The Faculty of Law at
Saint Petersburg State University is the oldest
law school and one of the biggest
research centers in Russia.
[1]
History
On 22 January 1724,
Peter the Great ordered the establishment of the
Russian Academy of Sciences and a
university where tutors would teach students in
theology,
jurisprudence, medicine and philosophy.
[2] For this purpose Peter invited teachers from
Germany. However, from the middle of 18th century the university had been suffering financial difficulties.
That was until 1819, when
Alexander I reinstated it. From the very beginning the Faculty of Philosophy and Law was leading: 13 of 24 first students studied there. The university perceived the
liberal ideas of 1860s and became a mainstay of
free thought, science and art. The Faculty of Law became the biggest at Saint Petersburg University by the end of 19th century (1335 of 2675 students studied there in 1894). The university's and faculty's advancement was stopped by the
Revolution of 1905,
World War I and the
Revolution of 1917. After the Revolution many professors left the country, some of them were
expelled.
The university did not have a law faculty from 1930 to 1944. It was re-established after the
Siege of Leningrad had been lifted in 1944. After the war the faculty restored its leading positions and now is considered one of the best law faculties in Russia.
[3]
During the 19th and 20th centuries such scholars as
Friedrich Martens,
Leon Petrazycki,
Nikolai Tagantsev,
Aleksandr Gradovsky,
Konstantin Kavelin,
Maksim Kovalevsky,
Anatoly Koni, and
Anatoly Sobchak lectured at the Faculty of Law.
Alexander Blok,
Nikolay Gumilev,
Leonid Andreyev,
Mikhail Zoshchenko,
Rainis,
Mikhail Vrubel,
Sergei Diaghilev,
Nicholas Roerich,
Igor Stravinsky,
Ilia Zdanevich, and
Sergei Yursky have attended the Faculty of Law.
[4] Also three
prime ministers of Russia,
Boris Shturmer,
Alexander Kerensky and
Dmitriy Medvedev (as well former
president), the leader of the
Bolsheviks
Vladimir Lenin and the current
president
Vladimir Putin (as well former prime minister) have graduated from the faculty.
[5] Among the graduates of the faculty, there are also
Prime Minister of Latvia
Peteris Jurasevskis, leader of the
Turkestan Autonomy
Mustafa Shokay,
Prime Minister of the
Belarusian Democratic Republic
Alaksandar Ćvikievič,
State Elders of Estonia
Ants Piip and
Jaan Teemant, and
Prime Minister of Estonia
Jüri Uluots.
Structure
Nowadays the Faculty of Law has twelve
departments,
[6] which include the Department of Administrative and Finacnial Law, Department of Civil Law, Department of Civil Procedure, Department of Commercial Law, Department of Constitutional Law, Department of International Law, Department of Notaryship, Department of Environmental Law, Department of Legal Theory and History, Department of Labor Law, Department of Criminal Law and Department of Criminal Procedure and Criminalistics.
Notable alumni
Law and Politics
-
Mikhail Petrashevsky (1841), revolutionary and Utopian theorist
-
Pavel Demidov (1860),
Head of Kiev (1871–1872, 1873–1874), Prince of
San Donato (1870–1885)
-
Boris Shturmer (1872),
Prime Minister of the Russian Empire (1916),
Minister of Foreign Affairs (1916),
Minister of Internal Affairs (1916),
Yaroslavl Governor (1896–1902),
Novgorod Governor (1894–1896)
-
Dmitry Sipyagin (1876),
Ministor of Internal Affairs of the Russian Empire (1899–1902),
Moscow Governor (1891–1893),
Courland Governor (1888–1891)
-
Sergey Manukhin (1879),
Minister of Justice and
Prosecutor general of the Russian Empire (1905)
-
Mikhail Sheftel (1882), member of the
First Duma (1906)
-
Naphtali Friedman (1887), member of the
Third and
Fourth Duma (1907–1917)
-
Pēteris Stučka (1888),
Chief Justice of the RSFSR (1923–1932), Chairman of the
Council of People's Commissars of the
Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic (1918–1920),
People's Commissar for Justice of the RSFSR (1917, 1918)
-
Alimardan bey Topchubashov (1888), Deputy
Speaker of National Assembly of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1918–1920),
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1918)
-
Pavel Alexandrov (1890), prominent
criminal investigator
-
Vladimir Lenin (1891),
Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the Soviet Union (1923–1924), Chairman of the
Council of People's Commissars of the Russian SFSR (1917–1924)
-
Vladimir Nabokov (1891), Minister for Justice of the
