You are on page 1of 7

List of leaders of

Russia

This 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.

Princes of Ancient Rus' (862–1547)

Princes of Novgorod (862–882)


Rurik (862 — 879)

Oleg the Seer (879 — 882)

Grand Princes of Kiev (882–1157)


Oleg the Seer (882 — fall 912)

Igor I (912 — fall 945)

Olga of Kiev (fall 945 — after 959)

Sviatoslav I (after 959 — March 972)


Yaropolk I (972 — June 11, 978)

Vladimir the Great (June 11, 978 — July 15, 1015)

Sviatopolk the Cursed (July 1015 — Fall 1016)

Yaroslav the Wise (fall 1016 — July 22, 1018)

Sviatopolk the Cursed (August 14, 1018 — 1019)

Yaroslav the Wise (1019 — February 20, 1054)

Iziaslav I (February 1054 — September 15, 1068)

Vseslav the Sorcerer (September 15, 1068 — April 1069)

Iziaslav I (again) (May 2, 1069 — March 1073)

Sviatoslav II (March 22, 1073 — December 27, 1076)

Vsevolod I (January 1, 1077 — July 1077)

Iziaslav I (third time) (July 15, 1077 — October 3, 1078)

Vsevolod I (October 1078 — April 13, 1093)

Sviatopolk II (April 24, 1093 — April 16, 1113)

Vladimir Monomakh (April 20, 1113 — May 19, 1125)

Mstislav I (May 20, 1125 — April 15, 1132)

Yaropolk II (April 17, 1132 — February 18, 1139)

Viacheslav I (February 22 — March 4, 1139)

Vsevolod II (March 5, 1139 — August 1, 1146)

Igor II (August 2 — 13, 1146)

Iziaslav II (August 13, 1146 — after August 23, 1149)

Yuri the Long Hands (August 28, 1149 — August 1150)

Viacheslav I (August 1150)

Iziaslav II (August 1150)

Yuri the Long Hands (August 1150 — early 1151)

Iziaslav II (March 1151 — November 13, 1154)


Rostislav I (December 1154)

Iziaslav III (December 1154 — March 1155)

Yuri the Long Hands (March 20, 1155 — May 15, 1157)·

Grand Princes of Vladimir (1157–1340)


Andrey the Pious (June 4, 1157 — June 29, 1174)

Mikhalko I (1174)

Yaropolk III (September 1174 — June 15, 1175)

Mikhalko I (June 15, 1175 — June 20, 1176)

Vsevolod the Big Nest (June 1176 — April 15, 1212)

Yuri II (April 1212 — April 27, 1216)

Konstantin of Rostov (April 1216 — February 2, 1218)

Yuri II (February 1218 — March 4, 1238)

Yaroslav II (1238 — September 30, 1246)

Sviatoslav III (1246 — early 1248)

Mikhail Khorobrit (early 1248 — winter 1248/1249)

Andrey II (December 1249 — July 24, 1252)

Alexander Nevsky (1252 — November 14, 1263)

Yaroslav of Tver (1264 — 1272)

Vasily of Costroma (1272 — January 1277)

Dmitry of Pereslavl (1277 — 1281)

Andrey of Gorodets (1281 — 1283)

Dmitry of Pereslavl (December 1283-1293)

Andrey of Gorodets (1293 — July 27, 1304)

Michael of Tver (autumn 1304 — November 22, 1318)

Dmitry the Fearsome Eyes (1318 — November 2, 1322)

Alexander of Tver (1322 — September 15, 1326)


Alexander of Susdal (1326 — 1328)

Ivan I Kalita (1331 — March 31, 1340)

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)

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)

Nikita Khrushchev (September 7, 1953 — 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

Notes and references

Literature

External links

Retrieved from
"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=List_of_leaders_of_Russia&oldid=1122702272
"
Last edited 6 days ago by 23.88.154.222

You might also like