Obsolete Russian weights and measures 

A native system of weights and measures was used in Imperial Russia and after the Russian Revolution, but it was abandoned in 1924 when the Soviet Union adopted the metric system.

The Tatar system is very similar to the Russian one, but some names are different.

The system existed since ancient Rus', but under Peter the Great, the Russian units were redefined relative to the English system. Until Peter the Great the system also used Cyrillic numerals, and only in the 18th century Peter the Great replaced it with the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.

Contents

Length

The basic unit is the Russian cubit, called arshin, measuring exactly twenty-eight English inches, as standardised by Peter the Great. Thus, 80 vershoks = 20 piads = 5 arshins = 140 English inches.

A piad or chetvert (че́тверть, “quarter”) is a hand span, the distance between ends of the spread thumb and index finger.

Unit Cyrillic Ratio Metric
Value
English units
tochka точка 1/2800 0.254 mm 1/100 inch
liniya линия 1/280 2.54 mm 1/10 inch; cf. line
diuym дюйм 1/28 2.54 cm 1 inch
vershok вершо́к 1/16 4.445 cm 1 ¾ in, 1 rack unit
piad пядь 1/4 17.78 cm 7 in; cf. span
fut фут 3/7 30.48 cm 1 ft
arshin арши́н 1 71.12 cm 2 ⅓ ft
sazhen са́жень 3 2.1336 m 7 ft
versta верста́ 1500 1.0668 km 3,500 ft
milia миля 10,500 7.4676 km 24,500 ft

Alternative units:

The vershok is coincidently equivalent to the modern day "rack unit" used in describing the height of standardized rack-mounted devices such as those used in the broadcasting, computing, entertainment and telecommunications industries.

Area

Volume

As in many ancient systems of measurement the Russian distinguishes between dry and liquid measurements of capacity. Note that the chetvert appears in both lists with differing values.

Dry measures

Liquid measures

Note: The liquid measures were such because of Vodka monopoly in Imperial Russia.

Weight

The pood was used in Russia, Finland, Belarus and Ukraine. Pood was first mentioned in a number of documents of the twelfth century. It may still be encountered in documents dealing with agricultural production (especially with reference to cereals), and has been revived in determining weights when casting bells in belfries following the rebirth of the Orthodox Churches in the former Soviet lands.

External links