Marshal of the Soviet Union (Russian: Маршал Советского Союза, romanized: Marshal sovetskogo soyuza, pronounced [ˈmarʂəl sɐˈvʲetskəvə sɐˈjuzə]) was the second-highest military rank of the Soviet Union. It was de facto the highest rank because its superior rank, Generalissimo, was only applied to Joseph Stalin, who preferred to wear the uniform and insignia of a Marshal after World War II.
| Marshal of the Soviet Union Маршал Советского Союза | |
|---|---|
Marshal's star – big | |
Uniform shoulder strap (1955–1991) | |
| Country | Soviet Union |
| Service branch | Red Army (1922–1946) Soviet Army (1946–1991) |
| Rank | General officer |
| Formation | 22 September 1935 |
| Abolished | December 1991 |
| Next higher rank | Generalissimo |
| Next lower rank | Army General Marshal of the branch |
| Equivalent ranks | Admiral of the Fleet Chief marshal of the branch |
1935–1940
1940–1943
1940–1943
1943–1955
1945–1991
The rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union was created in 1935 and abolished in 1991 when the Soviet Union dissolved. Forty-one people held this rank. The equivalent naval rank was until 1955 admiral of the fleet and from 1955 Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union.
History of the rank
The military rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union was established by a decree of the Soviet Cabinet, the Council of People's Commissars (Sovnarkom), on 22 September 1935. On 20 November, the rank was conferred on five people: People's Commissar of Defence and veteran Bolshevik Kliment Voroshilov, chief of the General Staff of the Red Army Alexander Yegorov, and three senior commanders, Vasily Blyukher, Semyon Budyonny, and Mikhail Tukhachevsky.
Of these, Blyukher, Tukhachevsky, and Yegorov were executed during Stalin's Great Purge of 1937–38. On 7 May 1940, three new marshals were appointed: the new People's Commissar of Defence, Semyon Timoshenko, Boris Shaposhnikov, and Grigory Kulik.
During World War II, Kulik was demoted for incompetence, and the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union was given to a number of military commanders who earned it on merit. These included Georgy Zhukov, Ivan Konev and Konstantin Rokossovsky to name a few. In 1943, Stalin himself was made a Marshal of the Soviet Union, and in 1945, he was joined by his intelligence and police chief Lavrentiy Beria. These non-military marshals were joined in 1947 by politician Nikolai Bulganin.
Two Marshals were executed in postwar purges: Kulik in 1950 and Beria in 1953, following Stalin's death. Thereafter the rank was awarded only to professional soldiers, with the exception of Leonid Brezhnev, who made himself a marshal in 1976, and Dmitry Ustinov, who was prominent in the arms industry and was appointed Minister of Defence in July 1976. The last Marshal of the Soviet Union was Dmitry Yazov, appointed in 1990, who was imprisoned after the failed coup against Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991. Marshal Sergei Akhromeyev committed suicide in 1991 during the fall of the Soviet Union.
The Marshals fell into three generational groups.
- Those who had gained their reputations during the Russian Civil War. These included both those who were purged in 1937–38 (Blyukher, Tukhachevsky, and Yegorov), and those who held high commands in the early years of World War II (Budyonny, Kulik, Shaposhnikov, Timoshenko and Voroshilov). All of the latter except Shaposhnikov and Timoshenko proved out-of-step with modern warfare and were removed from commanding positions.
- Those who built their reputations during World War II and assumed high commands in the latter part of the war. These included Zhukov, Vasilevsky, Konev, Rokossovsky, Malinovsky, Tolbukhin, Govorov, and Meretskov.
- Those who assumed high command during the Cold War era. All were officers in World War II, but their higher commands were held in the Warsaw Pact or as Soviet defence ministers. These included Sokolovsky, Grechko, Yakubovsky, Kulikov, Ogarkov, Akhromeyev, and Yazov.
