Benoyn Boyshar | |
Native Name: | Бенойн БойсгӀар, Benoyn Boyshar |
Native Name Lang: | Chechen |
Nickname: | "Tash Stag" (Man of Stone) |
Birth Date: | 1794 |
Birth Place: | Benoy, Chechnya |
Death Date: | March 3, 1861 |
Death Place: | Khasavyurt, Russian Empire |
Placeofburial: | Yaryksu-Auh |
Allegiance: | Caucasian Imamate Chechnya |
Branch: | Army |
Serviceyears: | 1817–1861 |
Rank: | General (1840 – 1859) Imam of Chechnya (1859 – 1861) |
Battles: | Caucasian War
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Benoyn Boyshar, also known as Baysangur of Beno or simply Baysangur (ce|Бенойн БойсхӀар, Benoyn Boyshar;[1] ; 1794 – 3 March 1861) was a 19th-century North Caucasian commander of Chechen origin. He was one of the naibs (deputies) of Imam Shamil.[2] Baysangur participated in the Caucasian War of 1817–1861.[2]
Boyshar was born around 1794 in the aul of Benoy and belonged to the teip of Benoy from Edi Nek'e. In 1825-1826 Boyshar took part in the uprising led by Beibulat Taimiev.[3] In 1828, when Gհazi Muhammad was proclaimed imam of the Caucasian Imamate, Boyshar joined his movement.[4] The aul Benoy became the mainstay of Ghazi Muhammad in Chechnya.[5] In 1839, Boyshar's family received Shamil and his murids after they escaped from the Siege of Akhoulgo.[6]
By 1846, during a battle with the Russian troops of Count Mikhail Vorontsov, Boyshar lost an arm and an eye, and in 1847, in the battle for Gergebil, his leg was blown off by a cannonball. As a result of this serious injury, he was captured by the tsarist troops, although he was rescued by Shamil's murids, who attacked the convoy that was transporting Baysungur to the fortress of Grozny. According to popular legends, he was tied to a horse so that he could stay in the saddle.[6]
On May 8, 1860, Boyshar and former naibs of Shamil Uma Duyev and Atabi Atayev raised a new uprising in Chechnya. In June of the same year Boyshar's men defeated Russian forces led by General Musa Kundukhov near the town Fachu. Atabi Atayev's rebels thwarted attempts to strengthen the forces of Russian commander Nikolay Yevdokimov, and Duyev's forces freed the villages of the Argun Gorge from Russian control. The total strength of the rebel forces at that time reached 1,500. In November, they fought against eight hundred cossacks, 9 infantry battalions, and four rifle companies.
Boyshar's zeal and courage was noted by Imam Shamil in the diary of his bailiff Colonel A. I. Runovsky:[7]
Alarmed by the uprising of Boyshar, the Russian Army decided to take immediate action. With assistance from Musa Kundukhov, Nikolai Kolovachyov and Artsu Chermoyev, the Russian Army started to round up around the village of Belgatoy thanks for earlier intelligence information of Boyshar's location. Kundukhov used brute force and extreme brutality to crush every Chechen villages remaining, destroying 15 villages in total. Losing their hideout, Boyshar and his men returned to Benoy and tried to continue the resistance, but it was eventually crushed and they were captured.[8] [9]
Boyshar was imprisoned in Khasavyurt and was later sentenced to death by hanging by authority of Major General Pavel Kempert. He was hanged on March 1, 1861.
Since his death, the story of his famed last stand against Russian Army has been popular among Chechens as an example of Chechen heroism.