List of people from Yaroslavl

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Coat of Arms of Yaroslavl
Coat of Arms of Yaroslavl

This is a list of notable people who were born or have lived in Yaroslavl, Russia.

Vasily Maykov
(1728–1778)
Duke of Oldenburg

(1812–1881)
Izmail Sreznevsky
(1812–1880)
Leonid Sabaneyev
(1844–1898)
Aleksandr Lyapunov
(1857–1918)
Konstantin Satunin

(1863–1915)
Yuri Lyubimov
(1917–2014)
Artemy Troitsky
(born 1955)
Elena Letuchaya
(born 1978)
Sergei Mozyakin
(born 1981)
Denis Grebeshkov
(born 1983)
Alexander Vasyunov
(1988–2011)
Mark Bluvshtein
(born 1988)
Olga Meganskaya
(born 1992)

Born in Yaroslavl

17th century

1601–1700

  • Joseph Vladimirov (active 1642–1666), Russian painter and art theorist of the 17th century

18th century

1701–1800

  • Vasily Maykov (1728–1778), Russian poet, fabulist, playwright and translator
  • Ivan Dmitrevsky (1734–1821), the most influential actor of Russian Neoclassicism and "Russia's first great tragedian"
  • Mikhail Popov
    (1742–1790), Russian writer, poet, dramatist and opera librettist
  • Gerasim Lebedev (1749–1817), Russian adventurer, linguist, pioneer of Bengali theatre, translator, musician and writer
  • Semyon Bobrov (1763/1765–1810), Russian poet and civil servant
  • Andrei Ukhtomsky (1771–1852), Russian copper engraver
  • Nikolay Mylnikov (1797–1842), Russian portrait painter

19th century

1801–1900

  • Karolina Pavlova (1807–1893), Russian poet and novelist
  • Duke Peter Georgievich of Oldenburg
    (1812–1881), Duke of the House of Oldenburg
  • Izmail Sreznevsky (1812–1880), a towering figure in 19th-century Slavic studies
  • Leonid Sabaneyev (1844–1898), Russian zoologist
  • Aleksandr Lyapunov (1857–1918), Russian mathematician, mechanician and physicist
  • Liverij Darkshevich
    (1858–1925), Russian neurologist
  • Sergei Lyapunov (1859–1924), Russian composer and pianist
  • Konstantin Satunin
    (1863–1915), Russian zoologist
  • Mikhail Kuzmin (1872–1936), Russian poet, musician and novelist
  • Leonid Sobinov (1872–1934), Russian opera singer
  • Sergey Shukalov (1883–after 1941), Soviet weapons designer
  • Mikhail Sokolov (1885–1947), Russian painter, graphic artist and illustrator active in Soviet Avant-garde arts activity
  • Ivan Vakhrameev (1885–1965), Russian revolutionary
  • Nikolai Nevsky
    (1892–1937), Russian and Soviet linguist
  • Mikhail Viktorov (1892–1938), Russian military leader and Commander-in-Chief of the Soviet Naval Forces

20th century

1901–1920

  • Boris Shavyrin (1902–1965), Russian artillery and rocket engineer
  • Bonifaty Kedrov (1903–1985), Soviet researcher, philosopher, logician, chemist and psychologist
  • Maria Prilezhayeva (1903–1989), Russian and Soviet children's author, literary critic and the Soviet Union of Writers official
  • Tikhon Rabotnov (1904–2000), Russian plant ecologist
  • Maria Petrovykh (1908–1979), Russian poet and translator
  • Victor Rozov
    (1913–2004), Russian Soviet dramatist
  • Yuri Lyubimov (1917–2014), Soviet and Russian stage actor and director associated with the internationally renowned Taganka Theatre, which he founded in 1964
  • Yury Smyslov (1920–1991), Soviet equestrian

1921–1950

  • Aleksey Naumov (1923–1943), WWII Soviet tank commander
  • Veniamin Basner (1925–1996), Russian composer
  • Violetta Kiss (1925–1994), Soviet acrobat, juggler, director, and teacher
  • Sergei Kalinin (born 1926), Russian sports shooter
  • Viktor Danilov (born 1927), abbot of the Greek Catholic parish in Grodno
  • Pavel Kolchin (1930–2010), Soviet cross-country skier
  • Juvenal Poyarkov
    (born 1935), hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church
  • Oleg Aleksandrov (1937–1997), Soviet rower
  • Viktor Carev
    (born 1939), Soviet sprint canoeist
  • Viktor Sheinov (born 1940), Professor of Psychology and Pedagogical Proficiency
  • Valery Tarakanov (born 1941), Soviet/Russian cross-country skier
  • Valentin Kornev (born 1942), Soviet sport shooter
  • Valery Volkov (born 1947), Soviet equestrian and Olympic champion
  • Valeri Frolov (born 1949), Russian professional football coach and a former player

1951–1960

1961–1970

1971–1980

1981–1990

1991–2000

21st century

2001–2100

Lived in Yaroslavl

See also

External links