Clever Geek Handbook
πŸ“œ ⬆️ ⬇️

Rumyantsev, Nikolai Ivanovich

Nikolai Ivanovich Rumyantsev (1914-1992) - military engineer - mechanic , participant in the Soviet-Finnish and World War II, head of the Higher Naval Engineering School named after V. Lenin , engineer vice admiral .

Rumyantsev Nikolay Ivanovich
Rumyantsev N I.png
Date of BirthMay 14, 1914 ( 1914-05-14 )
Place of BirthMoscow
Date of deathJune 8, 1992 ( 1992-06-08 ) (78 years old)
Place of deathPushkin , Leningrad region , Russia
Affiliation the USSR
Type of armyUSSR Navy
Years of servicesince 1933
RankEngineer Vice Admiral of the Navy of the USSR
CommandedLVVMIU named after V.I. Lenin
Awards and prizes
The order of LeninOrder of the Red BannerOrder of the Patriotic War I degreeOrder of the Patriotic War II degree
Order of the Red StarOrder of the Red StarOrder of the Red StarOrder "For Service to the Homeland in the Armed Forces of the USSR" III degree
Retired1975

Content

Biography

Nikolai Ivanovich Rumyantsev was born on May 14, 1914 (in other sources on May 22) in Moscow .

In September 1933 he entered and in 1938 graduated from the mechanical sector of the Higher Naval School named after Comrade F. Dzerzhinsky .

He was appointed commander of the machine group, then commander of the electromechanical sector of the warhead-5 destroyer " Swift " brigade of destroyers of the Baltic Fleet , since 1939 - commander of the electro-mechanical warhead of the ship. Member of the Soviet-Finnish war of 1939-1940.

Since July 1940 - Head of the 1st division of the destroyer crew of the Northern Fleet , a participant in the Great Patriotic War, the defense of the Soviet Arctic .

Since July 1941 - commander of the warhead-5 destroyer destroyer " Terrible " of the Northern Fleet. He took part in three raiding and 25 convoy operations of the allied and domestic ships. At the beginning of 1943, the future famous writer Valentin Savvich Pikul served on the destroyer along with Rumyantsev N.I.

In 1943, N. I. Rumyantsev was appointed commander of the warhead 5 of the destroyer Squadron, then the flagship mechanical engineer of the detachment of ships under construction in the city of Molotovsk (now Severodvinsk ), he was directly involved in the commissioning of large hunters Shturman and "Kirovets", the patrol ship " SKR-29 " and the submarine " S-17 ".

Since May 1944, he was an assistant to the flagship survivability mechanical engineer brigade of destroyer squadrons and an assistant to the flagship mechanical engineer of the Northern Fleet ships squadron. In these positions he took part in 20 combat operations of the fleet ships.

Since 1949 - mechanical engineer of the Northern Fleet destroyer squadron brigade, since 1950 - engineer of the control and reception apparatus of the Technical Department of the Navy.

In March 1952 he was appointed the flagship mechanical engineer of the 6th squadron of the Northern Fleet.

Since October 1954, deputy chief of armament and ship repair of the Northern Fleet.

In 1957, the captain of the 2nd rank engineer Rumyantsev was appointed head of the steam-power department, and on December 26, 1959 - the head of the Leningrad Higher Naval Engineering School in the city of Pushkin [2] .

In 1971, he was awarded the title of Vice Admiral Engineer.

Since March 1971, he was chairman of the Scientific Council for the admission to the defense of dissertations and the approval of the scientific degree of a candidate of technical sciences in two specialties: armament and military equipment and automatic control and regulation.

In September 1975, he was transferred to the reserve.

He died on June 8, 1992. He was buried at the Kazan cemetery in the city of Pushkin, within the boundaries of St. Petersburg.

Rewards

  • Order of Lenin (1954),
  • Order of the Red Banner (1953),
  • Order of the Patriotic War I degree (1944),
  • Order of the Patriotic War 2 degrees (1945),
  • Order of the Red Star (1942, 1949, 1950),
  • Order for Service to the Motherland in the Armed Forces, 3 degrees
  • Medals "For Military Merit"; β€œFor courage” of β€œ Ushakova ”, β€œ Nakhimov ” and many others [3] .

Notes

  1. ↑ Livanov P. We went hiking! / The newspaper "Evening Magadan", 01.24.2013.
  2. ↑ Martynov N.P., Kuzinets I.M. β€œThe Russian marine mechanical engineer should beβ€œ more scientific ”than marine mechanics of all countries.” Military History Journal.
  3. ↑ Public electronic document bank β€œFeat of the People in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945”

Literature

  • Kuzinets I. M. The history of the Russian higher naval engineering education in persons. Brief essays on the leaders of the Naval Engineering Institute (1798-2003), St. Petersburg, Mor West, 2004.
  • Usik N.P. , Fields Ya. I. Higher Naval Engineering College named after F.E. Dzerzhinsky. Historical background. - L .: VVMIOLU named after F.E. Dzerzhinsky, 1990 .-- 408 p.
  • Rumyantsev Nikolay Ivanovich // Kola Encyclopedia . 5 t. T. 4. P - T / Ch. ed. V.P. Petrov . - Murmansk: RUSMA (IP Glukhov A. B.), 2013 .-- S. 260.

Links

  • Alexander Cadet Corps for minors - Social network of the city of Pushkin
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rumyantsev__Nikolay_Ivanovich&oldid=101647728


More articles:

  • Mine named after S. M. Kirov (Makeevka)
  • Shenshakov, Vasily Makarovich
  • Rodriguez Nue, Lisardo
  • Shumakov, Boris Apollonovich
  • Arsinoterium
  • Sergeev, Anatoly Andreyevich
  • Hellyeah
  • 118 (number)
  • Moral Universalism
  • Raevo (Moscow region)

All articles

Clever Geek | 2019