Approximately 38 people have been head of the Russian government since its establishment in 1905.

Sergei Witte
Vladimir Lenin
Viktor Chernomyrdin
Mikhail Mishustin

The Council of Ministers of the Russian Empire, created in November 1905, was preceded by a number of cabinet-like institutions. Oldest of them was the Supreme Privy Council, created in 1726 by the empress Catherine I. Considering weakness of her and her successor's powers, the Council acted as government of the Russian Empire until 1731. Its successor departments such as the Cabinet of Her Imperial Majesty (1731–41), the Conference at the Highest Court (1756–62), the Imperial Council (1762) and finally the Council at the Highest Court (1768–1801) remained mostly advisory bodies to the monarch.

The ministerial reform of 1802 introduced the Committee of Ministers, which competence was limited to interagency issues. The committee was not responsible for the activities of individual ministries and for the coherence of their policies. Beginning with Count Aleksandr Romanovich Vorontsov, the eldest of the officers was de facto chairman of the committee. Eight years after the inauguration of the manifest, the first de jure office holder was Count Nikolay Rumyantsev.[1] According to the tradition established over time, the chairmanship of the committee was the last honorary position, to which elderly respected officials were appointed.

The Council of Ministers was unofficially formed in October 1857, as a result of Emperor Alexander II's reforms; its first session began on 19 (31) December 1857. Before the actual formation of that body on 12 (24) November 1861, the Emperor himself was in charge. The Council of Ministers consisted of chairmen of the State Council and the Committee of Ministers, as well as high-ranking officers appointed by the Emperor. The first session ended on 11 (23) December 1882, after the number of files to the Council greatly decreased.[2][3]

The imperial Council of Ministers was re-established in late 1905, as a part of the large-scale government reform caused by the First Russian Revolution. All ministries and departments became parts of a single national administration. The Committee of Ministers functioned simultaneously with the second session of the Council of Ministers for six more months; Count Sergei Witte participated on both entities until the abolition of the committee on 23 April (5 May) 1906.

By the order of Emperor Nicholas II, the second session of the Council of Ministers began on 19 October (1 November) 1905, following the formation of the State Duma. Shortly after the February Revolution and the inception of the Russian Provisional Government on 2 (15) March 1917, Georgy Lvov from the Constitutional Democratic Party became Minister-Chairman, who was succeeded by Alexander Kerensky in July.

In November 1917 the Provisional Government was overthrown by the Bolshevik faction of Russian social democrats led by Vladimir Lenin. The Council of People's Commissars of the Russian Soviet Republic became the new governmental body, which was chaired from 1917 to 1924 by Lenin. That body was renamed Council of Ministers following a decree of the Supreme Council on 23 March 1946. The same was made in other republics of the Soviet Union.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, Boris Yeltsin, as the President of the Russian Federation, was appointed as the extraordinary head of government of the Russian Federation. The latter body took the name "Council of Ministers — Government of Russia", the chairman of which became Viktor Chernomyrdin, replacing acting chairman Yegor Gaidar. According to the new constitution ratified on 25 December 1993, the "Government" (Russian: Правительство, romanizedPravitelstvo) is the official name of the Russian cabinet. Since then, the head of that office takes the formal title "Chairmen of the Government" or colloquially "Prime Minister."

Current Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin took the office on 16 January 2020.

The youngest head of government by his accession to office was Sergey Kiriyenko (1998), at age 35, and the oldest Ivan Goremykin (1914), at age 74.

Russian Empire (1721–1917)

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Early collegial institutions without a single leader

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Since the 18th century, a modern system of public administration was going to be created in Russia, including the formation of bodies such as the Supreme Privy Council and the Committee of Ministers whose powers are similar to the powers of the modern Russian Government. In the period from 1726 to 1905 there was no official title for the leader of the government. The chief ministers (principal ministres) of certain Emperor of All Russia nonetheless led the government de facto, but de jure the head of government was a monarch.[4]

Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Monarch
Members of the Supreme Privy Council of the Russian Empire (1726–1730)
  Count and Prince Alexander Danilovich Menshikov
(1673–1729)
8 February
1726
8 September
1727
Catherine I
 