All marshals in the third category had been officers in World War II, except Ustinov, who had been People's Commissar for Armaments. Even Yazov, who was 20 when the war ended, had been a platoon commander. Brezhnev was not a professional soldier, but was still commissioned as a political commissar in the war.
Of the 35 Marshals who were career soldiers, the majority were of Russian origin. Timoshenko (Tymoshenko), Kulik (Kulyk), Grechko (Hrechko), Yeremenko (Yeryomenko), Moskalenko, Batitsky (Batytsʹkyy) and Koshevoy (Koshovyy) were of Ukrainian origin, while Sokolovsky (Sakaloŭski) and Yakubovsky (Jakuboŭski) had Belarusian origins. Rokossovsky (Rokossowski) was born in Congress Poland to a Polish family, while Malinovsky (Malinowsky) was born in Odessa (now in Ukraine) to a Polish father. Tukhachevsky also had Polish ancestry. Bagramyan (Baghramyan) was the sole marshal of Armenian origin.
The rank was abolished with the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991. It was succeeded in modern Russia by the rank of Marshal of the Russian Federation, which has been held by only one person, Igor Sergeyev, who was Russia's defence minister from 1997 to 2001. There have been no living marshals since Yazov's death in February 2020.
List of marshals
| No. | Name | Photo | Date of rank | Positions held | Central Committee member | Secretariat member | Politburo member | Yrs | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kliment Voroshilov | 20 Nov 1935 |
Other positions (1939–1942)
| Yes (10th–20th, 23rd) | No | Yes (14th–20th) | 25 | (1881–1969) Resigned as head of state, 1960. Mayor of Luhansk, 1917; People's Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs, 1925–1934. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1956 and 1968; Hero of Socialist Labour, 1960. | |
| 2 | Semyon Budyonny | 20 Nov 1935 |
Field commands (1940–1942)
| Yes (Candidate: 17th, 19th–24th; Full: 18th) | No | No | 17 | (1883–1973) Retired, 1954. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1958, 1963 and 1968. | |
| 3 | Mikhail Tukhachevsky | 20 Nov 1935 |
| Candidate (17th) | No | No | 2 | (1893–1937) Stripped of rank, 1937. Posthumously rehabilitated. | |
| 4 | Alexander Yegorov | 20 Nov 1935 |
| Candidate (17th) | No | No | 3 | (1883–1939) Stripped of rank, 1938. Posthumously rehabilitated. | |
| 5 | Vasily Blyukher | 20 Nov 1935 |
| Yes (17th) | No | No | 3 | (1889–1938) Retroactively stripped of rank, 1939. Posthumously rehabilitated. | |
| 6 | Semyon Timoshenko | 7 May 1940 |
Field commands (1941–1943)
| Yes (Full: 18th; Candidate: 19th–23rd) | No | No | 20 | (1895–1970) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1960. Chairman, State Committee for War Veterans, 1961–1970. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1940 and 1965; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. | |
| 7 | Boris Shaposhnikov | 7 May 1940 |
| Candidate (18th) | No | No | 5 | (1882–1945) Died in office. | |
| 8 | Grigory Kulik | 7 May 1940 |
| Yes (18th) | No | No | 2 | (1890–1950) Stripped of rank, 1942. Posthumously rehabilitated. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1940 (rescinded 1942). | |
| 9 | Georgy Zhukov | 18 Jan 1943 |
| Yes (Candidate: 18th; Full: 19th–20th) | No | Yes (20th) | 14 | (1896–1974) Dismissed as minister of defence, 1957. Chief, General Staff of the Red Army, 1941. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1940, 1944, 1945 and 1956; awarded Order of Victory, 1944 and 1945. | |
| 10 | Aleksandr Vasilevsky | 16 Feb 1943 |
| Yes (19th–20th) | No | No | 14 | (1895–1977) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1959. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944 and 1945; awarded Order of Victory, 1944 and 1945. | |
| 11 | Joseph Stalin | 6 Mar 1943 |
| Yes (6th Conf.–19th) | Yes (11th–19th) | Yes (6th Comp.–19th) | 2 | (1878–1953) Died in office. Promoted to Generalissimo, 27 Jun 1945. Made Hero of Socialist Labour, 1939; Hero of the Soviet Union, 1945; awarded Order of Victory, 1944. | |
| 12 | Ivan Konev | 20 Feb 1944 |
| Yes (Candidate: 18th; Full: 19th–24th) | No | No | 17 | (1897–1973) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1960; reappointed, 1962. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944 and 1945; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. | |
