Timeline of Russian innovation
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This timeline of Russian innovation encompasses key events in the history of technology in Russia.
The entries in this timeline fall into the following categories:
- indigenous invention, like ICBMs
- uniquely Russian products, objects and events, like Russian vodka
- products and objects with superlative characteristics, like the Typhoon-class submarine
- scientific and medical discoveries, like the periodic law, vitamins and stem cells
This timeline includes scientific and medical discoveries, products and technologies introduced by various peoples of Russia and its predecessor states, regardless of ethnicity, and also lists inventions by naturalized immigrant citizens. Certain innovations achieved internationally may also appear in this timeline in cases where the Russian side played a major role in such projects.
Kievan Rus'
10th century

- Kokoshnik
- The kokoshnik is a traditional Russian head-dress for women. It is patterned to match the style of the
- Kvass / Okroshka
- Kvass or kvas, sometimes called in English a "bread drink", is a Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorodbuilt on place of the original 13-domed wooden church, 11th century.
- Multidomed church
- The multidomed church is a typical form of Russian church architecture, which distinguishes Russia from other Eastern Orthodox nations and Christian denominations. Indeed, the earliest Russian churches built just after the Red currant kissel.
- Kissel
- Kissel or kisel is a dessert that consists of sweetened juice, typically that of berries, thickened with cornstarch or potato starch, with red wine or dried fruits added sometimes. The dessert can be served either hot or cold, and if made using less thickening starch it can be consumed as a beverage, which is common in Russia. Kissel was mentioned for the first time in the Primary Chronicle, where it forms part of the story of how a besieged Russian city was saved from nomadic Pechenegs.[3][6]
11th century
- Birch bark document
- A birch bark document is a document written on pieces of Mongol invasion of Rus' the level of literacy in the country might have been considerably higher than in contemporary Western Europe.[7]
A 17th-century koch in a museum in Krasnoyarsk - Koch / Icebreaker
- The koch was an ancient form of icebreaker, being a special type of one or two small wooden sailing ships with a mast, used for voyages in the icy conditions of the Arctic seas and Siberian rivers. The koch was developed by the Russian Pomors in the 11th century, when they started settling on the White Sea shores. The koch's hull was protected by a belt of ice-floe resistant flush skin-planking (made of oak or larch) along the variable water-line, and had a false keel for on-ice portage. If a koch was in danger of being trapped in the ice-fields, its rounded bodylines below the surface would allow for the ship to be pushed up out of the water and onto the ice with no damage. In the 19th century similar protective features were adopted to modern icebreakers.[8]
Ancient Russian Gudok. - Gudok
- The gudok is an ancient sympathetic strings (up to eight) under the sounding board. These made the gudok's sound warm and rich. It was also possible to play while standing or dancing, which made it popular among skomorokhs. The name gudok comes from the 17th century, however the same type of instrument existed from 11th to 16th century, but was called smyk.[9]
- Medovukha
- Medovukha is an old Slavic fermented mead as a luxury product to Europe in huge quantities. Fermentation occurs naturally over 15 to 50 years, originally rendering the product very expensive and only accessible to the nobility. However, in the 11th century East Slavs found that fermentation occurred much faster when the honey mixture was heated, enabling medovukha to become a commonly available drink in the territory of Rus'. In the 14th century, the invention of distillation made it possible to create a prototype of the modern medovukha, however vodka was invented at the same time and gradually surpassed medovukha in popularity.[10]
- 1048 Russian fist fighting
- Russian fist fighting is an ancient Russian combat sport, similar to modern boxing. However, it features some indigenous techniques and often fought in collective events called Stenka na Stenku ("Wall against Wall"). It has existed since the times of Kievan Rus', first mentioned in the Primary Chronicle in the year 1048. The government and the Russian Orthodox Church often tried to prohibit the fights; however, fist fighting remained popular until the 19th century, while in the 20th century some of the old techniques were adopted for the modern Russian martial arts.[3][11]
12th century
- Pernach
- The pernach is a type of plate mail. In later times it was often used as a symbol of power by military leaders in Eastern Europe.[12]
- Shashka
- The shashka is a special kind of Northern Caucasus. These lands were integrated into the Russian Empire in the 18th century. By that time shashka was adopted as their main cold weapon by Russian Cossacks.[13]
Treshchotka - Treshchotka
- The treshchotka, sometimes referred in plural as treshchotki, is a Novgorod.[14]
- 1149 bear spear
- The bear spear or rogatina was a medieval type of war horses. The sharpened head of a bear spear was enlarged and usually had the form of a bay leaf. Right under the head there was a short crosspiece that helped to fix the spear in the body of an animal. Often it was placed against the ground on its rear point, which made it easier to absorb the impact of the attacking beast. The Russian chronicles first mention rogatina as a military weapon in the year 1149, and as a hunting weapon in the year 1255.[15]
13th century
- Sokha
- The sokha is a light wooden handicraft seen on the background.
- Pelmeni
- Pelmeni is a dish originating from Moscow Kremlin.
- Onion dome
- The onion dome is a drum upon which they are set, and their height usually exceeds their width. The whole bulbous structure tapers smoothly to a point. The so-called onion dome is the dominant form for church domes in Russia, and though the earliest preserved Russian domes of the type date from the 16th century, illustrations of the old chronicles indicate that they were used since the late 13th century.[18]
Grand duchy of Moscow

