Alexey Ilyich Muravyov was a Red Armycolonel killed in World War II. Drafted into the Red Army during the Russian Civil War, Muravyov fought on the Eastern Front and in the Polish–Soviet War as a cavalryman, ending the war as a junior commander. He served in command positions with cavalry units between the wars, and had a stint as a staff officer during the early 1930s. In the late 1930s he quickly advanced from regimental to command to temporary commander of two rifle divisions and in 1941 became commander of the 209th Motorized Division in Belarus. Muravyov's division saw comparatively little action in the opening days of Operation Barbarossa, but despite this he was killed in actionon the third day of the war.
Muravyov was born on 28 October 1900 in the village of Zhelanya, now Ugransky District of Smolensk Oblast. Drafted into the Red Army in March 1919 at Moscow during the Russian Civil War, Muravyov was sent to the 7th Reserve Infantry Regiment in Kostroma. From May of that year he served with a cavalry battalion of the 5th Army, which was later reorganized into the 55th Cavalry Regiment, as a squad leader, assistant commander and commander of a platoon, and acting regimental adjutant. With the regiment, Muravyov fought on the Eastern Front near Ufa and Yekaterinburg against the forces of Alexander Kolchak between August 1919 and March 1920, and from May 1920 fought in the Polish–Soviet War on the Western Front. In August of that year he was interned in East Prussia when his unit was forced to retreat there after being defeated, and spent the six months in an internment camp. Returning to the Soviet Union in March 1921, Muravyov was sent to the 21st Cavalry Courses, initially in located Gzhatsk and later in Minsk. While at the courses he was sent with a consolidated cadet squadron to fight in the suppression of the East Karelian uprising in February 1922.
When Operation Barbarossa began on 22 June 1941, the division marched to positions northwest of Slonim. It subsequently retreated towards Baranovichi and Minsk. Late in the evening of 25 June, Muravyov wrote in a report that his division had not yet seen action apart from sporadic German air raids which caused few casualties. He reported stopping thousands of troops fleeing from German air attacks, which Muravyov thought were ineffective. Muravyov's personnel file listed him as missing in July 1941, but 209th Division deputy commander Ivan Chalenko stated in his autobiography that Muravyov was killed in action on 25 June. Ivan Stadnyuk, then a political officer with the division, wrote in postwar memoirs that he had seen Muravyov severely wounded by a German saboteur on 25 or 26 June in the area of Mir.