| 13 | Leonid Govorov | 18 Jun 1944 |
| Candidate (19th) | No | No | 11 | (1897–1955) Died in office. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1945; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. | |
| 14 | Konstantin Rokossovsky | 29 Jun 1944 |
| Candidate (22nd–23rd) | No | No | 18 | (1896–1968) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1962. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944 and 1945; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. Made Marshal of Poland, 1949. | |
| 15 | Rodion Malinovsky | 10 Sep 1944 |
| Yes (Candidate: 19th; Full: 20th–23rd) | No | No | 23 | (1898–1967) Died in office. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1945 and 1958; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. | |
| 16 | Fyodor Tolbukhin | 12 Sep 1944 |
| No | No | No | 5 | (1894–1949) Died in office. Posthumously made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1965; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. | |
| 17 | Kirill Meretskov | 26 Oct 1944 |
| Candidate (18th–19th) | No | No | 20 | (1897–1968) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1964. Chief, General Staff of the Red Army, 1940–1941. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1940; awarded Order of Victory, 1945. | |
| 18 | Lavrentiy Beria | 9 Jul 1945 |
| Yes (17th–19th) | No | Yes (18th–19th) | 8 | (1899–1953) Stripped of rank, 1953. First Secretary, Communist Party of Georgia, 1931–1932, 1934–1938; First Secretary, Communist Party, Transcaucasian SFSR, 1932–1938. Made Hero of Socialist Labour, 1943. | |
| 19 | Vasily Sokolovsky | 3 Jul 1946 |
| Yes (Full: 19th–20th; Candidate: 22nd–23rd) | No | No | 14 | (1897–1968) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1960. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1945. | |
| 20 | Nikolai Bulganin | 3 Nov 1947 |
| Yes (17th–20th) | No | Yes (18th–20th) | 11 | (1895–1975) Stripped of rank, 1958. Chairman, Council of People's Commissars, Russian SFSR, 1937–1938; Deputy Chairman, Council of People's Commissars, 1938–1944; Chairman, State Bank of the Soviet Union, 1938–1940, 1940–1945. Made Hero of Socialist Labour, 1955. | |
| 21 | Andrei Grechko | 11 Mar 1955 |
| Yes (Candidate: 19th–20th; Full: 22nd–25th) | No | Yes (24th–25th) | 21 | (1903–1976) Died in office. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1958 and 1973. | |
| 22 | Ivan Bagramyan | 11 Mar 1955 |
| Yes (Candidate: 19th–20th; Full: 22nd–26th) | No | No | 13 | (1897–1982) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1968. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944 and 1977. | |
| 23 | Sergey Biryuzov | 11 Mar 1955 |
| Yes (Candidate: 20th; Full: 22nd) | No | No | 9 | (1904–1964) Died in office. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1958. | |
| 24 | Kirill Moskalenko | 11 Mar 1955 |
| Yes (20th–26th) | No | No | 28 | (1902–1985) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1983. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1943 and 1978. | |
| 25 | Vasily Chuikov | 11 Mar 1955 |
| Yes (Candidate: 20th; Full: 22nd–26th) | No | No | 17 | (1900–1982) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1972. Commander in Chief, Group of Soviet Occupation Forces in Germany, 1949–1953. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944 and 1945. | |
| 26 | Andrey Yeryomenko | 11 Mar 1955 |
| Yes (Candidate: 20th, 23rd; Full: 22nd) | No | No | 3 | (1892–1970) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1958. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944. | |
| 27 | Matvei Zakharov | 8 May 1959 |
| Yes (22nd–24th) | No | No | 12 | (1898–1972) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1971. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1945 and 1971. Director, Main Intelligence Directorate, 1949–1952. | |
| 28 | Filipp Golikov | 6 May 1961 |
| Yes (22nd) | No | No | 1 | (1900–1980) Relieved and appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1962. Director, Main Intelligence Directorate, 1940–1941. | |
| 29 | Nikolay Krylov | 28 Apr 1962 |