(1725–1727)
Peter II
 
(1727–1730)
Anna
 
(1730–1740)
  Count Fyodor Matveyevich Apraksin
(1661–1728)
8 February
1726
10 November
1728
  Count Gavriil Ivanovich Golovkin
(1660–1734)
8 February
1726
6 May
1727
  Count Andrey Ivanovich Osterman
(1686–1747)
8 February
1726
6 May
1727
  Prince Dmitry Mikhaylovich Golitsyn
(1665–1737)
8 February
1726
6 May
1727
  Count Pyotr Andreyevich Tolstoy
(1645–1729)
8 February
1726
6 May
1727
  Count Karl-Fridrikh Golshteyn-Gottorpsky
(1700–1739)
8 February
1726
(or March 1726)[5]
25 July
1727
  Prince Alexey Grigoryevich Dolgorukov
(?–1734)
3 February
1728
4 March
1730
  Prince Vasily Lukich Dolgorukov
(1670–1739)
6 April
1729
4 March
1730
  Prince Vasily Vladimirovich Dolgorukov
(1667–1746)
19 January
1730
4 March
1730
  Prince Mikhail Mikhailovich Golitsyn
(1675–1730)
19 January
1730
4 March
1730
Cabinet ministers of the Russian Empire (1731–1741)
  Count Gavriil Ivanovich Golovkin
(1660–1734)
10 November
1731
20 January
1734
Anna
 
(1730–1740)
  Count Andrey Ivanovich Osterman
(1686–1747)
20 January
1734
10 November
1740
  Count Khristofor Antonovich Minikh
(1683–1767)
10 November
1740
3 March
1741
Ivan VI
 
(1740–1741)
  Count Andrey Ivanovich Osterman
(1686–1747)
(2nd time)
3 March
1741
25 November
1741
Conferency ministers at the Highest Court of the Russian Empire (1756–1762)
  Stepan Fyodorovich Apraksin
(1702–1758)
14 March
1756
1 October
1757
Elizabeth
 
(1741–1762)
Peter III
 
(1762)
  Count Mikhail Petrovich Bestuzhev-Ryumin
(1688–1760)
14 March
1756
2 October
1757
  Prince Mikhail Mikhaylovich Golitsyn
(1684–1764)
14 March
1756
17 December
1757
  Count Alexey Petrovich Bestuzhev-Ryumin
(1693–1768)
14 March
1756
14 February
1758
  Count Alexander Borisovich Buturlin
(1694–1767)
14 March
1756
17 October
1760
  Count Peter Ivanovich Shuvalov
(1711–1762)
14 March
1756
4 January
1762
  Count Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov
(1714–1767)
14 March
1756
20 January
1762
  Prince Nikita Yuryevich Trubetskoy
(1699–1767)
14 March
1756
20 January
1762
  Count Alexander Ivanovich Shuvalov
(1710–1771)
14 March
1756
20 January
1762
  Grand Duke Peter Fyodorovich Romanov
(subsequently Emperor Peter III)
(1728–1762)
14 March
1756
28 January
1762
  Prince Yakov Petrovich Shakhovskoy
(1705–1777)
16 September
1760
25 December
1761
  Ivan Ivanovich Neplyuev
(1693–1773)
16 September
1760
20 January
1762
  Count Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov
(1707–1783)
28 December
1761
20 January
1762
Members of the Imperial Council of the Russian Empire (1762)
  Prince Georg-Ludwig Golshteyn-Gottorpsky
(1719–1763)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
Peter III
 
(1762)
  Count Pyotr August Friedrich Golshteyn-Beksky
(1696–1775)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
  Count Khristofor Antonovich Minikh
(1683–1767)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
  Prince Nikita Yuryevich Trubetskoy
(1699–1767)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
  Count Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov
(1714–1767)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
  Aleksandr Nikitich Vilbua
(1713–1788)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
  Prince Mikhail Nikitich Volkonsky
(1713–1788)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
  Aleksey Petrovich Melgunov
(1722–1788)
28 January
1762
28 June
1762
Heads of Council Affairs at the Highest Court (Highest Council) of the Russian Empire (1768–1801)
  Stepan Fyodorovich Strekalov
(1728–1805)
17 November
1768
1776 Catherine II
 
(1762–1796)
  Count Alexander Nikolayevich Samoylov
(1744–1814)
1776 1787
  Ivan Andreyevich Weydemeyer
(1752–1820)
1787 18 November
1796
  Gavriil Romanovich Derzhavin
(1743–1816)
18 November
1796
22 November
1796
Paul I
 
(1796–1801)
  Ivan Andreyevich Weydemeyer
(1752–1820)
(2nd time)
18 November
1796
26 March
1801

Committee of Ministers (1802–1905)

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The Committee of Ministers was established on 20 September 1802 in the course of Alexander I's ministerial reform. All the ministers were independent from each other and were responsible for the activities of their departments individually. The committee was not responsible either for the activities of individual ministries, or for the coherence of their policies. During the first years of the existence of the committee, its meetings were chaired by the Emperor, and in his absence - by the ministers alternately, starting with the senior in rank, each for 4 sessions. In 1810, the chairmanship was given to the chancellor and chairman of the State Council Count N.P. Rumyantsev.

Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Monarch
Chairmen of the Committee of Ministers of the Russian Empire (1802–1905)
  Count
Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev
(1754–1826)
1810 1812 Alexander I
 
(1801–1825)
  Count and Prince
Nikolay Ivanovich Saltykov
(1736–1816)
29 March
1812[6]
9 September
1812 (disputed)[note 1]
16 May
1816
  Count
Sergey Kuzmich Vyazmitinov (disputed)[note 2]
(1744–1819)
9 September
1812
15 October
1816
  Prince
Pyotr Vasilyevich Lopukhin
(1753–1827)
25 May
1816[7]
6 April
1827
  Prince
Viktor Pavlovich Kochubey
(1768–1834)
29 April
1827[8]
3 June
1834
Nicholas I
 
(1825–1855)
  Count
Nikolay Nikolayevich Novosiltsev
(1761–1838)
11 July
1834[9]
8 April
1838
  Prince
Illarion Vasilyevich Vasilchikov
(1776–1847)
9 April
1838[10]
21 February
1847
  Count
Vasily Vasilyevich Levashov
(1783–1848)
31 December
1847[11]
23 September
1848
  Prince
Alexander Ivanovich Chernyshyov
(1785–1857)
1 December
1848[12]
5 April
1856[12]
  Prince
Alexey Fyodorovich Orlov
(1787–1862)
May
1857[13]
January
1861[14]
Alexander II
 
(1855–1881)
  Count
Dmitry Nikolayevich Bludov
(1785–1864)
12 November
1861
19 February
1864
  Prince
Pavel Pavlovich Gagarin
(1789–1872)
24 February
1864[15]
21 February
1872
  Count
Pavel Nikolayevich Ignatyev
(1797–1879)
21 February
1872[16]
20 December
1879[16]
  Count
Pyotr Aleksandrovich Valuyev
(1815–1890)
25 December
1879[17]
4 October
1881[17]
  Count
Mikhail Khristoforovich Reytern
(1820–1890)
4 October
1881[18]
30 December
1886[18]
Alexander III
 
(1881–1894)
  Nikolay Khristianovich Bunge
(1823–1895)
1 January
1887[19]
3 June
1895[19]
  Ivan Nikolayevich Durnovo
(1834–1903)
15 October
1895[20]
29 May
1903
Nicholas II
 
(1894–1917)
  Count
Sergei Yulyevich Witte
(1849–1915)
16 August
1903[21]
6 November
1905[21]

Prime Minister of the Russian Empire (1905–1917)

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The modern government type in Russia came after the establishment of the Council of Ministers on 1 November 1905, created for the "management and union action principal chiefs of departments on subjects like law and senior public administration", and modelled on the relevant institutions within the constitutional states, when all the ministries and directorates have been declared part of the unified state management.[clarification needed] The first Prime Minister was Count Sergei Witte, who was appointed on 6 November 1905.[22]

Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Monarch
1   Count
Sergei Yulyevich Witte
(1849–1915)
6 November 1905 5 May 1906 Nicholas II
 
(1894–1917)
2   Ivan Logginovich Goremykin
(1839–1917)
1 5 May 1906 21 July 1906
3   Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin
(1862–1911)
21 July 1906 18 September 1911
(Assassinated)
4   Count
Vladimir Nikolayevich Kokovtsov
(1853–1943)
22 September 1911 12 February 1914
(2)   Ivan Logginovich Goremykin
(1839–1917)
2 12 February 1914 2 February 1916
5   Baron
Boris Vladimirovich Shtyurmer
(1848–1917)
2 February 1916 23 November 1916
6   Alexander Fyodorovich Trepov
(1862–1928)
23 November 1916 20 January 1917
7   Prince
Nikolai Dmitriyevich Golitsyn
(1850–1925)
20 January 1917 12 March 1917

Provisional Government/Russian Republic (1917)

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After the alleged abdication of Nicholas II from the throne in favor of his brother Michael, Michael also abdicated, before the convening of the Constituent Assembly. On 14 September 1917, the Russian Republic was proclaimed. At this period, a provisional government was formed and the Prime Minister was the head of state.

Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party
8   Prince
Georgy Yevgenyevich Lvov
(1861–1925)
15 March 1917 21 July 1917 Constitutional Democratic Party
9   Alexander Fyodorovich Kerensky
(1881–1970)
1 21 July 1917 14 September 1917 Socialist Revolutionary Party
2 14 September 1917 7 November 1917

Russian State (1918–1920)

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The heads of government of the Russian State during the Civil War were de facto Prime Ministers in exile.

Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party Head of state
  Pyotr Vasilyevich Vologodsky
(1863–1925)
I 4 November 1918 18 November 1918 Socialist Revolutionary Party Nikolai Avksentiev
 
(1918)
II 18 November 1918 22 November 1919 Alexander Kolchak
 
(1918–1920)
  Viktor Nikolayevich Pepelyayev
(1885–1920)
22 November 1919 4 January 1920 Independent

Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (1917–1991)

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Since the creation of the Russian Soviet Republic its cabinet was styled as the Council of People's Commissars. Between the creation of the USSR on 30 December 1922 and the formation of its own Council of People's Commissars on 6 July 1923, the Council of People's Commissars of Russia temporarily acted as the government of the USSR. On 23 March 1946, the Council of People's Commissars was renamed into the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR.

Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party Legislature
(election)
Head of state
10   Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (Lenin)
(1870–1924)
8 November 1917 21 January 1924
(Died in office)
Communist Party ARCEC Lev Kamenev
 
(1917)
Yakov Sverdlov
 
(1917–1919)
Mikhail Kalinin
 
(1919–1938)
11   Alexey Ivanovich Rykov
(1881–1938)
2 February 1924 18 May 1929 Communist Party
12   Sergey Ivanovich Syrtsov
(1883–1937)
18 May 1929 3 November 1930 Communist Party
13   Daniil Yegorovich Sulimov
(1890–1937)
3 November 1930 22 July 1937 Communist Party
14   Nikolay Alexandrovich Bulganin
(1895–1975)
1 22 July 1937 19 July 1938[23] Communist Party
2 20 July 1938[24] 17 September 1938 I
(1938)
Aleksei Badayev
 
(1938–1944)
15   Vasily Vasilyevich Vakhrushev
(1902–1947)
17 September 1938 2 June 1940 Communist Party
16   Ivan Sergeyevich Khokhlov
(1895–1973)
2 June 1940 23 June 1943[note 3] Communist Party
17   Alexey Nikolayevich Kosygin
(1904–1980)
23 June 1943 23 March 1946 Communist Party
Nikolay Shvernik
 
(1944–1946)
18   Mikhail Ivanovich Rodionov
(1907–1950)
1 23 March 1946 25 June 1947 Communist Party
2 26 June 1947 9 March 1949 II
(1947)
Ivan Vlasov
 
(1946–1950)
19   Boris Nikolayevich Chernousov
(1908–1978)
1 9 March 1949 17 April 1951 Communist Party
2 17 April 1951 20 October 1952 III
(1951)
Mikhail Tarasov
 
(1950–1959)
20   Alexander Mikhailovich Puzanov
(1906–1998)
1 20 October 1952 26 March 1955 Communist Party
2 26 March 1955 24 January 1956 IV
(1955)
21   Mikhail Alexeyevich Yasnov
(1906–1991)
24 January 1956 19 December 1957 Communist Party
22   Frol Romanovich Kozlov
(1908–1965)
19 December 1957 31 March 1958 Communist Party
23   Dmitry Stepanovich Polyansky
(1917–2001)
1 31 March 1958 15 April 1959 Communist Party
Nikolay Ignatov
 
(1959)
2 16 April 1959 23 November 1962 V
(1959)
Nikolay Organov
 
(1959–1962)
24   Gennady Ivanovich Voronov
(1910–1994)
1 23 November 1962 5 April 1963 Communist Party
Nikolay Ignatov
 