14th century
- Lapta is a Russian Novgorod.[19]
- A zvonnitsa is a large rectangular structure containing multiple
Anbur script The alphabet was introduced by a Russian missionary, Stepan Khrap, also known as Saint Stephen of Perm (Степан Храп, св. Стефан Пермский) in 1372. The name Abur is derived from the names of the first two characters: An and Bur. The alphabet derived from Cyrillic and Greek, and Komi tribal signs, the latter being similar in the appearance to runes or siglas poveiras, because they were created by incisions, rather than by usual writing. The alphabet was in use until the 17th century, when it was superseded by the Cyrillic script. Abur was also used as cryptographic writing for the Russian language.
1376 Sarafan
- The sarafan is a long, shapeless
15th century
- The bardiche was a long poleaxe, that is a type of weapon combining the features of an firearms, who used bardiches to rest handguns upon when firing.[24]
- The boyar hat, also known as gorlatnaya hat, was a
- The gulyay-gorod (literally "wandering town") was a mobile fortification made from large wall-sized prefabricated shields set on Ukrainian Cossacks.[26]
- Ukha is a Russian soup, made with sheatfish and burbot were used to add flavour to the soup. Ukha as a name in the Russian cuisine for fish broth was established only in the late 17th to early 18th centuries. In earlier times this name was first given to thick meat broths, and then later chicken. Beginning from the 15th century, fish was used more and more often to prepare ukha, thus creating a dish that had a distinctive taste among soups.[27]
- The Russian oven or Russian stove is a unique type of Great Patriotic War some people escaped the Nazis by hiding in ovens. Porridge or pancakes prepared in such an oven may differ in taste from the same meal prepared on a modern stove or range. The process of cooking in a traditional Russian oven can be called "languor" - holding dishes for a long period of time at a steady temperature. Foods that are believed to acquire a distinctive character from being prepared in a Russian oven include baked milk, pearl barley, mushrooms cooked in sour cream, or even a simple potato.[28][29]
- Rassolnik is a Russian soup made from
c. 1430 Russian vodka
- Russian vodka is perhaps the world's most famous national brand of Moscow Kremlin.[31]
Early 16th century
- The kokoshnik is a semicircular or keel-like exterior decorative element in the traditional Russian architecture, a type of corbel blind arch. The name was inspired by the traditional Russian women's head-dress. Kokoshniks were used in Russian church architecture in the 16th century, while in the 17th century their popularity reached the highest point. Kokoshniks were placed on walls, at the basement of tented roofs or tholobates, or over the window frames, or in rows above the vaults.[32]
1510s Tented roof masonry
- The tented roof masonry was a technique widely used in the Alexandrov, built in the 1510s.[33]
1530
Tsardom of Russia
Late 16th century

- The Russian abacus or schoty (literally "counts") is a electronic calculators in the late 20th century, though it remains in quite common use today.[34]
1550 Streltsy
- First known standard military uniform worn by Russian regular army, elite armed forces known as Streltsy.
1552
- The battery-tower is a late type of military engineer Ivan Vyrodkov during the siege of Kazan in 1552 (a part of the Russo-Kazan Wars), and could hold ten large-calibre cannons and 50 lighter cannons. Later battery-towers were often used by the Ukrainian Cossacks.[35]

- Saint Basil's Cathedral is perhaps the most famous
1566
- The Great Abatis Line, or Bolshaya Zasechnaya Cherta in Russian, was the largest fortification line of the Meschera swamps starting from the 12th century, and was officially completed in 1566, exceeding 1000 km in length.[38]

1586 Tsar Cannon
- The Tsar Cannon is an enormous
17th century
- The bochka roof or simply bochka (Russian Revival style buildings.[41]

- Gorodki or townlets is an old Russian Peter I of Russia.[42]
- Russian Mountains, as they were called by the Westerners, were winter sled rides held on specially constructed hills of ice, sometimes up to 200 feet tall, being the first type of Tsarskoe Selo and Oranienbaum. The first such wheeled ride was brought to Paris in 1804 under the name Les Montagnes Russes (French for "Russian Mountains"), and the term Russian Mountains continues to be a synonym for roller coaster in many countries today.[43]

- The Bird of Happiness is the traditional North Russian wooden toy, carved in the shape of a bird. It was invented by Pomors, the inhabitants of the White and Barents Sea coastline. The Bird of Happiness is made without glue or other fasteners, by elaborate carving of thin petals for the bird's wings and tail and then using a special method of spreading and curving them. Similar methods are also used in other products of the North Russian handicraft. The amulet is usually made of pine, fir, spruce, or Siberian cedar. It is suspended inside a house, guarding the family hearth and well-being.[44]
- Dymkovo toys, also known as the Vyatka toys or Kirov toys are moulded painted clay figures of people and animals (sometimes in the form of a pennywhistle). It is an old Russian folk handicraft which still exists in a village of Dymkovo near Kirov (former Vyatka). Traditionally, the Dymkovo toys are made by women. Up until the 20th century, this toy production had been timed to the spring fair called свистунья (svistunya), or whistler. The first recorded mention of this event took place in 1811, however it is believed to have existed for some 400 years, thus dating the history of Dymkovo toy at least from the 17th century.[45][46]
- The troika (тройка, "triplet" or "trio") is a traditional Russian canter. At full speed a troika could reach 45–50 kilometres per hour (28–31 mph), which was a very high speed on land for vehicles in the 17th-19th centuries, making the troika closely associated with the fast ride. The troika was developed from the late 17th century, first being used for speedy delivering of mail, and having become common by the late 18th century. It was often used for travelling in stages where teams of tired horses could be exchanged for fresh animals to transport loads and people over long distances.[47][48]
1630
1659 Khokhloma

- Khokhloma is a Russian wood painting icon painting techniques to the local craftsmen, such as the usage of a goldish color without applying real gold. Nowadays khokhloma is one of the symbols of Russia, and apart from its usage in making tableware, furniture and souvenirs, it can be found in the wider context, for example in paintings on Russian airliners.[49]

1679 Circle of fifths
- In the late 1670s a vocal groupings. Diletskii intended his treatise to be a guide to composition but pertaining to the rules of music theory. Within the Grammatika treatise is where the first circle of fifths appeared and was used for students as a composer's tool.[50]

1685 Tula pryanik
- The Tula pryanik is a type of printed jam or condensed milk, while in the old times they were made with honey. The first mention of the Tula pryanik is in Tula census book of 1685.[51]
1688 Balalaika

- The balalaika is a Vasily Andreev, who also started a tradition of balalaika orchestras, which finally led to the popularity of the instrument in many countries outside Russia.[52]

- The podstakannik (Russian: подстаканник, literally "thing under the glass"), or tea glass holder, is a holder with a handle, most commonly made of metal, that holds a drinking glass. The primary purpose of podstakanniki (pl.) is to hold a very hot glass of tea, which is usually consumed right after it is brewed. It is a traditional way of serving and drinking tea in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and other post-Soviet states.
1693
- Naryshkin Baroque. Also called Moscow Baroque, or Muscovite Baroque, is the name given to a particular style of Baroque architecture and decoration which was fashionable in Moscow from the turn of the 17th into the early 18th centuries.
Early 18th century
- The table-glass or granyonyi stakan (literally faceted glass) is a type of drinkware on certain occasions originated from that episode.[53]

