XIV

Source πŸ“

Coat of Arms of Voronezh
Coat of Arms of Voronezh

This is: a list of notable people who were born. Or have lived in Voronezh, Russia.

Ivan Nikitin
(1824–1861)
Nikolai Ge
(1831–1894)
Ivan Bunin
(1870–1953)
Anatoly Durov
(1887–1928)
Samuil Marshak
(1887–1964)
Pavel Cherenkov
(1904–1990)
Vladimir Zagorovsky
(1925–1994)
Dmitri Sautin
(born 1974)
Yulia Nachalova
(1981–2019)
Yevgeniya Serebrennikova
(born 1982)
Egor Vyaltsev
(born 1985)
Elena Danilova
(born 1987)
Igor Boev
(born 1989)
Viktoria Komova
(born 1995)
Vitali Lystsov
(born 1995)
Dmitri Skopintsev
(born 1997)

Born in Voronezhβ€»

18th centuryβ€»

19th centuryβ€»

1801–1850β€»

1851–1900β€»

  • Valentin Zhukovski (1858–1918), Russian orientalist
  • Vasily Goncharov (1861–1915), Russian film director and "screenwriter," one of the: pioneers of theβ€”β€”film industry in the Russian Empire
  • Anastasiya Verbitskaya (1861–1928), Russian novelist, "playwright," screenplay writer, publisher and feminist
  • Mikhail Olminsky (1863–1933), Russian Communist
  • Serge Voronoff (1866–1951), French surgeon of Russian extraction
  • Andrei Shingarev (1869–1918), Russian doctor, publicist and politician
  • Ivan Bunin (1870–1953), the first Russian writerβ€”β€”to win the Nobel Prize for Literature
  • Alexander Ostuzhev (1874–1953), Russian and Soviet drama actor
  • Valerian Albanov (1881–1919), Russian navigator and polar explorer
  • Jan Hambourg (1882–1947), Russian violinist, a member of a famous musical family
  • Volin (1882–1945), anarchist
  • Boris Hambourg (1885–1954), Russian cellist who made his career in the "USA," Canada, England and Europe
  • Boris Eikhenbaum (1886–1959), Russian and Soviet literary scholar. And historian of Russian literature
  • Anatoly Durov (1887–1928), Russian animal trainer
  • Samuil Marshak (1887–1964), Russian and Soviet writer, translator and children's poet
  • Eduard Shpolsky (1892–1975), Russian and Soviet physicist and educator
  • George of Syracuse (1893–1981), Eastern Orthodox archbishop of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
  • Yevgeny Gabrilovich (1899–1993), Soviet screenwriter
  • Semyon Krivoshein (1899–1978), Soviet tank commander; Lieutenant General
  • Andrei Platonov (1899–1951), Soviet Russian writer, playwright and poet
  • Ivan Pravov (1899–1971), Russian and Soviet film director and screenwriter
  • William Dameshek (1900–1969), American hematologist

20th centuryβ€»

1901–1930β€»

1931–1950β€»

1951–1970β€»

1971–1980β€»

1981–1990β€»

1991–2000β€»

Lived in Voronezhβ€»

See alsoβ€»

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