Jurowski
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Jurowski
Jurowski is a Polish-language surname which appears in various forms amonh the neighboring peoples. Notable people with the surnames include: * Dmitri Jurowski (born 1979), German conductor, son of Michail and grandson of Vladimir Michailovich *Michail Jurowski (1945–2022), Russian conductor, son of Vladimir Michailovich *Vladimir Jurowski Vladimir Mikhailovich Jurowski (; born 4 April 1972) is a Russian conductor. He is the son of conductor Michail Jurowski, and grandson of Soviet film music composer Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski. Early life Born in Moscow, Jurowski began h ... (born 1972), Russian conductor, son of Mikhail and grandson of Vladimir Michailovich; brother of Dmitri * Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski (1915–1972), Soviet film music composer See also * Jurkowski {{surname Polish-language surnames Slavic-language surnames ...
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Vladimir Jurowski
Vladimir Mikhailovich Jurowski (; born 4 April 1972) is a Russian conductor. He is the son of conductor Michail Jurowski, and grandson of Soviet film music composer Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski. Early life Born in Moscow, Jurowski began his musical studies at the Moscow Conservatory. In 1990, he moved with his family, including his brother Dmitri (conductor) and his sister Maria (pianist) to Germany, where he completed his education at the music schools at the Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber Dresden and the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler. He studied conducting with Rolf Reuter and vocal coaching with Semion Skigin. He participated in a conducting master class with Sir Colin Davis on Sibelius' Symphony No. 7 in 1991. Career Jurowski first appeared on the international scene in 1995 at the Wexford Festival, where he conducted Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's opera '' May Night'', and he returned the following year for Giacomo Meyerbeer's ''L'étoile du nord'', whi ...
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Michail Jurowski
Michail Vladimirovich Jurowski (; 25 December 1945 – 19 March 2022) was a Russian Conducting, conductor who worked internationally, based in Germany for most of his career. He was particularly interested in the works of Dmitri Shostakovich, in concerts and recordings. Jurowski grew up in a musical family, where his father Vladimir Mikhailovich Yurovsky was a composer, and many prominent Russian musicians were family friends. He first worked in Moscow, but was from 1978 a regular guest conductor at the Komische Oper Berlin, then in East Berlin. With a 1989 contract for the Staatsoper Dresden, he moved to Germany with his family. He was music director of the Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie from 1992, and the Norddeutsche Philharmonie Rostock from 1999, followed by positions with the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra and the WDR Rundfunkorchester Köln. He worked as a guest worldwide, including Scandinavia and Argentina. His recordings include the first recordings of Dmitri Shostakov ...
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Dmitri Jurowski
Dmitri Jurowski (born 6 November 1979) is a German conductor and the grandson of composer Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski. Early life and education Jurowski was born in Moscow, into a Jewish family with several generations of musicians. At the age of six he began learning cello at the Moscow Conservatory and then moved with his family to Berlin, where he attended the Musikgymnasium Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach. He continued his cello studies at the Rostock University of Music and Theatre, and in April 2003 began attending conducting lessons at the Academy of Music Hanns Eisler Berlin. Soon afterwards, he became an assistant conductor for a production of Prokofiev's ''Boris Godunov'' which he conducted along with his father, Mikhail Jurowski, for the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. Career Assistant conductor In September 2004, he was assistant conductor of ''Parsifal'' at the Genoan Teatro Carlo Felice under the guidance of Harry Kupfer and then conducted Prokofiev's ''The Love for ...
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Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski
Vladimir Mikhailovich Yurovsky (Russian: Владимир Михайлович Юровский; Tarashcha, 7 0March 1915 – 26 January 1972, in Moscow) was a Ukrainian Soviet film music composer. His son is the conductor Michail Jurowski, his grandsons are Vladimir Jurowski (born 4 April 1972) (also named Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski) and Dmitri Jurowski Dmitri Jurowski (born 6 November 1979) is a German conductor and the grandson of composer Vladimir Michailovich Jurowski. Early life and education Jurowski was born in Moscow, into a Jewish family with several generations of musicians. At the age ... (born 1979), both conductors. He married the daughter of David S. Block (1888-1948), conductor, organizer, the first director of the National Orchestra of Cinematography of the USSR, and a member of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee.dic.academic.ru/ Юровский, Владимир Михайлович (род. 1915) советский композитор. Works * Opera ...
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Yurovsky
Yurovsky may mean two related surnames. It is a Russian surname, a variant of the Polish surname Jurowski and the Slovak surname Jurovský. Notable people with the surnames include: *Vladimir Mikhailovich Yurovsky *Yakov Yurovsky (1878–1938), Soviet revolutionary, murderer of the Romanov family *Yuri Yurovsky See also

* * * (1908-1985), Slovak psychologist *Šimon Jurovský (1912–1963), Slovak composer *Yuryevsky *Gary Yourofsky {{surname Russian-language surnames ...
