Stalin's third government
Soviet government
Stalin's third government | |
---|---|
Soviet Union 13th government of the Soviet Union | |
Date formed | March 12, 1950 |
Date dissolved | March 15, 1953 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Nikolai Shvernik |
Head of government | President of the Sovmin |
Deputy head of government | Vyacheslav Molotov |
No. of ministers | 56 |
Member party | All-Union Communist Party (Bolshevik) |
Status in legislature | Third Convocation of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union |
History | |
Election | 1950 Soviet Union legislative election |
Outgoing election | 1954 Soviet Union legislative election |
Predecessor | Stalin II |
Successor | Malenkov I |
The Third Government of Stalin was the cabinet of the Soviet Union established in 1950 with Joseph Stalin as head of government, serving as president of the Council of Ministers. It functioned until March 15, 1953, with the death of Stalin, when Georgy Malenkov succeeded him as president of the Council of Ministers.[1]
Ministries[2]
Ministry | Minister | Party |
---|---|---|
Chairman of the Council of Ministers | Joseph Stalin | PCU (b) |
First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers | Vyacheslav Molotov[3][4] | PCU (b) |
Nikolai Bulganin[5][6] | PCU (b) | |
Deputy Chairmen of the Council of Ministers | Lavrenti Beria | PCU (b) |
Andrei Andreyev | PCU (b) | |
Nikolai Bulganin (1950) | PCU (b) | |
Kliment Voroshilov | PCU (b) | |
Aleksandr Yefremov[7][8] (1950-1951) | PCU (b) | |
Alexei Kosygin | PCU (b) | |
Georgy Malenkov | PCU (b) | |
Anastas Mikoyan[9] | PCU (b) | |
Maksim Saburov | PCU (b) | |
Ivan Tevosian[10] | PCU (b) | |
Mikhail Pervukhin | PCU (b) | |
Panteleimon Ponomarenko (1952–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Administrator of Affairs | Mikhail Pomaznev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Andrey Vyshinsky | PCU (b) |
Minister of Armed Forces | Aleksandr Vasilievsky | PCU (b) |
Minister of Navy | Ivan Yumashev (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Nikolai Kuznetsov (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Defense | Nikolai Bulganin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Foreign Trade | Mikhail Menshikov (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Pavel Kumykin (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Trade | Basilio Zhavoronkov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Railways | Boris Beshev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Information | Nikolay Psurtsev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Timber Industry | Georgy Orlov (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Ivan Emelianovich (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Light Industry | Alexei Kosygin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Meat and Dairy Industry | Ivan Kuzminy | PCU (b) |
Minister of Broad Consumer Goods | Alexei Kosygin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Aeronautical Industry | Mikhail Krunichev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Automotive Industry | Ivan Jlamov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Naval Industry | Vyacheslav Malyshev (1950–1952) | PCU (b) |
Ivan Nosenko (1952–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Armaments | Dmitry Ustínov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Agricultural Electrical Engineering | Piotr Goremykin (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Georgy Popov (1951) | PCU (b) | |
Sergei Stepanov (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Heavy Construction Industry | Nikolai Kazakov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Automotive and Tractor Industry | Stepan Akopov[11] (1950) | PCU (b) |
Grigory Xlamov (1950–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Mechanics and Tools | Pyotr Parshin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Metallurgical Industry | Ivan Tevosian[10] | PCU (b) |
Minister of Ferrous Metallurgy | Ivan Tevosian[10] | PCU (b) |
Minister of Non-Ferrous Metallurgy | Pyotr Lomako | PCU (b) |
Minister of Petroleum Industry | Nikolai Baibakov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Coal Industry | Alexander Zasyadko | PCU (b) |
Minister of Electrical Industry | Ivan Kabanov (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Dmitry Yefremov [ru] (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Energy | Dmitri Zhimerin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Chemical Industry | Sergei Tikhomirov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Building Materials Industry | Simon Ginzburg (1950) | PCU (b) |
Pavel Yudin (1950–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Transport Engineering | Yuri Maksarev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Construction and Mechanical Engineering | Semyon Fomin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Finance | Arseny Zverev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Rural Affairs | Ivan Benediktov | PCU (b) |