| Yes (22nd–24th) | No | No | 10 | (1903–1972) Died in office. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, twice in 1945. | |
| 30 | Ivan Yakubovsky | 12 Apr 1967 |
| Yes (22nd–25th) | No | No | 9 | (1912–1976) Died in office. Commander in Chief, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, 1960–1961; 1962–1965. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, twice in 1944. | |
| 31 | Pavel Batitsky | 15 Apr 1968 |
| Yes (Candidate: 22nd; Full: 23rd–26th) | No | No | 10 | (1910–1984) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1978. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1965. | |
| 32 | Pyotr Koshevoy | 15 Apr 1968 |
| Candidate (22nd–23rd) | No | No | 1 | (1904–1976) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1969. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1944 and 1945. | |
| 33 | Leonid Brezhnev | 7 May 1976 |
| Yes (19th–26th) | Yes (19th–26th) | Yes (Candidate: 19th; Full: 20th–26th) | 6 | (1906–1982) Died in office. First Secretary, Communist Party of Moldavia, 1950–1952; First Secretary, Communist Party of Kazakhstan, 1955–1956; Chairman, Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, 1960–1964; Second Secretary, Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1963–1964. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1966, 1976, 1978 and 1981; Hero of Socialist Labour, 1961; awarded Order of Victory, 1978 (rescinded 1989). | |
| 34 | Dmitry Ustinov | 30 Jul 1976 |
| Yes (19th–26th) | Yes (22nd–25th) | Yes (Candidate: 22nd–24th; Full: 25th–26th) | 8 | (1908–1984) Died in office. Minister of the Defence Industry, 1941–1957; Deputy Chairman, Council of Ministers, 1957–1963; First Deputy Chairman, Council of Ministers, 1963–1965; CPSU Central Committee Secretary for Administrative Organs, 1963–1976; for the Defence Industry, 1965–1976. Made Hero of Socialist Labour, 1942 and 1961; Hero of the Soviet Union, 1978. | |
| 35 | Viktor Kulikov | 14 Jan 1977 |
| Yes (24th–27th) | No | No | 12 | (1921–2013) Relieved, 1989. Commander in Chief, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, 1969–1971; Chief, General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces, 1971–1977; Member of the State Duma, 2000–2003. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1981. | |
| 36 | Nikolai Ogarkov | 14 Jan 1977 |
| Yes (Candidate: 23rd; Full: 24th–28th) | No | No | 11 | (1917–1994) Relieved as chief of the general staff, 1984; appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1988. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1977. | |
| 37 | Sergei Sokolov | 17 Feb 1978 |
| Yes (23rd–27th) | No | Candidate (26th–27th) | 9 | (1911–2012) Dismissed as minister of defence, 1987. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1980. | |
| 38 | Sergey Akhromeyev | 25 Mar 1983 |
| Yes (26th–27th) | No | No | 5 | (1923–1991) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1988. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1982. | |
| 39 | Semyon Kurkotkin | 25 Mar 1983 |
| Yes (Candidate: 24th; Full: 25th–27th) | No | No | 5 | (1917–1990) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1988. Commander in Chief, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, 1971–1972. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1981. | |
| 40 | Vasily Petrov | 25 Mar 1983 |
| Yes (25th–27th) | No | No | 3 | (1917–2014) Appointed to Group of Inspectors General, 1986. Made Hero of the Soviet Union, 1982. | |
| 41 | Dmitry Yazov | 28 Apr 1990 |
| Yes (Candidate: 26th; Full: 27th–28th) | No | Candidate (27th) | 1 | (1924–2020) Dismissed as minister of defence, 1991. |
Timeline
See also
- Marshal of the Russian Federation
- History of Russian military ranks
- Military ranks of the Soviet Union
- 1935–1940 and 1940–1943
- 1943–1955 and 1955–1991
- Marshal of the branch
- Chief marshal of the branch
- Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union
- Field marshal (Russian Empire)
- Marshal of the People's Republic of China
- Marshal (North Korea and South Korea)
Bibliography
- Erickson, John (2001) [1962]. The Soviet High Command: A Military-Political History, 1918–1941 (PDF). CASS Series on Soviet (Russian) Military Institutions. Frank Cass Publishers. ISBN 978-0415408608. Retrieved 12 December 2024.
