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Osip (Russian ''О́сип'') is a Russian male given name, a variant of the name Joseph. Notable people with the name include: * Osip Abdulov (1900–1953), Soviet actor * Osip Aptekman, Russian revolutionary * Ossip Bernstein (1882-1962), Russian-French chess player * Osip Bilchansky (1858-1879), Russian terrorist hanged for using a gun to resist arrest * Osip Bodyansky (1808-1877), Russian Imperial Slavist of Ukrainian Cossack descent * Osip Braz (1873-1936), Russian-Jewish realist painter * Osip Brik, Russian writer and literary critic, a futurist * Osip Dymov (writer), pseudonym for Yosif (Osip) Isidorovich Perelman (1878-1959), Russian writer * Osip Gelfond (1868-1942), Russian physician and Marxist philosopher * Osip Komissarov, hatter's apprentice famous for thwarting the assassination of Alexander II of Russia * Osip Kozodavlev (1754–1819), Russian statesman, politician and Minister of the Interior * Osip Mikhailovich Lerner (1847–1907), also known as Y. Y. (Yosef Yeh ...
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Hebrew Name
A Hebrew name is a name of Hebrew origin. In a more narrow meaning, it is a name used by Jews only in a religious context and different from an individual's secular name for everyday use. Names with Hebrew origins, especially those from the Hebrew Bible, are commonly used by Jews and Christians. Many are also used by Muslims, particularly those names mentioned in the Qur'an (for example, ''Ibrahim'' is a common Arabic name from the Hebrew '' Avraham''). A typical Hebrew name can have many different forms, having been adapted to the phonologies and orthographies of many different languages. A common Jewish practice worldwide is to give a Hebrew name to a child that is used in religious contexts throughout that person's lifetime. Not all Hebrew names are strictly Hebrew in origin; some names may have been borrowed from other ancient languages, including from Egyptian, Aramaic, Phoenician, or Canaanite. Names of Hebrew origin Hebrew names used by Jews (along with many Hebre ...
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Osip Mikhailovich Lerner
Osip Mikhailovich Lerner (13 January 1847 – 23 January 1907), also known as Y. Y. (Yosef Yehuda) Lerner, was a 19th-century Russian Jewish intellectual, writer, and critic. Originally a ''maskil''—a propagator of the ''Haskala'', or "Jewish Enlightenment"—he became a pioneer in the fields of Yiddish theater and folklore, as well as literary criticism.Gottesman, Itzik Nakhmen (2003). ''Defining the Yiddish Nation: The Jewish Folklorists of Poland''. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. p. xvii. "Lerner ... was a pioneer in the fields of Yiddish theater, Yiddish folklore, and especially Yiddish literary criticism." In his later years, he converted to Christianity and wrote a book denouncing Jews (Adler, 1999, p. 200). Biography Lerner was born in Berdichev (today Berdychiv), Kiev Governorate, then in the Russian Empire. After attending the Jewish school there, at age 13 he went to study at the gymnasium in nearby Zhytomyr. In 1866 he moved to Ode ...
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Osipov
Osipov (russian: Осипов), Osipova (feminine; Осипова), or Ossipoff is a Russian surname that is derived from the male given name Osip and literally means ''Osip's''. Notable people with the surname include: * Afanasiy Osipov (born 1928), Soviet painter and People's Artist of the RSFSR * Alexei Osipov (born 1938), Russian Orthodox theologian and professor * Alexander Osipov (1920-1945), Soviet aircraft pilot and Hero of the Soviet Union * Eskandar Shura Ossipoff, Assyrian boxer in the 1948 Olympics * Fyodor Osipov (1902-1989), Soviet army officer and Full Cavalier of the Order of Glory * Gennady Osipov (born 1929), Soviet sociologist and academician * Gennady Simeonovich Osipov (1948-?), Russian scientist in Artificial Intelligence, professor * Igor Osipov (born 1973), Russian naval officer * Ilya V. Osipov (born 1975), Computer scientist, tech entrepreneur * Irina Osipova (born 1981), Russian basketball player * Mariya Osipova (1908–1999), Soviet World War I ...