1704
- The decimal currency is a type of 10, typically 100. Most modern currencies adhere to this pattern. Russia was the first country to introduce such a currency after decimalisation of its financial system in 1704, during the reign of Peter the Great, when Russian ruble was made equal to 100 kopecks.[54]
1717
- by Andrey Nartov. A compound slide on a metal lathe adds the ability to turn tapers more easily, and may be used to turn more precise diameters. They are a standard feature of modern manually operated lathes.
1718 Yacht club
- The yacht club is a sports St. Petersburg (likely, the idea had been devised as early as 1716, when the First Neva Shipyard started building civilian vessels). Though, since it was not a purely voluntary association of members, but an organisation founded by Tsar's decree, the Neva Yacht Club's being the world's oldest is challenged by the Royal Cork Yacht Club in Ireland, founded in 1720. Both clubs have gone through periods of dormancy and undergone various name changes.[55][56]
Russian Empire
1720s

1725 Rebar
- Rebar or reinforcing bar is a common metal bar (typically made of
1730s

1732 Cast iron cupola / Lightning rod
- The cast iron cupola was a type of St. Petersburg, built in the 1840s. The very top of the tower was crowned with a gilded metallic sphere with spikes. Since it was grounded through the rebar of the tower carcass, it acted like a lightning rod. Thus, the Russian builders de facto created the first lightning rod in the Western world some 25 years before Benjamin Franklin, however it is not known whether that was intentional.[57]
- The Peter and Paul Cathedral is a Nicholas II, with the exception of Peter II. The cathedral's bell tower is the world's tallest Eastern Orthodox bell tower. Since the belfry is not standalone, but an integral part of the main building, the cathedral is sometimes considered the highest Eastern Orthodox Church in the world.[58]
1735 Tsar Bell
- The Tsar Bell, also known as the Tsarsky Kolokol or Royal Bell, is a huge Ivan Motorin and his son Mikhail in 1733–1735. The bell, however, was never rung because of a fire in 1737, when a huge slab (11.5 tons) cracked off while it was still in the casting pit. In 1836, the bell was placed on a stone pedestal next to the Ivan the Great Bell Tower. For a time, the bell served as a chapel, with the broken area forming the door. According to the legend, on Judgement Day the Tsar Bell will be miraculously repaired and lifted up to heaven, where it will ring the blagovest (call to prayer).[40]

