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Veniamin
Veniamin is the Russian version of the name Benjamin, and may refer to: * Veniamin Alexandrov (1937–1991), Soviet professional ice hockey player * Veniamin Belkin (1884–1951), Russian artist and painter * Veniamin Fleishman, (1913–1941), Russian composer * Veniamin Kagan (1869–1953), Russian mathematician and expert in geometry * Veniamin Kaverin (1902–1989), Soviet writer associated with the early 1920s movement of the Serapion Brothers * Veniamin (Kazansky) (1873–1922), bishop in the Russian Orthodox Church, Archbishop of Petrograd 1917–1922 * Veniamin Kondratyev (born 1970), Russian politician and governor of Krasnodar Krai * Veniamin Levich (1917–1987), physicist, an expert in the field of electrochemical hydrodynamics * Veniamin Mandrykin (born 1981), Russian professional football goalkeeper * Veniamin of Petersburg (1874–1922), Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdov 1917–1922 *Veniamin Smekhov (born 1940), Russian actor and stage director *Veniamin Soldatenko ...
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Andrew Veniamin
Andrew "Benji" Veniamin (16 November 1975 – 23 March 2004) was an Australian criminal from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. A convicted car thief, Veniamin was a key figure in the Melbourne underworld killings, suspected of both murdering seven underworld figures, and being a hit-man for the Williams crime family. Veniamin was killed by Domenic "Mick" Gatto at the La Porcella Italian restaurant in Carlton. Gatto claimed it was in self-defence following a heated argument. Early and personal life Veniamin was born to Greek Cypriot immigrant parents, and was raised in the Western Melbourne suburb of Sunshine. From a child to his early teens, Veniamin was an altar boy at the St Andrew's Greek Orthodox Church in the neighbouring suburb of Sunshine West, where his funeral was later held. Veniamin worked at the West Melbourne wholesale fruit and vegetable market. A few years before his death, Veniamin fathered a daughter as the result of a casual affair. He was also a known assoc ...
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Veniamin Smekhov
Veniamin Borisovich Smekhov (russian: Вениами́н Бори́сович Сме́хов; born August 10, 1940 in Moscow) is a Soviet and Russian stage and film actor and director. He was the winner of the Petropol Award (2000) as well as the Tsarskoselsky Artistic Prize (2009). He refused the title of People's Artist of Russia, which was offered to him on his 70th birthday. Smekhov has long worked in the Moscow Taganka Theatre where his roles included Woland in a stage adaptation of Mikhail Bulgakov's ''The Master and Margarita''. His portrayal of the main antagonist of the story is considered to be the best of any adaption of the novel. In film, he is best known and loved for the role of Athos in a Russian version of ''D'Artagnan and Three Musketeers'' (1978) and its sequels (1992, 1993). He also has written children's poetry, scripts, memoirs and comedic materials. Family *Father: Boris Moiseyevich Smekhov (January 10, 1912, Gomel, Belarus - October 8, 2010, Aachen, Germ ...
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Veniamin Of Petersburg
Veniamin is the Russian version of the name Benjamin, and may refer to: * Veniamin Alexandrov (1937–1991), Soviet professional ice hockey player * Veniamin Belkin (1884–1951), Russian artist and painter * Veniamin Fleishman, (1913–1941), Russian composer * Veniamin Kagan (1869–1953), Russian mathematician and expert in geometry * Veniamin Kaverin (1902–1989), Soviet writer associated with the early 1920s movement of the Serapion Brothers * Veniamin (Kazansky) (1873–1922), bishop in the Russian Orthodox Church, Archbishop of Petrograd 1917–1922 * Veniamin Kondratyev (born 1970), Russian politician and governor of Krasnodar Krai * Veniamin Levich (1917–1987), physicist, an expert in the field of electrochemical hydrodynamics * Veniamin Mandrykin (born 1981), Russian professional football goalkeeper * Veniamin of Petersburg (1874–1922), Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdov 1917–1922 *Veniamin Smekhov (born 1940), Russian actor and stage director *Veniamin Soldatenko ...
