The 4th Rifle Division was formed from local guard battalions and other units from
Omsk,
Semipalatinsk, and
Novonikolayevsk in accordance with an order of the troops in Siberia of 28 September 1920, part of the
5th Army. By an order of 26 October, it was redesignated the 1st Siberian Rifle Division. The division became the 29th Rifle Division in accordance with an order of the assistant to the commander in chief for Siberia on 15 November. The division received the honorific
Vyatka on 30 November 1921. In 1922, the 29th fought in the suppression of the
West Siberian revolt, a series of peasant uprisings against Soviet rule. It fought in
Akmola,
Tyumen, and
Tobolsk Governorates, and in the areas of
Ishim,
Yalutorovsk, and
Petropavlovsk. Between January and June the division protected the Omsk section of the
Trans-Siberian Railway. Later that year, it was transferred to the
Western Siberian Military District. The 29th was transferred to the
Western Military District (later the Belorussian Military District) to participate in maneuvers in September 1923, joining the
4th Rifle Corps. Between 29 March 1924 and the mid-1930s, the 29th was a territorial unit. On 12 December 1924, the 29th received the honorific named for the Finnish proletariat and lost the Vyatka honorific. In September 1939, it fought in the
Soviet invasion of Poland. The 29th was officially redesignated as a motorised division on 4 July 1940. With
6th Mechanised Corps,
10th Army,
Western Front on 22 June 1941. Poirer and Connor appear to say it was wiped out near Minsk in July 1941. It was formally disbanded on 19 September 1941. == Second formation ==