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・ Mikhail Baranov
・ Mikhail Baranovskiy
・ Mikhail Barataev
・ Mikhail Bariban
・ Mikhail Baron
・ Mikhail Barshchevsky
・ Mikhail Barsukov
・ Mikhail Baryshnikov
・ Mikhail Bashilov
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・ Mikhail Batyanov
・ Mikhail Beketov
・ Mikhail Belov
・ Mikhail Belov (footballer, born 1966)
・ Mikhail Belov (footballer, born 1992)
Mikhail Berens
・ Mikhail Bernshtein
・ Mikhail Berulava
・ Mikhail Beschastnykh
・ Mikhail Bestuzhev-Ryumin
・ Mikhail Bezverkhny
・ Mikhail Biarnadski
・ Mikhail Bilaonov
・ Mikhail Biryukov
・ Mikhail Biryukov (footballer born 1958)
・ Mikhail Biryukov (footballer born 1987)
・ Mikhail Biryukov (ice hockey)
・ Mikhail Biryukov (tennis)
・ Mikhail Blagosklonny
・ Mikhail Bobrovsky


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Mikhail Berens : ウィキペディア英語版
Mikhail Berens

Mikhail Andreyevich Berens ((ロシア語:Михаил Андреевич Беренс)) (January 16, 1879 – January 20, 1943) was an officer in the Imperial Russian Navy and the White Navy during the Russian Civil War.
==Biography==

Mikhail Berens was born in Kutaisi, Georgia, and graduated from the Naval Cadet Corps in 1898. He commanded the gunboat ''Gilyak'' in the Imperial Russian Navy where he distinguished himself during the suppression of Taku Forts during the Boxer Rebellion. He was promoted to captain in 1904 and stationed with the Russian Pacific Fleet at Port Arthur
During the Russo-Japanese War, as a junior officer he served as navigator on the battleship ''Sevastopol'', and was captain of the destroyer ''Boyki'' after the Battle of the Yellow Sea. After the Russian defeat, Berens escaped with his ship to Tsingtao and was interned for the remainder of the war. In 1906 he joined the Baltic Fleet and was executive officer of the cruiser ''Diana'' and subsequently commanded the destroyer ''Novik'' during World War I. On August 18, 1915 he engaged two German destroyers in the Gulf of Riga, sinking one and inflicting heavy damage on the other. For this action, he was awarded the Order of St. George from Russia and the Legion of Honour from France.
In 1916 he was promoted to captain of the battleship ''Petropavlovsk'' and became chief of staff of the Russian Baltic Fleet in 1917. Following the Russian Revolution, the Russian Provisional Government dismissed him in 1918 without pension.
He escaped from in March 1919 Petrograd via Finland and joined Admiral Kolchak, who gave him the rank of rear admiral and assigned him command the White Movement naval forces at Vladivostok. On January 31, 1920, he took his remaining vessels and numerous refugees to Tsuruga in Japan. In August 1920 he arrived at Sevastopol in the Crimea and joined General Wrangel's Armed Forces of South Russia. He was assigned command of the fortres of Kerch in September 1920, patrolling the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea. With the collapse of the White Movement, he evacuated his forces with Wrangel's fleet to Bizerte in Tunisia. He commanded the Russian fleet in exile from January 1921 until its disarmament after the recognition by France of the Soviet Union on October 29, 1924.
Remaining in Tunis, he worked in the agricultural sector, participated actively in the affairs of the local Department of Navy Union. He died in Tunis in 1943 and was buried at the cemetery in Megrin. His ashes were transferred to the Borzhel cemetery in Tunisia on April 30, 2001.
Mikhail's brother Yevgeniy Berens joined the Bolshevik cause during the Russian Civil War and became commander in the Soviet Navy.

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