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549:; the changing of the government structure in the wake of widespread political unrest; Witte's opposition to several of Kokovtsov's policies as Minister of Finance during the Russo-Japanese War, and in an important loan negotiation that occurred in 1905–06. The differences were made public in the Council of State when one or the other would make comments in opposition to the other's viewpoint on various issues.
802:
474:. Nicholas refused: "I know Rasputin too well to believe all the tittle-tattle about him." Kokovtsov had offered Rasputin a substantial amount of money to leave for Siberia and ordered the newspapers not to mention his name in connection with the Empress. The tsar dismissed Kokovtsov on 29 January 1914 for a "lack of control over the press" .
413:
serving first in the statistical, then the legislative and finally in the criminal office. From 1879 to 1890 he served as Senior
Inspector and Assistant Head of the Central Administration of Prisons. This period is noted for its prison reforms formulated by State Secretary K.K. Grot, a senior member
400:
and S. Pakhman, all notable legal authorities of the time. However, his father, who had promised to pay for his education suddenly died leaving the family in strained financial circumstances. As a result, instead of attending university he entered the civil service to provide him and his family an
600:
Brief dispatches received from
Minister of Finance Kokovsoff at Harbin add little to the news dispatches concerning the murder of Prince Ito. The Minister points out that no blame is to be attached to the railroad police, who had been specially requested to admit all Japanese to the
458:
Kokovtsov succeeded
Stolypin as Chairman of the Council of Ministers after Stolypin's assassination in 1911, while also maintaining his post as Minister of Finance, and held both offices until his retirement in 1914. Kokovtsov opposed to the appointment of
418:. From 1890 to 1896, he served in the State Council as Assistant State Secretary, State Secretary and finally as Assistant Imperial Secretary where he worked primarily on matters reviewed by the Russian Imperial State Council's Department of State Economy.
540:
Much was made of
Kokovtsov's differences with Witte which resulted in the two refusing to work with one another after 1905–06. The apparent cause of these differences were conflicts over courses of action in the preparation for peace talks with
532:
Witte states in his autobiography that while
Kokovtsov was serving as one of his assistants, he was left alone to do the business he knew so well and that Kokovtsov was the source of several small but meaningful reforms in the finances of the
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524:
society until his death on 29 January 1943. In 1933, he published his memoirs, which describe his childhood and education as well as his early years in government service from 1903 to 1919.
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443:. Although not a minister, he then played a substantial role in securing a loan that did nothing less than keep the imperial government from having to devalue its currency and leave the
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In domestic policy, Kokovtsov's time as prime minister saw the passage of two laws in 1912 that provided accident and sickness insurance to about 20% of workers.
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455:(1906–11). Kokovstov was an anti-Semite who believed the problem with Jews was not their 'backwardness' but the fact that they were 'so clever'.
447:, then the basis of almost all financially stable, secure and modern countries. Kokovtsov returned as Minister of Finance in the cabinets of
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Kokovsoff, the
Russian Minister of Finance, has definitely assumed the Premiership made vacant by the death of Stolypin.
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He resigned the next year when his former superior in the
Finance Ministry, Witte, assumed the
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From 1896 to 1902 he served in one of the three
Assistant Minister of Finance positions under
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After resigning from the position, he served as
Imperial Secretary until his appointment as
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6 April] 1853 – 29 January 1943) was a
Russian politician who served as the fourth
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Upon retiring, Kokovstov was invested with the title and rank of count. After the
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582:"Kokovsoff Gives Details. Assassin Suddenly Forced His Way in Front of Prince"
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Kokovtsov was admitted as a candidate for a civil service position in the
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Count Sergei Witte and the Twilight of Imperial Russia: A Biography.
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Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima
639:"M. Kokovsoff Takes Vacancy Made by Stolypin's Assassination"
513:
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and eventually settled in Paris. He was a leading figure in
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Burials at Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois Russian Cemetery
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in December 1872 Kokovtsov applied for admittance to
971:. Questionable heads of government are written in
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350:of Russia from 1911 to 1914, during the reign of
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466:In 1912 Kokovtsov asked the tsar to authorize
1503:Members of the State Council (Russian Empire)
940:
822:Newspaper clippings about Vladimir Kokovtsov
617:. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP. p. 158.
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96:18 September 1911 – 30 January 1914
1513:Emigrants from the Russian Empire to France
947:
933:
734:. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. p. 631.
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1488:Heads of government of the Russian Empire
857:18 September 1911 – 30 January 1914
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612:
476:
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554:Serbian Royal Order of the White Eagle
392:to study law on the recommendation of
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560:, and the Grand Cross of the Swedish
16:Russian civil servant and politician
13:
784:(translator, Abraham Yarmolinsky).
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14:
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1518:White Russian emigrants to France
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390:Saint Petersburg State University
203:5 February 1904 – 24 October 1905
800:
704:Foundations of the Welfare State
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813:Vladimir Nikolayevich Kokovtsov
754:Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe.
516:but escaped with his family to
340:Влади́мир Никола́евич Коко́вцов
332:Vladimir Nikolayevich Kokovtsov
257:Vladimir Nikolayevich Kokovtsov
148:26 April 1906 – 30 January 1914
1498:Senators of the Russian Empire
1192:Council of People's Commissars
807:Vladimir Nikolaevich Kokovtsov
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662:
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528:Relationship with Sergei Witte
384:Following graduation from the
1:
1483:People from Borovichsky Uyezd
956:Heads of government of Russia
765:Kokovtsov, Vladimir. (1935).
