Obsolete Russian units of measurement


A native system of weights and measures was used in Imperial Russia and after the Russian Revolution, but it was abandoned after July 21, 1925, when the Soviet Union adopted the metric system, per the order of the Council of People's Commissars.
The Tatar system is very similar to the Russian one, but some names are different. The Polish system is also very close to the Russian.
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 did Peter the Great replace it with the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.

Length

The basic unit is the Russian cubit, called the arshin, which has been in use since the 16th century. It was standardized by Peter the Great in the 18th century to measure exactly twenty-eight English inches. Thus, 80 vershoks = 20 piads = 5 arshins = 140 English inches.
A pyad or chetvert is a hand span, the distance between ends of the spread thumb and index finger.
Alternative units:
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 vastly differing values.

Dry measures

Liquid measures

UnitRussianTranslationRatioCubic
inches
Metric
value
ImperialU.S.
Customary
shkalikшка́ликmeasure61.5 ml2.16 fl oz2.08 fl oz
kosushkaкосу́шкаshot61.5 ml2.16 fl oz2.08 fl oz
charkaча́ркаwine glass123 ml4.33 fl oz4.16 fl oz
butylka буты́лка bottle 615 ml1.08 pints1.3 pints
butylka буты́лка bottle 768.7 ml1.35 pints1.625 pints
kruzhkaкру́жкаmug751.23 L2.16 pints1.3 quarts
shtofштофflagon751.23 L2.16 pints1.3 quarts
chetvertче́твертьquarter1.537 L2.70 pints1.624 quarts
vedroведро́bucket175012.29941 L2.71 gal3.249 gal
bochkaбо́чкаbarrel4030,000491.98 L108.22 gal129.967 gal

Weight/mass

Two systems of weight were in use, an ordinary one in common use, and an apothecaries' system.

Ordinary system

The pood was first mentioned in a number of documents of the twelfth century. It may still be encountered in documents dealing with agricultural production, and has been revived in determining weights when casting bells in belfries following the rebirth of the Orthodox Churches in the former Soviet lands. It is also popular in the modern fitness industry of the 21st century, as the pood is used when referencing the weight of a kettlebell, a Russian invention, especially in CrossFit.

Apothecaries' system

The Imperial Russian apothecaries' weight was defined by setting the grain to be exactly seven-fifths of a dolya. The only unit name shared between the two was the funt, but the one in the apothecaries' system is exactly seven-eighths of the ordinary funt.
UnitRussianTranslationRatioMetric valueAvoirdupois valueOrdinary value
granгранgrain162.210 mg0.96004 gr1.4 dolya
scrupulскрупулscruple201.2442 g19.201 gr28 dolya
drakhmaдрахмаdram603.7326 g57.602 gr zolotnik
untsiyaунцияounce48029.861 g1.0533 oz or 460.82 gr7 zolotnik
funtфунтpound5760358.328 g12.640 oz or 5529.8 gr84 zolotnik

Idiomatic expressions

The obsolete units of measurement survived in Russian culture in a number of idiomatic expressions and proverbs, for example: