Oleksander Lototsky
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Oleksander Lototsky Олекса́ндр Гна́тович Лото́цький | |
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Chancellor | |
In office August 13, 1917 – November 20, 1917 | |
Prime Minister | Volodymyr Vynnychenko |
Preceded by | Pavlo Khrystiuk |
Succeeded by | Ivan Mirnyi (acting) |
State Controller | |
In office February 8, 1918 – April 29, 1918 | |
Prime Minister | Vsevolod Holubovych |
Preceded by | Aleksandr Zolotaryov |
Succeeded by | Georgiy Afanasiev |
Minister of Confessions | |
In office October 25, 1918 – November 14, 1918 | |
Prime Minister | Fedir Lyzohub |
Preceded by | Vasyl Zenkovsky |
Succeeded by | Mykhailo Voronovych |
Ambassador of Ukraine to Turkey | |
In office 1919–1920 | |
President | Symon Petlyura |
Preceded by | Mykhailo Sukovkin |
Succeeded by | Ivan-Stepan Tokarzhevsky |
Minister of Internal Affairs | |
In office 1927–1930 | |
Prime Minister | Vyacheslav Prokopovych |
Personal details | |
Born | village of Bronnytsia, Podolie Governorate | March 21, 1870
Died | October 22, 1939 | (aged 69)
Political party | UPSF |
Alma mater | Kiev Theological Academy |
Occupation | diplomat, statesman, public activist |
Oleksander Lototsky was a Ukrainian statesman, diplomat, writer, and scientist. He was a member of the Ukrainian Progressionists Association.
Lototsky graduated from the Kiev Theological Academy in 1896. In 1900-17 he worked in the office of state controller in Kiev and Saint Petersburg. During the World War I Lototsky served as a gubernatorial commissar of Bukovina and Pokuttia. In 1917 he also one of organizers of the Ukrainian National Council in Saint Petersburg.
Lototsky had a daughter Oksana who married Ivan-Stepan Tokarzhevsky.
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Categories:
- 1870 births
- 1939 deaths
- People from Mohyliv-Podilskyi Raion
- Ukrainian Democratic Party (1904) politicians
- Ukrainian writers
- Ukrainian diplomats
- Kiev Theological Academy alumni
- Ambassadors of Ukraine to Turkey
- People who emigrated to escape Bolshevism
- Interior ministers of Ukraine
- Members of the Central Council of Ukraine
- Members of the Ukrainian government in exile
- State controllers of Ukraine
- Imperial Russian emigrants to Poland