Troyekurovskoye Cemetery
Troyekurovskoye Cemetery | |
---|---|
Троекуровское кладбище | |
Details | |
Established | 1962 |
Location | |
Country | Russia |
Coordinates | 55°42′00″N 37°24′32″E / 55.70000°N 37.40889°E |
Size | 33.72 hectares (83.3 acres) |
The Troyekurovo Cemetery (Russian: Троекуровское кладбище, romanized: Troyekurovskoye kladbishche), alternatively known as Novo-Kuntsevo Cemetery (Russian: Ново-Кунцевское кладбище, romanized: Novo-Kuntsevskoye kladbishche), is a cemetery in Moscow, Russia.
The cemetery is located in the former village of
Soviet era
but reopened in 1991.
Troyekurovo Cemetery is administered as a branch of the Novodevichy Cemetery and is the resting place of numerous notable Russian and Soviet figures.
Notable people buried at the Troyekurovo Cemetery
Notable graves
- Nina Alisova (1915–1996), Russian actress
- Gennady Bachinsky (1971–2008), Russian radio talk show host and producer
- Grigory Baklanov (1923–2009), Russian writer
- George Blake (1922–2020), Soviet spy who defected from the United Kingdom
- Alexei Bogomolov (1913–2009), radio engineer, Hero of Socialist Labour, Lenin Prize, USSR State Prize
- Viktor Bortsov (1934–2008), Soviet/Russian theatrical and cinema actor
- Galina Dzhugashvili (1938–2007), Russian translator of French, granddaughter of Joseph Stalin
- Semyon Farada (1933–2009), Russian actor
- cosmonaut
- Vladislav Galkin (1971–2010), Russian film actor
- Vasily Grossman (1905–1964), Soviet-era writer and journalist
- Natalya Gundareva (1948–2005), Russian actress
- Roman Abelevich Kachanov(1921–1993), Russian animator
- Russian military
- Elem Klimov (1933–2003), Soviet Russian film director
- Vyacheslav Kochemasov (1918–1998), diplomat
- Central Bank of the Russian Federationfrom 1997 to 1999 and again in 2002 to 2006
- Ilya Kormiltsev (1959–2007), Russian poet, translator, and publisher
- Konstantin Krylov (1967–2020), nationalist writer, journalist and philosopher
- Alfred Kuchevsky (1931–2000), Soviet professional ice hockey player
- plasma physics, complexitystudies and synergetic
- Mikhail Lapshin (1934–2006), President of the Altai Republic in Russia from 2002 to 2006
- political scientist
- Alexander Lenkov (1943–2014), Russian film, stage and voice actor.
- Anatoly Lysenko (1937–2021), Russian television figure, journalist, director, producer.[1]
- Sergey Mavrodi (1955–2018), MMMLeader
- Georgy Millyar (1903–1993), Russian film actor
- Yelena Mukhina(1960–2006), Soviet Gymnast.
- Yulia Nachalova (1981–2019), Russian singer and actor[2]
- Vyacheslav Nevinny (1934–2009), Russian actor
- Arsha Ovanesova (1906–1990), Soviet Armenian documentary film director, and screenplay writer.[3]
- Galina Pisarenko (1934–2022), Soviet-born Russian soprano and teacher
- activist well known for her opposition to the Chechen conflict and Russian President Vladimir Putin
- actress
- Pavel Popovich (1930–2009), the 8th person in space
- Anatoly Pristavkin (1931–2008), Russian writer
- Yuli Raizman (1903–1994), Russian film director
- Boris Rybakov (1908–2001), Soviet archaeologist and historian
- Genrikh Sapgir (1928–1999), Russian poet
- lexicographer
- Sergei Suponev (1963–2001), TV host
- Valentina Tolkunova (1946–2010), Russian singer
- Yevgeny Vesnik (1923–2009), Russian actor
- children's writer
- Sergey Zalygin (1913–2000), Russian novelist
- Agnia Aleksandrovna Kuznetsova(1911–1996), Russian writer
Public and political figures
- Yegor Ligachyov (1920–2021), Second Secretary of the CPSU
- Yevgeny Bushmin (1958–2019), Russian economist, politician
- Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union
- Prime Minister of the Soviet Union
- spy and head of the KGBfrom 1982 to 1988
- Vitaly Fedorchuk (1918–2008), Ukrainian Soviet administrator. He was chairman of the KGB in 1982. He then became the Soviet interior minister from 1982 until 1986
- Prime Minister of the Soviet Union
- Boris Fyodorov (1958–2008), Russian economist, politician, and reformer
- Aleksandr Kamshalov (1932–2019), member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and head of the State Committee for Cinematography in the Soviet Union
- Andrei Kirilenko (1906–1990), leading official of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in the 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s
- Kazakh SSR