Minister of State Farms | Nikolay Skvortsov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Cotton | Usman Yusupov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Maritime Transport | Nikolai Novikov | PCU (b) |
Minister of River Transport | Zosima Shashkov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Internal Affairs | Sergey Kruglov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Health | Yefim Smirnov (1950–1952) | PCU (b) |
Aleksandr Shabanov (1952–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Andrei Treitakov (1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Justice | Konstantin Gorshenin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Food Industry | Boris Dvinsky (1950) | PCU (b) |
Panteleimon Ponomarenko (1951–1952) | PCU (b) | |
Nikolai Ignatov (1952–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Fishing Industry | Konstantín Rusakov (1950–1952) | PCU (b) |
Dmitri Pavlov (1952–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Meat and Dairy Industry | Ivan Kuzminy | PCU (b) |
Minister of State Security | Viktor Abakumov (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Semyon Ignatiev (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Construction Engineering | Nikolai Dygai | PCU (b) |
Minister of State Control | Lev Mejlis (1950) | PCU (b) |
Viktor Abakumov (1950–1953) | PCU (b) | |
Minister of Higher Education | Sergei Kaftanov (1950–1951) | PCU (b) |
Vsevolod Stoletov (1951–1953) | PCU (b) | |
State Committee on Cinematography | Ivan Bolshakov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Labor and Employment | Vasily Pronin | PCU (b) |
Minister of Communications | Alekseenko Gennady | PCU (b) |
Minister of Road Transport | Aleksandr Kurshev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Railways | Boris Beshev | PCU (b) |
Minister of Geology | Piotr Zajarov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Urban Development | Georgy Popov | PCU (b) |
Minister of Gosbank | Vasily Popov | PCU (b) |
Minister of State Planning Committee | Maksim Saburov | PCU (b) |
References
- ^ "Soviet Union – History, Leaders, Map, & Facts".
- ^ "SOV". 2012-02-24. Archived from the original on 2012-02-24. Retrieved 2022-08-13.
- ^ Phillips, Steven (2000). Lenin and the Russian Revolution. Heinemann. p. 89. ISBN 0-435-32719-4.
- ^ Ulam, Adam (2007). Stalin: The Man and his Era. Tauris Parke Paperbacks. p. 508. ISBN 978-1-84511-422-0.
- ^ Trahair, R.C.S. (2004). Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 69. ISBN 0-313-31955-3.
- ^ Siddiqi, Asif Azam (2010). The Red Rockets' Glare: Spaceflight and the Soviet Imagination, 1857–1957. Cambridge University Press. p. 266. ISBN 978-0-521-89760-0.
- ^ "Efremov Alexander Illarionovich". Archived from the original on 2011-05-19.
- ^ Great Soviet Encyclopedia: in 30 volumes / Ch. ed. A.M. Prokhorov. – 3rd ed. 1974.
- ^ "Governments of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 1917–1964". Archived from the original on 28 November 2017. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
- ^ a b c Тевосян Иван Федорович in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969–1978 (in Russian)
- ^ "Stepan H. Akopov". Global Security. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
Further reading
External links
Stalin's third government at Wikipedia's sister projects
- Definitions from Wiktionary
- Media from Commons
- Quotations from Wikiquote
- Texts from Wikisource
- Data from Wikidata
- Stalin Library (with all 13 volumes of Stalin's works and "volume 14")
- Library of Congress: Revelations from the Russian Archives
- Electronic archive of Stalin's letters and presentations
- Stalin digital archive
- Joseph Stalin Newsreels // Net-Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive
- Stalin Biography from Spartacus Educational
- A List of Key Documentary Material on Stalin
- Stalinka: The Digital Library of Staliniana
- Electronic archive of Stalin's letters and presentations
- A List of Key Documentary Material on Stalin
- Newspaper clippings about Stalin's third government in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by | Governments of the Soviet Union March 12, 1950 – March 15, 1953 | Succeeded by |
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- Morgenthau Plan
- Hukbalahap Rebellion
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Pro-communist | |
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Pro-Western |
competition
- Gar Alperovitz
- Thomas A. Bailey
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- Warren H. Carroll
- Adrian Cioroianu
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- Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
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