Volga-Kama Commercial Bank

The Volga-Kama Commercial Bank (sometimes Volzhsko-Kamsky Commercial Bank, ), often referred to simply as the Volga-Kama Bank, was a major commercial bank of the Russian Empire. Founded in 1870, it was Russia's largest private-sector bank by total assets at the start of the 20th century.[1] In late 1917 following the Russian Revolution, like all other commercial banks in Russia, it was absorbed into the State Bank with no compensation to its shareholders.[2] Its name refers to the rivers Volga and Kama.

Overview

The bank's charter was approved by Alexander II on 1870/02/24, establishing as a joint-stock company with an initial authorized capital of 6 million rubles. The founders were a group of manufacturers and merchants led by Vasily Kokorev, who became its chairman in 1878.

From 1879 to 1917, the bank was near-continuously led by Alexander F. Mukhin, successively as director, member of the board, and eventually chairman, with only a six-year gap in 1906–1912. From 1907 to 1911 the managing director of the bank was Pyotr Bark, who later became Russian Minister of Finance.

By 1899, the Volga-Kama Bank had branches in Astrakhan, Baku, Kazan, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, Orenburg, Perm, Rostov-on-Don, Rybinsk, Samara, Saratov, Simbirsk (later Ulyanovsk), Suzdal, Tashkent, Tsaritsin (later Volgograd), Ufa, Vyatka (later Kirov), and Yekaterinburg. By 1914, it had a network of 60 branches in the Empire, the majority in the Volga Region and the Urals. By then, its place among Russian commercial banks had declined to sixth rank.[3]

See also

References

  1. Nikita Lychakov. Government-made bank distress: Industrialisation policies and the Russian financial crisis of 1899-1902 Queen's University Centre for Economic History, 2018^
  2. George Garvy. Money, Financial Flows, and Credit in the Soviet Union National Bureau of Economic Research, 1977^
  3. Volzhsko-Kamsky Commercial Bank Saint Petersburg Encyclopedia^
  4. Київ. Вечірній Хрещатик - Kyiv. Evening Khreshchatyk Hive Blog, 2020^
  5. Kharkiv. Constitution Square Travel Ukraine & World, 2022/03/15^