(1962–1966)
2 5 April 1963 12 April 1967 VI
(1963)
Mikhail Yasnov
 
(1966–1985)
3 12 April 1967 23 July 1971 VII
(1967)
25   Mikhail Sergeyevich Solomentsev
(1913–2008)
1 28 July 1971 15 July 1975 Communist Party VIII
(1971)
2 15 July 1975 26 March 1980 IX
(1975)
3 26 March 1980 24 June 1983 X
(1980)
26   Vitaly Ivanovich Vorotnikov
(1926–2012)
1 24 June 1983 26 March 1985 Communist Party
2 26 March 1985 3 October 1988 XI
(1985)
Vladimir Orlov
 
(1985–1988)
27   Alexander Vladimirovich Vlasov
(1932–2002)
3 October 1988 15 June 1990 Communist Party Vitaly Vorotnikov
 
(1988–1990)
Boris Yeltsin
 
(1990–1991)
28   Ivan Stepanovich Silayev
(1930–2023)
1 15 June 1990 10 July 1991[note 4] Communist Party XII
(1990)
2 12 July 1991 26 September 1991
P
  Boris Yeltsin[note 5]
(1931–2007)
6 November 1991 25 December 1991 Independent

Russian Federation (1991–present)

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Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party President
P   Boris Yeltsin
(1931–2007)
25 December 1991 15 June 1992 Independent Boris Yeltsin
 
(1991–1999)
29   Viktor Chernomyrdin
(1938–2010)
1 14 December 1992 9 August 1996 Our Home – Russia
2 10 August 1996 23 March 1998
30   Sergey Kiriyenko
(1962–)
24 April 1998 23 August 1998 Independent
31   Yevgeny Primakov
(1929–2015)
11 September 1998 12 May 1999 Independent
32   Sergey Stepashin
(1952–)
19 May 1999 9 August 1999 Independent
33   Vladimir Putin
(1952–)
1 16 August 1999 7 May 2000 Independent
34   Mikhail Kasyanov
(1957–)
17 May 2000 24 February 2004 Independent Vladimir Putin
 
(2000–2008)
[note 6]
35   Mikhail Fradkov
(1950–)
1 5 March 2004 7 May 2004 Independent
2 12 May 2004 12 September 2007
36   Viktor Zubkov
(1941–)
14 September 2007 7 May 2008 United Russia
(33)   Vladimir Putin
(1952–)
2 8 May 2008 7 May 2012 United Russia Dmitry Medvedev
 
(2008–2012)
37   Dmitry Medvedev
(1965–)
1 8 May 2012 7 May 2018 United Russia Vladimir Putin
 
(2012–)
2 8 May 2018 15 January 2020
38   Mikhail Mishustin
(1966–)
1 16 January 2020 7 May 2024 Independent
2 10 May 2024 Incumbent


Acting prime ministers

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Timeline

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Mikhail MishustinDmitry MedvedevViktor ZubkovMikhail FradkovMikhail KasyanovVladimir PutinSergei StepashinYevgeny PrimakovSergei KiriyenkoViktor ChernomyrdinBoris YeltsinIvan SilayevAlexander Vlasov (politician)Vitaly VorotnikovMikhail SolomentsevGennady VoronovDmitry PolyanskyFrol KozlovMikhail YasnovAlexander PuzanovBoris ChernousovMikhail Rodionov (politician)Alexey KosyginIvan KhokhlovVasily VakhrushevNikolai BulganinDaniil SulimovSergey Syrtsov (politician)Alexei RykovVladimir LeninAlexander KerenskyGeorgy LvovNikolay Dmitriyevich GolitsynAlexander TrepovBoris ShturmerVladimir KokovtsovPyotr StolypinIvan GoremykinSergei WitteIvan DurnovoNikolai von BungeMichael von ReuternPyotr ValuyevPavel IgnatyevPavel GagarinDmitry BludovAlexey Fyodorovich OrlovAlexander ChernyshovVasily LevashovIllarion VasilchikovNikolay NovosiltevViktor KochubeyPyotr LopukhinSergey VyazmitinovNikolay SaltykovNikolay Rumyantsev

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Sources which list Vyazmitinov as Saltykov's successor state a date of 9 September 1812; other sources assert that Saltykov was in office until his death
  2. ^ Some sources (such as the Large Soviet Encyclopedia) list Vyazmitinov as committee minister, while other (such as the History of the Fatherland encyclopedia) don't mention him at all and instead list Lopukhin as the successor of Saltykov.
  3. ^ Deputy premier Konstantin Pamfilov effectively exercised Khokhlov's duties since 5 May 1942 until his death on 2 May 1943.
  4. ^ The Council of Ministers of the RSFSR resigned before the elected President of the RSFSR, who took office on July 10, 1991
  5. ^ Headed the government as President of Russia, was not the Prime Minister.
  6. ^ Putin de facto took this position on 31 December 1999, when he became Acting President after the resignation of Boris Yeltsin. Elected President on 26 March 2000, officially took office on 7 May 2000.

