Ivan Kazanets

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Cyrillic ( Ukrainian )
Іван Павлович Казанець
Transl. : Ivan Pavlovyč Kazanec '
Transcr. : Ivan Pavlovych Kazanets
Cyrillic ( Russian )
Иван Павлович Казанец
Transl .: Ivan Pavlovič Kazanec
Transcr .: Ivan Pavlovich Kazanets

Ivan Pawlowytsch Kazanez (born October 12, 1918 in Lozmanska Kamjanka , today in Dnipro , † February 15, 2013 in Moscow ) was a Ukrainian - Soviet politician and from 1963 to 1965 Chairman of the Council of Ministers (head of government ) of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic .

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Kazanez was born as a farmer's son in the village of Lozmanska Kamjanka, today a district of Stadtrajon Sobor in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro. He studied from 1934 to 1937 at the Mining Institute in Dnipropetrovsk and from 1937 to 1944, in addition to his work at the Kuznetsk Metallurgical Combine, at the evening school of the Siberian Metallurgical Institute in Novokuznetsk . In 1944 Kazanez joined the CPSU and began a career as a party official.

After Stalin's death , on September 19, 1953, he became the first secretary of the Stalino Oblast Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine . He held this post until March 1, 1960. On June 28, 1965 he became, in succession to Vladimir Shcherbitsky , Chairman of the Council of Ministers (Prime Minister) of the Ukrainian SSR and held this office until October 15, 1965, whereupon Vladimir Shcherbitsky again took over this office until 1972. On October 2, 1965, Kazanets took over the post of Minister of Metallurgy of the USSR until 1985 . From July 17 to 25, 1967, he visited the GDR in this capacity . He retired from this ministerial post in July 1985. He died in Moscow in 2013 and was buried in the Trojekurovo cemetery .

Honors

Kazanets was awarded the Order of Lenin in 1957, 1958, 1966, 1968 and 1971, and the Order of the October Revolution in 1978 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Minister Kazanez in the stainless steel center in Neues Deutschland on July 23, 1967, accessed on March 26, 2015
  2. ^ Foreign delegations in the GDR; USSR Vol. 2 DC 20/23661 , Federal Archives , accessed on March 26, 2015
  3. a b biography in the Handbook of the History of the Communist Party and the Soviet Union 1898–1991 , accessed on February 5, 2015
  4. Kazanets on the official website of the Ukrainian government , accessed on February 5, 2015
  5. "Governor" of the 1950s on donjetsk.com; Retrieved February 5, 2015