1739 Ice palace
1740s
1741 Quick-firing gun

1750s
1754

1757 Licorne (Russian field gun)
- by M.W. Danilov and S.A. Martynov
1760s
1761 Atmosphere of Venus
- Mikhail Lomonosov was the first person to hypothesize the existence of an atmosphere on Venus based on his observation of the transit of Venus of 1761 in a small observatory near his house in Petersburg.
1762 Off-axis reflecting telescope
1770s
1770 Amber Room
- The Amber Room in the Peter I of Russia. Then it was expanded by Russian craftsmen, and by 1770, when the work was finished, the Room covered more than 55 square meters and contained over six tons of amber. It was looted during World War II by Nazi Germany, brought to Königsberg and lost in the chaos at the end of the war. In 1979-2003 Russian craftsmen again reconstructed the Amber Room in the Catherine Palace, while the location of the original one is still a mystery.[60][61]
1770 Thunder Stone
- The largest stone ever moved by man, used a base for a statue.
1776 Orenburg shawl
1778 Russian samovar
- In 1778 the Lisitsyn brothers introduced their first samovar design, and the same year they registered the first samovar-making factory in Russia.[62]
-
The Transportation of the Thunder-stone in the Presence of Catherine II. Engraving by I.F.Schley of the drawing by Yury Felten. 1770.
-
A typical samovar
1780s
1784 Orlov Trotter
-
Orlov Trotter, considered the fastest for most of the 19th century.
1790s
1793 Screw drive elevator
- The screw drive elevator is an elevator that uses a screw drive system instead of a hoist, like it was in the earlier elevators. The invention of the screw drive was the most important step in elevator technology since ancient times, which finally led to the creation of modern passenger elevators. The first such elevator was invented by Ivan Kulibin and installed in the Winter Palace in 1793, while several years later another of Kulibin's elevators was installed in Arkhangelskoye near Moscow. In 1823, an "ascending room" made its debut in London.[63]
1795 Fedoskino miniature / Russian lacquer art
1796 Peaked cap
- The peaked cap has been worn by Russian Army officers as a type of forage cap since 1796 by some regiments, and from 1811 by most of the army.
-
A seven-string Russian guitar
-
Russian soldiers wearing peaked caps.
19th century
- Kargopol toys
- Filimonovo toys
- Gorodets painting
- Rushnikis a ritual cloth embroidered with symbols and cryptograms of the ancient world.
1802 Modern powdered milk
1805 Droshky any of various 2 or 4 wheeled, horse-drawn, public carriages (early taxicabs).
-
Early 19th century depiction by Aleksander Orłowski
1810s
1811 Sailor cap
1812
1812 Naval mine
1814
-
Beehive frame filled with honey.
1820s
1820 Antarctica
1820s Russian Revival architecture is the generic term for a number of different movements within Russian architecture that arose in second quarter of the 19th century and was an eclectic melding of pre-Peterine Russian architecture and elements of Byzantine architecture.
1820 Monorail
- The so-called "Road on Pillars" near Moscow, with horse-drawn carriages, built by Ivan Elmanov.[64]
1825 Zhostovo painting
1828
1829 Industrial production process of sunflower oil
1829
1829 Hyperbolic geometry
1830s
- Semen Korsakov was reputedly the first to use the punched cardsin informatics for information storage and search. Korsakov announced his new method and machines in September 1832, and rather than seeking patents offered the machines for public use.
1833 Lenz's law
- by Heinrich Lenz
1835 Centrifugal fan
1838 Electrotyping
1839 Electric boat
- by Boris Jacobi
1839
- by Heinrich Lenz[68]
-
The search of data onSemen Korsakov's punched card, a part of the machine called linear homeoscope.
-
Components of a centrifugal fan.
1840s
1847 Field anesthesia
1848 Modern oil well
- by Vasily Semyonov[69]
1850s
1850s Neo-Byzantine architecture in the Russian Empire emerged in the 1850s and became an officially endorsed preferred architectural style for church construction during the reign of Alexander II of Russia (1855–1881), replacing the Russo-Byzantine style of Konstantin Thon.
1851 Struve Geodetic Arc
1854
1854 Stereo camera
1857-1861 Theory of chemical structure
- By Hexamine and the discoverer of the Formose reaction.
1857 Radiator
- A radiator is a
- Saint Isaac's Cathedral is the largest galvanoplastic sculpture in architecture.[72]
1859
-
An old-style household radiator.
-
St. Petersburg.
1860s
1860s
1861 Beef Stroganoff
1864 Modern icebreaker
- An icebreaker is a special-purpose Pomor kochs, which had been navigating icy waters of the White Sea and Barents Sea for centuries.[73]
1868 Grow light
- Andrei Famintsyn was the first to use artificial light for plant growing and research.
1869 Hectograph
1869 Periodic table of the elements
-
Russian salad.
1870s
- The gymnasterka was originally introduced into the Tsarist army about 1870 for wear by regiments stationed in Turkestan during the hot summers.[74] It took the form of a loose fitting white linen "shirt-tunic" and included the coloured shoulder-boards of the green tunic worn during the remainder of the year. The gymnasterka was taken into use by all branches of the Imperial Army at the time of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78. Originally intended for working dress during peace-time and patterned on the traditional Russian peasant smock, the gymnasterka was subsequently adopted for ordinary duties and active service wear. It was worn as such by non-commissioned ranks in summer during the 1890s and early 1900s. The officers' equivalent was a white double breasted tunic or kitel. During the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05, the white gymnasterka with its red or blue shoulder-boards proved too conspicuous against modern weaponry and the garments were often dyed various shades of khaki.[75] The smartness and comfort of the white gymnasterka enabled it to survive for a few more years of peacetime wear until a light khaki version was adopted in 1907-09 and worn during World War I.
1872
- By Alexander Lodygin. In 1872, he applied for a Russian patent for his filament lamp. He also patented this invention in Austria, Britain, France, and Belgium. For a filament, Lodygin used a very thin carbon rod, placed under a bell-glass.
1872 Aldol reaction
- by Charles-Adolphe Wurtz
1873 Odhner Arithmometer
1873 Armored cruiser
- General-Admiral by Andrei Alexandrovich Popov
1874 Headlamp
1875
1876
1876 Yablochkov candle
- Invented in 1876 by carbon arc lamp and was used for the world's first electric street lightning at the Exposition Universelle (1878)in Paris.
1877 Torpedo boat tender
1877
1878
1879 Modern oil tanker
- by Ludvig Nobel
-
Gymnasterka of sergeant of Red Army (1935)
-
W. T. Odhner's arithmometer
-
Yablochkov candles illuminating a music hall in Paris.
-
An oldcylindrical oil storage tank.
1880s
1880s Winogradsky column
- The Winogradsky column is a simple device for culturing a large diversity of microorganisms. Invented in the 1880s by Sergei Winogradsky, the device is a column of pond mud and water mixed with a carbon source such as newspaper (containing cellulose), blackened marshmallows or egg-shells (containing calcium carbonate), and a sulfur source such as gypsum (calcium sulfate) or egg yolk. Incubating the column in sunlight for months results in an aerobic/anaerobic gradient as well as a sulfide gradient. These two gradients promote the growth of different microorganisms such as Clostridium, Desulfovibrio, Chlorobium, Chromatium, Rhodomicrobium, and Beggiatoa, as well as many other species of bacteria, cyanobacteria, and algae.
