Constantine Gregorievich Kromiadi (Russian: Константин Григориевич Кромиади, Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Γκριγκόριεβιτς Κρομιάδης; 21 January 1893 – 25 April 1990)[1] was a Russian military officer of Greek origin. A staunch anti-communist, he served in the Imperial Russian Army and the White Army, later heading the collaborationist Russian National People's Army and commanding the headquarters of the Russian Liberation Army.

Constantine Kromiadi
Константин Григориевич Кромиади (Russian)
Κωνσταντίνος Γκριγκόριεβιτς Κρομιάδης (Greek)
Kromiadi in Russian National People's Army uniform
Commandant of the Headquarters of the Russian National People's Army
In office
1942–1943
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
General of the Russian Liberation Army
In office
1942–1945
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born21 January 1893
Kars, Kars Oblast, Russian Empire
Died25 April 1990 (aged 97)
Munich, Bavaria, West Germany
Awards
NicknameSanin
Military service
AllegianceRussian Empire Russian Empire
(1914-1917)
Russian State
(1918-1920)
 Nazi Germany
(1941–1945)
Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia
(1944–1945)
Years of service1914–1945
Commands
Battles/wars

First years edit

Kromiadi was born in Kars (then part of the Russian Empire), into a Greek family, in 1893.[2][3] He entered service in the Imperial Russian Army as a volunteer and fought during World War I in Persia and also on the Caucasus Front, where many Armenians, Caucasus Greeks, Georgians, and Russians fought against the forces of the Ottoman Empire. During the Russian Civil War Kromiadi joined the White movement, achieving the rank of colonel. After the war he emigrated to Munich where he worked as automobilist.[4]

In Axis army edit

During World War II, Kromiadi became a Nazi official and a pioneer of the Russian Liberation Movement. In 1942, he headed the Russian National People's Army, an armed unit of Russians, under the pseudonym of Sanin.[5][6] He was also a general in the Russian Liberation Army. Kromiadi became close with fellow collaborator Andrey Vlasov, thus becoming Vlasov's first white émigré ally. In late 1942, Vlasov gave Kromiadi command of his headquarters. Kromiadi made several attempts to attract white émigrés to Vlasov, and was finally successful by the time of the Prague Manifesto, having secured the support of two branches of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Kromiadi believed that the Russian Liberation Army was a 30-year Christian liberation war against Communism.[7]

Later life edit

In the final days of WWII, Kromiadi was wounded in the leg and, when Vlasov and his staff relocated to Füssen, he was placed in a private residence in order to recover. A few days later they head towards southern Bohemia, but they left Kromiadi behind in Füssen since he was still recuperating from his injury.[8] Vlasov and his staff ended up getting captured by the Americans and handed over to the Soviets, who executed them. Kromiadi was living amongst the civilians in Füssen at the time and escaped this fate.[8] After the end of WWII, Kromiadi took an active part in saving Russian collaborators from extradition to the USSR.[2]

In 1980, he wrote a book on his experience in the Russian Liberation Movement called For Land, for Freedom..., which was published in San Francisco. He died in 1990 in Munich.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kromiadi biography (in Russian)
  2. ^ a b "Биографические данные некоторых руководителей и сотрудников КОНР. К." roa2.narod.ru. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
  3. ^ Константин Кромиади "За землю, за волю!" Воспоминания соратника генерала Власова) "И Андрей Андреевич, многозначительно улыбнувшись, спросил: "Вы говорили, что вы родом из деревни?" — "Да, из очень бедной маленькой деревни в горах Закавказья", — ответил я."
  4. ^ Oleg Beyda "Two Antichrists Collided". 22 June 1941 in assessment of the Russian emigration. NZ 2014 3 (95) (in Russian)-retrieved 17 June 2018
  5. ^ Hondromatidis, Iakovos I Mavri Skia Stin Ellada ("The Black Shadow Over Greece"), Athens 2004 (in Greek) page 61
  6. ^ Thomas, Nigel (20 October 2015). Hitler's Russian & Cossack Allies 1941–45. Bloomsbury USA. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-4728-0687-1.
  7. ^ 2018 Traitors, Collaborators and Deserters in Contemporary European Politics of Memory Forms of Betrayal Editors: Grinchenko, Gelinada, Narvselius, Eleonora (Eds.) P 91 & 94
  8. ^ a b Parta, R. Eugene (9 August 2022). Under the Radar: Tracking Western Radio Listeners in the Soviet Union. Central European University Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-963-386-687-0.