[citation needed] On 14 November 1853, the regiment defeated the Ottomans at Akhaltsikhe, for which it was awarded the St. George Banner with the corresponding inscription.
[citation needed] From 4 December 1873, the regiment was stationed in Feodosia, in the rifle barracks on Voennaya (now Viti Korobkova) Street.
14), as well as the buildings of the bankrupt mechanical establishment of engineer Maslyannikov, converted to accommodate the regimental supply train.
[citation needed] During the Russo-Turkish War, the regiment guarded the Crimean coast from Feodosia to Sudak.
On 23 June 1905, the 2nd company of the regiment fired on the Potemkin, which was loading coal in the Feodosia port, after which the ship weighed anchor and sailed to the shores of Romania.
During the Russian Revolution of 1905, individual companies of the regiment were repeatedly called upon to disperse strikes and demonstrations in the Taurida Governorate.
5 June], the Vilnius Regiment landed on the Kagul near Koktebel,[5] attacking Red Army units from the rear, and thus contributing to their defeat and occupation of Feodosia.
[6] The Alekseevites again became an independent unit, and the regiment, as part of the 13th Division, participated in the Northern Taurida Operation and the Siege of Perekop.
Perhaps this was revenge on the captured enemy, since the 9th Red Division repeatedly met with the Vilnius Regiment on the fields of Northern Taurida.