- Gebhardt, James (1989). "The Petsamo-Kirkenes Operation: Soviet Breakthrough and Pursuit in the Arctic, October 1944" (PDF). Leavenworth Papers (17).
- Grachev, Pavel, ed. (1994). "Выстрел" [Vystrel]. Военная энциклопедия в 8 томах [Military Encyclopedia in 8 volumes] (in Russian). Vol. 2. Moscow: Voenizdat. ISBN 5-203-00299-1.
- Huskey, Eugene, ed. (1992). Executive Power and Soviet Politics: The Rise and Decline of the Soviet State. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-1563240607.
- Karlsson, Håkan (1988). "The Defense Council of the USSR". Cooperation and Conflict. 23 (2): 69–83. doi:10.1177/001083678802300202. JSTOR 45084370.
- Manninen, Ohto (2004). The Soviet Plans for the North Western Theatre of Operations in 1939–1944 (PDF). Finnish Defence Studies. National Defence College, Helsinki. p. 111. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
- Naab, Richard (May 1977). Victor G. Kulikov, Marshal of the Soviet Union: A Dimming Red Star? (PDF) (Thesis). Garmisch, Germany: U.S. Army Institute for Advanced Russian and East European Studies. Retrieved 12 December 2024.
- Pierre, André (September 1955). "The Army and the Party in the Soviet Union". Quarterly Review of Military Literature. 35 (6). Retrieved 27 September 2021 – via Google Books.
- Sadykiewicz, Michael (1982). "Soviet Far East High Command: A New Development Factor in the USSR Military Strategy Towards East Asia". Asian Perspectives. 6 (2). JSTOR 43737988.
- Sadykiewicz, Michael (August 1987). "Soviet-Warsaw Pact Western Theater of Military Operations: Organization and Missions" (PDF). RAND Corporation.
- Shukman, Harold (1997) [1993]. Stalin's Generals. London: Phoenix Giants. ISBN 978-0802114877.
- Spahr, William (4 July 1972). "The Soviet Military Decisionmaking Process". Parameters. 2 (1). USAWC Press. doi:10.55540/0031-1723.1048. Retrieved 5 December 2024.
- Tyushkevich, Stepan Andreevich (1978). The Soviet Armed Forces: A History of Their Organizational Development, A Soviet View (translated) (PDF). Translated by CIS Multilingual Section, Translation Bureau, Canadian Department of External Affairs. Moscow: U.S. Government Publishing Office.
- Warner, Edward; Bonan, Josephine; Packman, Erma (April 1987). "Key Personnel and Organizations of the Soviet Military High Command" (PDF). RAND Corporation.
- Ziemke, Earl Frederick; Bauer, Magna E. (1987). Moscow to Stalingrad: Decision in the East. U.S. Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-16-080081-8.
wikipedia, wiki, encyclopedia, book, library, article, read, free download, Information about Marshal of the Soviet Union, What is Marshal of the Soviet Union? What does Marshal of the Soviet Union mean?