List of Russian people

This is a list of people associated with the modern Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, Imperial Russia, Russian Tsardom, the Grand Duchy of Moscow, Kievan Rus', and other predecessor states of Russia.

The Millennium of Russia monument in Veliky Novgorod, featuring the statues and reliefs of the most celebrated people in the first 1000 years of Russian history.
Men of enlightenment at the Millennium of Russia
Statesmen at the Millennium of Russia
Military men and heroes at the Millennium of Russia
Writers and artists at the Millennium of Russia

Regardless of ethnicity or emigration, the list includes famous natives of Russia and its predecessor states, as well as people who were born elsewhere but spent most of their active life in Russia. For more information, see the articles Rossiyane, Russians and Demographics of Russia. For specific lists of Russians, see Category:Lists of Russian people and Category:Russian people.

Statesmen

Monarchs

  • Rurik, ruler of Novgorod, progenitor of the Rurikid Dynasty, traditionally the first ruler of Russia
  • Oleg "the Seer", conqueror of Kiev and founder of Kievan Rus', famous for his wars with Byzantium
  • Igor "the Old", the first historically well-attested Rurikid ruler
  • Olga, the first woman ruler of Rus' (regent), the first Christian among Russian rulers
  • Vladimir I "the Great", turned from pagan to saint and enacted the Christianization of Kievan Rus'
  • Yaroslav I "the Wise", reigned in the period when Kievan Rus' reached the zenith of its cultural flowering and military power, founder of Yaroslavl
  • Vladimir II Monomakh, defender of Rus' from Cuman nomads, presided over the end of the Golden Age of Kiev
  • Yury I "the Long-Handed", founder of Moscow
  • Andrey I "Bogolyubsky" (the God-Loving), key figure in transition of political power from Kiev to Vladimir-Suzdal
  • Vsevolod "the Big Nest", the Grand Prince of Vladimir during its Golden Age, had 14 children
  • Alexander Nevsky, Prince of Novgorod and Grand Prince of Vladimir, military hero famous for the Battle of Neva and the Battle of the Ice, patron saint and the Name of Russia
  • Ivan I "the Moneybag", brought wealth and power to Moscow by maintaining his loyalty to the Golden Horde and acting as its chief tax collector in Russia
  • Simeon "the Proud", continued the policies of his father Ivan I, died of the Black Death
    Ivan the Great
  • Dmitry Donskoy, saint and war hero, the first Prince of Moscow to openly challenge Mongol authority in Russia, famous for the Battle of Kulikovo
  • Ivan III "the Great", reunited the Central and Northern Rus', put an end to the Mongol yoke, brought Renaissance architecture to Russia
  • Ivan IV, the first Tsar of Russia, called "the Terrible" in the West; transformed Russia into a multiethnic, multiconfessional, and transcontinental state
  • Boris Godunov, the first non-Rurikid monarch
  • False Dmitriy I, the first impostor during the Time of Troubles
  • Vasili IV Shuisky, Tsar elected during the Time of Troubles
  • False Dmitry II, the second impostor during the Time of Troubles
  • Mikhail, the first Romanov monarch, oversaw the largest ever expansion of Russia's territory, reaching the Pacific

Statesmen of the Tsardom and Empire

Aleksandr Menshikov

Soviet leaders and statesmen

Presidents and contemporary politicians

  • Dmitriy Abramenkov, vice-governor of the Smolensk Oblast and deputy in the State Duma during the second (1995–1999) and third (1999–2003) sessions
  • Viktor Chernomyrdin, Prime Minister of Russia for most of the 1990s
  • Yegor Gaidar, Prime Minister in 1992, launched the controversial shock therapy reforms aimed into installation of liberal market economy in Russia
  • Boris Gryzlov, current Speaker of Russia's State Duma (the lower house of parliament) and a leader of the ruling United Russia party
  • Mikhail Fradkov, Prime Minister from 2004–07, currently the head of Russian Foreign Intelligence Service
  • Sergei Kiriyenko, Prime Minister in 1998, currently the head of Rosatom (the state nuclear energy corporation)

Military

Army

Air Force

Religious figures

Orthodox leaders

  • Metropolitan Alexius, saint, ruled Russia during Prince Dmitry Donskoy's minority
  • Patriarch Alexy I, longest serving Patriarch in the Soviet era
  • Patriarch Alexy II, first post-Soviet Patriarch, oversaw the period of major church restoration and religious renaissanse
  • Metropolitan Isidore, attempted a reunion with the Roman Catholic Church, which instead led to independence of the Russian Orthodox Church
  • Patriarch Job, last Metropolitan and the first Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia
  • Patriarch Kirill, current Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia
    Patriarch Philaret
  • Metropolitan Macarius, saint, prominent iconographer
  • Patriarch Nikon, introduced major church reforms which eventually led to a lasting schism in the Russian Orthodox Church, known as Raskol
  • Metropolitan Philaret, saint, the principal Russian theologician of the 19th century
  • Patriarch Philaret, de facto ruler of Russia during the minority of his son, Tsar Mikhail
  • Patriarch Pimen, oversaw the end of the persecution of Christianity in the Soviet Union and the 1000th anniversary of the Baptism of Rus'
    Patriarch Tikhon
  • Patriarch Sergius, led the Russian Orthodox Church during World War II, when the earlier Soviet militant atheism was scaled down and the Church was re-legalised
  • Patriarch Tikhon, first Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia after restoration of the Patriarchate in the early Soviet era