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Veniamin Kondratyev
Veniamin Ivanovich Kondratyev (russian: link=no, Вениамин Иванович Кондратьев; born 1 September 1970) is the governor of Krasnodar Krai in the southern European part of Russia. Biography In 1993 he graduated from the Kuban State University as a philologist and teacher of the Russian language, in 1995, the same university as a lawyer. In the public service since 1994. He worked in the Jurist Department of the administration of Krasnodar Krai from 1994 to 1995, from 1995 – in the Lawyer Department of the administration of Krasnodar Krai. From 2001 to 2003 – Deputy chief of staff, head of the Lawyer Department of administration of Krasnodar region. Since August 2003 he worked as Deputy head of administration of Krasnodar Krai on issues of property, land and legal relations. Since 30 July 2014 at work in the Main office of the Federal property of the Russian Federation the administration of the President of the Russian Federation. January 2015 – the ...
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Veniamin Levich
Veniamin Grigorievich (Benjamin) Levich (russian: Вениами́н Григо́рьевич Ле́вич; 30 March 1917 in Kharkiv, Ukraine – 19 January 1987 in Englewood, New Jersey, United States) was a Soviet dissident, internationally prominent physical chemist, electrochemist and founder of the discipline of physico-chemical hydrodynamics. He was a student of the theoretical physicist, Lev Landau. His landmark textbook titled ''Physicochemical Hydrodynamics'' is widely considered his most important contribution to science. The Levich equation describing a current at a rotating disk electrode is named after him. His research activities also included gas-phase collision reactions, electrochemistry, and the quantum mechanics of electron transfer. Levich received many honors during his life, including the Olin Palladium Award of The Electrochemical Society in 1973. He was elected a foreign member of the Norwegian Academy of Sciences in 1977 and a foreign associate of the U. ...
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Veniamin Kaverin
Veniamin Aleksandrovich Kaverin (russian: link=no, Вениами́н Алекса́ндрович Каве́рин; Вениами́н А́белевич Зи́льбер (Veniamin Abelevich Zilber); , Pskov – May 2, 1989, Moscow) was a Soviet and Russian writer, dramatist and screenwriter associated with the early 1920s movement of the Serapion Brothers. Biography Kaverin was born to the kapellmeister of the 96th Infantry Regiment out of Omsk, Abel Abramovich Zilber and his wife, Khana Girshevna Desson, who owned a chain of music stores. His elder sister, Leah Abelevna Zilber, married Yury Tynyanov, who was a classmate of Kaverin's older brother, Lev Zilber. Kaverin studied at the Pskov Governorate Gymnasium and in 1923 graduated the Leningrad Institute of Living Oriental Languages, specializing in Arabic. In 1924, he also graduated the history and philology faculty of the Saint Petersburg State University, Leningrad State University. During that time he was close with me ...
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Veniamin Soldatenko
Veniamin Vasilievich Soldatenko (russian: Вениамин Васильевич Солдатенко, born 4 January 1939) is a retired Soviet athlete who competed mainly in the 50 km walk. He acquired Kazakhstani citizenship after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Soldatenko took up athletics in 1962 and became a member of the USSR National Team in 1967. He competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics and won the silver medal. He also won a silver medal at the 1970 World Race Walking Cup, a gold medal at the 1976 World Championships and bronze, gold and silver medals at the European Championships in 1969, 1971 and 1978, respectively. Soldatenko was awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor The Order of the Badge of Honour (russian: орден «Знак Почёта», orden "Znak Pochyota") was a civilian award of the Soviet Union. It was established on 25 November 1935, and was conferred on citizens of the USSR for outstanding ... in 1972. Soldatenko was the first ever IAAF ...
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Veniamin Alexandrov
Veniamin Veniaminovich Alexandrov (russian: Вениамин Вениаминович Александров; 18 April 1937 – 6 November 1991) was a Soviet ice hockey player who played in the Soviet Hockey League. He played for CSKA Moscow. He was inducted into the Russian and Soviet Hockey Hall of Fame in 1963. After playing exhibition matches in North America in 1957, Alexandrov was put on the negotiation list of the Chicago Black Hawks, a team in the National Hockey League The National Hockey League (NHL; french: Ligue nationale de hockey—LNH, ) is a professional ice hockey league in North America comprising 32 teams—25 in the United States and 7 in Canada. It is considered to be the top ranked professional .... While Soviet players were not expected to be able to move to North America, Chicago still felt highly enough of him to do so in the event that changed. Career statistics International References External links * Profile 1937 births 1991 dea ...
