Bender Uprising

{{Expand Romanian|topic=mil|Răscoala de la Tighina|date=February 2018}}

{{For|other conflicts at the same location|Battle of Bender (disambiguation){{!}}Battle of Bender}}

{{Infobox military conflict

| conflict = Bender Uprising

| partof = the Southern Front of the Russian Civil War

| image = Grigorii stariy.jpg

| caption = Grigoriy Ivanovich Borisov (Stary), the leader of the Bender Uprising

| date = 27 May 1919

| place = Tighina, Kingdom of Romania (present day Bender, Moldova)

| territory =

| result = Romanian–French victory

| combatant1 = {{flagdeco|Romania}} Romania
{{flag|French Third Republic|name= France}}

| combatant2 = {{flagicon image|Red flag.svg}} Red Guards
{{flag|Ukrainian SSR|1927}}

| commander1 = {{flagdeco|Romania}} Ferdinand I
{{flagdeco|France|1794}} Henri Berthelot

| commander2 = {{flagicon image|Red flag.svg}} {{ill|Grigoriy Borisov|ro|Grigore Borisov}}

| strength1 = Unknown

| strength2 = 150+ Red Guards
150 Ukrainian troops

| casualties1 = Unknown

| casualties2 = 150+ captured and executed

| campaignbox = {{Southern Front of the Russian Civil War}}

}}

The Bender Uprising was organized by local Bolshevik groups in Bender/Tighina on 27 May 1919, as a protest of the local Russian population against the annexation of Bessarabia by the Kingdom of Romania in December 1918 (united in a federation with Romania since April 1918, Bessarabia was annexed by the latter on 10 December). Red Guards from local factories were organized under the command of {{ill|Grigoriy Borisov|ro|Grigore Borisov}}, and were supported by 150 troops of the 3rd Brigade of the 5th Division of the 3rd Ukrainian Soviet Army. Together, the Ukrainian troops and the rebels captured the local railway station, post office and telegraph office. During that evening, however, the Romanian Army together with a unit of French colonial troops arrived at the scene and swiftly suppressed the uprising. Although many rebels fled across the Dniester River, at least 150 of them were captured and executed.Jonathan D. Smele, Rowman & Littlefield, 2015, Historical Dictionary of the Russian Civil Wars, 1916-1926, p. 190Wim P. van Meurs, East European Monographs, 1994, The Bessarabian question in communist historiography: nationalist and communist politics and history-writing, p. 77

See also

References