announced singer Victoria Tsyganova, dressed in a red coat and red kerchief.
The instantly recognisable strains of “The Holy War”, a famous WWII-era song, emanated from loudspeakers.
A worker from UralVagonZavod, a maker of battle tanks in the Urals -- which publicly supported Putin during the height of winter protests in 2011-2012 -- accused the opposition of betraying Russia reeling from the effects of the economic crisis and Western sanctions.
“Now that the country is going through hardships the opposition are rubbing their hands,” said Alexei Balyberdin.
“I fully support Putin’s policies,” said a 37-year-old demonstrator, Ivan Blagoi in St Petersburg. “I don’t want the collapse of the country and a civil war brought on in Ukraine by the Maidan.”
Critics say the Moscow event was organised with the help from authorities, with many participants brought in on buses or paid to be there. Organisers deny the claims.
After the Kiev uprising ousted Kremlin-backed president Viktor Yanukovych last February, Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine and has since backed a separatist insurgency in the east of the country.
Starikov said the march was the movement’s first major rally aimed at discouraging the pro-Western opposition from plotting a coup in Russia.
“Don’t even try. Don’t make any attempts to rock the boat in Russia,” he said in televised remarks.
State television gave ample coverage to Saturday’s event and said similar rallies had been held across the country.
The opposition plans a protest on March 1 against the Ukraine conflict as well as Russia’s economic crisis, which has been exacerbated by Western sanctions over Moscow’s support for the separatists.
Earlier this week a court jailed top opposition activist Alexei Navalny for two weeks in a move that will most likely prevent him from leading next weekend’s rally.
The protest is set to take place in southeastern Moscow, after authorities denied permission for the activists to march through the city centre. Putin remains Russia’s most popular politician despite hardships brought on by the economic crisis and Western sanctions.
Ukraine’s ousted leader Yanukovych, who lives in Russia sheltered from prosecution back at home, said he would like to return to his country as soon as he can.
“I’ll be back and will do everything in my power to make life easier in Ukraine,” he told Russia’s Channel One in an excerpt of interview which will be broadcast in its entirety on Monday.