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Veniamin Fleishman
Veniamin Iosifovich Fleishman, (russian: Вениами́н Ио́сифович Фле́йшман, July 20, 1913 in Bezhetsk, Tver Governorate – September 14, 1941 in Krasnoye Selo, Leningrad Oblast) was a Soviet composer. ''Rothschild's Violin'' While studying under Dmitri Shostakovich at the Leningrad Conservatory (1939–1941), he began a one-act opera ''Rothschild's Violin'' based on Anton Chekhov's short story of the same name about Bronza, a Russian country coffin-maker and violinist, and his combative relationship with the Jewish musicians in his village. At the outbreak of World War II, Fleishman volunteered for the front and was killed before he could complete the work. In memory of his talented student, Shostakovich rescued the manuscript from besieged Leningrad, finished it and orchestrated it in 1943–1944. Shostakovich dated his completion of the score February 5, 1944. Later, he exerted influence so that the opera should be published and performed. The oper ...
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Veniamin Kagan
Veniamin Fyodorovich Kagan (russian: Вениами́н Фёдорович Ка́ган; 10 March 1869 – 8 May 1953) was a Russian and Soviet mathematician and expert in geometry. He is the maternal grandfather of mathematicians Yakov Sinai and Grigory Barenblatt. Biography Kagan was born in Shavli, in the Kovno Governorate of the Russian Empire (now Šiauliai, Lithuania) in 1869, to a poor Lithuanian Jewish family. In 1871 his family moved to Yekaterinoslav (now Dnipro), where he grew up. Kagan entered the Imperial Novorossiya University in Odesa in 1887, but was expelled for revolutionary activities in 1889. He was put on probation and sent back to Yekaterinoslav. He studied mathematics on his own and in 1892 passed the state exam at Kyiv University. In 1894 Kagan moved to Saint Petersburg where he continued his studies with Andrey Markov and Konstantin Posse. They tried to help him to obtain an academic position, but Kagan's Jewish background was an obstacle. Only in 1897 w ...
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Veniamin Mandrykin
Veniamin Anatolyevich Mandrykin (russian: Вениамин Анатольевич Мандрыкин; born 30 August 1981) is a retired Russian professional football goalkeeper. Career Mandrykin trained at the youth academy at FC Alania Vladikavkaz and in 1997 turned professional aged seventeen. In 1998, he made his Russian Premier League debut and made 46 first-team appearances for FC Alania Vladikavkaz over the next three years before joining PFC CSKA Moscow in 2002. He played for PFC Spartak Nalchik in the Russian Cup. Injury On 10 November 2010, he crashed his Porsche Cayenne SUV into a tree after trying to get away from a traffic police car in a high-speed chase. He suffered spinal fracture and injuries to his spinal cord. Two passengers in his car (two women, aged 19 and 20) received less serious injuries, breaking bones. Two of his FC Dynamo Bryansk teammates who were also in the car, Maksim Fyodorov and Marat Magkeyev Marat Rostislavovich Magkeyev (rus ...
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Veniamin Belkin
Veniamin Pavlovich Belkin (russian: Вениамин Павлович Белкин, January 26, 1884, Verkhoturye, Verkhotursky Uyezd, Perm Governorate — November 8, 1951, Leningrad, now Saint Petersburg) was a Russian artist and painter. He made a lot of book artwork and was presented at various exhibitions from 1906, both in the Soviet Union ( Moscow, Leningrad) and abroad ( Paris, New York New York most commonly refers to: * New York City, the most populous city in the United States, located in the state of New York * New York (state), a state in the northeastern United States New York may also refer to: Film and television * '' ..., Boston). Among Belkin's notable scores are those for '' The Decameron'', '' The Three Musketeers'', '' A Hero of Our Time'' and '' The Knight in the Panther's Skin''. He also worked for famous publishing house Academia. Belkin was a close friend of Alexey Tolstoy and Anna Akhmatova. from Wayback Machine Notes {{DEFAULTSORT:Bel ...
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