Januarius Kazimirovich Tsikhovich (Russian: Януарий Казимирович Цихович; born September 7, 1871 – death date unknown) was a Russian commander, lieutenant general (6/12/1915), division general of the Polish Army.
Since May 26, 1903 - the headquarters officer for special assignments under the commander of the forces of the Amur Military District.
Member of the Russian-Japanese war of 1904–1905, he served in the headquarters of the Manchurian army and commander in the Far East.
On December 7, 1910, the commander of the 26th Siberian Rifle Regiment, with whom the First World War entered.
From October 21, 1915 he was in the reserve of ranks at the headquarters of the Minsk Military District.
After the October Revolution, in response to a telegram from N.V. Krylenko dated December 1 (14), 1917, demanding to be guided by the provision on democratization sent by the Military Revolutionary Committee at Headquarters, wrote that "the army has already been democratized to such an extent that it has disappeared from the world’s scale and no one is reckoning with it" and removing shoulder straps, the only sign by which one can at least approximately distinguish the regiments of a multimillion-dollar army, "turns it into a gray crowd of human bodies."
On December 3, 1917, the Bolshevik Military Revolutionary Committee removed Tsikhovich from the post of commander for liaising with the Ukrainian Central Rada and appointed in his place the staff captain Vladimir Triandafillov.
[2] Then - a member of the Military Historical Commission for the study and use of the experience of World War II.
[4] By the beginning of the September War, he served as chief of the customs guard in Graevo.