Checheno-Ingush Regional Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
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The First Secretary of the Checheno-Ingush regional branch of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was the position of highest authority in the Chechen AO (1922–34), Checheno-Ingush AO (1934–36), Checheno-Ingush ASSR (1936–44, 1957–91) and the Grozny Oblast (1944–57) in the Russian SFSR of the Soviet Union. The position was created in November 1922, and abolished on August 23, 1991. The First Secretary was a de facto appointed position usually by the Politburo or the General Secretary himself.
List of First Secretaries of the Checheno-Ingush Communist Party
[edit]Name | Term of Office | Life years | |
---|---|---|---|
Start | End | ||
First Secretaries of the Oblast Committee of the Communist Party | |||
Tashtemir Eldarkhanov | November 1922 | 1923 | 1870–1934 |
Aznarashvili | 1923 | January 1924 | |
Magomed Eneyev | January 1924 | December 1925 | 1897–1928 |
Yefrem Eshba | January 1926 | August 25, 1927 | 1893–1939 |
Gurgen Bulat | August 25, 1927 | 1929 | |
Solomon Khasman | 1929 | 1930 | 1886–1938 |
Georgy Karib (Tovmasyan) | 1930 | November 30, 1933 | 1896–1938 |
Georgy Makharadze | November 30, 1933 | 1935 | 1898–1938 |
Vasily Yegorov | 1935 | October 10, 1937 | 1899–1950 |
Fyodor Bykov | October 10, 1937 | May 1940 | 1901–1980 |
Viktor Ivanov | May 1940 | March 7, 1944 | 1903–1969 |
First Secretaries of the Oblast Committee of the Communist Party (Grozny Oblast) | |||
Pyotr Cheplakov | March 1944 | September 1949 | 1906–1985 |
Ivan Zhegalin | September 1949 | 1955 | 1906–1984 |
Aleksandr Yakovlev | 1955 | 1957 | 1911– |
First Secretaries of the Communist Party (Checheno-Ingush ASSR) | |||
Aleksandr Yakovlev | 1957 | January 1959 | 1911– |
Aleksandr Trofimov | January 1959 | September 1963 | 1903–1980 |
Fyodor Titov | September 1963 | January 11, 1966 | 1910–1989 |
Semyon Apryatkin | January 11, 1966 | July 1975 | 1911–1977 |
Aleksandr Vlasov | July 1975 | July 31, 1984 | 1932–2002 |
Vladimir Foteyev | July 31, 1984 | July 1, 1989 | 1935– |
Doku Zavgayev | July 1, 1989 | August 23, 1991 | 1940– |
Sources
[edit]- [1] World Statesmen.org