'Mikhail Dmitrievich Skobelev' () (–) was a Russian general famous for his conquest of
Central Asia and heroism during the
Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78. Dressed in white uniform and mounted on a white horse, and always in the thickest of the fray, he was known and adored by his soldiers as the White General. British
Field-Marshall Bernard Montgomery wrote that Skobelev was the world's "ablest single commander" between 1870 and 1914 and called him a "skilful and inspiring" leader.
[1] His heart-attack death at the early age of thirty-nine was a blow to Russia's Army.
Early life and Conquest of Khiva
Skobelev was born near
Moscow on
29 September 1843. After graduating from the
General Staff Academy as a staff officer, he was sent to
Turkestan in
1868 and, with the exception of an interval of two years, during which he was on the staff of the grand duke Michael in the
Caucasus, remained in Central Asia until
1877.
He commanded the advanced guard of General
Lomakin's column from Kinderly Bay, in the
Caspian Sea, to join General Verevkin, from
Orenburg, in the expedition to the
Khanate of Khiva in
1874, and, after great suffering on the desert march, took a prominent part in the capture of the Khivan capital. Dressed as a
Turkoman, he intrepidly explored in a hostile country the route from Khiva to Igdy, and also the old bed of the
Oxus. In 1875 he was given an important command in the expedition against the
Khanate of Kokand under General
Konstantin Petrovich Kaufman, showing great capacity in the action of Makram, where he outmanoeuvered a greatly superior force and captured 58 guns, and in a brilliant night attack in the retreat from
Andijan, when he routed a large force with a handful of cavalry.
Later life, the Battle of Pleven, and Death
He was promoted to be
major-general, decorated with the
Order of St George, and appointed the first governor of the
Ferghana Oblast. In the Turkish War of
1877 he seized the bridge over the Sereth at Barborchi in April, and in June crossed the
Danube with the 8th corps. He commanded the Caucasian
Cossack Brigade in the attack of the Green Hills at the
second battle of Pleven. He
captured Lovetch on
3 September, and distinguished himself again in the desperate fighting on the Green Hills in the
third battle of Pleven. Promoted to be a
lieutenant-general, and given the command of the 16th Division, he took part in the investment of Pleven and also in the
fight of 9 December, when Osman Pasha surrendered, with his army. In January 1878 he crossed the
Balkans in a severe snowstorm defeating the Turks at Sheynovo, near
Shipka, and capturing 36,000 men and 90 guns.
He returned to
Turkestan after the war, and in 1880 and 1881 further distinguished himself in a retrieving the disasters inflicted by the Tekke Turkomans, captured
Geok-Tepe, and, after much slaughter, reduced the
Akhal-Tekke country to submission.
[2] He was advancing on
Ashkhabad and Kalat i-Nadiri when he was disavowed and recalled. He was given the command at
Minsk.
In the last years of his short life he engaged actively in politics, and made speeches in
Paris and in Moscow at the beginning of 1882 in favor of a militant
Pan-Slavism, predicting a desperate strife between Slavs and Germans.
[3] He was at once recalled to St Petersburg. He was staying at a Moscow hotel, on his way to his estate, when he died suddenly of a heart attack on
7 July 1882. In Russia he was a very popular man at the time of his death, and not surprisingly, his death aroused suspicion among many. After all, he was a relatively young (38) and vigorous man. Without a doubt, Skobelev's early death deprived Russia of a great military leader.
[4] This became especially evident during the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05. The Russian commanding generals in that war were men of Skobelev's generation, but none of them had his military genius and charisma.
Skobelev's Memory

Monument to Skobelev in Moscow, 1912
After Skobelev's death,
a major square in
Moscow was given his name and the town of
Fergana in
Uzbekistan was renamed Skobelev. The White General also makes appearance in several of
Boris Akunin's Erast Fandorin novels, and in the
2005 Russian film ''The Turkish Gambit'', in the person of General Sobolev.
Today, his name still lives, even beyond his motherland: shortly after the end of the Turkish War of
1877, the grateful Bulgarians constructed a park in
Pleven,
Skobelev Park, on one of the hills where the major battles for the city took place. The park is also a location of the Panorama
Pleven's Epopee 1877 memorial, where in one of the scenes of the gigantic 360 degree panoramic painting the White General is displayed charging with his horse and bare sword, leading the Russian attack on the Turkish positions.
Shortly after the entrance of the park, the bust of the famous general can be seen, watching over the city. The park contains memorials with the names of the Russian and Romanian solders that died for the liberation of
Pleven, and is decorated with non-functional arms donated by Russia: cannons, cannon balls, gatling guns, rifles, bayonets.
Notes
1. ''A Concise History of Warfare'' by Field-Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein (1968), p. 266, 269. ISBN 0001921495
2. Lansdell, Henry (1885) ''Russian Central Asia: Including Kuldja, Bokhara, Khiva and Merv'' S. Low, Marston, Searle
and Rivington, London, pp. 464-465
3. Novikova, Olǵa Alekseevna and Skobelev, Mikhail Dmitrievich (1883) ''Skobeleff and the Slavonic cause, by O.K.'' Longmans, Greene & Co., London,
4. Alexander III wrote: "His loss to the Russian army is one it is hard to replace, and it must be deeply lamented by all true soldiers. It is sad, very sad, to lose men so useful and so devoted to their mission." Novikova, Olǵa Alekseevna and Skobelev, Mikhail Dmitrievich (1883) ''Skobeleff and the Slavonic cause, by O.K.'' Longmans, Greene & Co., London, p. 387
References
★