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Der Zar und sein Rolls-Royce auf Ketten

Die Verbindung zwischen Halbkettenfahrzeugen und dem Namen des französischen Ingenieurs Adolphe Kégresse ist wohlbekannt. Vor nicht allzu langer Zeit berichteten wir über die kaum zu glaubende Geschichte, wie einige dieser kuriosen Fahrzeuge ihr Ende fanden (hier klicken). Es handelte sich natürlich um Citroëns, da Kégresse seinen Landsmann André Citroën dazu brachte, hier Forschung und Entwicklung zu betreiben.

Aber das ist noch nicht alles. Wir erfuhren erst kürzlich, dass Monsieur Kégresse – geboren in den französischen Alpen nahe der Schweizer Grenze, also in einer Gegend mit reichlich Schnee – 1905 nach St. Petersburg zog, um persönlicher Chauffeur von Zar Nikolaus II. zu werden und später Leiter der mechanischen Abteilung der russischen kaiserlichen Garage. Dort entwickelte er tatsächlich seine berühmte Erfindung, deren wesentliches Merkmal ein flexibles Gummiband anstelle der bisher verwendeten starren Metallglieder war.

 

Der Zar war als begeisterter Autoliebhaber und Sammler bekannt. Als er 1903 zum ersten Mal ein Auto sah, war er fasziniert von dem, was er angeblich „dieses Petroleumding“ nannte. Danach gab er ein Vermögen dafür aus, bis zu seinem Tod im Jahr 1918. Er besaß nicht nur zahlreiche Autos, sondern auch eine Flotte von 21 Chauffeuren und eigens gebaute Garagen in Zarskoje Selo, Peterhof, im Livadia-Palast und im Winterpalast in St. Petersburg. Eine Liste einiger seiner Fahrzeuge finden Sie hier. Erstaunlicherweise wird der von Kégresse gebaute halbkettenbetriebene Rolls-Royce dort nicht erwähnt, da er meist Lenin zugeschrieben wird. Andere Quellen sagen jedoch, dass er 1914 für Zar Nikolaus II. gebaut und später von Lenin benutzt wurde. Das hier gezeigte Exemplar existiert noch heute in Lenins Residenz in Gorki und befindet sich in hervorragendem Zustand.

Das zweite und dritte Foto zeigen weitere von Kégresse gebaute Fahrzeuge, angeblich mit dem Zaren selbst am Steuer. Welche sind das genau? Wie so oft: Wir lassen uns gern belehren – man lernt schließlich nie aus!

 

Text: Jeroen Booij. Fotos: Wikipedia und Twitter.

 

Publiziert:
Mittwoch Januar 27th, 2021
Ivan Barantsev
21 Dezember 2025, 22:10
Ten years ago I conducted a very interesting historical investigation and studied many archival documents about this Rolls-Royce 40/50НР (chassis 79YG) with soviet carosserie.

It turned out that this all-terrain Kégresse vehicle was built in 1928 four years after Lenin's death. But Lenin used this Rolls-Royce when the car was on the wheels.
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Timo Laitinen
05 Februar 2021, 18:13
According to the Russian book mentioned earlier Kégresse made a (final) list of the vehicles of the imperial garage on March 11, 1917. The list (56 vehicles) includes six vehicles with Kégresse equipment - none of them a Rolls-Royce. Two Kégresse-Packards were used until 1928 and 1929 when their half-track mechanisms were transferred to two Rolls-Royces. The first of them exists as the "Lenin´s car". It is possible that Lenin used the car but that was before it had the half-tracks.
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Bozi Mohacek
01 Februar 2021, 13:33
Hi, we looked into this one on the Surrey Vintage Vehicle Society Help pages (in 2008 p 16) when an enquirer was trying to firm up the history of "Lenin's Rolls Royce" then in Gorki Leninskie Museum. Chassis plate 79 YG. Our researches of the day revealed there were two possible scenarios in existence relating to the exact history of the vehicle:

The first was that the car was built in 1916 for Tsar Nicholas II, and that it was re-build in Petrograd 1919 in the Poutiloff works as half-track "Kegresse"; The Tsar was assassinated 17 July 1918. The Tsar had numerous cars many fitted with half-tracks.

The second scenario was that the car came to Russia in 1920 and had half-tracks added to the car by Adolphe Kegresse. Our discussions with the RREC advised that they have the build-date for this chassis as 1922, and that the client is listed as the "All Russian Co-Operative Society". Lenin died 1924.


The half-track system of the type seen on the back of the Rolls was developed by Adophe Kegresse, a Frenchman working in the Tsar’s Imperial Garage from 1905 to the First World War. Adolphe was also used as the personal driver to the Tsar. However, after WW1, from 1919, Kegresse was employed by Andre Citroen working in Paris developing half-track vehicles during the 1920s and 1930s. Assuming that the car in the picture carries the chassis number mentioned, it would seem to have nothing to do with the Tsar. The centralised trading system of the era would have required importation of everything via an import-export company, the ” Co-Op” . They often use counter-trade and discount conditions, and it is possible that the Rolls was one of those. As Adophe Kegresse was in Paris by 1919, he could not have fitted the halftrack to the car, nor could he have been Lenin’s driver of the Rolls.

Bozi Mohacek
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Timo Laitinen
28 Januar 2021, 11:33
There is a magnificent Russian book published in 2017 "Garage of His Imperial Highness" which has all the info, even what happened to many of the cars afterwards (when known). The book has 400 huge pages and weights 3 kilos ! Kegresse himself left Russia in 1917 in one of the Delaunay-Bellevilles for Finland. One D-B was converted to (and used as) a bus in Stockholm in the 1920´s but its origin is unclear.
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Keith Kuehn
27 Januar 2021, 18:37
At least I can say it is NOT the Tsar behind the wheel in any photo here. Really interesting though!
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Ariejan Bos
27 Januar 2021, 23:38
No, definitely not! At the wheel of the Russo-Balt we see M. Kégresse himself.
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Ariejan Bos
27 Januar 2021, 11:40
I do not know about a Benz, but at least one Mercedes was equipped with the Kégresse system. The car on the second photo is a Packard, of which several were converted. The car on the last photo is a Russo-Balt, the well-known Russian make, of which also several are known to have been adapted.
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Harit Trivedi
27 Januar 2021, 09:19
Many years ago there was an article in a German magazine about Kégresse and his half track cars. There were lots of old period pics, some with the Tsar family members and one vehicle so converted was a Benz. Maybe someone has the article handy and could share some extracts.
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John Peirson
27 Januar 2021, 00:43
The Rolls-Royce in your picture is 1922 chassis 79YG.

There is another Lenin Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost in Moscow. It is on wheels, not half tracks.

Czar Nicholas II is listed in "The Edwardian Rolls-Royce" as owning eight pre WW1 Silver Ghosts. Lenin is not listed.
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