567:
562:Royal Order of the Polar Star
512:, he was investigated by the
360:
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23:Eastern Slavic naming customs
770:(translator, Laura Matveev).
411:Imperial Ministry of Justice
7:
1493:Finance ministers of Russia
1478:People from Novgorod Oblast
1442:Russian Government Cabinets
826:20th Century Press Archives
10:
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782:The Memoirs of Count Witte
672:Rasputin: The Untold Story
552:He was decorated with the
510:October Revolution of 1917
136:Finance Minister of Russia
21:In this name that follows
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774:Stanford University Press
748:Harcave, Sidney. (2004).
730:Acović, Dragomir (2012).
496:Retirement and later life
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853:Prime Minister of Russia
669:Fuhrmann, J. T. (2013).
558:Order of Prince Danilo I
381:6 April] 1853.
84:Prime Minister of Russia
779:Witte, Sergei. (1921).
613:Slezkine, Yuri (2006).
1160:Provisional Government
991:Committee of Ministers
489:
416:Imperial State Council
377:on 18 April [
264:6 April] 1853
1508:White movement people
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342:; 18 April [
1447:Premiers of the USSR
1251:Council of Ministers
1103:Council of Ministers
809:at Wikimedia Commons
441:Council of Ministers
375:Novgorod Governorate
716:M. Rasputin (1934)
647:. 23 September 1911
502:February Revolution
430:Minister of Finance
401:additional income.
394:Aleksandr Gradovsky
260:18 April [
1329:Russian Federation
838:Political offices
644:The New York Times
615:The Jewish Century
587:The New York Times
556:, the Montenegrin
547:Russo-Japanese War
490:
48:Vladimir Kokovtsov
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914:Succeeded by
887:Succeeded by
860:Succeeded by
805:Media related to
760:978-0-7656-1422-3
590:. 27 October 1909
398:Nikolai Tagantsev
371:Borovichsky Uyezd
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271:Borovichsky Uyezd
50:Владимир Коковцов
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649:. Retrieved
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508:. After the
499:
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486:Auguste Léon
484:portrait by
470:'s exile to
465:
457:
437:Chairmanship
434:
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423:Sergei Witte
420:
408:
383:
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286:(1943-01-29)
233:Succeeded by
214:Sergei Witte
198:
186:Succeeded by
166:
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124:Succeeded by
91:
38:
31:Nikolayevich
30:
18:
1473:1943 deaths
1468:1853 births
1293:Solomentsev
1078:von Reutern
1048:Chernyshyov
1038:Vasilchikov
1033:Novosiltsev
1012:Vyazmitinov
900:Ivan Shipov
890:Ivan Shipov
651:20 November
594:20 November
451:(1906) and
355:Nicholas II
301:Nationality
238:Ivan Shipov
221:Preceded by
179:Ivan Shipov
174:Preceded by
112:Preceded by
105:Nicholas II
71: 1915
67: 1910
35:family name
1462:Categories
1389:Khristenko
1298:Vorotnikov
1263:Chernousov
1225:Vakhrushev
1006:Rumyantsev
973:small type
917:Pyotr Bark
911:1906–1914
884:1904–1905
786:New York:
772:Stanford:
700:Thane, Pat
568:References
506:Kislovodsk
482:Autochrome
361:Early life
312:Alma mater
191:Pyotr Bark
69: – c.
62:Kokovtsov
27:patronymic
1422:Mishustin
1373:Stepashin
1356:Kiriyenko
1283:Polyansky
1131:Goremykin
1126:Kokovtsov
1116:Goremykin
1000:Vorontsov
788:Doubleday
718:My father
432:in 1904.
373:, in the
367:Borovichi
267:Borovichi
199:In office
144:In office
92:In office
39:Kokovtsov
1428:Belousov
1417:Medvedev
1383:Kasyanov
1368:Primakov
1258:Rodionov
1236:Pamfilov
1230:Khokhlov
1220:Bulganin
1173:Kerensky
1146:Golitsyn
1121:Stolypin
1068:Ignatyev
1043:Levashov
1028:Kochubey
1023:Lopukhin
1018:Saltykov
720:, p. 70.
702:(1996).
601:station.
564:(1897).
82:4th
1395:Fradkov
1338:Yeltsin
1308:Silayev
1288:Voronov
1268:Puzanov
1242:Kosygin
1215:Sulimov
1210:Syrtsov
1136:Stürmer
1088:Durnovo
1073:Valuyev
1063:Gagarin
969:italics
828:of the
824:in the
762:(cloth)
518:Finland
472:Tobolsk
439:of the
414:of the
352:Emperor
336:Russian
305:Russian
167:Himself
101:Monarch
1411:Zubkov
1400:Zubkov
1345:Gaidar
1303:Vlasov
1278:Kozlov
1273:Yasnov
1141:Trepov
1058:Bludov
817:Flickr
758:
679:
621:
488:, 1927
295:France
25:, the
1405:Putin
1378:Putin
1314:Lobov
1205:Rykov
1200:Lenin
1111:Witte
1093:Witte
1083:Bunge
1053:Orlov
965:Note:
543:Japan
514:Cheka
329:Count
291:Paris
1168:Lvov
756:ISBN
677:ISBN
653:2008
619:ISBN
596:2008
379:O.S.
344:O.S.
281:Died
262:O.S.
253:Born
830:ZBW
815:at
37:is
29:is
1464::
691:^
655:.
641:.
598:.
584:.
537:.
463:.
425:.
396:,
369:,
357:.
338::
293:,
273:,
269:,
64:c.
975:.
948:e
941:t
934:v
790:.
776:.
685:.
627:.
334:(
41:.
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