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Osip Dymov
Osip Dymov (Russian: Осип Дымов) is the central fictional character in the classic Russian story " The Grasshopper" (''Poprygunya''; 1892) by Anton Chekhov.Loehlin, James N. (2010). The Cambridge introduction to Chekhov'. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. . p. 80-83 (on "The Grasshopper "); here: p. 80. For generations this character has served to inspire medical professionals as to the standards of dedication expected from them. About the character Dymov is an unassuming doctor married to Olga Ivanovna, a beautiful and wealthy socialite, and amateur artist, who allows her moral values, as well as sense of beauty, to become distorted by her restless search for great men."Anton Pavlovich Chekhov." ''Encyclopedia of World Biography''. Detroit: Gale, 1998; updated 2004. Retrieved via ''Biography in Context'' database, 2017-04-26. They soon grow apart, due to her preference for the "fast life", on the one hand, and his total dedication to his profession, ...
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OSIP
Osip (Russian language, Russian ''О́сип'') is a Russian male given name, a variant of the name Joseph (name), Joseph. Notable people with the name include: * Osip Abdulov (1900–1953), Soviet actor * Osip Aptekman, Russian revolutionary * Ossip Bernstein (1882-1962), Russian-French chess player * Osip Bilchansky (1858-1879), Russian terrorist hanged for using a gun to resist arrest * Osip Bodyansky (1808-1877), Russian Imperial Slavist of Ukrainian Cossack descent * Osip Braz (1873-1936), Russian-Jewish realist painter * Osip Brik, Russian writer and literary critic, a futurist * Osip Dymov (writer), pseudonym for Yosif (Osip) Isidorovich Perelman (1878-1959), Russian writer * Osip Gelfond (1868-1942), Russian physician and Marxist philosopher * Osip Komissarov, hatter's apprentice famous for thwarting the assassination of Alexander II of Russia * Osip Kozodavlev (1754–1819), Russian statesman, politician and Minister of the Interior * Osip Mikhailovich Lerner (1847–1907), ...
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Osip Yermansky
Osip Arkadyevich Yermansky (Russian: О́сип Арка́дьевич Ерма́нский; 28 July 1867 – 1941), born Yosif Arkadyevich Kogan (Russian: Иосиф Аркадьевич Коган), and known by the pseudonyms M. Borisov, A. O. Gushka, Meerovich, and P. R., was a Russian Social Democratic political figure, economic theorist, pamphleteer, and memoirist. He was one of the originators of the Soviet school of management, in particular, its psychophysiological tendency. He regarded scientific management as a syncretic, interdisciplinary system, drawing material from other scientific disciplines, such as technology, economics, psychology, and physiology. Early life Yermansky was born in Akkerman, a town on the Dniester estuary, into a family of artisans. After receiving a traditional Jewish education, he studied jurisprudence at Odessa University. In 1888, as a consequence of his involvement in the students' movement, he was expelled and sent to the Caucasus. In ...
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Osip Ivanovich Somov
Osip Ivanovich Somov (russian: Ио́сиф (О́сип) Ива́нович Со́мов; 13 June 1815, Moscow Governorate – 8 May 1876, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, structure, space, models, and change. History On .... References * * * External links * * 1815 births 1876 deaths Russian mathematicians 19th-century mathematicians from the Russian Empire Full members of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences {{russia-mathematician-stub ...
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Osip Startsev
Osip Dmitrievich Startsev (Осип Дмитриевич Старцев) was a Russian architect who mastered both Muscovite Baroque and Ukrainian Baroque idioms during the early part of Peter the Great's reign. His father Dmitry Startsev was the architect responsible for the completion of the Arkhangelsk Gostiny Dvor in the 1680s. As a young man, Ossip took part in the rebuilding campaigns in the Moscow Kremlin and redesigned several '' prikazy'' offices. It was Startsev who gave the Palace of Facets its familiar wide windows and built the 11-domed roof and cornice over the Terem Palace churches. His major buildings include the civic buildings in Moscow (notably the Krutitsy ''Teremok'' and the Simonov Monastery refectory) and the archaic-looking Baroque cathedrals in Kiev (the ''katholikons'' of St. Nicholas and Epiphany Monasteries). In the early 18th century Peter the Great sent him to design the fortress towns of Azov and Taganrog. He was also active in the reconstruction o ...
