119:
31:
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594:. Khozin became deputy commander of the Northwestern Front in April, and transferred to hold the same position for the Western Front. He was dismissed from this position by a Stavka order on 8 December for inactivity and an unserious attitude to his duties. In March 1944 he was appointed commander of the
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bridgehead, and due to the understrength, demoralized and inexperienced conditions of his units Khozin's plan for the offensive relied on a frontal attack. The army suffered heavy losses in a series of costly attacks and the offensive culminated by mid-December. Khozin was replaced in command of the
606:
Postwar, Khozin was relieved of command of the Volga
Military District in July 1945, considered unfit for his position. After a year at the disposal of the Main Cadre Directorate awaiting his next assignment, he was appointed to a non-operational post, chief of the Military-Pedagogical Institute in
316:
and enlisted in the 4th
Company of the 60th Reserve Infantry Battalion at Tambov as a volunteer. In May 1916 he entered the 4th Kiev School for Praporshchiks for junior officer training. In June of that year he graduated with the rank of Praporshchik and was appointed a junior officer in the 60th
329:, and was wounded on 18 December, 1916. In June 1917, he was appointed regimental head of the intelligence collection, and was elected a member of the regimental committee that month. In August, Khozin was appointed officer for special assignments with the topographical section of the
899:
607:
July 1946. Khozin remained in military academy posts for the rest of his career, and was transferred to serve as chief of the
Military Foreign Languages Institute in February 1954. He was shifted to serve as chief of the Higher Academic Courses at the
909:
396:
From
February 1921, he commanded the 22nd Separate Rifle Brigade of the Cheka Troops, which guarded the Soviet border with Estonia and Latvia. In October of that year he was appointed commander of the 113th Separate Rifle Brigade of the
320:
In late
October, he was sent to the 37th Siberian Rifle Regiment of the 10th Siberian Rifle Division , where he was appointed a junior officer in the regimental machine gun detachment. Subsequently, he fought on the
352:. In late 1919, the regiment was reorganized into two separate battalions, the 34th and 33rd. Khozin continued to command the 34th Separate Rifle Battalion, which remained in Kirsanov and operated in the
308:, the son of a railroad worker. He graduated from a parish school in 1907 and a three-year city school in 1911, entering the Saratov Railway Technical School. In August 1915, he was mobilized into the
611:
in
November 1956, and in November 1959 became head of a department of the academy. Retired in November 1963, Khozin died on 27 February 1979 in Moscow and was buried in the columbarium of the
340:
as commissar of the track and traffic service of the
Kirsanov Rail Junction, simultaneously commanding a workers' detachment tasked with guarding the rail bridge. He was conscripted into the
929:
954:
949:
894:
349:
914:
944:
934:
924:
833:
502:
After
Germany invaded the Soviet Union, Khozin was dispatched to hold an operational post in July, becoming deputy commander for the rear of
124:
510:. He was made a deputy chief of the General Staff on 4 September, responsible for the Leningrad axis. When Zhukov took command of the
939:
413:
between
December 1921 and March 1922, and in the disarmament of Chechnya, Ingushetia and Ossetia during November and December 1923.
919:
884:
526:. After Zhukov departed the Leningrad Front Khozin succeeded him in command on 27 October. Khozin led the front during the
457:
879:
739:"ВОЕННАЯ ЛИТЕРАТУРА --[ Военная история ]-- Исаев А. Краткий курс истории ВОВ. Наступление маршала Шапошникова"
650:
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on 22 February 1938, and was appointed chief of the Frunze
Military Academy in January 1939. Khozin was promoted to
904:
445:
402:
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in December of that year, and in April 1938 succeeded to command the district. He was promoted to the rank of
297:
266:
52:
568:
547:
959:
477:
473:
653:[Khozin, Mikhail Semyonovich] (in Russian). Central Archives of the Russian Ministry of Defense.
514:, he brought Khozin with him as his chief of staff on 13 September. Khozin simultaneously commanded the
583:
582:
Khozin commanded the Special Group of Forces created to eliminate the German Demyansk salient in the
326:
551:
539:
515:
465:
344:
during a mobilization of party members in November 1918, appointed assistant commander of the 14th
198:
194:
190:
534:, reduced in status from the previously independent Volkhov Front. For his failure to relieve the
409:. Subsequently, he led a regiment of the division in the suppression of anti-Soviet resistance in
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202:
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309:
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Members of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, 1938–1947
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Railroad Regiment. Khozin rose to command the regiment in May 1919, leading it against
305:
230:
65:
364:
sectors. In May 1920 Khozin transferred to command the 194th Separate Rifle Battalion
336:
After returning to his homeland, Khozin worked at the rail junction at the station of
846:
718:
693:
555:
527:
476:. Promotions followed quickly for Khozin as he was appointed deputy commander of the
368:, and in October took command of the 294th Rifle Regiment of the 33rd Rifle Division
301:
220:
61:
57:
910:
Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union alumni
436:
at Stalingrad in September 1925. In October 1926, he was appointed commander of the
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280:
from October 1941 to June 1942, until he was relieved from command and replaced by
258:
30:
816:Генералитет Красной Армии (1918-1941). Военный биографический словарь в 3-х томах
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Zhukov's Greatest Defeat: The Red Army's Epic Disaster in Operation Mars, 1942
424:, and that fall went to Moscow to complete the Higher Academic Courses at the
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and offensive operations, and in April 1942 took simultaneous command of the
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Red Army Generals, 1918–1941: Three-volume Military Biographical Dictionary
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444:. He graduated from the political training courses for commanders at the
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215:
538:, Khozin was relieved of command in June and appointed commander of the
345:
562:. Khozin's army was tasked with attacking the German defenses on the
421:
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when the Red Army introduced general officer ranks on 4 June 1940.
