PhotosBiographyFacebookTwitter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mikhail Dukhanov
Birth nameMikhail Pavlovich Dukhanov
Born(1896-07-14)14 July 1896
Kiev, Russian Empire (now Kyiv, Ukraine)
Died6 September 1969(1969-09-06) (aged 73)
Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (now Saint Petersburg, Russia)
Buried
Allegiance Russian Empire (1915-1917)
Russian SFSR (1918-1922)
Soviet Union (1922-1953)
Service/branch Red Army
Years of service1915-1953
Rank Lieutenant general
Commands held 9th Army
10th Rifle Division
Neva Operational Group
67th Army
Battles/wars
Awards Order of Lenin

Mikhail Pavlovich Dukhanov, ( Russian: Михаил Павлович Духанов), Kiev, 14 July 1896 – Leningrad, 2 September 1969) was a Soviet Lieutenant-General (1943).

Biography

Dukhanov participated in the First World War and the Russian Civil War.
Later, he was Senior Instructor at several Military Schools. In August 1938, he became deputy commander of the Leningrad Military District.

At the outbreak of the Soviet-Finnish Winter War (1939-1940), without much experience, he was appointed the commander of the 9th Army, which operated at the beginning of the war in the Kandalaksha and Rebolsk directions. On December 22, 1939, after a series of defeats and by decision of the Headquarters, he was removed from the post of commander of the 9th Army and sent into the reserve.

After the outbreak of the Great Patriotic War, Dukhanov was first in August 1941 Assistant Commander in Chief of the Northern Front and then on 19 September became commander of the 10th Rifle Division. As part of the 8th Army of the Leningrad Front, the division took up defensive positions in the area of Strelna during the Leningrad Defensive Operation. In early October, under the threat of encirclement, the division withdrew to the line west of the city of Petergof. From October 4 to October 24, 1941, M.P. Dukhanov temporarily commanded the 19th Rifle Corps of the 23rd Army.

On 6 October 1942, he became commander of the Neva Operational Group, which was converted into the 67th Army four days later. He led this army for more than a year, until the end of December 1943, when the Army administration was merged with that of the 55th Army.

In March 1944, he was appointed deputy commander of the 8th Guards Army of the 3rd Ukrainian Front, a post he would hold until the end of the War.
After the War, he was Assistant Commander in Chief for Military Schools in the Leningrad Military District and retired in April 1953.

Sources