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Klavdiya Khabarova
Klavdiya is a given name. Notable people with the name include: *Klavdiya Afanasyeva (born 1996), Russian racewalker *Klavdiya Blinova née Blinova (1920–1988), Soviet fighter pilot *Klavdiya Boyarskikh (1939–2009), Soviet cross-country skier *Klavdiya Kildsheva (1917–1994), Soviet and Russian test engineer *Klavdiya Kosenkova (born 1949), Lithuanian Olympic rower *Klavdiya Kuzmina (1923–2008), Soviet-Russian scientist *Klavdiya Latysheva (1897–1956), Soviet mathematician *Klavdiya Mayuchaya (1918–1989), Soviet track and field athlete, competed mainly in the javelin throw *Klavdiya Nazarova (1920–1942), Soviet organizer of an underground Komsomol partisan unit during WWII *Klavdiya Nechaeva (1916–1942), Soviet fighter pilot during World War II who was killed in action *Klavdiya Nikolayeva (1893–1944), Russian revolutionary, syndicalist, feminist, Old Bolshevik and Soviet politician *Klavdiya Plotnikova (1893–1989), the last living speaker of the Kamassian language ...
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Klavdiya Afanasyeva
Klavdiya Afanasyeva (russian: Клавдія Афанасьєва; born 15 January 1996) is a Russian racewalker. She won gold medals in the European U20 and U23 championships in the 10,000 m race walk and 20 km race walk respectively. Though she has never tested positive for an anti-doping violation, in May 2018 she was suspended from international competition due to participating in a training camp including banned coach Viktor Chegin. Career Afanasyeva began competing on the national level in 2012 as a sixteen-year-old, finishing fourth at the Russian Winter Race Walking Championship and later winning the Chuvash Republic Championships. Her first international competition was in 2013, when she finished 5th in the 5000 m race walk at the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics. In 2016, the Russian Athletics Federation was banned from international competition from the IAAF for state-sponsored doping, meaning no Russian athletes were allowed to participate in th ...
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Klavdiya Blinova
Klavdiya Mikhailovna Kudlenko née Blinova (russian: Клавдия Михайловна Блинова; 24 December 1920 23 November 1988) was a Soviet fighter pilot. Originally assigned to the women's 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment, an air defense regiment, she went on to fly in several predominantly male regiments, in which she engaged in intense aerial combat during the Battle of Stalingrad. Despite being shot down and taken prisoner by the Nazis during the Battle of Kursk, she soon escaped and returned to combat. Early life Blinova was born on 24 December 1920 to a Russian peasant family in Kaluga Governorate. Her family relocated to Ochakovo in Moscow oblast in the 1930s, where she went on to attend the local Osoaviakhim aeroclub and eventually become a flight instructor. World War II Several months after the German invasion of the Soviet Union Blinova voluntarily joined the Red Army to join the 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment. After brief training at Engels Military Avi ...
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Klavdiya Boyarskikh
Klavdiya Sergeyevna Boyarskikh (russian: Клавдия Сергеевна Боярских; 11 November 1939 – 12 December 2009) was a Soviet cross-country skier who competed in the 1960s. In 1964, Boyarskikh won her first Soviet titles, in the 5 km and relay, and was selected for the Olympic Games. There she ran the fastest leg of the 3 × 5 km relay, and became the first female cross-country skier to win all Olympic events. In 1966, she won two more national titles, in the 5 and 10 km, as well as two world titles. Next year she had her last two national victories, in the 5 km and relay. She also won three times at the Holmenkollen ski festival with two wins in 10 km (1965, 1966) and one win in the 5 km (1967). Boyarskikh retired in 1968 and until her death worked as a skiing coach with Lokomotiv Sverdlovsk. Since 1970, the annual Klavdiya Boyarskikh Cup in cross-country skiing is held in Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg Yekaterinburg ( ; rus, ...
