
episode Lenin's Brain: The Autopsy, Eugenics, and a Soviet Cult of Genius artwork

Lenin's Brain: The Autopsy, Eugenics, and a Soviet Cult of Genius

When Vladimir Lenin died in 1924, his brain was removed, sliced, and preserved, launching a decades-long Soviet research program to prove biological genius. This episode follows the strange afterlife of Lenin's brain: from the original autopsy by Alexei Abrikosov, through the creation of the Brain Institute, to the German neuroscientist Oskar Vogt who was brought to Moscow to examine Lenin's cerebral cortex. Vogt's claim that Lenin was a 'associative athlete' with unusually large pyramidal neurons fit Stalin's propaganda needs — and obscured a deeper scandal: Lenin had suffered from severe neurosyphilis, a fact his doctors had covered up. We explore the intersection of science, ideology, and macabre curiosity that turned a revolutionary's brain into a state relic, and why the research eventually collapsed in the 1930s. Featuring the terms: Brain Institute, Institut Mozga, Vogt, Abrikosov, pyramidal cells, neurosyphilis, and the tension between materialist science and the cult of personality. #LeninsBrain #InstitutMozga #OskarVogt #AlexeiAbrikosov #SovietScience #HistoryOfNeuroscience #BrainAutopsy #CultOfPersonality #RussianRevolution #SovietUnion #Neurosyphilis #Eugenics #Lenin #Communism #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #20thCentury Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11 de jul de 20267 min
episode The First Red Cavalry: Budyonny's Cossacks at Tsaritsyn artwork

The First Red Cavalry: Budyonny's Cossacks at Tsaritsyn

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into the brutal formation of Semyon Budyonny's Konarmiya, the First Red Cavalry Army, during the Battle of Tsaritsyn in 1918. They explore how a former Tsarist cavalry sergeant forged a mobile strike force from Don Cossacks, Kalmyks, and industrial workers, fighting against the White Volunteer Army of Anton Denikin. Lucas explains the strategic importance of Tsaritsyn (later Stalingrad) as a grain and oil hub, the role of Kliment Voroshilov and Stalin in the city's defense, and the harrowing winter campaigns across the steppe. The episode also touches on the brutal class warfare between Cossack veterans and Bolshevik commissars, the cavalry's later role in the Polish-Soviet War, and how Budyonny's legend was built through propaganda. Specific figures include Yefim Shchadenko, Joseph Stalin, and the writer Isaak Babel, who chronicled the Konarmiya's violence. This episode offers a ground-level view of how revolutionary armies were forged in blood and mud. #RedCavalry #Budyonny #Tsaritsyn #Stalin #Voroshilov #DonCossacks #Denikin #RussianCivilWar #Konarmiya #IsaakBabel #VolunteerArmy #KavaleriyskiyKorpus #1918 #Bolsheviks #WhiteArmy #EasternFront #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10 de jul de 20266 min