1888s Three-phase electric power
- The three-phase system was developed independently from others by Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovolsky.
1880 Vitamins
- By Nikolai Ivanovich Lunin (Russian Wikipedia article)[77]
1880
1881 Carbon arc welding
- The first arc welding method was introduced by Nikolay Benardos and later patented in 1887.[78]
1883 Cathedral of Christ the Saviour
- The Cathedral of Christ the Saviour is the main and largest cathedral of the Byzantine Revival architecture. The domes of the cathedral for the first time in history were gilded using the technique of gold electroplating. The original building was demolished during the Soviet era, but was rebuilt in 1995–2000, having become a symbol of Russia's religious renaissance.[68][79]
1884 Mozhaysky's airplane
- By Alexander Mozhaysky. Known as one of the earliest heavier-than-air machines to leave the ground under its own power, however still underpowered for a sustained controlled flight.
1884 Electric submarine
1888
- The first steam-powered tractor on continuous tracks was completed by Fyodor Blinov[76]
1888 Shielded metal arc welding
1888 Solar cell (based on the outer photoelectric effect)
1889 Three-phase induction motor
1889 Mosin–Nagant rifle
- By Sergei Ivanovich Mosin, the most produced rifle of the era
-
Electric tram in Saint Petersburg.
-
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow, the world's tallest Eastern Orthodox church.
1890s
1890 Matryoshka doll
1890 Powered exoskeleton
1890 Chemosynthesis
1891 Thermal chemical cracking
- Shukhov cracking process by Vladimir Shukhov and Sergei Gavrilov, the first cracking method
1891 Long-distance transmission of three-phase electric power
- By power grids.
1891 Three-phase hydroelectric power plant
1892
1894 Nephoscope
1895 Lightning detector / Radio receiver
- By Alexander Stepanovich Popov
1896
1896 Tensile structure
- By Vladimir Shukhov, see also Shukhov Tower
1897 Gridshell
1898 Polar icebreaker
- A polar icebreaker is an pack ice. It was built in England between 1897 and 1898 after Admiral Stepan Makarov's design and under his supervision. Between 1899 and 1911 Yermak sailed in heavy ice conditions for more than 1000 days. Starting from this vessel, Russia created the largest fleet of oceangoing icebreakers in the 20th and 21st centuries.[81]
1899 Radiation pressure
-
The original matryoshka carved by Vasily Zvyozdochkin and painted by Sergey Malyutin.
-
The world's first tensile steelShell by Vladimir Shukhov (during construction), Nizhny Novgorod, 1895.
-
The world's firstAll-Russian Exposition, Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, 1896
20th century
- by Pavlov's dog")
1901 Chromatography
1902
- Fire fighting foam is oil industry at that time. Impressed by the terrible and hardly extinguishable oil fires that he had seen there, Loran tried to find such a liquid substance that could deal effectively with the problem, and so he invented his fire fighting foam.[82]
1903 Theoretical foundations of spaceflight
1903 Cytoskeleton
1903 Motor ship
- The Russian tanker Vandal was the world's first diesel-powered ship.
1904 Radio jamming
1904 Foam extinguisher
- The first such extinguisher was produced in 1904 by fire fighting foam two years before.[83]
1905
1905 Korotkov sounds
1905
- By Alexey Krylov and Stepan Makarov
1906 Electric seismometer
- By Boris Borisovich Galitzine
1907 Aerosledge
1907 Pulsejet
1907 Bayan
1907 Church of the Savior on Blood
- The church contains over 7500 square metres of mosaics— according to its restorers, more than any other church in the world.
-
A modern foam fire extinguisher.
-
Aneroidauscultatory blood pressure measurement.
1910s
1910 Polybutadiene
- The first commercially viable
1910
1910
1911
1910 Color television
1911 Television
- By Vladimir Zworykin
- A progression of techniques used to train actors to draw believable emotions to their performances. The method that was originally created and used by Constantin Stanislavski from 1911 to 1916 was based on the concept of emotional memory for which an actor focuses internally to portray a character's emotions onstage.
1913 Zaum
- Zaum (Russian: зáумь) is a word used to describe the linguistic experiments in sound symbolism and language creation of Russian Futurist poets such as Velimir Khlebnikov and Aleksei Kruchenykh.
1913 Airliner
- Russky Vityaz by Igor Sikorsky
1913 Half-track
- Also known as Kégresse track, invented by Adolphe Kégresse.
1914 Aerobatics
- By Pyotr Nesterov, independently from Adolphe Pégoud
1914 Gyrocar
1914 Tachanka
- By Nestor Makhno (according to some sources)
1914 Strategic bomber
1914 Aerial ramming
1915 Activated charcoal gas mask
- By Nikolay Zelinsky, independently from James Bert Garner
1915 Vezdekhod
- Vezdekhod was the first prototype caterpillar tank, or tankette, and the first continuous track amphibious ATV. It was invented by Aleksandr Porokhovschikov in 1915. The word Vezdekhod means "He who goes anywhere" or "all-terrain vehicle".
1915 Tsar Tank
- This eccentric design differed from modern tanks in that it did not use caterpillar tracks, rather it used a wheeled tricycle design. The two front spoked wheels were nearly 9 metres (27 feet) in diameter; the back wheel was smaller, only 1.5 metres (5 feet) high.
- The longest railway in the world.
1916
-
knapsack parachute.
-
The Zelinsky—Kummant gas mask in the Military Museum of Finland.
-
The Tsar Tank.
1916 Avtomat rifle. Unlike 1890's Cei gas rifle, the Avtomat was designed for 25-round detachable magazines. Contemporary Occidental writers have struggled to classify the Fedorov Avtomat. Some consider it to be an "early predecessor" or "ancestor" to the modern assault rifle,[87][88][89][90] while others believe that the Fedorov Avtomat was the world's first assault rifle.[91]
Soviet Russia and Soviet Union
Late 1910s
1917 Socialist realism
- A style of realistic art which was developed in the Soviet Union and became a dominant style in other socialist countries.
1918 Air ioniser
1918 Budenovka
1918 Ushanka
1918 Jet pack (not built)
1919 Film school
1919 Constructivism (art)
- An artistic and architectural philosophy which was a rejection of the idea of autonomous art. The movement was in favour of art as a practice for social purposes.
-
The later version of the Soviet Army ushanka.
-
Lydia Kavina playing theremin.
1920s
1920s Constructivist architecture
- A form of modern architecture that flourished in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and early 1930s. It combined advanced technology and engineering with an avowedly Communist social purpose.
1920 Theremin
1921 Aerial refueling
- By Alexander P. de Seversky
1923 Iconoscope
- By Vladimir Zworykin
1923 Palekh miniature
1924 Flying wing
1924 Optophonic Piano
- By Vladimir Baranov-Rossine
1924
- By Russian-American scientist, Alexander Maximow
1924 Primordial soup hypothesis (Abiogenesis)
