POLITICIAN

Mikhail Chigir

1948 - Today

Photo of Mikhail Chigir

Icon of person Mikhail Chigir

Mikhail Nikolayevich Chigir or Michaił Mikalajevič Čyhir (born 24 May 1948) is a Belarusian politician who served as the second Prime Minister of Belarus from 21 July 1994 to 18 November 1996. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mikhail Chigir is the 15,530th most popular politician (down from 14,797th in 2019), the 160th most popular biography from Belarus (down from 155th in 2019) and the 47th most popular Belarusian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mikhail Chigir by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Mikhail Chigir ranks 15,530 out of 19,576Before him are Luis Muñoz Marín, Lloyd Bentsen, Herneith, Anna Grodzka, James Brady, and Alain Krivine. After him are Yan Gamarnik, Jill Evans, Tulsi Gabbard, John P. Kennedy, Mahmoud El Nokrashy Pasha, and Mirko Šarović.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1948, Mikhail Chigir ranks 542Before him are Richard Riehle, Robert Tarjan, Gudrun Schyman, Edward Rutherfurd, Aleksandr Timoshinin, and Staffan Tapper. After him are Avery Brooks, Eizo Kenmotsu, Ján Čapkovič, Michael Kitchen, Jan van Beveren, and Phil Mogg.

Others Born in 1948

Go to all Rankings

In Belarus

Among people born in Belarus, Mikhail Chigir ranks 160 out of 368Before him are Wilhelm Anderson (1880), Tadevuš Kandrusievič (1946), Thaddeus Bulgarin (1789), Victoria Azarenka (1989), Jakub Szynkiewicz (1884), and Masha Bruskina (1924). After him are Nina Andrycz (1912), Gavriil Adrianovich Tikhov (1875), Boris Galerkin (1871), Leonid Shvartsman (1920), Maja Berezowska (1893), and Leonid Taranenko (1956).

Among POLITICIANS In Belarus

Among politicians born in Belarus, Mikhail Chigir ranks 47Before him are Sergei Sidorsky (1954), Roman Golovchenko (1973), Lev Dovator (1903), Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1714), Sergey Ling (1937), and Masha Bruskina (1924). After him are Vladimir Resin (1936), Gennady Novitsky (1949), Viktar Babaryka (1963), Andrei Sannikov (1954), Maria Kalesnikava (1982), and Vladimir Makei (1958).