USSR Women's Chess Championship
The Women's Soviet Chess Championship was played in the Soviet Union from 1927 through 1991 to determine the women's chess national champion.
The championship was not played on a regular basis in the years 1927–1937 and there was a break during World War II. From 1950 onward it was played regularly all years.
List of winners
- # - Year - Place - Winner[1][2] - Score - 1 - 1927 - Moscow - Olga Rubtsova 8½ / 10- 2 - 1931 - Moscow - Olga Rubtsova 7½ / 9- 3 - 1934 - Leningrad - Olga Semenova Tyan-Shanskaya 7 / 9- 4 - 1936 - Leningrad - Olga Semenova Tyan-Shanskaya 9½ / 11- 5 - 1937 - Rostov-on-Don - Olga Rubtsova 12½ / 15- 6 - 1945 - Moscow - Valentina Borisenko 7½ / 9- 7 - 1946 - Moscow - Elisaveta Bykova 14 / 16- 8 - 1947 - Moscow - Elisaveta Bykova 12 / 15- 9 - 1948 - Moscow - Olga Rubtsova 13 / 17- 10 - 1950 - Riga - Elisaveta Bykova 12½ / 15- 11 - 1951 - Kiev - Kira Zvorykina 11½ / 17- 12 - 1952 - Tbilisi - Lyudmila Rudenko 13 / 17- 13 - 1953 - Rostov-on-Don - Kira Zvorykina 13 / 17- 14 - 1954 - Krasnodar - Larissa Volpert 14 / 19- 15 - 1955 - Sukhumi - Valentina Borisenko 13½ / 19- 16 - 1956 - Dnepropetrovsk - Kira Zvorykina 13½ / 17- 17 - 1957 - Vilnius - Valentina Borisenko[3] 12 / 17- 18 - 1958 - Kharkov - Larissa Volpert[4] 14 / 21- 19 - 1959 - Lipetsk - Larissa Volpert 12 / 18- 20 - 1960 - Riga - Valentina Borisenko[5] 13 / 18- 21 - 1961 - Baku - Valentina Borisenko 13½ / 19- 22 - 1962 - Riga - Tatiana Zatulovskaya 13 / 19- 23 - 1963 - Baku - Maaja Ranniku[6] 14 / 19- 24 - 1964 - Tbilisi - Nona Gaprindashvili 15 / 19- 25 - 1965 - Beltsy - Valentina Kozlovskaya 13½ / 19- 26 - 1966 - Kiev - Nana Alexandria 14 / 19- 27 - 1967 - Sochi - Maaja Ranniku 11 / 13- 28 - 1968 - Ashkhabad - Nana Alexandria[7] 13½ / 19- 29 - 1969 - Gori - Nana Alexandria 15 / 19- 30 - 1970 - Beltsy - Alla Kushnir 14 / 19- 31 - 1971 - Sochi - Irina Levitina 14 / 19- 32 - 1972 - Tolyatti - Marta Litinskaya 12 / 19- 33 - 1973 - Tbilisi - Nona Gaprindashvili 14 / 19- 34 - 1974 - Tbilisi - Elena Fatalibekova 14 / 18- 35 - 1975 - Frunze - Liudmila Belavenets 10 / 16- 36 - 1976 - Tbilisi - Anna Akhsharumova 12½ / 17- 37 - 1977 - Lvov - Maia Chiburdanidze 13 / 17- 38 - 1978 - Nikolayevsk - Lidia Semenova 12½ / 17- 39 - 1979 - Tbilisi - Irina Levitina 12½ / 17- 40 - 1980 - Alma-Ata - Irina Levitina 12 / 15- 41 - 1981 - Ivano-Frankivsk - Nona Gaprindashvili 
 Nana Ioseliani[8]12 / 17- 42 - 1982 - Tallinn - Nana Ioseliani 12 / 17- 43 - 1983 - Vilnius - Nona Gaprindashvili 12½ / 17- 44 - 1984 - Kiev - Svetlana Matveeva 
 Anna Akhsharumova[9]9½ / 15- 45 - 1985 - Yerevan - Nona Gaprindashvili 12½ / 17- 46 - 1986 - Frunze - Nana Ioseliani 11½ / 16- 47 - 1987 - Tbilisi - Nana Ioseliani 14½ / 19- 48 - 1988 - Alma-Ata - Julia Demina 12 / 17- 49 - 1989 - Volzhsky - Irina Chelushkina 12½ / 17- 50 - 1990 - Podolsk - Ketevan Arakhamia-Grant 13 / 16- 51 - 1991 - Lvov - Svetlana Matveeva 13½ / 17
Winners of more titles
- 5 titles : Valentina Borisenko, Nona Gaprindashvili
- 4 titles : Olga Rubtsova, Nana Ioseliani
- 3 titles : Nana Alexandria, Elisaveta Bykova, Irina Levitina, Larissa Volpert, Kira Zvorykina
- 2 titles : Anna Akhsharumova, Svetlana Matveeva, Maaja Ranniku, Olga Semenova Tyan-Shanskaya
Notes
- ^ Anatoly Karpov, ed. (1990). Шахматы. Энциклопедический Словарь [Chess. Encyclopedic Dictionary] (in Russian). Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya. pp. 458–459, 613–614. ISBN 5-85270-005-3.
- ^ Bartelski, Wojciech. "Women's Soviet Chess Championship summary". OlimpBase. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
- ^ Valentina Borisenko won the title after a tiebreak match with Kira Zvorykina (2½ – ½ )
- ^ Larissa Volpert won the title after a tiebreak match with Kira Zvorykina (2½ – 1½ )
- ^ Valentina Borisenko won the title after a tiebreak match with Tatiana Zatulovskaya (4½ – 3½ )
- ^ Maia Ranniku won the title after a tiebreak match with Tatiana Zatulovskaya (4–2)
- ^ Nana Alexandria won the title after a tiebreak match with Alla Chaikovskaya (3½ – ½)
- ^ The tiebreak match was not played.
- ^ The tiebreak match was not played.