Nikolai Kutler
Nikolai Nikolayevich Kutler (Russian: Николай Николаевич Кутлер; 23 July 1859 – 10 May 1924) was a Russian politician.
Biography
[edit]Assistant minister of the Interior, 1904–1905. Assistant minister of Finance, manager of Nobles Land Bank and Peasant Land Bank, 1905. Minister of Agriculture, 1905. Kutler resigned from his position when he was criticized for his project of compulsory alienation of private estates in February 1906 and joined Constitutional Democratic Party. He was elected member of 2nd and 3rd State Dumas and became one of its leading authorities on the agrarian question, replacing Mikhail Herzenstein, who was murdered by Black Hundreds.[1]
After the Bolshevik revolution Kutler worked at the People's Commissariat of Finance and was State Bank of the USSR board member.
References
[edit]- ^ Lazar Volin (1970) A century of Russian agriculture. From Alexander II to Khrushchev, p. 101. Harvard University Press
- Out of My Past: The Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov Edited by H.H. Fisher and translated by Laura Matveev; Stanford University Press, 1935.
- 1859 births
- 1924 deaths
- People from Tula, Russia
- People from Tula Governorate
- Russian Constitutional Democratic Party members
- Government ministers of Russia
- Members of the State Council (Russian Empire)
- Members of the 2nd State Duma of the Russian Empire
- Members of the 3rd State Duma of the Russian Empire
- Russian Constituent Assembly members