Early years Kuropatkin was born in 1848 in
Kholmsky Uyezd,
Pskov Governorate, in the
Russian Empire. His father, a retired army captain, came from landed gentry. Educated in the
Cadet Corps and
Pavlovsky Military School, Kuropatkin entered the
Imperial Russian Army in 1864. On August 8, 1866, he was promoted to lieutenant in the 1st Turkestan Infantry Battalion, and took part in the
conquest of Bukhara, the
storming of Samarkand and other battles in the
Russian conquest of Turkestan. He was promoted to major in August 1870. From 1872 to 1874, Kuropatkin studied at the
Nicholas General Staff Academy, after which he was dispatched as a
military attaché to
Berlin and
Paris, completing his military studies, and with the
French troops in
French Algeria, accompanying a French expedition to
Sahara. Returning to Russia in late 1875, he was assigned to the
Turkestan Military District. He was awarded the
Order of St. George (4th class) for his role in the Russian conquest of
Kokand. From 1875-1876, Kuropatkin was employed in a diplomatic mission to
Yaqub Beg (ruler of
Kashgaria) to resolve the issues of Russian border claims in the
Fergana Valley. From September 1877 to September 1878, he was
Chief of Staff of the
16th Infantry Division. In August 1879, he was commander of the Turkestan Rifle Brigade. In December 1880, he and 5 companies made an 18-day march across 500 miles of desert to join General
Mikhail Skobelev’s invasion of
Turkmenistan. Kuropatkin led the main assault at the
Battle of Geok Tepe on January 24, 1881. He was awarded the Order of St. George (3rd class) for his victory in the battle. After the war, he wrote a detailed and critical history of the operations which was highly regarded. During the 1880s, Kuropatkin served on the south-eastern frontier in command of the Turkestan Rifle Brigade. He was promoted to major general on January 29, 1882. He joined the General Staff the following year, and was promoted to lieutenant general in 1890. From 1890 to 1898, Kuropatkin was governor of the
Transcaspian Region in Central Asia, based in
Askhabad. During his tenure, he was known to have developed trade, agriculture and towns in an area formerly known for endemic
banditry and
slavery. He established a local judicial and school system, and encouraged the settlement of colonists from the interior provinces of the
Russian Empire. In 1895 on Kuropatkin was bestowed the extraordinary Russian mission, called the Extraordinary Embassy to Persia in order to proclaim the ascension to the throne of
Nicholas II. One member of the mission was
Pavel Piasetsky, who later painted his famous
Panorama of Persia, showing the way from
Anzali to
Teheran.
Minister of War In 1898, Kuropatkin was recalled to
St. Petersburg and appointed War Minister. His first priority was of improving the command structure of the army, as well as the living conditions of its officers. His reforms included measures to rejuvenate the army by setting age limits for line officers and candidates for higher office, and by increasing the period of secondment of officers from the General Staff to combat units. He attempted to improve the quality of officers by raising the two-year cadet training program to three years, and by opening seven new cadet schools. He also increased the frequency of training maneuvers. However, with respect to the lower ranks, Kuropatkin's reforms fell short. While aware of the poor standards of food, clothing, and housing, he was unable to secure the necessary funds for improvements, so his activities were confined to improving morale through the increased use of
chaplains, the abolition of
corporal punishment, and improved field kitchens.
Russo-Japanese War Kuropatkin was involved in the negotiations with the
Empire of Japan before the
Russo-Japanese War in 1904. He did not support an armed conflict with Japan and opposed the
Bezobrazov Circle. His views became firmer after a visit to Japan in June 1903. Kuropatkin was heavily involved in the fiasco of the Russian land forces during the war. Although the rationale of his military approach was to wage a
war of attrition and to avoid an offensive until the
Trans-Siberian Railway brought sufficient troops and materiel, his cautiousness and hesitancy markedly influenced the repeated Russian defeats. Military historians consider his indecisiveness and organizational deficiencies in directing large-scale military operations as a major element in the Russian defeat. Kuropatkin also was influenced by his racism against Asians, reportedly telling the Tsar that he would only need two Russian soldiers for every three Japanese soldiers. After the Russian defeat at the
Battle of Mukden, Kuropatkin was relieved of command and handed over his post to
Nikolai Linevich, formerly commander of the
1st Manchurian Army. However, he insisted that he stay at the front and was given permission to take over Linevich's old post. In 1906, following the end of the Russo-Japanese War, Kuropatkin served as a member of the
State Council of Imperial Russia. However, in 1907 he retired to his country house, and wrote his own, yet candid, defense, which was published in a number of books in several languages. The Russian government reportedly confiscated the history he wrote.
World War I At the start of
World War I, Kuropatkin requested to be reinstated and to be sent to the front; however, his requests were blocked by Grand Duke
Nikolai Nikolaevich. Nevertheless, once Tsar
Nicholas II assumed the post of Supreme Commander, he put Kuropatkin in charge of the
Grenadier Corps in October, 1915. At the end of January 1916, he was appointed commander of the
5th Army, and in February 1916, he became Commander of the
Northern Front, in succession to General
Pavel Plehve, whose health had broken down. In early March, his forces undertook a limited offensive near
Riga, but were outflanked and forced to withdraw to the
Daugava River. A second and larger offensive later that month only managed to advance a couple of kilometers. Tsar Nicholas II did not accept Kuropatkin's excuses of a lack of artillery support, poor roads and bad weather. He planned a night attack which included setting up batteries of
searchlights to blind the German defenders, a tactic which had worked in 1904 against Japanese troops. Unfortunately for his men in 1915, on being sent 'over the top', they were silhouetted and suffered thousands of casualties. Kuropatkin was relieved of command on July 22, 1916, and reassigned to Turkestan, where the Russian involvement in World War I, especially against the
Ottoman Empire was extremely unpopular among the indigenous peoples and which had led to the
Central Asian revolt of 1916. Kuropatkin served as
Governor-General of the
Turkestan Military District as well as
ataman of the
Semirechye Cossacks, leading the brutal suppression of the revolt.
Post-Revolution In the
February Revolution of 1917 Kuropatkin was in
Petrograd, and quickly pledged his allegiance to the
Russian Provisional Government, cutting the royal insignia off his
epaulettes. He was confirmed in his post as commander of the Turkestan Military District by Provisional Government War Minister
Alexander Guchkov. However, this was disputed by the
Bolshevik ''
Tashkent Soviet of Soldiers and Workers' Deputies'', who placed him under arrest and sent him back to Petrograd. Freed by order of the Provisional Government, he returned to his home province. Following the
October Revolution, he became very skilled at playing the violin and taught at an agriculture school that he had founded, until his death in 1925.
Writings • 1882 – • 1909 – ==Honours==