Яковлев Як-40 9421225, Санкт-Петербург - Пулково RP80570
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Яковлев Як-40 9421225, Санкт-Петербург - Пулково RP80570
Yakovlev (Яковлев, ) is an East Slavic surname derived from the masculine given name Yakov. Yakovleva is the feminine form. Notable people with the surname include: * Alexander Yakovlev (other), several people * Anatoli Yakovlev (1913–1993), Soviet spymaster in New York City * Andrei Yakovlev (born 1995), Russian footballer * Boris Yakovlev (1945–2014), Soviet Ukrainian race walker * Dmitry Yakovlev, Kazakhstani beach volleyball player * Egor Yakovlev (born 1991), Russian ice hockey player * Elena Yakovleva (born 1961), Russian actress * Gennady Yakovlev (born 1938), Russian botanist * Ivan Yakovlev (1848–1930), Chuvash enlightener, educator, and writer * Lora Yakovleva (born 1932), Russian chess grandmaster * Maksim Sergeyevich Yakovlev (born 1991), Russian footballer * Mikhail Iakovlev (born 2000), Israeli racing cyclist * Mikhail Yakovlev (footballer, born 1892) (1892–1942), Russian footballer * Natalya Yakovleva (handballer) (born 1986), Kaza ...
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Yakov
Yakov (alternative spellings: Jakov or Iakov, cyrl, Яков) is a Russian or Hebrew variant of the given names Jacob (name), Jacob and James (name), James. People also give the nickname Yasha ( cyrl, Яша) or Yashka ( cyrl, Яшка) used for Yakov. Notable people People named Yakov * Yakov Blumkin (1900–1929), a Left Socialist-Revolutionary * Yakov Cherevichenko (1894–1976), Soviet military leader * Yakov Chubin (1893–1956), Soviet official * Yakov Dzhugashvili (1907–1943), the oldest son of Joseph Stalin * Yakov Eliashberg (born 1946), American mathematician * Yakov Ehrlich (born 1988), former Russian football player * Yakov Eshpay (1890–1963), Soviet composer * Yakov Estrin (1923–1987), Soviet chess player * Yakov Fedorenko (1896–1947), Soviet military leader * Yakov Frenkel (1894–1952), Soviet physicist * Yakov Fliyer (1912–1977), Soviet pianist * Yakov Gakkel (1901–1965), Soviet oceanographer * Yan Gamarnik, Yakov "Yan" Gamarnik (1894–1937), Soviet off ...
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Oleg Yakovlev (footballer, Born 1970)
Oleg Ivanovich Yakovlev (; born 5 July 1970) is a Russian professional football manager and a former player. Yakovlev played in the Russian First League with FC Zvezda Irkutsk FC Zvezda Irkutsk () was a Russian football club based in Irkutsk. Zvezda finished first in the Russian Second Division East in 2006, winning promotion to the Russian First Division. The club previously played in the First Division between 1992 a .... External links * 1970 births Living people Soviet men's footballers Russian men's footballers FC Zvezda Irkutsk players Russian football managers Men's association football defenders Footballers from Irkutsk 20th-century Russian sportsmen {{Russia-footy-defender-1970s-stub ...
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Vasyl Yakovlev
Vasyl Yakovlev (born 3 July 1972) is a Ukrainian former cyclist. He competed four Olympic Games The modern Olympic Games (Olympics; ) are the world's preeminent international Olympic sports, sporting events. They feature summer and winter sports competitions in which thousands of athletes from around the world participate in a Multi-s .... References External links * 1972 births Living people Ukrainian male cyclists Olympic cyclists for Ukraine Olympic cyclists for the Unified Team Cyclists at the 1992 Summer Olympics Cyclists at the 1996 Summer Olympics Cyclists at the 2000 Summer Olympics Cyclists at the 2004 Summer Olympics Sportspeople from Odesa {{Ukraine-cycling-bio-stub ...
