Petya Lyuty worked as a painter and decorator. Following the outbreak of the
Ukrainian War of Independence against the occupying
Central Powers, Lyuty joined the insurgent detachment under
Nestor Makhno, who he served as his personal bodyguard. Disguised as women, Lyuty and Makhno carried out reconnaissance on the local Austro-German headquarters in
Huliaipole, but they called off their planned bombing attack against it, as they feared that they would harm the women and children inside. On 22 September 1918, Makhno and Lyuty moved to decisively reoccupy Huliaipole, setting off from
Ternivka in disguise as officers of the (UAF). Along the way, they encountered a real detachment of the UAF, from whom they received
intelligence on the positions and strength of the Austro-German forces, before killing them. On 30 September 1918, Lyuty took a commanding role in the
battle of Dibrivka, where the insurgents successfully defeated the local Austrian garrison. This was followed by a series of reprisals, with the Austrian forces eventually driving the insurgents out of
Dibrivka. On 15 November 1918, the insurgents were ambushed by a Hungarian detachment at
Temyrivka, with half of them being killed in the attack. During the scrambled insurgent defense, Makhno fired a
Lewis gun from Lyuty's own shoulder, killing enough men to stop the attack. But after a failed counterattack, the insurgents fell back, pinned down by gunfire. Lyuty, along with
Oleksiy Marchenko and
Petro Petrenko, rescued a wounded Makhno from the battle and escaped on horseback. Nevertheless, the insurgents were able to rally themselves, finally recapturing Huliaipole on 27 November. This accelerated a process of reorganisation of the insurgent forces, which were now surrounded on all fronts by different enemies. At an
extraordinary insurgent conference, the various insurgent detachments federated together under a central command, with Lyuty being elected to the
insurgent staff. After Makhno broke with the
Bolsheviks and retreated from Huliaipole in the summer of 1919, Lyuty joined the insurgent detachment on its way towards
Kherson. In early September, the insurgents fell into a series of clashes with the
White Army around
Pomichna, during which Petya Lyuty was killed. ==References==