Morozenko
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Morozenko
Morozenko ( uk, Морозенко) is a Ukrainian surname. It may refer to: * Morozenko, pen name of Sydir Vorobkevych (1836–1903), Ukrainian composer and writer * Pavel Morozenko (1939–1991), Soviet-Ukrainian actor * Yevhen Morozenko Yevhen Morozenko ( uk, Євген Сергійович Морозенко; born 16 December 1991 in Kyiv) is a Ukraine association football, football midfielder who plays for FC Livyi Bereh Kyiv, Livyi Bereh Kyiv. Morozenko is a product of Dyna ... (born 1991), Ukrainian footballer See also * {{Surname Ukrainian-language surnames ...
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Pavel Morozenko
Pavel Semenovich Morozenko (russian: link=no, Павел Семёнович Морозенко; uk, Павло Семенович Морозенко; Pavlo Semenovich Morozenko; born 5 July 1939, Snizhne, Ukrainian SSR – died 14 July 1991, Rostov Region, RSFSR) – Soviet theatre and film actor, Merited artist of the Ukrainian SSR (1973). Biography Pavel Morozenko was born on 5 July 1939 in Snizhne, Ukraine, Soviet Union. In 1960 he graduated from the National University of theatre, cinema and television of Karpenko-Kary. In the same year made his debut in cinema played the main male role in the military melodrama directed by Vladimir Denisenko «Roman and Francesca» (on the basis of the plot a touching love story of a Soviet sailor Roman and Italian a simple girl Francesca will the fate of separated The Great Patriotic War). The shooting took place in the city of Sochi – the magnificent landscapes of the Southern town, a great game of actors (the main female role was ...
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Yevhen Morozenko
Yevhen Morozenko ( uk, Євген Сергійович Морозенко; born 16 December 1991 in Kyiv) is a Ukraine association football, football midfielder who plays for FC Livyi Bereh Kyiv, Livyi Bereh Kyiv. Morozenko is a product of Dynamo Kyiv football academy. External links fcslovanliberec.cz
at fcslovanliberec.cz * 1991 births Living people Footballers from Kyiv Ukrainian footballers Ukraine youth international footballers FC Slovan Liberec players Czech First League players Expatriate footballers in the Czech Republic FC Dynamo-2 Kyiv players FC Hoverla Uzhhorod players FC Oleksandriya players FC Guria Lanchkhuti players NK Veres Rivne players FC Olimpik Donetsk players FC Chornomorets Odesa players FC Cherkashchyna players FC Livyi Bereh Kyiv players Ukrainian expatriate sportspeople in the Czech Republic Ukrainian expatriate footballers Expatriate footballers in Georgia (country) Ukrainian expatriate sportspeople in Georgia (country) Association football m ...
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Sydir Vorobkevych
Sydir Vorobkevych (, ) (1836–1903) was a Ukrainian composer, writer, Eastern Orthodox priest, teacher, artist, and newspaper editor of Bukovina. He used following pen-names: Danylo Mlaka, Demko Makoviychuk, Morozenko, Semen Khrin, Isydor Vorobkevych, S.Volokh, and others. Biography Sydir Vorobkevych was born 18 May 1836 in Chernivtsi to a family of Orthodox priests and theologians. His brother was Ukrainian poet Hryhoriy Vorobkevych. Vorobkevych's great-grandfather, Skalsky Mlaka de Orobko, ran away from Lithuania, and his grandfather changed his name from Orobko to Vorobkevych. He later used part of the former name as part of his pseudonym Danilo Mlaka. His mother died early in 1840, and his father Ivan worked in the Chernivtsi Lyceum as a professor of religion and philosophy. His father died in 1845 and Sydir along with his brother Hryhoriy were left orphans. They went to live with their grandfather, Mykhailo Vorobkevych, the Protopope of Kitsman. In his family the ...
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Ukrainian Surname
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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