Orthodox saints

Explorers

Siberian explorers

Explorers of Russian America

Circumnavigators

  • Fyodor Konyukhov, adventurer, the first Russian to complete the Three Poles Challenge and Explorers Grand Slam, set a record for the solo yacht circumnavigation of Antarctica
  • Mikhail Lazarev, discoverer of Antarctica and a number of Pacific islands, triple circumnavigator, war hero
  • Yuri Lisyansky, leader of the first Russian circumnavigation, discoverer of a number of Pacific islands
  • Fyodor Litke, oceanographer, explorer of Novaya Zemlya, Bering Sea, Bonin Islands, and the Carolines, double circumnavigator
  • Konstantin Posyet, participant of the circumnavigation on the frigate Pallas, expert on Japan, explorer of the Possiet Bay, Minister of Ways and Communications of Russia
  • Yevfimy Putyatin, leader of the circumnavigation on Pallas, diplomat, explorer of the Sea of Japan
  • Nikolai Rezanov, leader of the first Russian circumnavigation, explorer of the Russian America, protagonist of the rock opera Juno and Avos
  • Fyodor Tolstoy, "the American", mischief-making participant of the first Russian circumnavigation, celebrity adventurer
  • Ivan Unkovsky, leader of the circumnavigation on Pallas
  • Vasily Zavoyko, double circumnavigator, explored the estuary of the Amur River, war hero

Travelers in the tropics

Explorers of Central Asia

Polar explorers

Cosmonauts

Inventors and engineers

Polymath inventors

Weaponry makers

Land transport developers

Aerospace engineers

Structural engineers

Electrical engineers

IT developers

Optics and photography pioneers

Communication engineers

Musical instrument makers

Miscellaneous inventors

Scientists and scholars

Polymaths

Earth scientists

Biologists and paleontologists

Physicians and psychologists

Ilya Mechnikov

Economists and sociologists

Historians and archaeologists

Linguists and ethnographers

Mathematicians

Astronomers and cosmologists

Physicists

Chemists and material scientists

Philosophers

Imperial period

Soviet period

Modern

Orientalists

East Asian studies

Middle East studies

Art

Visual arts

Architects

Sculptors and jewellers

Painters

Literature

Novel and short story authors

Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Philosophers and critics

Playwrights

Poets

Aleksandr Blok

Performing arts

Actors

Theatre directors

Film directors and animators

Ballet dancers and choreographers

Classical composers and musicians

Opera and choir singers

Modern musicians, singers and bands

Radio and TV people

Fashion models

Sportspeople

Basketball

Boxers

Chess players

Fencers

  • Maria Mazina (born 1964), épée fencer, Olympic gold medalist, bronze
  • Mark Midler (1931–2012), foil fencer, 2-time Olympic champion
  • Mark Rakita (born 1938), saber fencer, 2-time Olympic champion, 2-time silver
  • Yakov Rylsky (1928–1999), saber fencer, Olympic champion
  • Sergey Sharikov (1974–2015), sabre fencer, two-time Olympic gold medalist, silver, bronze
  • David Tyshler (1927–2014), sabre fencer, Olympic bronze medalist
  • Eduard Vinokurov (1942–2010), sabre fencer, 2-time Olympic gold medalist, silver, six-time team world champion
  • Iosif Vitebskiy (born 1938), épée fencer, Soviet Ukrainian Olympic medalist and world champion and fencing coach

Figure skaters

Gymnasts

Ice hockey players

Association football players

Andrei Arshavin

Tennis players

  • Nikolay Davydenko, former consistent top 10 player
  • Elena Dementieva, silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics and gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics
  • Yevgeny Kafelnikov, former world no. 1 tennis player
  • Anna Kournikova, former top 10 tennis player
  • Svetlana Kuznetsova, former world no. 2 tennis player. Won the 2004 U.S. Open and 2009 French Open
  • Anastasia Myskina, former world no. 2 tennis player. Won the 2004 French Open (becoming the first Russian woman to win a grand slam title)
  • Daniel Prenn (1904–1991), Russian-born German, Polish, and British world-top-ten tennis player
  • Marat Safin, former world no. 1 tennis player. Won 2000 U.S. Open and 2005 Australian Open.
  • Dinara Safina, former world no. 1 ladies tennis player
  • Maria Sharapova, former world no. 1 tennis player. Won 2004 Wimbledon, 2006 U.S. Open, 2008 Australian Open, 2012 French Open and Silver Medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics
  • Vera Zvonareva, two time Grand Slam finalist

Weightlifters

Other sportspeople

Yelena Isinbaeva

Activists and revolutionaries

Legendary and folk heroes

See also

References

  1. Carson Cunningham (2010). American Hoops: U.S. Men's Olympic Basketball from Berlin to Beijing. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-2293-9. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  2. Bloom, Nate (February 16, 2006). "The Tribe goes to Torino: Sketches of Jewish Olympic-Bound Athletes". JWR. Retrieved July 1, 2010.
  3. Stokkermans, Karel. "IFFHS' Century Elections". RSSSF. Retrieved June 25, 2008.
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