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ "Комитет министров". Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary: In 86 Volumes (82 Volumes and 4 Additional Volumes) (in Russian). St. Petersburg: F. A. Brockhaus. 1890–1907.
  2. ^ "Совет министров". Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary: In 86 Volumes (82 Volumes and 4 Additional Volumes) (in Russian). St. Petersburg: F. A. Brockhaus. 1890–1907.
  3. ^ "Ministers' Council established in Russia". Presidential Library Named After Boris Yeltsin. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  4. ^ 7 царских председателей Совета министров
  5. ^ "Верховный тайный совет". Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary: In 86 Volumes (82 Volumes and 4 Additional Volumes) (in Russian). St. Petersburg: F. A. Brockhaus. 1890–1907.
  6. ^ Салтыков, князь Николай Иванович [Prince Nikolay Ivanovich Saltykov] (in Russian). Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  7. ^ Неизвестная Фемида : документы, события, люди [The Unknown Themis: Documents, Events, People] (in Russian). ОЛМА Медиа Групп. 2003. p. 93. ISBN 978-5-224-04224-1.
  8. ^ Кочубей, князь Виктор Павлович [Prince Viktor Pavlovich Kochubey] (in Russian). Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  9. ^ B. V. Ananych, ed. (2008). Лики России Управленческая элита Российской империи: история министерств, 1802–1917 [Ruling Elite of the Russian Empire: History of Ministries, 1802–1917] (in Russian).
  10. ^ Васильчиков Илларион Васильевич — Биографический указатель [Illarion Vasilyevich Vasilchikov – Biography] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 9 February 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  11. ^ Vladimir Nikolayevich Balyazin; Voldemar Nikolayevich Balyazin (2008). Царский декамерон: От Николая I до Николая II. Исторические книги В.Н. Балязина (Historical Books by V. N. Balyazin) (in Russian). Vol. 2. ОЛМА Медиа Групп. p. 49. ISBN 978-5-373-01976-7.
  12. ^ a b Александр Иванович Чернышев — Биографический указатель [Aleksandr Ivanovich Chernyshov] (in Russian). Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  13. ^ Землевладельцы Панинского района. Князь Орлов Алексей Фёдорович [Landowners of the Panin Rayon. Prince Alexey Fyodorovich Orlov] (in Russian). Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  14. ^ Орлов князь Алексей Федорович [Prince Aleksey Fyodorovich Orlov] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  15. ^ Павел Павлович Гагарин [Pavel Pavlovich Gagarin] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  16. ^ a b Игнатьев Павел Николаевич [Pavel Nikolayevich Ignatyev] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  17. ^ a b Валуев Петр Александрович [Pyotr Aleksandrovich Valuyev] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  18. ^ a b Рейтерн Михаил Христофорович [Mikhail Khristoforovich Reytern] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
  19. ^ a b Бунге Николай Христианович [Nikolay Khristianovich Bunge] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  20. ^ Дурново Иван Николаевич [Ivan Nikolayevich Durnovo] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  21. ^ a b "Витте Сергей Юлиевич (sic!)" [Sergey Yuliyevich (sic!) Witte] (in Russian). Russian Empire. Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  22. ^ Преобразован Совет министров Российской империи
  23. ^ Заседания Верховного Совета РСФСР [1-го созыва], первая сессия (15-20 июля 1938 г.): стенографический отчет [Sessions of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR [1st convocation], first session (July 15–20, 1938): verbatim record] (in Russian). Moscow: Publishing House of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. 1938. p. 74.
  24. ^ Заседания Верховного Совета РСФСР [1-го созыва], первая сессия (15-20 июля 1938 г.): стенографический отчет [Sessions of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR [1st convocation], first session (July 15–20, 1938): verbatim record] (in Russian). Moscow: Publishing House of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. 1938. pp. 110–111.

Sources

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