List of leaders of Russia
Appearance
That is the list of rulers of Ancient Rus', the Tsardom of Russia, the Russian Empire, the Russian Republic, the Soviet Union, and the modern Russian Federation. It does not include regents, acting rulers, rulers of the separatist states in the territory of Russia, persons who applied for the post of ruler, but did not join it, rebel leaders who do not control the capital, and the nominal heads of the Russian SFSR.
Grand Dukes of Moscow (1325–1547)
- Ivan I Kalita (November 21, 1325 — March 31, 1340)
- Simeon the Proud (March 31, 1340 — April 26, 1353)
- Ivan II the Red (April 26, 1353 — November 13, 1359)
- Dmitry of the Don (13 November 1359 — 19 May 1389)
- Vasily I (May 19, 1389 — February 27, 1425)
- Vasily II the Dark (February 27, 1425 — April 25, 1433)
- Yury of Zvenigorod (spring — summer 1433)
- Vasily II the Dark (summer 1433 — March 31, 1434)
- Yury of Zvenigorod (March 31 — June 5, 1434)
- Vasily the Squint (June 5 — July 1434)
- Vasily II the Dark (July 1434 — July 7, 1445)
- Dmitry Shemyaka (July 7 - October 26, 1445)
- Vasily II the Dark (October 26, 1445 — February 13, 1446)
- Dmitry Shemyaka (February 12, 1446 — February 17, 1447)
- Vasily II the Dark (February 17, 1447 — March 27, 1462)
- Ivan III the Great (March 27, 1462 — October 27, 1505)
- Vasili III (October 27, 1505 — December 4, 1533)
- Ivan IV the Terrible (December 4, 1533 — January 16, 1547)
Tsars of Russia (1547–1721)
Rurik (1547–1598)
- Ivan IV the Terrible (January 16, 1547 — March 18, 1584)
- Simeon Bekbulatovich (no later than October 30, 1575 — no earlier than July 18, 1576)[1]
- Feodor I (March 19, 1584 — January 7, 1598)
Godunovs (1598–1605)
- Irina Godunova (January 7 — January 15, 1598)
- Boris Godunov (February 17, 1598 — April 13, 1605)
- Feodor II (April 13 — June 1, 1605)
Time of Troubles (1605–1613)
- False Dmitriy I (June 20, 1605 — May 17, 1606)
- Vasili IV Shuysky (May 19, 1606 — July 17, 1610)
- Seven Boyars[2]
- Fedor Mstislavsky (July 17, 1610 — October 22, 1612)
- Zemsky government[3]
- Dmitry Trubetskoy (fall 1612 — spring 1613)
Romanovs (1613–1721)
- Michael Romanov (February 21, 1613 — July 13, 1645)
- Alexis I (July 13, 1645 — January 29, 1676)
- Feodor III (January 30, 1676 — April 27, 1682)
- Ivan V (April 27, 1682 — January 29, 1696)[4]
- Peter I the Great (April 27, 1682 — October 22, 1721)[5]
Emperors of Russia (1721–1917) (Romanovs)
- Peter I the Great (October 22, 1721 — January 28, 1725)
- Catherine I (January 28, 1725 — May 6, 1727)
- Peter II (May 6, 1727 — January 19, 1730)
- Anna Ioannovna (February 4, 1730 — October 17, 1740)
- Ivan VI (October 17, 1740 — November 25, 1741)
- Elizabeth Petrovna (November 25, 1741 — December 25, 1761)
- Peter III (December 25, 1761 — June 28, 1762)
- Catherine II the Great (June 28, 1762 — November 6, 1796)
- Paul I (November 6, 1796 — March 11, 1801)
- Alexander I (March 12, 1801 — November 19, 1825)
- Nicholas I (November 19, actually from December 13, 1825 — February 18, 1855)[6]
- Alexander II (February 18, 1855 — March 1, 1881)
- Alexander III (March 1, 1881 — October 20, 1894)
- Nicholas II (October 20, 1894 — March 2, 1917)[7]
Chairmen of the Provisional Government (1917)
- Georgy Lvov (March 2 (15) — July 8 (21), 1917)
- Alexander Kerensky (July 8 (21) — October 25 (November 7), 1917)
Leaders of Soviet Russia (1917–1991)
- Vladimir Lenin (November 8, 1917 — January 21, 1924)
- Joseph Stalin (January 21, 1924 — March 5, 1953)
- Georgy Malenkov (March 5, 1953 — February 8, 1955)
- Nikita Khrushchev (February 8, 1955 — October 14, 1964)
- Leonid Brezhnev (October 14, 1964 — November 10, 1982)
- Yuri Andropov (November 12, 1982 — February 9, 1984)
- Konstantin Chernenko (February 13, 1984 — March 10, 1985)
- Mikhail Gorbachev (March 11, 1985 — December 25, 1991)
Presidents of Russia (1991–present)
- Boris Yeltsin (July 10, 1991 — December 31, 1999)[8]
- Vladimir Putin (May 7, 2000 — May 7, 2008)[9]
- Dmitry Medvedev (May 7, 2008 — May 7, 2012)
- Vladimir Putin (May 7, 2012 – Present)
See also
- List of heads of government of Russia
- List of heads of state of Russia
- Premier of the Soviet Union
- Bald–hairy (political joke)
Notes and references
- ^ In 1575, Ivan the Terrible declared the Kassim Khan "the Grand Duke of all Russia," but retained influence on the country's politics. In 1576, Ivan the Terrible returned to the throne.
- ^ In the period 1610-1612 after the overthrow of Tsar Vasily Shuisky, power in Moscow belonged to the Boyar Duma, which created an interim government of seven boyars. The government was headed by the main boyar - Fedor Mstislavsky.
- ^ In the fall of 1612, a united rebellion liberated Moscow from Polish interventionists and abolished the Seven Boyars. The new government was headed by Dmitry Trubetskoy, who formally led Russia before the election of Mikhail Romanov as Tsar in 1613.
- ^ Rules together with Peter I.
- ^ Rules together with Ivan V.
- ^ During his lifetime, Alexander I appointed Nicholas as heir, because his elder brother Konstantin abdicated the throne, but only a small number of close associates knew about this, which caused the situation of interregnum and the oath of oath to Konstantin began. In December, Konstantin repeatedly abdicated the throne.
- ^ Abdicated in favor of his younger brother Michael. The next day, Michael refused to become Emperor, saying that the fate of the monarchy should be decided by the Constituent Assembly.
- ^ President of the RSFSR from July 10 to December 25, 1991.
- ^ Acting President until May 7, 2000.
Literature
- Руководители России, СССР, РФ (862—2004) // Большая российская энциклопедия. Том «Россия». — М., 2004.
- История России. Т. 1. С древнейших времён до второй половины XIX века. Т. 2. История России. Вторая половина XIX—XX вв. Курс лекций / Под ред. проф. Б. В. Личмана. — Екатеринбург: Урал. гос. техн. ун-т. 1995.
- Махновец Л. Е. Великi князi киівськi // Летопись Русский / Под Ипатским списком. — К., 1989.
- Князья крупнейших княжеств (сост. В. А. Кучкин) // Древняя Русь в средневековом мире. — М., 2014.
- Состав руководящих органов ЦК Коммунистической Партии (1919—1990) // Известия ЦК КПСС. — 1990. — № 7.