Yrjö Elfvengren (8 September 1889 – 10 June 1927) was a Finnish Nobility and white officer who was Chairman of the Provisional Committee of the unrecognized state of the North Ingria.
In the First World War, Georg Elfvengren successfully engaged in reconnaissance activities behind enemy lines. He was awarded the fourth class of the Order of St. George for his service. After being wounded, he was transferred to the Tsarskoye Selo military hospital. Following the murder of Grigori Rasputin, he was briefly detained for investigation, mainly due to his acquaintance with Felix Yusupov and Vladimir Purishkevich, a representative of the State Duma, and suspicion of involvement in the planning of the murders of Empress Alexandra and Anna Vyrubova. He was released after the February Revolution in March 1917.
The next attack occurred on October 21, 1919, with 1,700 soldiers in cooperation with Nikolai Yudenich. The attackers succeeded in capturing the Kuivaisi position, Lempaala, and Miikkulainen on the shores of Lake Ladoga. However, a counterattack by the Soviet Russians forced them to retreat, and the North Ingrian Regiment withdrew back to Kirjasalo. The regiment also retained control of the Raasuli position. After this, Elfvengren was elected chairman of the interim committee of North Ingria.
Upon Elfvengren's assumption of leadership, the relations between the interim committee of North Ingria and the Northwestern Army were strengthened. A military hospital and a newspaper named Kirjasalo Sanomat were established.
Elfvengren was responsible for clandestine activities in Northwestern Russia, Finland, and the Baltic states. In 1922, the organization attempted to assassinate the Soviet Foreign Minister Georgy Chicherin in Geneva, but the plot failed. Elfvengren has been alleged to have been involved in the assassination of Soviet diplomat Vatslav Vorovsky in 1923 in Lausanne.Engman 2007, p. 206. Elfvengren resigned from the union in 1923, and the following year, Boris Savinkov was arrested in Moscow, where he had secretly arrived.
Elfvengren subsequently worked as a businessman in Helsinki, but there is little information about his activities in his final years. In 1925, Elfvengren secretly traveled to Russia but was discovered and arrested by the OGPU. He was executed by firing squad in June 1927 in Moscow. At the same time, 19 other individuals accused of counter-revolutionary activities were also executed in response to the assassination of Soviet diplomat Pyotr Voykov, including several members of Russian noble families. Voikovin murha saa kaameita jälkiseurauksia, Helsingin Sanomat, 11.06.1927, nro 155, s. 5, Kansalliskirjaston digitaaliset aineistot
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