List of heads of state of Russia explained

This is the list of the heads of state of Russia after the monarchy had been abolished in 1917.

Russian Republic (1917–1918)

With the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II after the February Revolution of 1917, power in Russia passed to the Provisional Government formed by the liberal leadership of the Duma. Grand Duke Michael had refused to ascend to his older brother's throne without the consent of an elected Constituent Assembly, and it was broadly assumed that the Assembly would be the only body with the authority to change the form of government. However, after a failed coup attempt against the government, the Russian Republic was proclaimed by Minister-President Kerensky. The election was scheduled for November 1917, yet when it finally took place, the power in the capital city of Petrograd had already switched to the Bolshevik revolutionaries. By that time, the government had been de facto dissolved, and the newly elected Assembly was also disbanded after its very first session by the Bolsheviks on 19 January 1918.

PictureNameTerm of officeParty
Chairmen of the Provisional Government
Georgy Lvov
(1861–1925)
15 March 191721 July 1917KD
Alexander Kerensky
(1881–1970)
21 July 191714 September 1917PSR
(Trudovik faction)
Minister-President
Alexander Kerensky
(1881–1970)
14 September 19177 November 1917PSR
(Trudovik faction)
Office vacant

Russian State (1918–1920)

The October Revolution sparked a civil war across the former Russian Empire, with the most prominent factions being the Bolsheviks, loosely connected anti-Bolshevik governments and armies known as the White movement, as well as numerous independence movements loosely aligned with the Whites. Various anti-Bolshevik governments began to form across Russia since early 1918, initially emerging among the cossacks of Don and Kuban. In September 1918, the largest factions united into the Provisional All-Russian Government, creating the Russian State. Two months later, Admiral Alexander Kolchak headed the Russian State as a Supreme Ruler. After Kolchak's defeat in 1920, the White movement started to decline, with most of its members leaving Russia in November 1920 under the command of General Pyotr Wrangel. Various social-democratic governments continued to function until June 1923, when the Bolsheviks suppressed the Yakut revolt in Priamurye.

PictureNameTerm of officeParty
Chairmen of the Provisional Siberian Government
Pyotr Derber
(1883–1938)
29 January 191829 June 1918PSR
Pyotr Vologodsky
(1863–1925)
30 June 19183 November 1918Independent
Chairman of the Committee of Members of the Constituent Assembly
Vladimir Volsky
(1877–1937)
June 1918 September 1918PSR
Chairman of the Provisional All-Russian Government
Nikolai Avksentiev
(1878–1943)
23 September 1918 18 November 1918PSR
Supreme Ruler
Alexander Kolchak
(1874–1920)
18 November 19187 February 1920 †Independent
Commanders-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of South Russia
Anton Denikin
(1872–1947)
8 January 19194 April 1920Independent
Pyotr Wrangel
(1878–1928)
4 April 192021 November 1920Independent
Chairmen of the Provisional Priamurye Government
Spiridon Merkulov
(1870–1957)
May 192123 July 1922Independent
Mikhail Diterikhs
(1874–1937)
23 July 192225 October 1922Independent
Anatoly Pepelyayev
Acting
25 October 192216 June 1923Independent

Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (1917–1991)

See also: List of heads of state of the Soviet Union and List of leaders of the Soviet Union. On 30 December 1922, the Russian Soviet Republic, along with the Soviet pro-Bolshevik republics of Ukraine, Belarus and the Southern Caucasus were merged into the Soviet Union, with the Russian SFSR authorities holding the authority of the highly centralized country, which was governed by a leader of the Communist Party (informally known as Vozhd) or a collective leadership (Politburo). In 1938, the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR was formed. Following the adoption of amendments to the Constitution in 1989, the office of Chairman of the Presidium was removed, and the position of the Russian head of state passed directly to the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet in May 1990.

PortraitName
Term of officePolitical party
Took officeLeft office
1Lev Kamenev
9 November 191721 November 1917Communist Party
2Yakov Sverdlov
21 November 191716 March 1919Communist Party
Mikhail Vladimirsky

Acting
16 March 191930 March 1919Communist Party
5Mikhail Kalinin
30 March 191915 July 1938Communist Party
6Andrei Zhdanov
15 July 193819 July 1938Communist Party
7Aleksei Badayev
19 July 19389 April 1943Communist Party
Ivan Vlasov

Acting
9 April 19434 March 1944Communist Party
8Nikolai Shvernik
4 March 194425 June 1946Communist Party
9Ivan Vlasov
25 June 19467 July 1950Communist Party
10Mikhail Tarasov
7 July 195016 April 1959Communist Party
11Nikolai Ignatov
16 April 195926 November 1959Communist Party
12Nikolai Organov
26 November 195920 December 1962Communist Party
(11)Nikolai Ignatov
20 December 196214 November 1966Communist Party
13Mikhail Yasnov
23 December 196626 March 1985Communist Party
14Vladimir Orlov
26 March 19853 October 1988Communist Party
15Vitaly Vorotnikov
3 October 198829 May 1990Communist Party
16Boris Yeltsin
29 May 199010 July 1991Independent
(16)Boris Yeltsin
10 July 199125 December 1991Independent

Russian Federation (since 1991)

On 17 March 1991, the all-Russian referendum on the introduction of presidency was held. More than 70% of citizens voted for the introduction of the office. On 12 June, Boris Yeltsin won 57% of the popular vote in the first democratic presidential election. Yeltsin's inauguration took place on 10 July. On 12 December, Russia ratified the Belovezh Accords, thus dissolving the Soviet Union. On 25 December, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic was renamed Russian Federation, with the names of the state and its highest executive office constitutionally amended in 1992. The office got its current status with the adoption of a new constitution in 1993, following an armed dispute between the president and the parliament.

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Presidents
PictureNameTerm of officeElectedParty
1Boris Yeltsin
(1931–2007)
10 July 199121 September 19931991Independent
Alexander Rutskoy
Acting; disputed
22 September 19934 October 1993Independent
1Boris Yeltsin
(1931–2007)
4 October 19935 November 1996Independent
1996
Viktor Chernomyrdin
Acting
5 November 19966 November 1996Our Home – Russia
1Boris Yeltsin
(1931–2007)
6 November 199631 December 1999
(resigned)
Non-partisan
Vladimir Putin
(b. 1952)
31 December 19997 May 2000Unity
27 May 20007 May 20082000Independent
2004
3Dmitry Medvedev
(b. 1965)
7 May 20087 May 20122008United Russia
(2)Vladimir Putin
(b. 1952)
7 May 2012Incumbent
2012Independent
2018
2024