Crimean Regional Government (1918), Secretary of the
Russian Provisional Government (1917)
-
Anatol von Lieven (1895), leader of the
Brotherhood of Russian Truth (1921–1936)
-
Sirakan Tigranyan (1897),
Minister of Foreign Affairs of the
First Republic of Armenia (1918–1919), Member of the
Second Duma (1907)
-
Georgy Khrustalev-Nosar (1899), Chairman of the
Saint Petersburg Soviet (1905)
-
Varlam Gelovani (1900), Member of the
Fourth Duma
-
Jaan Teemant (1901),
State Elder of Estonia (1925–1927, 1932)
-
Pēteris Juraševskis (1904),
Prime Minister of Latvia (1928),
Minister of Justice (1918–1919)
-
Khachatur Karchikyan (1904),
Minister of Social Protection of the
First Republic of Armenia (1918)
-
Alexander Kerensky (1904), Minister-Chairman of the
Russian Provisional Government (1917), Minister of War and Navy (1917),
Minister of Justice (1917)
-
Vladimir Zhernakov (1906), Head of
Novonikolayevsk (1909–1914)
-
Aslan bey Safikurdski (1907),
Minister of Labor and Justice of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1919),
Prosecutor General (1919),
Minister of Postal Service and Telegraph (1918-1919)
-
Jaan Anvelt (1912), chairman of the Council of the
Commune of the Working People of Estonia (1918-1919), premier of the Soviet Executive Committee of
Estonia (1917-1918)
-
Alaksandar Ćvikievič (1912), Prime Minister of
Belarusian Democratic Republic (1923–1925),
Minister of Foreign Affairs (1919-1923)
-
Ya'akov Klivnov (1912), Member of the
Knesset (1949–1957)
-
Ivan Mikhailov (1913),
Minister of Finance of the
Provisional All-Russian Government (1918–1919)
-
Ants Piip (1913),
State Elder of Estonia (1920–1921),
Prime Minister of Estonia (1920)
-
Mustafa Shokay (1914), Minister-President of the
Turkestan Autonomy (1917–1918)
-
Sergey Kavtaradze (1915),
USSR Ambassador to Romania (1945–1952), Deputy
People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs (1943–1945), First Deputy
Procurator General of the Soviet Union (1924–1927), Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the
Georgian SSR (1922–1923)
-
Viktor Kingissepp (1916), leader of the
Estonian Communist Party
-
Jüri Uluots (1918),
Prime Minister of Estonia (1939–1940),
Prime Minister in the duties of the President (1940–1945)
-
Anatoly Volin (1930), Chief Jusctice of the
Supreme Court of the Soviet Union (1948–1957),
Prosecutor of the Russian SFSR (1939–1948)
-
Lev Smirnov (1936), Chief Jusctice of the
Supreme Court of the Soviet Union (1972–1984),
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Russian SFSR (1962–1972)
-
Vladimir Terebilov (1939), President of the
Supreme Court of the Soviet Union (1984–1989),
Minister of Justice (1970–1984)
-
Pavel Prokkonen (1957), Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the
Karelian ASSR (1956–1979), Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the
Karelo-Finnish SSR (1940–1947, 1950–1956)
-
Anatoly Sobchak (1959),
Mayor of Saint Petersburg (1991–1996)
-
Yuri Schmidt (1960), human rights activist and
advocate
-
Yury Petrov (1971), Member of the
State Duma (since 2011), Director of the
Federal Agency for State Property Management (2008–2011)
-
Viktor Cherkesov (1973), Director of the
Federal Drug Control Service of Russia (2003–2008)
-
Aleksey Aleksandrov (1974),
Senator from
Kaluga Oblast (2004–2020), Member of the
State Duma (1994–2003)
-
Alexander Bastrykin (1975), Head of the
Investigative Committee of Russia (since 2011), First Deputy
Prosecutor General of Russia (2007–2011)
-
Irina Podnosova (1975),
Chief Justice of Russia (since 2024)
-
Vladimir Putin (1975),
President of Russia (2000–2008, 2012–present),
Prime Minister of Russia (1999–2000, 2008–2012),
Director of the Federal Security Service (1998–1999)
-
Vladimir Pligin (1982), Member of the
State Duma (2003–2016)
-
Yury Volkov (1982),
Senator from
Kaluga Oblast (2015–2020), Member of the
State Duma (2003–2015),
Senator from
Nenets Autonomous Okrug (2002),
Senator from
Komi Republic (2001–2002)
-
Ada Marshania (1983), Member of the
Parliament of Georgia (since 2016), Deputy of Supreme Council of the
Government of Abkhazia in exile (since 2006)
-
Dmitry Kozak (1985), Deputy
Kremlin Chief of Staff (since 2020),
Vice Prime Minister (2008–2020),
Minister of Regional Development (2007–2008)
-
Mikhail Krotov (1985), judge of the
Supreme Court of Russia (since 2020), Presidential Plenipotentiary Representative in the
Constitutional Court (2005–2020)
-