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Klavdiya Kildsheva
Klavdiya Sergeyevna Kildisheva (russian: Клавдия Сергеевна Кильдишева; 6 March 1917 2 May 1994) was a Soviet and Russian test and aerospace engineer. She was awarded the Hero of Socialist Labour medal in 1981, the highest degree of distinction in the USSR for exceptional achievements in Soviet industry and culture. Biography Kildisheva was born in Vyazma to a railroad worker. She finished school in 1934 and went on to study at the Moscow University in the Mechanical - Mathematical Faculty. Kildisheva graduated in 1940 and went on to work in Moscow in the experimental design office Andrei Tupolev completing strength calculations for aircraft. She moved to the A.S. Yakovlev Experimental Design Bureau in 1941, which had been formed in 1934 under designer Alexander Sergeyevich Yakovlev. She joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and from 1943 to 1946 she was the chair of the trade union committee for the war. Afterwards, in 1946, Kildisheva too ...
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Klavdiya Kosenkova
Klavdiya is a given name. Notable people with the name include: *Klavdiya Afanasyeva (born 1996), Russian racewalker *Klavdiya Blinova née Blinova (1920–1988), Soviet fighter pilot * Klavdiya Boyarskikh (1939–2009), Soviet cross-country skier *Klavdiya Kildsheva (1917–1994), Soviet and Russian test engineer * Klavdiya Kosenkova (born 1949), Lithuanian Olympic rower * Klavdiya Kuzmina (1923–2008), Soviet-Russian scientist *Klavdiya Latysheva (1897–1956), Soviet mathematician * Klavdiya Mayuchaya (1918–1989), Soviet track and field athlete, competed mainly in the javelin throw *Klavdiya Nazarova (1920–1942), Soviet organizer of an underground Komsomol partisan unit during WWII *Klavdiya Nechaeva (1916–1942), Soviet fighter pilot during World War II who was killed in action *Klavdiya Nikolayeva (1893–1944), Russian revolutionary, syndicalist, feminist, Old Bolshevik and Soviet politician *Klavdiya Plotnikova (1893–1989), the last living speaker of the Kamassian lang ...
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Klavdiya Kuzmina
Klavdiya Alekseevna Kuzmina, Doctor of Medical Sciences (russian: Клавдия Алексеевна Кузьмина; 30 March 1923, Tbilisi – 1 July 2008) was a Soviet-Russian scientist who taught at the Saratov State Medical University. During World War II, Kuzmina worked as a nurse in an evacuation hospital. She graduated from the Saratov State Medical University in 1948, and earned her Candidat degree in 1952. From 1960 to 1974, she served as assistant dean at the Saratov State Medical University. In 1970, she defended her doctoral A doctorate (from Latin ''docere'', "to teach"), doctor's degree (from Latin ''doctor'', "teacher"), or doctoral degree is an academic degree awarded by universities and some other educational institutions, derived from the ancient formalism ''li ... thesis. From 1974 to 1990, she was a member of the specialised Scientific Councils of VNIIIPCHI "Microbe" and the Saratov Medical Institute. Kuzmina headed the Department of Biology at the ...
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Klavdiya Latysheva
Klavdiya Yakovlevna Latysheva (Russian: ; Ukrainian: ; born 14 March 1897, Kyiv, Russian Empire – 11 May 1956, Kyiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Kyiv, Ukraine)) was a Soviet mathematician known for her contributions to the theory of differential equations, electrodynamics and probability. She was honoured with the Order of Lenin and the Medal "For Valiant Labour in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945". Life Klavdiya Yakovlevna Latysheva was born in Kyiv, Russian Empire (now Kyiv, Ukraine) on 14 March 1897 in a Russian military family. She completed her high school in 1916, and obtained a degree from the Physico-Mathematical division of the Kyiv higher women's educational institution in 1921. The rest of her education and career was at the Mykhailo Drahomanov University. Her teachers were Boris Bukreev, Dmitry Grave, and Georgy Pfeiffer. From 1925 to 1928, she was in postgraduate studies, working on finding solutions to differential and integral equations using Mykhail ...
