List of highest points of Russian federal subjects
This is a list of the highest points of the Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation.
List
Above 1000 m
| Highest point | Russian name | Elevation | Federal subject | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elbrus | Эльбрус | 5,642 metres (18,510 ft) | Lateral Range, Eastern Caucasus | |
| Kazbek | Казбек | 5,033 metres (16,512 ft) | Lateral Range, Eastern Caucasus | |
| Klyuchevskaya Sopka | Ключевская Сопка | 4,754 metres (15,597 ft) | Eastern Range (Kamchatka) | |
| Belukha | Белуха | 4,506 metres (14,783 ft) | Altai Mountains | |
| Tebulosmta | Тебулосмта | 4,493 metres (14,741 ft) | Lateral Range, Eastern Caucasus | |
| Bazardüzü | Базардюзю | 4,466 metres (14,652 ft) | Main Caucasian Range, Greater Caucasus | |
| Shani | Шан | 4,451 metres (14,603 ft) | Main Caucasian Range, Greater Caucasus | |
| Mongun-Taiga | Монгун-Тайга | 3,970 metres (13,020 ft) | Altai Mountains | |
| Mönkh Saridag | Мунку-Сардык | 3,491 metres (11,453 ft) | Eastern Sayan, Sayan Mountains | |
| Tsakhvoa | Цахвоа | 3,345 metres (10,974 ft) | Western Caucasus | |
| Chugush | Чугуш | 3,237 metres (10,620 ft) | Western Caucasus | |
| BAM Peak | Пик БАМ | 3,072 metres (10,079 ft) | Kodar Range, Stanovoy Highlands | |
| Peak Pobeda | Пик Победа | 3,003 metres (9,852 ft) | Buordakh Massif, Ulakhan-Chistay, Chersky Range | |
| Kyzlasov Peak | Пик Кызласова | 2,969 metres (9,741 ft)[1] | Western Sayan, Sayan Mountains | |
| Pik Martena | Пик Мартена | 2,988 metres (9,803 ft) | Kodar Range, Stanovoy Highlands[2][3][4] | |
| Berill | Берилл | 2,934 metres (9,626 ft) | Suntar-Khayata Range | |
| Grandiozny Peak | Пик Грандиозный | 2,891 metres (9,485 ft) | Kryzhin Range, Eastern Sayan, Sayan Mountains | |
| Mayak Shangina | Маяк Шангина | 2,490 metres (8,170 ft) | Korgon Range, Sayan Mountains | |
| Alaid | Алаид | 2,339 metres (7,674 ft) | Atlasov Island, Kurils | |
| Unnamed | — | 2,337 metres (7,667 ft) | Okhandya Range, Chersky Range[5] | |
| Gorod-Makit | Город-Макит | 2,298 metres (7,539 ft) | Yam-Alin | |
| Verkhny Zub | Верхний Зуб | 2,178 metres (7,146 ft) | Kuznetsk Alatau | |
| Anik | Аник | 1,932 metres (6,339 ft) | Sikhote-Alin | |
| Mount Narodnaya | Народная | 1,894 metres (6,214 ft) | Urals | |
| Iskhodnaya | Исходная | 1,887 metres (6,191 ft) | Chantal Range, Chukotka Mountains | |
| Mount Karpinsky | Гора Карпинского | 1,878 metres (6,161 ft) | Issledovatelsky Range, Subpolar Urals | |
| Yamantau | Ямантау | 1,640 metres (5,380 ft) | Southern Urals | |
| Unnamed | — | 1,603 metres (5,259 ft) | Kabardian Range (south of Kislovodsk)[6][7] | |
| Konzhakovskiy Kamen | Конжаковский Камень | 1,569 metres (5,148 ft) | Konzhakov-Serebryan Massif, Northern Urals | |
| Mount Kruzenshtern | Гора Крузенштерна | 1,547 metres (5,075 ft) | Northern Island, Novaya Zemlya | |
| Roman-Kosh | Роман-Кош | 1,545 metres (5,069 ft) | Crimean Mountains | |
| Payer | Пайер | 1,472 metres (4,829 ft) | Polar Urals | |
| Tulymsky Kamen | Тулымский Камень | 1,469 metres (4,820 ft) | Northern Urals | |
| Mount Studencheskaya | Гора Студенческая | 1,421 metres (4,662 ft) | Bureya Range | |
| Nurgush | Нургуш | 1,406 metres (4,613 ft) | Southern Urals | |
| Yudychvumchorr | Юдычвумчорр | 1,201 metres (3,940 ft) | Khibiny Mountains | |
| Chuvash-Koi | Чуваш-Кой | 1,051 metres (3,448 ft) | Tarpan-Bair Mountains |
Below 1000 m
| Highest point | Russian name | Elevation | Federal subject | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nakas | Накас | 667 metres (2,188 ft) | Southern Urals | |
| Nuorunen | Нуорунен | 576 metres (1,890 ft) | Maanselkä | |
| Pikhtovyy Greben' | Пихтовый гребень | 502 metres (1,647 ft) | Salair Ridge | |
| Morye-Iz | Море-Из | 423 metres (1,388 ft) | Pai-Khoi Range | |
| Nablyudatel | Наблюдатель | 381 metres (1,250 ft) | Zhiguli Mountains, Volga Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 369 metres (1,211 ft) | Khvalynsk Mountains | |
| Unnamed | — | 363 metres (1,191 ft) | Volga Upland | |
| Mount Serpokrylovskaya | гора Серпокрыловская | 358 metres (1,175 ft) | Don-Medveditsa Ridge, Volga Upland | |
| Makushka Valdaya | Макушка Валдая | 346 metres (1,135 ft) | Valdai Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 342 metres (1,122 ft) | Khvalynsk Mountains | |