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Vasily Evgrafovich Yakovlev
Vasily Evgrafovich Yakovlev (; also transliterated Vasiliy Ewgrafowitsch Jakovlev or Vasiliy Yevgrafovich Yakovlev; 9 February 1839 – 15 August 1908) was a Russian zoologist who studied fishes, molluscs and insects. He is not to be confused with Alexander Ivanovich Yakovlev, another entomologist. His name was spelled Wassily Ewgrafowitsch Jakowlew in French, in which he sometimes wrote. Yakovlev lived in Saint Petersburg, but travelled widely collecting insects in the Crimea, Volga region and Turkestan until he finally travelled and settled in Griffin, GA. Although primarily interested in Coleoptera, Yakovlev also worked on Hemiptera and Lepidoptera. From around 1867 Yakovlev conducted zoological observations in the vicinity of Astrakhan. Yakovlev described Caspian roach (''Rutilus caspicus'') and Volga undermouth (''Chondrostoma variabile''). Publications Partial list *Description de quelques Longicornes paléarctiques nouveaux ou peu connus. ''Horae Soc. Ent. Ross''. 29: 5 ...
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Vasily Yakovlev
Vasily Vasilyevich Yakovlev (; 16 September 1938) was a Russian Old Bolshevik revolutionary and politician. He participated in the October Revolution of 1917; transferred former Russian Emperor Nicholas II and his family to Yekaterinburg, where they were later killed; rose to become a commander in the Red Army during the Russian Civil War; fled to China after being captured by the White Army, where he became a government advisor; and returned to the Soviet Union in 1928, where he was eventually arrested and executed. Yakovlev was portrayed by the actor Ian Holm in the 1971 film Nicholas and Alexandra. Political career Vasily Yakovlev was born Konstantin Alekseyevich Mâčin on in Sharlyk, Orenburg Oblast, Sharlyk to the family of Aleksey Mâčin, a Latvian engineer. In 1901 he was recruited as a sailor and studied electrical engineering in Helsinki, where in 1905 he joined the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and participated in an uprising of sa ...
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Varvara Yakovleva (politician)
Varvara Nikolaevna Yakovleva (; ( – 11 September 1941) was a prominent Bolshevik party member and Soviet government official who later supported Leon Trotsky's attempt to democratize the party. She was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 1938 for membership in a "diversionary terrorist organization." She was later shot in the Medvedev Forest massacre in Oryol. Early life Yakovleva was born in December 1884 in Moscow to the middle-class family of a tradesman of Jewish descent. Her father was a convert to Orthodox Christianity. She joined the Bolsheviks in January 1904, aged 19, as a student at a women's college in Moscow, where she was studying mathematics and physics, and was immediately involved in the illegal distribution of party literature. During the 1905 Revolution, she was violently assaulted on the breasts, which damaged her health, and was a cause of the tuberculosis that she later contracted in exile in Siberia. She was first arrested in 1906, and again in 1907, and bar ...
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Varvara Yakovleva
Varvara Alexeyevna Yakovleva (; c. 1880 – July 18, 1918), called Nun Barbara (), was a Russian Orthodox nun in the convent of Grand Duchess Elizabeth Fyodorovna. She was killed by the Bolsheviks along with the grand duchess and Prince Ioann Konstantinovich of Russia, Prince Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia, Prince Igor Konstantinovich of Russia, Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich of Russia, Fyodor Remez, Grand Duke Sergei's secretary, and Prince Vladimir Pavlovich Paley at Alapaevsk. She was later canonized as a martyr by both the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church within Russia. Life There is very little reliable information about her life before entering the Martha and Mary Convent. According to documentary evidence, she came from Tver. She arrived at the Convent from Yalta on August 20, 1910. In 1911, she was 31 years old.Додонов Б. Ф., Копылова О. Н., Крячкова Л. В«Новые свидетельств ...
