No.
Ivan IV
The monarch was the Tsar. Sometimes spelled Czar.
Catherine the Great was an Enlightened monarch, and attempted to make Russia a Western European nation.
The first great Russian monarch is considered by many to be Ivan the Great. Ivan III of Russia ruled from 1462 - 1505.
Peter the Great was certainly an absolute monarch and began the westernization of Russia
Russia did not have a president in 1869. Up until 1917 Russia was known as the Russian Empire, ruled by a monarch; the tsar. In 1869 Russia was ruled by Tsar Aleksandr II (reign 1855-1881).
Czar Nicholas ll
Unlike most revolutions, one monarch willingly ceded power to another monarch
The monarch butterfly is native throughout the world but typically does not fly in cold places (i.e. north canada, scandinavia, north russia, antarctica, etc...).
The brass cased ammunition is made in Serbia and the steel cased is made in Russia
Russia is ruled by a government with a prime minister at the top of it . It has a President as well. So Russia is a republic. (Previously, until 1917, it was a monarchy - the monarch was called a tsar .)
Peter the Great was the absolute monarch of Russia who founded St. Petersburg in 1703. He envisioned the city as a "window to the West" and a symbol of Russian modernization and wealth. St. Petersburg served as the capital of Russia for over 200 years and was designed to reflect the grandeur and aspirations of the Russian Empire. Peter's efforts significantly transformed Russia into a major European power.