Genetic diversity in rye with respect to resistance to brown rust and powdery mildew was studied. Plants resistant to brown rust and powdery mildew were revealed in 38 and 4 cultivars of winter rye, respectively. In each case, resistance to the diseases was shown to be controlled by a dominant allele of a single gene. A method of gene identification was proposed that can be used when a resistance trait is controlled by a dominant allele of a single gene. Resistance to a population of brown rust was for the first time demonstrated to be controlled by the genes Pd (in rye cultivars Sanim, I-125/79, Baltiiskaya RPd, and Chernigovskaya RPd) and Pd1 (Immunnaya 1). Brown rust resistance in the cultivar Chulpan RPd appeared to be determined by a gene that was nonallelic to Pd (temporarily designated Pd3). To confirm the proposed hypothesis, further experiments, establishing nonallelic relations between the genes Pd3 and Pd1, are required. In compliance with international standards, the genes Pd, Pd1, and Pd3 were given the new names Lr4, Lr5, and Lr6, respectively.