- Nikolay Kruchina (1928–1991), top Soviet communist official, the administrator of affairs of the Central Committee
- Leader Mikhail Gorbachev
- Anna Larina (1914–1996), third wife of Bolshevik leader Nikolai Bukharin, and author of memoirs about the Soviet Union and her 20 years spent imprisoned within the Gulag
- Urals Federal District, Russia
- Yuri Maslyukov (1937–2010), the last Gosplan chairman
- Boris Nemtsov (1959–2015), Russian opposition politician
- political figure
- Vladimir Semichastny (1924–2001), Chief of the KGB from November 1961 to April 1967
- Georgy Shakhnazarov (1924–2001), Soviet politician and political scientist
- Larisa Shoygu (1953–2021), Russian politician, deputy of the State Duma (2007–21)[4]
- Anatoly Tyazhlov (1942–2008), Russian politician who served as the governor of Moscow Oblast from 1991 until 2000
- "
- vice president of the Soviet Union
Military
- Sergey Akhromeyev (1923–1991), Hero of the Soviet Union (1982), Marshal of the Soviet Union (1983)
- Galaktion Alpaidze (1916–2006), Soviet lieutenant general and first director of the Plesetsk Cosmodrome
- Timur Apakidze (1954–2001), Russian major general, deputy commander of naval aviation and Hero of the Russian Federation
- Aleksey Botyan (1917–2020), Hero of the Russian Federation (2007), Second World War partisan and intelligence officer[5]
- Vladimir Bogdashin (1952–2021), naval officer, rear admiral, captain of the frigate Bezzavetnyy during the 1988 Black Sea bumping incident.
- Yuri Drozdov (1925–2017), a high-level Soviet and Russian security official who oversaw the KGB's Illegals Program from 1979 to 1991.
- Vasily Dzhugashvili (1921–1962), general, son of Joseph Stalin and his second wife, Nadezhda Alliluyeva
- Vitaly Margelov (1941–2021), colonel general, intelligence officer[6]
- Natalya Meklin (1922–2005), World War II bomber pilot and Heroine of the Soviet Union
- Strategic Missile Forces[7]
- Yevdokiya Pasko (1919–2017), Heroine of the Soviet Union from the 46th Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment[8]
- Aleksey Prokhorov (1922–2002), twice Hero of the Soviet Union, major-general
- armies
- Russian Federation from 1997 until 2001. He was the first and as of 2008 the only Marshal of the Russian Federation.
- Yevgeny Shaposhnikov (1942–2020), Marshal of Aviation, final Defence Minister of the Soviet Union[9]
- Lieutenant-General, Hero of the Russian Federation
- Army Generalin the Soviet and Russian armies
- Lev Skvirsky (1903–1990), commander of the 26th Army
- Army General, Hero of the Russian Federation
- general-lieutenant, counterintelligence officer
- General of the Army, Hero of the Soviet Union
- Ivan Vertelko (1926–2021), Soviet Colonel General
- Soviet Air Force
- General of the Army, Hero of the Soviet Union
References
- ^ Arnoldova, Yelena (21 June 2021). "Названо место похорон Анатолия Лысенко" (in Russian). Gazeta.Ru. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
- ^ Юлию Началову похоронят в четверг на Троекуровском кладбище. Риа Новости (in Russian).
- ^ "ОВАНЕСОВА Арша Амбарцумовна (1906 – 1990)". moscow-tombs.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-06-27.
- ^ "В Москве прошла церемония прощания с Ларисой Шойгу" (in Russian). TASS. 12 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ "В Москве похоронили легендарного разведчика Алексея Ботяна" (in Russian). REGNUM News Agency. 13 February 2020.
- Rambler.ru. 27 March 2021. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
- ^ "Служба Ritual.ru организовала похороны генерал-полковника Владимира Александровича Муравьева" (in Russian). Moscow City Municipal Funeral Service. 27 January 2020. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ "ОФИЦЕРЫ РОССИИ" простились с фронтовиком, Героем Советского Союза Евдокией Борисовной Пасько. ОФИЦЕРЫ РОССИИ (in Russian). Retrieved 2018-01-02.
- ^ "Маршала авиации Шапошникова похоронили на Троекуровском кладбище" [Marshal of Aviation Shaposhnikov was buried at the Troekurovsky cemetery] (in Russian). Argumenty i Fakty. 11 December 2020. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2009) |
External links
- Media related to Troekurovo Cemetery at Wikimedia Commons
- List of graves and pictures of the Troyekurovo Cemetery (in Russian)
- Troyekurovskoye Cemetery at Find a Grave