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The establishment of Armenian volunteer units in the Russian army dates back to the summer of 1914. Count Illarion Ivanovich Vorontsov-Dashkov consulted with the Mayor of Tbilisi Alexander Khatisian, the primate of Tbilisi, Bishop Mesrop Ter-Movsisian, and the prominent civic leader Dr. Hakob Zavriev about the creation of Armenian volunteer detachments. [2]
The Armenian Legion (German: Armenische Legion; Armenian: Հայկական լեգիոն, romanized: Haykakan legion) was a military unit in the German Army during World War II. It primarily consisted of Soviet Armenians , who wanted to fight the Soviets for an independent Armenia and commanded by General Drastamat Kanayan .
The Armenian Legion (French: Légion Arménienne) was a volunteer unit that was raised by the Allied Powers to serve in the Middle East Theatre during World War I.Trained and led by French army commanders, the Légion d'Orient (Eastern Legion), as the unit was originally known, was created in 1916, its ranks chiefly drawn from Levantine and Armenian exiles and refugees from the Ottoman Empire.
French Armenian Legion: Armenian-Georgian War Georgia: October 17-December 31, 1918 Republic of Armenia: Marash Resistance: Ottoman Empire: Cilicia Campaign of Turkish War of Independence: January 21-February 13, 1920 French Armenian Legion: Second Urfa Resistance: Ottoman Empire: Cilicia Campaign of Turkish War of Independence: February 9 ...
Antranik also in fought in the First World War fought as commander of the First Armenian Volunteer Battalion 7 within the Russian Caucasus Army. [2] 1914-17, World War I, Armenian volunteer units were employed in the Egyptian Expeditionary Force of British Army. 1916-20, World War I, French Armenian Legion were employed in the French Army. The ...
French Armenian Legion, part of the French Army; also involved in the Franco-Turkish War of 1918–21 Georgian Legion (1914–1918) , a unit of the German Army recruited from Georgians Infantry Regiment of the Academic Legion , formed by volunteer Polish students in 1918, later taken into the regular Polish Army
This division from Cilicia included a metropolitan regiment (the 412th Infantry Regiment), two colonial regiments (the 17th Senegalese Tirailleurs and the 18th Algerian Tirailleurs), and a French Armenian Legion regiment. This division became the first of four divisions in the Levant.
Tatar Legion; SS-Waffengruppe Idel-Ural (Turkic volunteers from Volga/Ural area) Waffen-Gebirgs-Brigade der SS (Tatar Nr. 1) (Tatar volunteers) 30. Waffen-Grenadier-Division der SS (Russische Nr. 2) (Armenian & Tatar volunteer units) Wolgatatarische Legion (Volga Tatars and Volga-Finns) Tataren-Gebirgsjäger-Regiment der SS (Crimean Tatar ...