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  1. Local phone numbers in Russia may be made up of five (x-xx-xx), six (xx-xx-xx), or seven (xxx-xx-xx) digits. Moscow City has three area codes assigned: 495 , 498 and 499 : when calling from any zone to 499: 8 499 xxx-xx-xx

  2. Telephone numbers in Russia - WikiMili, The Best Wikipedia Reader. Last updated March 22, 2024 • 4 min read From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Telephone numbers in Russia are administered by Roskomnadzor, and Ministry of Digital Development, Communications and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation. [1] .

  3. The Soviet Union used a four-level open numbering plan. The long-distance prefix was 8 . One could call a local number without the code. Local numbers usually consisted of 5-7 digits, with seven-digit numbers only occurring in Moscow (since 1968), Leningrad (since 1976) and Kiev (since 1981).

    • 8~10
    • Open
  4. The first telephone call in Russia was performed in 1879 – just three years after Alexander Graham Bell patented his invention. And the first telephone companies appeared in the country in...

    • Telephone numbers in Russia wikipedia1
    • Telephone numbers in Russia wikipedia2
    • Telephone numbers in Russia wikipedia3
    • Telephone numbers in Russia wikipedia4
    • Telephone numbers in Russia wikipedia5
  5. Demand for intercity communications prompted authorities to open up the state monopoly. Aware of the telephone’s importance for the country’s industrialization, authorities ceded the construction and management of new lines to private entrepreneurs and zemstvos (self-government assemblies).

  6. Telephone numbers in Russia are under a unified numbering plan with Kazakhstan, both of which share the international code +7. Historically, +7 was used as the country calling code for all of the Soviet Union. Following the Soviet break-up, all of its former republics, save for Russia and Kazakhstan, switched to new country