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Osip Sorokhtei
Osip-Roman Iyosafatovych Sorokhtei (Ukrainian: Осип-Роман Йосафатович Сорохтей; 28 February 1890, near Baranyvtsy, Sambir Raion – 28 November 1941, in Ivano-Frankivsk) was a Ukrainian painter, graphic artist, caricaturist and art teacher. Biography His father was a Czech laborer who came to Galicia working on the railway. His mother was Polish. Shortly after his birth, his family moved to Stanislaus (now Ivano-Frankivsk).Biography
@ the ''Library of Ukrainian Art''
His father was killed in an accident shortly after and his mother had to raise the family on a railway pension. He soon developed an interest in ...
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Józef Sękowski
Osip Ivanovich Senkovsky (russian: О́сип Ива́нович Сенко́вский), born Józef Julian Sękowski ( in Antagonka, near Vilnius – in Saint Petersburg), was a Polish-Russian orientalist, journalist, and entertainer. Life Senkovsky was born into an old family of Lithuanian nobility. During his study in the University of Vilno he became fascinated with all things oriental. Having mastered the Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Hebrew languages, he was assigned to the Russian mission in Constantinople, which occupation gave him ample opportunities to travel in Syria, Nubia, and Egypt. In 1821 he returned to the Russian capital, where he got the chair in oriental languages at the University of St Petersburg. In the 1820s, Senkovsky started publishing in the popular periodicals of Kondraty Ryleyev and Faddei Bulgarin. He is best remembered for having edited the first Russian "thick journal," '' Library for Reading'' (1833-1856), whose lively and humorous style (as N ...
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Osip Piatnitsky
Osip Aaronovitch Piatnitsky (russian: Осип Аронович Пятницкий; Iosif Aronovich Tarshis, 29 January 1882, Kovno Governorate – 29 July, 1938, Moscow), was a Russian revolutionary and Soviet politician. Piatnitsky is best remembered as head of the International Department of the Communist International during the 1920s and early 1930s, a position which made him one of the leading public faces of the international Communist movement. Biography Early years Iosif Aronovich Tarshis was born January 17, 1882, the son of a Jewish carpenter in the town of Vilkomir (today known as Ukmergė), in the Kovno Governorate of the Russian Empire (present-day Lithuania). As a boy Tarshis worked briefly as a tailor's apprentice in Vilkomir before moving to the big city of Kovno (today's Kaunas) in 1897.Susan Causey, "Osip Piatnitskii," in A. Thomas Lane (ed.), ''Biographical Dictionary of European Labor Leaders: M-Z.'' Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1995; pg. 754. There he ...
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Osip Petrov
Osip Afanasievich Petrov (russian: link=no, Осип Афанасиевич Петров, ) was a Russian operatic bass-baritone of great range and renown, whose career centred on St Petersburg. Biography Osip Petrov was born in Yelisavetgrad (now Kropyvnytskyi) in Ukraine, then part of Russia. He started his career by singing in a church chorus. Petrov then worked in Russian provincial theaters (including Poltava, where he worked together with Mikhail Shchepkin). From 1830 until his death in 1878 he worked for the Mariinsky Theatre, St Petersburg. His career was one triumph after another, and he created a number of important roles in Russian operas, by composers such as Dargomyzhsky, Glinka, Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Anton Rubinstein, Tchaikovsky and others. His 50th anniversary as a singer was the cause for national celebration. On 21 April 1876, on the stage of the Maryinsky Theatre, he was presented with a gold medal, the personal gift of Tsar Alexander II. The Pres ...
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