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Klavdiya Mayuchaya
Klavdiya Yakovlevna Mayuchaya (née ''Lapteva''; russian: Клавдия Яковлевна Маючая (Лаптева); 15 May 1918 – 14 October 1989) was a Soviet track and field athlete who competed mainly in the javelin throw. She was the gold medallist in the event at the European Athletics Championships in 1946 and was the first woman to throw the javelin beyond fifty metres. She was a nine-time Soviet champion across the javelin, discus throw and grenade throw disciplines. Career Early career Mayuchaya joined the Burevestnik sports club in Moscow in 1936 and practised throwing there until in 1945, when she changed to the Dynamo Sports Club and worked with coach Dmitry Markov until the end of her career.Main > Women, Javelin Throw > 1949–1952 Track and Field Brinkster. Retrieved on 28 December 2015. The last national podium finish of her career came in 1952, when she was runner-up to Zybina in the javelin. She came close to clearing fifty metres again that season, ...
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Klavdiya Nazarova
Klavdiya Ivanovna Nazarova (russian: Кла́вдия Ива́новна Наза́рова; 1 October 1920 – 12 December 1942) was an organizer of an underground Komsomol partisan unit in Ostrov during the Second World War who was posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 20 August 1945 after she was executed by the Germans. Civilian life Nazarova was born on 1 October 1920 to a Russian peasant family in Ostrov city of Pskov Governorate. Her father died from complications of a wound sustained in World War I when Klavdiya was at a young age. In addition to completing ten grades of school she attended the Lesgaft National State University of Physical Education, Sport and Health of Leningrad for one year and was a senior leader of a Young Pioneer detachment at a local school. She was a member of the Komsomol. In her later years she worked as a seamstress. Partisan activities Shortly after the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 Nazarova signed up for ...
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Klavdiya Nechaeva
Klavdiya Andreevna Nechaeva (russian: Клавдия Андреевна Нечаева; 9 March 1916 – 17 September 1942) was a Soviet fighter pilot during World War II who was killed in action protecting her squadron commander during the battle of Stalingrad. Biography Nechaeva was born in Ryazan Governorate on 9 March 1916 in Polyanka. She attended a local comprehensive school. She learned to fly at the Izmailovsky aeroclub in Moscow and later worked as an instructor. Upon the German invasion of the Soviet Union, she was invited to join women's aviation group by Marina Raskova. After joining she and the rest of the women volunteers were sent for training at Engels Military Aviation School, and Nechaeva was underwent training to fly the Yak-1 for the 586th Fighter Aviation Regiment, an air defense unit and the first of the three women's regiments to be deployed to the front. In September 1942 she and several other women pilots were transferred to the male 434th Fighter Aviation ...
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Klavdiya Nikolayeva
Klavdiya Ivanovna Nikolayeva (russian: Клавдия Ивановна Николаева; 13 June 1893 – 28 December 1944) was a Russian revolutionary, syndicalist, feminist, Old Bolshevik and Soviet politician. Early life The daughter of a Saint Petersburg labourer and a laundress, Nikolayeva worked as a nanny from an early age. After finishing elementary education she worked in a printing press, where her activism began. She wrote for the journal ''Rabotnitsa'' (''Working Woman''). She was arrested for the first time in 1908, at the age of 15, being arrested three more times by tsarist authorities and exiled twice.Зенькович Николай,НИКОЛАЕВА Клавдия Ивановна in ''Самые закрытые люди. От Ленина до Горбачева: Энциклопедия биографий'' (2002) Pre-revolution Bolshevik activism She became a member of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) in 1909, and was a Bolshevik, ...
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Klavdiya Plotnikova
Klavdiya Zakharovna Plotnikova-Andzhighatova (russian: Кла́вдия Заха́ровна Пло́тникова-Анджига́това, Kamassian: ; c. 1893 – 20 September 1989) was the last living speaker of the Kamassian language (and thus of any of the Sayan Samoyedic languages). Her father was a Russian named Zakhar Perov and her mother was a Kamassian named Afanasiya Andzhighatova. Plotnikova-Andzhighatova and her parents are in slot 14 on the chart the Finnish linguist Kai Donner made of the Abalakovo Kamassian families. Plotnikova-Andzhighatova did not have the opportunity to speak Kamassian after 1950 because she did not know anyone else who could speak it. Despite that, her Kamassian skills were fairly good, and she was a great help to philologists for the rest of her life. Plotnikova-Andzhighatova spoke fluent Russian Russian(s) refers to anything related to Russia, including: *Russians (, ''russkiye''), an ethnic group of the East Slavic peoples, primarily l ...
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