- By Aleksandr Oparin
1924
- Russian locomotive class E el-2
1925 Interlaced video
- Interlaced video is a technique of doubling the perceived frame rate introduced with the composite video signal used with analog television without consuming extra bandwidth. It was first demonstrated by Léon Thereminin 1925.
1926 Graphical sound
- By Pavel Tager and Aleksandr Shorin
1927 Light-emitting diode
- by Oleg Losev
- The most produced biplanein the world.
1928 Gene pool
- by Alexander Serebrovsky
1928
- Rabbage or Raphanobrassica, was the first ever non-sterile hybrid obtained through crossbreeding, which was an important step in biotechnology. It was produced by Georgii Karpechenko in 1928.
1929
- by Sergei Yudin
1929 Kinescope
- By Vladimir Zworykin
1929
- Pobedit is a specialized alloy that is close in hardness to diamond (85–90 on the
1929 Teletank / Military robot
-
wolves, an example of Palekh miniature.
-
Soviet TT-26 teletank, the first military robot.
1930s
Abalakov thread climbing device
1930s Modern ship hull design
- Vladimir Yourkevitch invented the modern ship hull design when he designed the SS Normandie.[citation needed]
1930 Blood bank[citation needed]
1930 Single lift-rotor helicopter
- Designed by Boris N. Yuriev and Alexei M. Cheremukhin of
1930
- Russian Airborne Troops- the first and largest in the world
1931 Pressure suit
1931 Hypergolic rocket propellants
- by Valentyn Glushko[citation needed]
1931 Rhythmicon / Drum machine
- by Léon Theremin, the first drum machine
1931 Flame tank
1932 Postconstructivism
- A transitional architectural style that existed in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, typical of early Stalinist architecture before World War II.
1932 Postal code
- Modern postal codes were first introduced in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in December 1932,[99] but the system was abandoned in 1939.
1932 Children's railway
1932 Terpsitone
- by Léon Theremin
1932
1933
- In 1933 surgeon Yuriy Vorony from Kherson in Ukraine attempted the first human kidney transplant, using a kidney removed six hours earlier from a deceased donor to be reimplanted into the thigh. He measured kidney function using a connection between the kidney and the skin. His first patient died two days later, as the graft was incompatible with the recipient's blood group and was rejected.[101] It was not until 17 June 1950, when a successful transplant was performed on Ruth Tucker, a 44-year-old woman with polycystic kidney disease, by Dr. Richard Lawler[102] at Little Company of Mary Hospital in Evergreen Park, Illinois.
1933
1933
- Also referred to as Stalinist Gothic, or Socialist Classicism, is a term given to architecture of the Soviet Union under the leadership of Joseph Stalin.
1934 Tupolev ANT-20
- Purpose-designed propaganda aircraft, the largest aircraft in 1930s
1934 Cherenkov detector
- Cherenkov radiation was discovered in 1934 by Pavel Cherenkov[103]
1935 Kirza
- Kirza is a type of pig leather. The material is mainly used in production of military boots and belts for machinery and automobiles. The name kirza is an acronym from Kirovskiy Zavod (Kirov plant) located in the city of Kirov, which was the first place of the mass production of kirza. The technology was invented in 1935 by Ivan Plotnikov and improved in 1941. Since that time kirza boots became a typical element of the uniform in the Soviet and Russian Army.[104]
1935 Moscow Metro
- The Moscow Metro, which spans almost the entire Russian capital, is Europe's metro system. Opened in 1935, it is well known for the ornate design of many of its stations, which contain numerous examples of socialist realist art.[105]
1935 Kremlin stars
1936 Acoustic microscopy
1936
1937 Artificial heart
- By Vladimir Demikhov. It was transplanted to a dog.
1937 Modern evolutionary synthesis
- By Russian-American evolutionary biologist, Theodosius Dobzhansky
1937 Superfluidity
- By Pyotr Kapitsa, with John F. Allen and Don Misener
1937
- The drag chute or braking parachute is an application of the drogue parachute for decreasing the landing distance of an aircraft below that available solely from the aircraft's brakes. For the first time drag chutes were used in 1937 by the Soviet airplanes in the Arctic that provided support for the famous polar expeditions of the era. The drag chute allowed safe landings on small ice-floes.
1937 Drifting ice station
- Soviet and Russian drifting ice stations are important contributors to exploration of the Arctic. An idea to use the drift ice for the exploration of nature in the high latitudes of the Arctic Ocean belongs to Fridtjof Nansen, who fulfilled it on Fram between 1893 and 1896. However, the first stations to be placed right upon the drifting ice originated in the Soviet Union in 1937, when the first such station in the world, North Pole-1, started operating. More drifting ice stations were organised after World War II, and many special equipment was developed for them, such as the elevated tents to be placed on the melting ice and indicators monitoring the ice cracks.[107]
1937 Welded sculpture
- Welded sculpture is an artform in which
1937 Fire-fighting sport
- Fire-fighting sport is a sport discipline that includes a competition between various fire fighting teams in fire fighting-related exercises, such as climbing special stairs in a mock-up house, unfolding a water hose, and extinguishing a fire using hoses or extinguishers. It was developed in the Soviet Union in 1937, while international competitions have taken place since 1968.[109]
1937-1957 ANS synthesizer[110]
1938
- The deep column station is a type of pylon station. The first deep column station in the world is Mayakovskaya, designed by Alexey Dushkin and opened in 1938 in Moscow Metro.[111]
1938 Sambo
- Sambo (an acronym, Самбо stands for САМооборона-Без-Оружия, meaning "self-defence without weapons") is modern martial art, combat sport and self-defense system developed in the Soviet Union and recognized as an official sport by the USSR All-Union Sports Committee in 1938, presented by Anatoly Kharlampiev.[112]
1939 Kirlian photography
- The world's first tail rotor helicopter and first amphibious helicopter by Igor Sikorsky.
1939 Ilyushin Il-2
- The world's most produced combat aircraft.
1939 Self-propelled multiple rocket launcher
-
Spring-loaded camming device in a parallel crack.
-
A modernunderwater welding.
-
Tupolev ANT-20 propaganda aircraft.
-
Kirza boots.
-
Kirlian photo of two coins.
1940s
1940s Ballast cleaner[citation needed]
1940s TRIZ
1940s Sikorsky R-4
- The R-4 was the world's first mass-produced helicopter and the first helicopter used by the United States Army Air Forces, Navy, Coast Guard, and the United Kingdom's Royal Air Force and Royal Navy.
1940 T-34 tank
- by Mikhail Koshkin, the most produced tank of World War II[113]
1941 Competitive rhythmic gymnastics
1941 Maksutov telescope
- by Dmitri Dmitrievich Maksutov
1941 Degaussing
- by Anatoly Petrovich Alexandrov,[citation needed] independently from Charles F. Goodeve
1942 Winged tank
1942 Gramicidin S
- by Georgy Gause
1944 Microtron
1944
1945
- World's most produced tank.
1945
- by Léon Theremin
1946
1947
- World's most produced jet aircraft.
1947 AK-47
