POLITICIAN

Vladimir Resin

1936 - Today

Photo of Vladimir Resin

Icon of person Vladimir Resin

Vladimir Iosifovich Resin (Russian: Влади́мир Ио́сифович Ре́син; born 21 February 1936) is a Russian politician who was the acting Mayor of Moscow, appointed by Russian president Dmitry Medvedev to succeed Yury Luzhkov on 28 September 2010. Resin previously served as the first deputy mayor under Luzhkov. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Vladimir Resin is the 16,125th most popular politician (down from 15,497th in 2019), the 169th most popular biography from Belarus (down from 165th in 2019) and the 48th most popular Belarusian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Vladimir Resin by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Vladimir Resin ranks 16,125 out of 19,576Before him are Al-Musta'in I, Margrete Auken, Harmodio Arias Madrid, Otto Liebe, Christine Kangaloo, and Helmut Zilk. After him are Ezekiel Alebua, William J. Casey, Charles Hardinge, 1st Baron Hardinge of Penshurst, Carlos Eugenio Restrepo, Henrique Capriles, and Võ Thị Ánh Xuân.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1936, Vladimir Resin ranks 471Before him are David Jenkins, Yury Osipov, Juan Seminario, Leon O. Chua, Enric Gensana, and Kjell Grede. After him are Dick Barnett, Ihor Turchyn, Claudio Barrientos, Robert A. Parker, Hannu Salama, and Carl Kaufmann.

Others Born in 1936

Go to all Rankings

In Belarus

Among people born in Belarus, Vladimir Resin ranks 169 out of 368Before him are Boris Galerkin (1871), Leonid Shvartsman (1920), Maja Berezowska (1893), Leonid Taranenko (1956), Sergey Gritsevets (1909), and Walter Anderson (1885). After him are Lidia Wysocka (1916), Iosif Kheifits (1905), Ivan Edeshko (1945), Vladimir Samsonov (1976), Anna Missuna (1868), and Aleksandr Dedyushko (1962).

Among POLITICIANS In Belarus

Among politicians born in Belarus, Vladimir Resin ranks 48Before him are Roman Golovchenko (1973), Lev Dovator (1903), Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1714), Sergey Ling (1937), Masha Bruskina (1924), and Mikhail Chigir (1948). After him are Gennady Novitsky (1949), Viktar Babaryka (1963), Andrei Sannikov (1954), Maria Kalesnikava (1982), Vladimir Makei (1958), and Mikola Statkevich (1956).