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Valentina Yakovleva
Valentina Yakovleva (; born 18 January 1947) is a Soviet swimmer. She competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics The , officially the and commonly known as Tokyo 1964 (), were an international multi-sport event held from 10 to 24 October 1964 in Tokyo, Japan. Tokyo had been awarded the organization of the 1940 Summer Olympics, but this honor was subseq ... in the 100 m butterfly event, but did not reach the final. Between 1963 and 1965 she won two national titles and set seven national records in butterfly and medley disciplines. After marriage she changed her last name to Rakaeva (). She works as a swimming coach at a Moscow sports school; she is also a swimming referee. References 1947 births Living people Soviet female butterfly swimmers Swimmers at the 1964 Summer Olympics Ukrainian female butterfly swimmers Olympic swimmers for the Soviet Union Sportspeople from Lviv {{Ukraine-swimming-bio-stub ...
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Vadim Yakovlev
Vadim Yakovlev was a Russian Cossack cavalry commander, in the rank of yesaul. A veteran of World War I, during the Russian Civil War he commanded a Cossack brigade in the ranks of Gen. Anton Denikin's White Russian army in Ukraine. Following Denikin's defeat, Yakovlev crossed the Bolshevik lines and with his men joined the Red Army as the commander of the 3rd Don Cossack Cavalry Brigade. Attached to the Semyon Budyonny's 1st Cavalry Army, the brigade was dispatched to the front of the Polish-Soviet War during the Polish offensive on Kiev. After the Battle of Wołodarka on 31 May 1920, he again switched sides with his men and joined the Polish Army, where his grade was reaffirmed as that of a Colonel. His brigade, roughly 1700-men strong, was renamed to Free Cossack Brigade and fought alongside the Poles. The troops of Yakovlev were particularly notorious for their cruel and bloody marauding of villages and towns in Ukraine and, later, Belarus, and anti-Jewish pogroms in the e ...
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Sergei Yakovlev (other)
Sergei Yakovlev may refer to: * Sergei Yakovlev (actor) (1925–1996), Russian actor * Sergei Yakovlev (cyclist) Sergei Yakovlev, (, born April 21, 1976, in Temirtau, Karaganda Region, Soviet Union, now Kazakhstan) is a Kazakhstani (ethnic Russian) professional road bicycle racer. He is currently without a team. He turned professional in 1999 and rode for B ... (born 1976), Kazakhstani road-bicycle racer * Sergey Yakovlev (diplomat), Russian diplomat and ambassador to Israel, 2011–2015 {{hndis, Yakovlev, Sergei ...
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Roman Yakovlev
Roman Nikolayevich Yakovlev (; born 13 August 1976) is a Russian former volleyball player. Yakovlev played for the Russia men's national volleyball team that won the silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. He led Russia to the gold medal at the 1999 FIVB World Cup in Japan, and was named the MVP of the tournament. Two years later he won the Volleyball World League The FIVB Volleyball World League was an annual international men's volleyball competition. Created in 1990, it was the longest and richest of all the international events organized by the Fédération Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB). The wome ... (2002) with Russia. Individual awards * 1999 FIVB World Cup "Most Valuable Player" * 1999 FIVB World Cup "Best Spiker" * 2000 Serie A1 League MVP References * * External links * * * 1976 births Living people Russian men's volleyball players Volleyball players at the 2000 Summer Olympics Olympic volleyball players for Russia Olympic si ...
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Postnik Yakovlev
Postnik Yakovlev (; born 16th century in Pskov) was a Russian architect best known as one of the builders of the Saint Basil's Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow (built between 1555 and 1560, the other architect is Barma). It is thought that he was nicknamed "Barma" (Барма) ("the mumbler"), although it might be that his full name was, in fact, Ivan Yakovlevich Barma; (Postnik means "Faster", a term used for several religious figures, including Patriarch John IV of Constantinople); Barma might also be Yakovlev's assistant. According to legend, Ivan the Terrible blinded Yakovlev so that he could never build anything so beautiful again. However, this is probably a myth, as Yakovlev, in cooperation with another master, Ivan ShirIai, designed the walls of the Kazan Kremlin and the in Kazan in 1561 and 1562, just after the completion of St. Basil's. He also designed the northeast chapel of St. Basil's (where Basil himself, the popular Basil Fool for Christ – Yurodivy Vassily ...
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