- The AK-47 (other names include Avtomat Kalashnikova, Kalashnikov, or AK) is a gas operated 7.62×39mm assault rifle, developed in the Soviet Union by Mikhail Kalashnikov. The AK-47 was one of the first true assault rifles. It has been manufactured in many countries and has seen service with regular armed forces as well as irregular, revolutionary and terrorist organizations worldwide. Even after six decades, due to its durability, low production cost and ease of use, the original AK-47 and its numerous variants are the most widely used and popular assault rifles in the world; more AK-type rifles have been produced than all other assault rifles combined.[115]
1947
- The technique of using a light beam to remotely record sound probably originated with Léon Theremin in the Soviet Union at or before 1947, when he developed and used the Buran eavesdropping system. This worked by using a low power infrared beam (not a laser) from a distance to detect the sound vibrations in the glass windows. Lavrentiy Beria, head of the KGB, used this Buran device to spy on the U.S., British, and French embassies in Moscow
1949
- Staged combustion cyclewidely used in rocket engines.
1949 Reactive armour
-
T-34, the most successful tank design of World War II.
-
Front view of aMiG-15.
-
A Type 2 AK-47, the first machined receiver variation
1950s
1950s Head transplant
- The first head transplant with full cerebral function (by Vladimir Demikhov)
1950s Magnetotellurics
- The magnetotelluric technique was introduced independently by Japanese scientists in 1948
1950 MESM
- The first universally programmable electronic computer in continental Europe, developed by Sergey Lebedev.
1950 Berkovich tip
1951 Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction
1951 Explosively pumped flux compression generator
1952
- Invention of the first masers by Charles Townes.
1952
- A 2006 editorial written by Marc Monthioux and Vladimir Kuznetsov in the journal Carbon described the interesting and often misstated origin of the carbon nanotube. A large percentage of academic and popular literature attributes the discovery of hollow, nanometer-size tubes composed of graphitic carbon to
1952 Anthropometric cosmetology or Ilizarov apparatus
- by Gavril Ilizarov
1954 Nuclear power plant
1955
- World's most produced supersonic aircraft.
1955 Ballistic missile submarine
- Project 611 ballistic missile submarine
1955 Fast-neutron reactor
- BN350nuclear fast reactor.
1955
1955 Tokamak
- The Tokamak T-4 was tested in 1968 in Novosibirsk, conducting the first ever quasistationary thermonuclear fusion reaction. The first actual experimental tokamak was built in 1955. The Tokamak design plays the basic role in modern projects for power generation based on thermonuclear fusion like ITER.
1957 ANS synthesizer
1957 Synchrophasotron
1957 Spaceport
- launch complex by Vladimir Barmin
1957 Intercontinental ballistic missile
- The world's first successful Sergey Korolevbetween 1953 and 1957.
1957 Orbital space rocket
- The world's first successful Sergey Korolevbetween 1953 and 1957.
1957 Artificial satellite
- Sputnik program.
1957 Space capsule
1957 Raketa hydrofoil
1959
- A nuclear-powered icebreaker is a purpose-built Admiralty Shipyard and completed in 1959.[121]
1959
- Luna 1, also the first escape velocity spacecraft and the first Sun satellite.
1959 Missile boat
1959 Kleemenko cycle
1959
-
Inside a carbon nanotube.
-
BN350nuclear fast reactor.
-
Baikonur Cosmodrome's "Gagarin's Start" Soyuz launch pad prior to the rollout of Soyuz TMA-13, October 10, 2008.
-
The large-size model ofICBM and the first orbital rocket.
-
Sputnik 1 replica.
-
Volga River.
-
A Komar-class missile boat launching a missile.
-
nuclear icebreaker
-
Staged combustion rocket cycle.
1960s
1960s
1960 Reentry capsule
- Sputnik 5
1961 Human spaceflight
- Sergey Korolyov.
1961 RPG-7
1961 Lawrencium
- Co-discovered at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
1961 Space food
1961 Space suit
1961
- The most powerful weapon ever tested. The Tsar Bomba was a three-stage Teller–Ulam design hydrogen bomb with a yield of 50 to 58 megatons of TNT (210 to 240 PJ). This is equivalent to about 1,350–1,570 times the combined power of the bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 10 times the combined power of all the conventional explosives used in World War II, or one quarter of the estimated yield of the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa, and 10% of the combined yield of all nuclear tests to date.
1961
1961 Mil Mi-8
- The world's most-produced helicopter
1962 3D holography
1962 Modern stealth technology
- by Petr Ufimtsev
1963 KTM-5
- The most produced tram in the world.
1963 Oxygen cocktail
1964 Rutherfordium
1964 Druzhba pipeline
- The longest oil pipeline system in the world.
1964 Kardashyov scale
1965
1965 Voitenko compressor
1965
- launch system
1965 Air-augmented rocket
1966 Nobelium
1966 Lander spacecraft
1966 Orbiter
1966 Regional jet
- The Yakovlev Yak-40 was the world's first regional jet.
1966 Caspian Sea Monster
- The largest ekranoplan and the second largest fixed-wing aircraft by Rostislav Alexeyev
1966 Soyuz rocket
- According to the European Space Agency, the Soyuz launch vehicle is the most frequently used and most reliable launch vehicle in the world.[122]
1966 Orbital module
1967 Space toilet
1967 Ostankino Tower
1967 The Motherland Calls
1967 Computer for operations with functions
1967
1967 Venus lander
1968 Dubnium
1968 Mil V-12
- The largest helicopter ever built.
1968 Supersonic transport
1969 Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko
1969 Intercontinental Submarine-launched ballistic missile
- R-29 Vysota
-
tAn RPG-7 with warhead, world's most used anti-tank weapon.
-
The model ofVostok spacecraft, the first human spaceflightmodule.
-
Russian space food.
-
A Tsar Bomba-type casing on display at Sarov.
-
Mil Mi-8, the world's most produced helicopter.
-
Molniya 1 satellite.
-
Launch of aProton rocket.
-
Soyuz spacecraft (TMA version).
-
Mil V-12, the world's largest helicopter.
1970s
1970s Semiconductor Heterostructures
- Creation by Zhores Alferov of Semiconductor Heterostructures which play important role in modern electronics (Nobel Prize in Physics in 2000).
1970s Radial keratotomy
1970 Excimer laser
1970
1970 Space rover
- Lunokhod 1, the first space exploration rover, reached the Moon surface on 17 November 1970.
1971 Space station
- Salyut 1 (DOS-1) (Russian: Салют-1; English: Salute 1) was launched 19 April 1971. It was the first space station to orbit Earth. Developed under supervision of Vladimir Chelomey.
1971 Kaissa (chess program)
- Kaissa became the first computer chess world champion in 1974.
1972
1972 Mil Mi-24
1972 Nuclear desalination
1973 Reflectron
- By Boris Aleksandrovich Mamyrin
1973 Skull crucible
- The first commercially viable process to manufacture cubic zirconia.
1974 Electron cooling
- Electron cooling was invented by MeV protonsat NAP-M storage ring at INP.
1975
- APS underwater assault rifle by Vladimir Simonov
- The Arktika class is a Russian and former Arktika, was the second Soviet nuclear icebreaker, completed in 1975. She became the first surface ship to reach the North Pole, on 17 August 1977.[123]
1975 Androgynous Peripheral Attach System
1976 Mobile ICBM
- Alexander Nadiradze