| Lipnitskaya | Липницкая | 339 metres (1,112 ft) | Bezhanitsy Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 338 metres (1,109 ft) | Volga Upland[8] | |
| Krasnoyar | Краснояр | 337 metres (1,106 ft) | Upper Kama Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 332 metres (1,089 ft) | Upper Kama Upland | |
| Chatyr-Tau | Чатыр-тау | 321 metres (1,053 ft) | Bugulma-Belebey Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 319 metres (1,047 ft) | Smolensk-Moscow Upland | |
| Zamri-Gora | Замри-гора | 310 metres (1,020 ft) | Moscow Upland, Smolensk-Moscow Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 306 metres (1,004 ft) | Salsk-Manych Ridge | |
| Malgora | Мальгора | 304 metres (997 ft) | Vepsian Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 299 metres (981 ft) | Valdai Upland | |
| Sondoba | Холм Сондоба | 293.3 metres (962 ft) | Galich-Chukhloma Upland[9] | |
| Unnamed | — | 293.2 metres (962 ft) | Near Raevo village, Central Russian Upland | |
| Gapselga | Гапсельга | 291 metres (955 ft) | Vepsian Upland | |
| Tarkhov Hill | Тархов холм | 292 metres (958 ft) | Borisoglebsk Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 288 metres (945 ft) | On the right bank of the Desna, Smolensk Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 286 metres (938 ft) | Inconspicuous elevation near Yablonovka village[10] | |
| Unnamed | — | 285.9 metres (938 ft) | Near Dementievka village, Central Russian Upland | |
| Chuksha | Чукша | 278.8 metres (915 ft) | Vyatsky Uval | |
| Unnamed | — | 276.8 metres (908 ft) | Inconspicuous elevation in Prokhorovsky District, Central Russian Upland | |
| Zaitseva Gora | Зайцева Гора | 275 metres (902 ft) | Central Russian Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 274.5 metres (901 ft) | Near Olkhovatka village, Central Russian Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 274.2 metres (900 ft) | Slight elevation in the West Siberian Plain | |
| Unnamed | — | 271.4 metres (890 ft) | Klinsk-Dmitrov Ridge, Moscow Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 268 metres (879 ft) | Elevation at the Kursk Oblast border, Central Russian Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 260.6 metres (855 ft) | Smolensk-Moscow Upland | |
| Teplostan Upland | Теплостанская возвышенность | 254.6 metres (835 ft) | On the right bank of the Moskva | |
| Unnamed | — | 252 metres (827 ft) | On the right bank of the Volga, Volga Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 242.1 metres (794 ft) | Vishtynetsk Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 236 metres (774 ft) | Central Russian Upland | |
| Shared | Шаред | 222 metres (728 ft) | Cholun-Khamur Ridge, Yergeni | |
| Unnamed | — | 219.4 metres (720 ft) | High point of an undulation, Oka–Don Lowland | |
| Unnamed | — | 212.7 metres (698 ft) | Near the border with Vladimir Oblast, Moscow Upland | |
| Unnamed | — | 210.6 metres (691 ft) | Slight elevation in the interfluve of the Uy and Miass rivers | |
| Mount Orekhovaya | Ореховая гора | 175.9 metres (577 ft) | Duderhof Heights | |
| Unnamed | — | 152.6 metres (501 ft) | Hill in the southern part of the oblast —excluding autonomous regions | |
| Unnamed | — | 150.4 metres (493 ft) | Near Nagornoye village | |
| Bolshoye Bogdo | Большое Богдо | 149 metres (489 ft) | Long hill rising above Lake Baskunchak |
See also
- List of mountains and hills of Russia
- List of European ultra-prominent peaks
- List of Ultras of Central Asia
- List of ultras of Northeast Asia
Notes
- ^ A newly-named peak. Formerly the HP of Khakassia was deemed to be 2931.8 m high Mount Karagosh
- ^ У самой высокой горы Иркутской области появилось название - пик Мартена
- ^ Other sources claim Pik Tofalariya in the Eastern Sayan as the highest point, but this isn't backed up by topographic maps.
- ^ Pik Tofalariya - Peak Visor
- ^ БЕЗЫМЯННАЯ ВЕРШИНА НА ХРЕБТЕ ОХАНДЯ СТАЛА САМОЙ ВЫСОКОЙ ТОЧКОЙ МАГАДАНСКОЙ ОБЛАСТИ
- ^ "Обозначена высшая точка Ставропольского края". Archived from the original on 2021-12-22. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
- ^ Город-курорт Кисловодск (Кабардинский хребет)
- ^ Located near Kirzhemany village; some sources give a height of 324 metres (1,063 ft)
- ^ The HP of Kostrom Oblast is only 0.1 metres (0.33 ft) higher than the HP of Tula oblast.
- ^ Article in the Chuvash newspaper Vedomosti (2004)