Andrey Yeryomenko - Commands

Commands

Military offices
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding Officer of the 79th Cavalry Regiment
1929 - 1936
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding Officer of the 22nd Cavalry Regiment
1937
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding Officer of the 14th Cavalry Division
1937 - 1938
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the 6th Cavalry Corps
1938 - 1940
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the 3rd Mechanized Corps
1940
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the North Caucasus Military District
1940 - 1941
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the 1st Red Banner Army
Jan 1941 - Jun 1941
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Army General Dumitry Pavlov
Commanding General of the Western Front
28 June 1941 – 2 July 1941
Succeeded by
Marshal Timoshenko, Yeryomenko as vice commander of Western Front
Preceded by
Newly Formed
Commanding General of the Bryansk Front
16 Aug 1941 – 13 Oct 1941
Succeeded by
Major General Georgiy Fedorovich Zakharov
Preceded by
27th Army renamed as 4th Shock Army
Commanding General of the 4th Shock Army
December 25th 1941 – February 13th 1942
Succeeded by
Lieutenant General Filipp Golikov
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the Southwestern Front
1942 - 12 Jul 1942
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Newly Formed
Commanding General of the Stalingrad Front
12 Jul 1942 - 7 Aug 1942
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Newly Formed by splitting the Stalingrad Front
Commanding General of the Southeastern Front
7 Aug 1942 - 28 Sep 1942
Succeeded by
Disbanded
Preceded by
Reformed from Southeastern Front
Commanding General of the Stalingrad Front
28 Sep 1942 - 1 Jan 1943
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Reformed from Stalingrad Front
Commanding General of the Southern Front
1 Jan 1943 - Feb 1943
Succeeded by
General Lieutenant Rodion Malinovsky
Preceded by
Army General Maksim Purkayev
Commanding General of the Kalinin Front
April 7 - October 12, 1943
Succeeded by
Renamed 1st Baltic Front
Preceded by
Renamed from Kalinin Front
Commanding General of the 1st Baltic Front
October 12 - November 19, 1943
Succeeded by
Army General Hovhannes Bagramyan
Preceded by
Army General Ivan Yefimovich Petrov
Commanding General of the Separate Coastal Army
Feb 3, 1944 – Apr 18, 1944
Succeeded by
Lieutenant General Kondrat Semenovich Melnik
Preceded by
Army General Markian Popov
Commanding General of the 2nd Baltic Front
April 23, 1944 - Feberuary 1945
Succeeded by
2nd Baltic Front was merged into Leningrad Front
Preceded by
Army General Ivan Yefimovich Petrov
Commanding General of the 4th Ukrainian Front
26 Mar 1945 - 25 Aug 1945
Succeeded by
Redisgnated as Carpathian Military District
Preceded by
Newly Formed from 4th Ukrainian Front
Commanding General of the Carpathian Military District
25 Aug 1945 - October 1946
Succeeded by
Colonel General K.N. Galytskyy
Preceded by
General Lieutenant V.I. Kurdyumov
Commanding General of the Western Siberian Military District
Oct 1946 - Nov 1953
Succeeded by
Disbanded to form Siberian Military District
Preceded by
Colonel General S G Trofimenko
Commanding General of the North Caucasus Military District
November 1953 - April 1958
Succeeded by
Army General Issa Alexandrovich Pliyev
Preceded by
Unidentified
Inspector General of the Ministry of Defense
April 1958
Succeeded by
Unidentified

Read more about this topic:  Andrey Yeryomenko

Famous quotes containing the word commands:

    Unpaid work never commands respect ...
    Harriot Stanton Blatch (1856–1940)

    There are no more ideologies in the authentic sense of false consciousness, only advertisements for the world through its duplication and the provocative lie which does not seek belief but commands silence.
    Theodor W. Adorno (1903–1969)

    The power of a text is different when it is read from when it is copied out.... Only the copied text thus commands the soul of him who is occupied with it, whereas the mere reader never discovers the new aspects of his inner self that are opened by the text, that road cut through the interior jungle forever closing behind it: because the reader follows the movement of his mind in the free flight of day-dreaming, whereas the copier submits it to command.
    Walter Benjamin (1892–1940)