1977 Vertical launching system
- First installed on Azov, a Kara-class cruiser
1977 Kirov-class battlecruiser
- The Kirov-class battlecruisers of the Russian Navy are the largest and heaviest surface combatant warships (i.e., not an aircraft carrier, assault ship or submarine) currently in active operation in the world.
1978
- Drozd system
1979 Space-based radio telescope[124]
- the KRT-10 radio observatory (ru:КРТ-10)
-
Hall effect thrusters.
-
BN350 desalination unit, the first nuclear-heated desalination unit in the world.
-
APS underwater assault rifle.
-
NS Arktika, the first surface ship to reach the North Pole.
-
ICBM.
1980s
- Invented and patented in the 1980s by Russian engineer Alexander Kalina. His invention included the first time development of a contiguous set of ammonia-water mixture thermodynamic properties, which provide the basis for unique power plant designs for different forms of power generation from different heat sources.[125]
1980s EHF therapy
- by Nikolay Devyatkov and Mikhail Golant
1980
- The largest submarine ever built.
1981 Quantum dot
- by Alexey Ekimov and Alexander Efros
1981 Tupolev Tu-160
- The Tupolev Tu-160 is a variable-geometry heavy bomber designed by the Soviet Union. Although several civil and military transport aircraft are bigger, the Tu-160 has the greatest total thrust, and the heaviest takeoff weight of any combat aircraft, and the highest top speed as well as one of the largest payloads of any current heavy bomber. Pilots of the Tu-160 call it the “White Swan”, due to its maneuverability and anti-flash white finish.[126]
1984 Tetris
- by Alexey Pazhitnov
- Mir space station
1987
- The first to reach the seabed under the North Pole. Developed in cooperation with Finland.
1987
- The world's most powerful liquid-fuel rocket engine.
1988
- The largest fixed-wing aircraft ever built.
- The deepest borehole in the world.
1989 Supermaneuverability
- Pugachev's Cobramaneuver.
1989 Tupolev Tu-155
- The world's first aircraft to use liquid hydrogen as fuel.
-
Typhoon-class submarine, covered with ice.
-
Tetris figures.
-
Mir space station.
-
ASu-27 performing the Cobra maneuver.
Early 1990s
1989-1991 BARS apparatus
1991 Thermoplan
- The thermoplan is a disc-shaped airship of hybrid type, currently under development in Russia. The key feature of thermoplan is its two section structure. The main section of the airship is filled with helium, while the other section is filled with air that can be heated or cooled by the engines. This design greatly improves the maneuverability, alongside the disc shape which helps resist the powerful winds up to 20 metre per second. The projet was started in the late 1980s and the early 1990s, with the first working prototype tested in 1991. That was rather small airship, and the giant thermoplan wasn't built at that time due to the problems caused by the economy crisis of the 1990s. In the late 2000s (decade), the project was revived under the name Locomoskyner by the Russian company Locomosky in Ulyanovsk.[127]
1991 Scramjet
- The Central Institute of Aviation Motors (CIAM) KHOLOD Hypersonic Flying Laboratory, through a joint effort with NASA. First successful supersonic combustion ramjet flight demonstration.
Russian Federation
1990s
RD-180 Engine
- Dual-Zenit rockets, and currently provides first-stage power for the American Atlas V launch vehicle.
1992
1992 Nuclotron
- Nuclotron is the world's first GeV. It was built in 1987–1992 as a part of Dubna synchrophasotron modernisation program (the Nuclotron ring follows the outer perimeter of the synchrophasotron ring). 5 runs of about 1400 hours total duration have been provided by the present time. The most important experiments tested the cryomagnetic system of a novel type, and obtained data on nuclear collisions using internal target.[128]
1993
- "Novichok" is a series of chemical weapons developed between 1971 (USSR) and 1993 (Russia), significantly more potent than VX and Soman.
1993 RAR
1996 Lake Vostok
1997
1998 Beriev Be-200
- Four retractable water scoops, two forward and two aft of the fuselage step can be used to scoop a total of 12 tonnes of water in 14 seconds.
1998
- Russian submarine K-407 Novomoskovsk, Shtil'
1999 7z
- By Igor Pavlov
1999 Sea Launch
- by Igor Spassky, multinational cooperation
1999 Flerovium
-
Beriev Be-200 dropping the water painted into the colors of the flag of Russia.
-
A launch of for space launches.
2000s
2000s
- By Zhores Alfyorov with Herbert Kroemer
2000 Livermorium
- Collaboration between Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the United States and the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Russia
2001 Space tourism
2001
- The largest diamond minein the world and the second largest human-made excavation.
2001 Superconducting nanowire single-photon detector
2003 Park Pobedy metro escalators
- Longest metro escalators
2003 Nihonium
- Russian–American collaboration
2003 Moscovium
- Russian–American collaboration
2003 Proof of the Poincaré conjecture
2004 Nginx
- One of the most widely used web servers in the world, created by Igor Sysoev.
2004 Graphene
- Creation of Graphene by Russian-born, British physicists Konstantin Novoselov and Andre Geim at the University of Manchester. They were awarded with Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery in 2010.
2005 Orbitrap
- by Aleksandr Makarov
2006 PEARL (PEtawatt pARametric Laser)
- First petawatt power level laser complex [129]
2006 Oganesson
- First synthesized in 2002 at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, near Moscow, Russia, by a joint team of Russian and American scientists.
2007 Elbrus 2000
- Russian microprocessor.
2007
- NS 50 Let Pobedy is the world's largest
2007
- Aviation Thermobaric Bomb of Increased Power, nicknamed "Father of All Bombs", is a
2008
- The third discovered kind of human.
-
NS 50 Let Pobedy, the world's largest icebreaker.
2010s
2010 Chatroulette
- The first randomized webcam chatroom
2010 Tennessine
- Russian–American collaboration
2011 w:ru:71-409
- The first Russian produced low-floor tram
2011
- The first mass-produced portable nuclear power station
2011 Nord Stream 1
- The longest offshore pipeline
2011 Spektr-R
- Space based radiotelescope with the highest angular resolution (RadioAstron project).
2012
- The world's longest cable-stayed bridge
2015 OCSiAl Graphetron
- industrial-scale production of carbon nanotubes
2016 T-14 Armata
2020s
2020 COVID-19 vaccine
- First vaccine of its kind (Gam-COVID-Vac) approved by governmental authorities.
See also
- List of Russian inventors
- Category:Russian inventions
- List of Russian scientists
- List of Soviet calculators
- Russian culture
References
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- ^ The history of kvas Archived 29 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine at kvas.ru site (in Russian)
- ^ a b c "Пушкинский Дом (ИРЛИ РАН) > Новости". Archived from the original on 16 March 2015.
- ^ Russian Church Design Archived 1 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine by Lisa Kies.
- ^ About Russian Domes and Cupolas[usurped] at Sky Palace world architecture site.
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- ISBN 978-5-9524-1895-0.
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