Konstantin Chuychenko (1987),
Minister of Justice (since 2020),
Vice Prime Minister (2018–2020)
-
Anton Ivanov (1987), President of the
High Court of Arbitration (2005–2014)
-
Dmitry Medvedev (1987),
Prime Minister of Russia (2012–2020),
President of Russia (2008–2012),
First Deputy Prime Minister of Russia (2005–2008)
-
Artur Parfenchikov (1987),
Head of the Republic of Karelia (since 2017),
Chief Bailiff (2008–2017)
-
Nikolay Vinnichenko (1987), Deputy
Prosecutor General of Russia (since 2013),
Chief Bailiff (2004–2008)
-
Liudmyla Denisova (1989),
Ombudsman in Ukraine (2018–2022),
Minister of Social Policy of Ukraine (2007–2010, 2014),
People's Deputy of Ukraine (2006–2007, 2012–2014, 2014–2018)
-
Konstantin Aranovsky (1990), judge of the
Constitutional Court of Russia (2010–2022)
-
Aleksandr Konovalov (1992), Presidential Plenipotentiary Representative in the
Constitutional Court (since 2020),
Minister of Justice (2008–2020)
-
Herman Gref (1993), CEO of
Sberbank (since 2007),
Minister of Economic Development and Trade (2000–2007)
-
Sergey Popov (1993), Member of the
State Duma (1995–2007)
-
Yury Gladkov (1994), Deputy Chairman of the
Legislative Assembly of Saint Petersburg (2003–2007)
-
Igor Artemyev (1998), President of the
Saint-Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange (since 2023), Director of the
Federal Antimonopoly Service (2004–2020)
-
Sergey Mironov (1998), Member of the
State Duma (since 2007),
Chairman of the Federation Council (2001–2011)
-
Boris Kovalchuk (1999), Chairman of the
Accounts Chamber of Russia (since 2024), CEO of
Inter RAO (since 2010)
-
Vitaly Mutko (1999),
Vice Prime Minister (2016–2020),
Minister of Sport (2008–2016),
Senator from
Saint Petersburg (2003–2008)
-
Anatoliy Serdyukov (2001),
Minister of Defence (2007–2012), Commissioner of the
Federal Taxation Service (2004–2007)
-
Gleb Nikitin (2004),
Governor of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast (since 2017)
-
Grigory Ledkov (2006),
Senator from
Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug (since 2020), Member of the
State Duma (2011–2020), President of the
Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples of the North (since 2013)
Business
Academia
-
Włodzimierz Spasowicz (1849), scholar of criminal law and defense attorney
-
Nikolai Tagantsev (1862), criminologist and criminalist
-
Friedrich Martens (1867), scholar of international law
-
Mikhail Taube (1891), scholar of international law and legal history
-
Lev Sternberg (1902), ethnographer
-
Ruben Orbeli (1903), archeologist
-
Eugene M. Kulischer (1906), sociologist
-
Naum Idelson (1909), theoretical astronomer
-
Isaak Rubin (1910), economist
-
Evgenii Bertels (1914), Orientalist, Iranologist and Turkologist
-
Nikolai Kondratiev (1915), economist
-
Vladimir Nazhimov (1951), scholar of criminal procedure
-
Anatoly Shesteryuk (1975), scholar of environmental law
-
Alexander Vershinin (1983), scholar of civil procedure
-
Nikita Lomagin (1997), historian
Arts
-
Pyotr Yershov (1834), poet
-
Apollon Maykov (1841), poet
-
Valerian Maykov (1842), literary critic
-
Grigory Danilevsky (1850), novelist
-
Pavlo Chubynskyi (1861), poet
-
Vsevolod Krestovsky (1861), writer and poet
-
Liodor Palmin (1862), poet and translator
-
Sergey Terpigorev (1862), writer
-
Vasily Polenov (1871), landscape painter
-
Nikolai Minsky (1879), writer and poet
-
Mikhail Vrubel (1880), painter and sculptor
-
Alexander Kugel (1886), theatre critic
-
Vladimir Posse (1888), journalist
-
Rainis (1888), poet and playwright
-
Saul M. Ginsburg (1891), writer and editor
-
Igor Grabar (1893), painter, restorer and publisher
-
Alexander Yablonovsky (1893), writer and journalist
-
Alexandre Benois (1894), art critic and painter
-
Sergei Diaghilev (1896), art critic, patron and ballet impresario
-
Nicholas Roerich (1898), painter, writer, archaeologist, theosophist and philosopher
-
Ivan Bilibin (1900), illustrator and stage designer
-
Dmitry Kuzmin-Karavayev (1909), Catholic priest
-
Yuri Shaporin (1913), composer
-
Alexander Tairov (1913), theatre director
-
Pavel Medvedev (1914), literary critic
-
Anoushavan Ter-Ghevondyan (1915), composer
-
Mikhail Zenkevich (1915), poet, writer and translator
-
Ilia Zdanevich (1917), poet, writer and art critic
-
Georgi Vladimov (1953), writer
-
German Sadulaev (1994), writer
See also
References
External links
59°56′03″N 30°15′44″E / 59.93417°N 30.26222°E / 59.93417; 30.26222