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Jurkowski
Jurkowski ( ; feminine: Jurkowska; plural: Jurkowscy) is a Polish-language surname which appears in different forms in other countries. People *Katarzyna Jurkowska-Kowalska (born 1992), Polish artistic gymnast * Kenneth Jurkowski (born 1981), American rower *Ryszard Jurkowski (born 1945), Polish architect and urban planner * Maria Fyodorovna Andreyeva, stage name of Maria Fyodorovna Yurkovskaya (1868–1953), Russian actress and Bolshevik administrator See also * *Jurowski Jurowski is a Polish-language surname which appears in various forms amonh the neighboring peoples. Notable people with the surnames include: * Dmitri Jurowski (born 1979), German conductor, son of Michail and grandson of Vladimir Michailovich * ... {{surname Polish-language surnames Slavic-language surnames ...
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Ukrainian Surnames
By the 18th century almost all Ukrainians had family names. Most Ukrainian surnames (and surnames in Slavic languages in general) are formed by adding possessive and other suffixes to given names, place names, professions and other words. Surnames were developed for official documents or business record keeping to differentiate the parties who might have the same first name. By the 15th century, surnames were used by the upper class, nobles and large land owners. In cities and towns, surnames became necessary in the 15th and 16th centuries. In 1632, Orthodox Metropolitan Petro Mohyla ordered priests to include a surname in all records of birth, marriage and death. After the partitions of Poland (1772–1795), Western Ukraine came under the Austrian Empire, where peasants needed surnames for taxation purposes and military service and churches were required to keep records of all births, deaths and marriages. The surnames with the suffix -enko are the most known and common Ukrain ...
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Romanization Of Ukrainian
The romanization of Ukrainian, or Latinization of Ukrainian, is the representation of the Ukrainian language in Latin alphabet, Latin letters. Ukrainian is natively written in its own Ukrainian alphabet, which is based on the Cyrillic script. Romanization may be employed to represent Ukrainian text or pronunciation for non-Ukrainian readers, on computer systems that cannot reproduce Cyrillic characters, or for typists who are not familiar with the Ukrainian keyboard layout. Methods of romanization include transliteration (representing written text) and transcription (linguistics), transcription (representing the spoken word). In contrast to romanization, there have been several historical proposals for a native Ukrainian Latin alphabet, usually based on those used by West Slavic languages, but none have caught on. Romanization systems Transliteration Transliteration is the letter-for-letter representation of text using another writing system. Rudnyckyj classified transliteratio ...
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Polish Name
Polish names have two main elements: the given name, and the surname. The usage of personal names in Poland is generally governed by civil law, church law, personal taste and family custom. The law requires a given name to indicate the person's gender. Almost all Polish female names end in a vowel ''-a'', and most male names end in a consonant or a vowel other than ''a''. There are, however, a few male names that end in ''a'', which are very old and uncommon, such as Barnaba, Bonawentura, Boryna, Jarema, Kosma, Kuba (a diminutive of Jakub) and Saba. Maria is a female name that can be used also as a middle (second) name for males. Since the High Middle Ages, Polish-sounding surnames ending with the masculine ''-ski'' suffix, including ''-cki'' and ''-dzki'', and the corresponding feminine suffix ''-ska/-cka/-dzka'' were associated with the nobility (Polish ''szlachta''), which alone, in the early years, had such suffix distinctions. Zenon Klemensiewicz, ''Historia języka polskie ...
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Belarusian Name
A modern Belarusian name of a person consists of three parts: given name, patronymic, and family name (surname), according to the Eastern Slavic naming customs, similar to Russian names and Ukrainian names. Belarusian given names As with most cultures, a person has a given name chosen by the parents. First names in East-Slavic languages mostly originate from three sources: Orthodox church tradition (which is itself of Greek origin), Catholic church tradition (which is itself of Latin origin) and native pre-Christian Slavic origin lexicons. Most names have several diminutive forms. ;List of Belarusian names: * Арцём ( Arciom) * Аксана (Aksana; most common Ukrainian female name as ''Oksana''; of Greek origin from ''Xenia'') * Алена (Alena, equivalent to Helen, of Greek origin) * Аляксей (Alaksiej, of Greek origin) * Аляксандр (Alaxandr, equivalent to Alexander, of Greek origin) * Аляксандра (Alaxandra, equivalent to Alexandra, of Greek ...
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Romanization Of Russian
The romanization of the Russian language (the transliteration of Russian text from the Cyrillic script into the Latin script), aside from its primary use for including Russian names and words in text written in a Latin alphabet, is also essential for computer users to input Russian text who either do not have a keyboard or word processor set up for inputting Cyrillic, or else are not capable of typing rapidly using a Keyboard layout#Russian, native Russian keyboard layout (JCUKEN). In the latter case, they would type using a system of transliteration fitted for their keyboard layout, such as for English QWERTY keyboards, and then use an automated tool to convert the text into Cyrillic. Systematic transliterations of Cyrillic to Latin There are a number of distinct and competing standards for the romanization of Russian Cyrillic, with none of them having received much popularity, and, in reality, transliteration is often carried out without any consistent standards. Scientific tr ...
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