Army service and desertions Karmaliuk was conscripted to serve in the Imperial Russian Army in Kamianets-Podilskyi. He was forcibly inducted into the Russian Imperial Army, and served in the
Napoleonic Wars of 1812 in an
Kharkov Dragoon Regiment, but eventually escaped and organized rebel bands who attacked merchants and landowners, while distributing the booty between the poor. He was captured in 1814, and was sentenced in
Kamianets-Podilskyi to
run a gauntlet of 500 blows, a typical military punishment. He was then sent to serve out the 25-year term of penal service in a military unit in the
Crimea, but he fled again, returning to northern
Podolia.
Rebellion In Podolia, he once again organized rebel bands in
Olhopil,
Letychiv, and
Lityn regions, attracting a wide support base among Ukrainians,
Jews and even
Poles. The rebellions intensified over the years, and then had spread not only to other parts of
Podolia, but also to the neighboring provinces of
Volynia,
Kyivshchyna, and
Bessarabia. Karmaliuk escaped from the castle where he was held captive, but was captured yet again in 1817-18. The second time, he was sentenced to 25 blows with the
knout in front of the town hall. In 1822, Karmaliuk was arrested yet again and jailed for the third time in the castle's Pope's Tower. On the night of March 12–13, 1823, Karmaliuk organized an escape with his fellow inmates, during which he was injured and captured just two weeks later. In April 1823, Karmaliuk was sentenced to 101 hits with the knout in front of the town hall and sent to far-away
Siberia. In 1825, he was transferred from the
Tobolsk to
Yalutorovsk. In the autumn of 1825, he escaped. He reached Podolia in the spring of 1826. In June 1827, he was arrested again. In March 1828, Karmalyuk was sentenced to punishment with the 101st whip and hard labor for life. He was sent to the Borovlyansky convict distillery in the village of ,
Kurgansky Uyezd,
Tobolsk Governorate. In 1829, he escaped. With the ongoing
Polish uprising of 1831, by the early 1830s Karmaliuk's guerrilla army was approximately 20,000 strong, with over 1,000 raids on the estates of the Polish and Russian landowners over a 20-year period. The response of the
tsar was to station military units in those regions hardest hit by Karmaliuk. He was caught four times and sentenced to hard labor in Siberia, but escaped each time, returning to Lityn and Letychiv districts. A tower in the
Kamianets-Podilskyi Castle bears the name of its famous prisoner.
Openness towards other ethnicities Karmaliuk bore no ill will towards the poor of all ethnic groups and minorities in Ukraine, Jews in particular, and as a result they supported him
en masse. His close companions were the Poles Jan and Alex Glembovski, Feliks Jankowski and Aleksander Wytwycki and Jews Avrum El Itzkovych, Abrashko Duvydovych Sokolnytsky and Aron Viniar. Many Jews were prosecuted for participating in Karmaliuk's raids and aiding and abetting him. In general, Karmaliuk inspired unprecedented loyalty in all his supporters. ==Death==