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between October and December. Zhukov selected Khozin to lead the
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In January 1924, Khozin was appointed assistant commander of the
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between February and March. Khozin's group reported directly to
428:. After graduating from the courses, he became commander of the
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in the rear, remaining in this post for the rest of the war.
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department of the 6th Army. He was demobilized in late 1917.
296:
Mikhail Semyonovich Khozin was born on 22 October [
460:. Khozin was transferred west in May 1935 to command the
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from 26 September during operations aiming to break the
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10 October] 1896 in the village of Skachikha,
575:. In January 1943 Khozin was promoted to the rank of
269:
10 October] 1896 – 27 February 1979) was a
930:Soviet military personnel of the Russian Civil War
861:
567:army and appointed Stavka representative to the
292:Early life, World War I, and Russian Civil War
955:Recipients of the Order of Suvorov, 1st class
950:Recipients of the Order of Suvorov, 2nd class
681:
717:. Pen and Sword Books Ltd. p. 415,422.
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488:on 8 February 1939 and received the rank of
895:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
546:axis. He served as deputy commander of the
915:Commandants of the Frunze Military Academy
832:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
665:"Хозин Михаил Семенович: Картотека потерь"
29:
945:Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner
935:Soviet military personnel of World War II
925:Russian military personnel of World War I
372:. He took part in the suppression of the
845:. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.
468:, and in April 1937 rose to command the
822:] (in Russian). Vol. 3. Penza.
554:on 7 December, replacing the dismissed
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448:in 1930, and was transferred to the
458:Special Red Banner Far Eastern Army
401:. Khozin's brigade was sent to the
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609:Voroshilov Higher Military Academy
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405:, where it was assigned to the
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885:People from Kirsanovsky Uyezd
690:Marshal of Victory, Volume II
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573:Ostrogozhsk–Rossosh offensive
432:before taking command of the
715:Marshal of Victory, Volume I
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325:with this unit, part of the
317:Reserve Infantry Regiment.
276:He was the commander of the
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478:Leningrad Military District
474:Leningrad Military District
284:for failing to relieve the
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446:Military-Political Academy
255:Mikhail Semyonovich Khozin
23:Mikhail Semyonovich Khozin
880:People from Tambov Oblast
841:Glantz, David M. (1999).
558:as the army prepared for
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814:Bulkin, Anatoly (2018).
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651:"Хозин Михаил Семенович"
466:Moscow Military District
263:Михаи́л Семёнович Хо́зин
905:Soviet colonel generals
713:Zhukov, Georgy (1974).
688:Zhukov, Georgy (1974).
596:Volga Military District
532:Volkhov Group of Forces
508:Front of Reserve Armies
452:in 1932 to command the
426:Frunze Military Academy
399:Oryol Military District
265:; 22 October [
203:Volga Military District
42:Михаил Семёнович Хозин
386:Voronezh Governorates
331:quartermaster general
310:Imperial Russian Army
145:Years of service
51:22 October [
800:, pp. 438–439.
788:, pp. 263–265.
776:, pp. 255–256.
462:18th Rifle Division
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175:36th Rifle Division
171:34th Rifle Division
167:32nd Rifle Division
960:Siege of Leningrad
613:Vagankovo Cemetery
592:Northwestern Front
584:Demyansk Offensive
542:, fighting on the
520:Siege of Leningrad
486:Komandarm 2nd rank
306:Tambov Governorate
231:Siege of Leningrad
66:Tambov Governorate
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556:Nikolay Kiryukhin
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138:Soviet Union
94:Soviet Union
90:Russian SFSR
81:(1979-02-27)
875:1979 deaths
870:1896 births
798:Bulkin 2018
786:Glantz 1999
774:Glantz 1999
762:Glantz 1999
669:gwar.mil.ru
450:Transbaikal
314:World War I
216:World War I
140:(1922–1963)
127:(1917–1922)
114:(1915–1917)
38:Native name
890:Bolsheviks
864:Categories
748:2015-08-27
674:2023-08-08
619:References
346:Rtishchevo
100:Allegiance
828:cite book
624:Citations
552:20th Army
540:33rd Army
516:54th Army
422:Krasnodar
273:general.
199:54th Army
195:33rd Army
191:20th Army
148:1915–1963
60:Village,
58:Skachikha
358:Voronezh
342:Red Army
338:Kirsanov
327:6th Army
163:Commands
602:Postwar
524:Kolpino
472:of the
464:of the
456:of the
442:Saratov
382:Saratov
312:during
259:Russian
248:(twice)
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721:
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588:Stavka
544:Vyazma
482:komkor
378:Tambov
362:Tambov
271:Soviet
242:Awards
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122:
109:
86:Moscow
818:[
366:VOKhR
847:ISBN
834:link
719:ISBN
694:ISBN
384:and
370:VNUS
360:and
298:O.S.
267:O.S.
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76:Died
53:O.S.
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