
The Estonian War of Independence

Signatures on the Peace Treaty of Tartu
The 'Estonian War of Independence' (
Estonian: ''Vabadussõda'', literally "freedom war"), which occurred in 1918-1920, took place during the
Russian Civil War, was the
Republic of Estonia's struggle for sovernity in the aftermath of
World War I and the
Russian Revolution.
Timeline
In November 1917, upon the disintegration of the
Russian Empire, a
Diet the Estonian National Council(
Maapäev), which had been elected in the spring of that year, proclaimed itself the highest authority in
Estonia. Soon thereafter, the
Bolsheviks dissolved the
Maapäev and temporarily forced the pro-independence Estonians underground in capital Tallinn. A few months later, using a moment between the Red Army's retreat and the arrival of
Imperial German Army, the
Salvation Committee of the Estonian National Council
Maapäev issued the
Estonian Declaration of Independence [1] in
Parnu on
February 24,
1918 and formed a provisional government. This first period of independence was extremely short-lived, as German troops entered
Tallinn on the following day. The German authorities recognized neither the provisional government, nor its claim for Estonia's independence, counting them as a self-styled group usurping sovereign rights of
Baltic chivalries.
After the
German Revolution, between 11 and 14 November 1918 the representatives of Germany formally handed over political power to the national government of Estonia. A new military invasion by the
Bolshevist Russia followed a few days later, marking the beginning of the Estonian War of Independence. The first Bolshevist attacks at Narva on November 22nd were met by both German forces and Estonian defenders, but the Germans thereafter withdrew westwards. On November 28, the
Red Army conducted an assault to capture the city with artillery support and, on November 29th, the Red Army captured
Narva and Narva-Jõesuu. Estonian bolsheviks declared a regional local government in Narva under the name of the
Estonian Workers' Commune (''Eesti Töörahva Kommuun'') The small, poorly armed Estonian defense force was initially pushed back by the Red Army into the vicinity of Tallinn, the capital. A mere 34 kilometers separated Tallinn and the front line. Partly due to the timely arrival of a shipment of arms brought by a British naval squadron (under Admiral
Edwyn Alexander-Sinclair, succeeded by Admiral
Walter Cowan) the Bolsheviks were stopped. In January 1919, the Estonians launched a counteroffensive under Commander-in-Chief
Johan Laidoner. The Estonian Army was supported by the
Royal Navy as well as Finnish, Swedish and Danish volunteers. By the end of February 1919, the Red Army had been expelled from all of the territory of Estonia.
Estonian troops also advanced into northern
Latvia. The Latvians had declared independence like Estonia, but the pro-British government of
Kārlis Ulmanis was toppled by the German general
Rüdiger von der Goltz, who installed a pro-German puppet government of
Andrievs Niedra in
Riga in May 1919. This was possible because under the terms of their armistice with the Western Allies, the Germans had been obliged to maintain their armies in the East to counter the Bolshevik threat. The Baltic German ''Landeswehr'' military formation, together with the "
Iron Division" of the regular German army, started to advance northwards and demanded that the Estonian army end the occupation of parts of northern
Latvia. It was widely believed that the real intent of the Landeswehr was to annex Estonia into a German-dominated state like the
United Baltic Duchy that had existed in 1918. In the fighting that ensued, the Baltic-German Landeswehr was defeated by the advancing Estonian Army in northern Latvia near the city of
Cēsis in June 1919. (
June 23, the anniversary of the
Battle of Wenden (''
Võnnu'' in Estonian) is celebrated in Estonia as a national holiday "
Victory Day.")
Although Estonian forces had attained control over the territory of Estonia, the Bolsheviks were still active and the Estonian High Command decided to push their defense lines across the border into Russia. The offensive began on May 13th. By then, Estonian land, naval and air forces comprised 74,500 men, including a 3,000-strong White Russian
Northern Corps. This had its origins back in the autumn of 1918, when a small White Russian force constituted with German consent in the
Pskov area retreated from the Bolsheviks and joined up with Estonian national forces. The Estonian May offensive was extremely successful and the Northern Corps mobilized members of the local population on the Russian territory under their control. On June 19, 1919, the Estonian Commander-in-Chief General Laidoner removed the White Russians from his command and they were renamed the
North-Western Army. Shortly afterwards General
Nikolai N. Yudenich took command of these troops.
The Bolsheviks began a counter-offensive in July 1919, which regained much ground lost during the Estonian offensive, but the Northwestern Army survived. With arms provided by Britain and France and supported by the Estonian army, Estonian warships and the
British Royal Navy, the Northwestern Army began an offensive on September 28, 1919, with the aim of capturing Petrograd. White Russian forces approached as close as ten miles from Petrograd, but the Bolshevik leader
Leon Trotsky gathered "an army of workers and soldiers", which was able to repulse Yudenich's troops and force their retreat back into Estonia where the Estonians, fearing the danger presented by a potential armed mob, disarmed and interned them. The Bolsheviks continued to make determined assaults on fortified positions at the Estonian border, but exhausted themselves. A ceasefire came into effect on January 3, 1920.
On
February 2,
1920, the Peace
Treaty of Tartu was signed by the Republic of Estonia and
Bolshevist Russia. At this point Bolshevist regime had not been recognized by any Western power. The terms of the treaty stated that Bolshevist Russia renounced in perpetuity all rights to the territory of Estonia. The agreed frontier corresponded roughly with the position of the front line at the cessation of hostilities. In particular, Estonia retained a strategic strip to the east of the Narva river (''Narvataguse'') and Setumaa in the southeast, areas which were lost in early 1945 - shortly after Soviet troops had taken control of Estonia, when Moscow transferred land East of the Narva River and most of Estonia's
Pechory county (Setumaa) to the RSFSR.
Substantial British involvement in the struggle in the Baltic region in 1918-19 as part of the
Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War took several forms:
★
British naval forces in December 1918, after lobbying in London by Estonian politicians, brought needed military equipment, training and also artillery support from
Royal Navy ships;
★ British protection of the Estonian left flank by naval action in the
Gulf of Finland. Among other operations, British
motor torpedo boats in conjuction with
RAF aircraft conducted the first combined air/sea assault in history on the Bolshevik fleet in
Kronstadt[2] torpedoing several Bolshevik warships at the cost of 3 boats. British officer
Augustus Agar won a
Victoria Cross for sinking a Soviet cruiser and then a
DSO for leading a second attack that sank two major warships;
★ Equipment supplied by the British to the White Russian Northwestern Army included six
tanks together with their crews, who were the only British troops to fight alongside the Northwestern Army. British tank crews are said to have got closer to
Petrograd (formerly
Saint Petersburg) in the autumn of 1919 than German
Panzer crews did in
World War II.
See also
★
History of Estonia
★
Latvian War of Independence
★
Lithuanian Wars of Independence
★
League of Liberators
External links
★ Estonica:
Emergence of Estonian independence
★
Estonian War of Independence
★ - in ''Baltic Defence Review'' No.8 Volume 2/2002
References
1. Estonian Declaration of Independence 24 February 1918 at www.president.ee
2. WAR IN RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK WATERS