Approximately 99 people have been head of the
Russian government since its establishment in 1726. The chairperson of government was a member of the
Supreme Privy Council, which was created on 8 (19) February 1726 by Empress
Catherine, and from 8 (20) September 1802 ministerial duties were allocated by the
Committee of Ministers, which was established on in accordance with the proclamation of Emperor
Alexander II. Beginning with
Count Aleksandr Romanovich Vorontsov, the eldest of the officers was
de facto chairperson of the committee. Eight years after the inauguration of the manifest, the first
de jure office holder was Count
Nikolay Rumyantsev. 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 chairperson 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. 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. Following that event, the duties of the committee were left to the Council of Ministers, until the formation of the Small Council in 1909, which also included deputy ministers. 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 and
Alexander Kerensky from the
Socialist Revolutionary Party became joint Minister-Chairmen. The provisional Russian Republic was eventually replaced by the
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) and the governmental body by the
Council of People's Commissars, which was chaired from 1917 to 1924 by
Vladimir Lenin. That body was renamed
Council of Ministers following a decree of the
Supreme Council on 23 March 1946. After the fall of the Soviet Union,
Boris Yeltsin, as the
President of the Russian Federation, was automatically appointed as the Head of Government of the
Russian Federation in the first two years of his mandate. The latter body took the previous name "Council of Ministers", the chairperson of which became
Viktor Chernomyrdin, replacing
acting chairperson
Yegor Gaidar. According to the new
constitution ratified on 25 December 1993, those two entities were separated. Since then, the head of that office takes the formal title "chairperson of the Government" or colloquially "Prime Minister" (the only actual prime minister was
Valentin Pavlov). Chernomyrdin resumed chairing the government, followed up by non-partisans and acting office holders. On 8 May 2008,
Vladimir Putin took the office for a second term, now as a member of
United Russia. Current Prime Minister
Mikhail Mishustin took the office on 16 January 2020. The youngest head of government by his accession to office was Count
Karl-Fridrikh Golshteyn-Gottorpsky, at age 26, and the oldest Count
Pyotr Andreyevich Tolstoy, at age 81. The list below includes Prime Ministers since 1991. == Notes ==