Ilya Shatrov Explained

Ilya Alekseevich Shatrov
Native Name:Илья (Илий) Алексеевич Шатров
Native Name Lang:Russian
Birth Date:April 1, 1879 (or 1885)
Birth Place:Zemlyansk, Russian Empire
Death Date:Tambov, Soviet Union
Death Place:May 2, 1952
Placeofburial:Vozdvizhensky Cemetery
Branch: Russian Imperial Army
Rank:Kapellmesister
Unit:Mokshansky Regimental Orchestra (214th Reserve Mokshan Infantry Regiment)
Battles:Russo-Japanese War
Awards: Order of Saint Stanislaus (3rd class with swords)
Order of St. George

Ilya Alekseevich Shatrov (April 1, 1879 (or 1885) - May 2, 1952) was a Russian military musician, conductor and composer. He is known for composing the waltz On the Hills of Manchuria in 1906. The waltz recounts his experiences at the Battle of Mukden during the Russo-Japanese War, and he dedicated it to one of his comrades who was killed in the battle.[1]

Biography

Shatrov was born in Zemlyansk, Semilukskiy, Voronezh Oblast, Russia on 1 April 1879 to Aleksej Mihajlovich Shatrov,[2] a retired non-commissioned officer of the Lithuanian Life Guards Infantry Regiment of the Russian Imperial Guard.[3]

In 1905, Shatrov became the bandmaster of the Mokshansky Regimental Orchestra and served in the Russo-Japanese war. In February 1905, the 214th Reserve Mokshan Infantry Regiment took part in the Battle of Mukden and Liaoyang. In one of the battles the regiment was surrounded by the Japanese and was constantly attacked by the enemy. At a critical moment, when the ammunition was already spent, the regiment commander Colonel Pavel Pobyvanets gave the order: "The banner and the orchestra will go ahead!" Kapellmeister Shatrov led the orchestra to the parapet of the trenches, gave the order to play a battle march and led the orchestra ahead of the regiment's banner.[4] Encouraged soldiers rushed into the bayonet attack. During the battle, the regiment, with the music of the orchestra, continuously attacked the Japanese and, in the end, broke through the encirclement. In the course of the battle the regiment commander perished, and of the original 4000 members of the regiment only 700 people, including 7 musicians of the orchestra, were left alive.[4] For this feat, all the survivor musicians of the orchestra were awarded with crosses of St. George, Shatrov - an officer order of Saint Stanislav 3rd class with swords (the second such awarding of the conductors), and the orchestra was awarded silver pipes.[3]

He died in Tambov on 2 May 1952. He was buried at Vozdvizhensky Cemetery.[2]

Works

Notes and References

  1. van der Oye. David Schimmelpenninck. Rewriting the Russo-Japanese War: A Centenary Retrospective. The Russian Review. January 2008. 67. 1. 78–87. 10.1111/j.1467-9434.2007.00475.x. 20620672. English.
  2. Web site: Ilya Alekseevich Shatrov. Geni.com. 20 November 2017. en. 17 October 2016.
  3. Web site: Usova Lyudmila. Petrova Elena. Знамя и оркестр, вперед! (Banner and orchestra, forward!). . 20 November 2017. Russia. ru. Documentary. 17 February 2016.
  4. Web site: Isayenko. Anatoly. Знамя и оркестр – вперед! (Banner and orchestra - forward!). Nezavisimaya Gazeta. 20 November 2017. Moscow. ru. 6 February 2006.