[4] He was pardoned on the eve of this execution due to the intervention of Trotsky and Lenin, but later re-arrested on charges for conspiring to organise an insurrection against the Soviet government.
[5] Filipp Kuzmich Mironov was born in 1872 on the farm Buerak-Senyutkin, in the village of Ust-Medveditskaya, into a Cossack family of the Don Host.
In 1890–1894, he served in active military service, from where, as one of the best, he entered the Novocherkassk Junker Cossack School [ru] in 1895, successfully graduating from it in 1898.
He traveled to St. Petersburg together with Pavel Ageev [ru] and deacon Nikolai Burykin to submit this decision to the First State Duma.
The uprising was suppressed in a few days by the troops of Budyonny (4th Cavalry Division of Oka Gorodovikov, later Deputy Commander Mironov).
[14] At a meeting of the Politburo of the Russian Communist Party on October 23, 1919, political confidence was expressed in Mironov and, later, command of the 2nd Cavalry Army was entrusted to him.
On October 12–14, 1920 for the defeat of the troops of Pyotr Wrangel in the ensuing Nikopol-Alexander battle, for disrupting the intentions of Józef Piłsudski and Wrangel to unite on the right bank of the Dnieper and the defeat of the cavalry corps of Nikolai Babiyev [ru] and Ivan Barbovich [ru], Mironov was awarded an honorary revolutionary weapon and the Order of the Red Banner.
[15] In February 1921, he was arrested on a false accusation of Donchek, when he carelessly drove into his native village (Mironov made many enemies in the Revolutionary Military Council, both among Trotsky's supporters and his opponents, Budyonny and Voroshilov, for openly criticizing the decossackization policy).
Conversely, American historian Laura Engelstein stated that Mironov was shot by the Cheka in Moscow on alleged charges of conspiracy and organising an insurrection.