Frīdrihs Briedis
{{Short description|Latvian military personnel}}
{{Infobox military person
| name = Frīdrihs Briedis
| image = Frīdrihs Briedis.jpg
| caption =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1888|06|23}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1918|08|28|1888|06|23}}
| birth_place = Klenoviki, Vitebsk Governorate, Russian Empire
| death_place = Moscow, Soviet Russia
| allegiance = {{flag|Russian Empire|1914}}
{{flagicon|Russia}} White Movement
| branch = {{flagdeco|Russian Empire|1914}} Imperial Russian Army
{{flagicon|Russia}} White Army
| serviceyears = 1906–1918
| rank = Colonel
| servicenumber =
| unit =
| commands =
| battles = World War I
Russian Civil War
| battles_label =
| awards = Order of Lāčplēsis (I, II, III classes)
Cross of St. George
Sword of St. George
Order of St. Vladimir (IV class)
Order of St. Anna (II, III and IV classes)
Order of Saint Stanislaus (II and III classes)[http://www.lkok.com/detail1.asp?ID=2118 Biography in Order of Lāčplēsis home page] {{in lang|lv}}
| relations =
| laterwork =
}}
Frīdrihs Briedis (June 23, 1888 – August 28, 1918) was a Latvian colonel and one of the most famous Latvian Riflemen commanders. He was posthumously the recipient of all classes of the Order of Lāčplēsis.{{cite book |last=Priedītis |first=Ērichs Ēriks |title=Latvijas Valsts apbalvojumi un Lāčplēši. |language=lv |publisher=Junda |location=Riga |year=1996 |isbn=9984-01-020-1 |oclc=38884671}}
Early life
To escape dishonest and harsh baronial treatment, Briedis' father moved the family from Vidzeme to Vitebsk Governorate (today's Shumilina Raion in Belarus), where he obtained forest land, cleared it for growing corn, and built the house where Briedis was born, the youngest of three children.M. Akmenājs, ed. Briedis, A Concise Biography with 12 Illustrations Based on a Manuscript by Aleksandrs Plensners. M. Goppers, Sweden. 1963.
Briedis' upbringing, particularly his mother's influence, engendered in him a devout nature. He graduated with distinction from the local rural district (pagastsWhen translated as "parish" in English, "pagasts" refers to local rural organization as found in England by that name, unrelated to religion.) and local congregational church schools.
He left his family home in 1902, traveling to Daugavpils, where he moved in with relatives and entered the six-year city school. A consistently excellent student, he devoted his spare time furthering his religious studies, tutoring to buy books, hoping one day to become a minister—his goal to battle the moral decay which deeply affected him at the time of the Russo-Japanese War. By his own admission, he had time for few, if any, friends.
Finished with school, Briedis determined to enter the Monastery at Belye Berega. Having arrived at the rail station, nearly at his destination, he encountered two inebriated monks. A shocked Briedis renounced any thought of entering the priesthood—he held boozing to be the most vile immorality and would have no truck with any who engaged in it. To fill the void, in 1905, Briedis found a new calling—the military.
Military service
=Russian Army units=
In 1906 he was accepted into the St.Petersburg's Vladimir War School. Due to his excellent tactical knowledge he reached the rank of Senior sergeant by his last year at the school. Briedis graduated from the war school with the rank of Podporuchik, and afterwards he served in the 99th Ivangorod infantry regiment, which was deployed in Daugavpils. In 1912 he attained the rank of Poruchik and was appointed the company's Commander.
He participated in World War I, initially serving in East Prussia, where he successfully led reconnaissance patrols and received numerous awards for valor for his accomplishments.
=Latvian Riflemen=
When the formation of the Latvian Riflemen battalions begun in 1915 he was appointed to command the 1st Daugavgrīva battalion. He and his men participated in battles near the Misa River, and near Ķekava. In March 1916 Briedis was severely wounded in the jaw, but he recovered and participated in the Christmas Battles as commander of a battalion. During the Christmas Battles he fought in Tīreļpurvs, where he was wounded for a second time.
Briedis was in hospital when the February Revolution broke out, triggering the collapse of the army. Many riflemen joined the Red Army, but Briedis was among those who refused to do so.
Briedis joined Boris Savinkov's Union for the Defence of the Motherland and Freedom, serving as an intelligence officer.
In 1918 he joined an anti-bolshevist conspiracy in Moscow. On July 23, 1918, he was arrested by the Cheka, and on August 27, 1918, he was executed in Moscow by firing squad. He posthumously received all classes of the Order of Lāčplēsis for his valor in the Christmas Battles, and for participation in almost all the rifleman's operations on the Riga front. In Riga there is also a street named in his name.
References in popular culture
Latvian pagan metal band Skyforger has a song Pulkvedis Briedis (Colonel Briedis) dedicated to Frīdrihs Briedis.
It is included in the Latvian rifleman album.
External links
- [https://latvians.com/?en/CFBH/Briedis/ Fridrihs Briedis], A Concise Biography with 12 Illustrations, compiled by M. Akmentājs after a manuscript by Aleksandrs Plensners, original and translation by David Guild
References
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Category:People from Shumilina district
Category:Latvian people from the Russian Empire
Category:People from Polotsky Uyezd
Category:Russian military personnel of World War I
Category:People of the Russian Civil War
Category:Recipients of the Order of Lāčplēsis, 1st class
Category:Recipients of the Cross of St. George
Category:Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th class
Category:Recipients of the Order of St. Anna, 2nd class
Category:Recipients of the Order of Saint Stanislaus (Russian), 2nd class
Category:Latvian anti-communists
Category:Victims of Red Terror in Soviet Russia
Category:Executed Latvian people
Category:Executed military personnel
Category:People executed by Russia by firing squad
Category:20th-century Latvian people
Category:White movement people executed by the Soviet Union
Category:Latvian military personnel in the Imperial Russian Army of World War I