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Baranovsky
Baranowski ( ; feminine: Baranowska, plural: Baranowscy) is a Polish surname. It is Lithuanised as Baranauskas and frequently transliterated from Russian as Baranovsky (feminine: Baranovskaya). The name is also frequently found among Ashkenazi Jews. People Notable people with the surname include: *Agnieszka Baranowska (1819–1890), Polish playwright and poet *Antanas Baranauskas (1835–1902), Lithuanian poet *Danny Baranowsky (born 1984), American electronic music composer * Dariusz Baranowski (born 1972), Polish cyclist * Dmytro Baranovskyy (born 1979), Ukrainian long-distance runner *Gabriel Baranovskii (1860–1920), also Gavriil (Baranovski, Baranowski) Russian architect, civil engineer, publisher and art historian *Henryk Baranowski (1943–2013), Polish theatre director and actor * Hermann Baranowski (1884–1940), German Nazi SS concentration camp commandant *Katarzyna Baranowska (born 1987), Polish Olympic swimmer *Kinga Baranowska (born 1975), Polish mountaineer *Kr ...
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Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky
Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky (russian: Михаил Иванович Туган-Барановский, uk, Михайло Іванович Туган-Барановський, romanized: ''Mykhailo Ivanovych Tuhan-Baranovskyi'') was a Ukrainian economist, politician, statesman. He is remembered as one of the founders of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and one of the earliest Ukrainian ministers of finances in the Vynnychenko's General Secretariat of the Central Council of Ukraine. In professional circles he is remembered as a leading exponent of Legal Marxism in the Tsarist Russian Empire and was the author of numerous works dealing with the theory of value, the distribution of a social revenue, history of managerial development, and fundamentals of cooperative managerial activities. Early life Mikhail Ivanovich Tugan-Baranovsky was born on 8 January 1865 in the village of Solyonoe in the Kupyansky Uyezd of the Kharkov Governorate of the Russian Empire (present-day ...
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Gabriel Baranovskii
Gavriil Vasilyevich Baranovsky (russian: Гавриил Васильевич Барановский, also spelled as Baranovskii, - ) was a Russian architect, civil engineer, art historian and publisher, who worked primarily in Saint Petersburg for the Elisseeff family, but also practiced in Moscow and produced the first town plan for Murmansk (then Romanov-na-Murmane). Biography Education and early career He was born in Odessa to attorney Vasili Ivanovitš Baranovsky and his wife Rosalia Malinovska Gavriil Baranovsky. Baranovsky trained at Saint Petersburg Institute of Civil Engineers (1881–1886), graduating with an honorary silver medal. He began his architectural career as an assistant to Paul Susor (Pavel Susor) between 1883 and 1885. His first commission was a state-financed Main Palace Chancellery (Главная дворцовая канцелярия); in 1885-1888, Baranovsky worked on numerous apartment buildings in Saint Petersburg. After 1888 he became staff archi ...
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Petr Baranovsky
Pyotr Dmitrievich Baranovsky (; February 26, 1892 – June 12, 1984) was a Russian architect, preservationist and restorator who reconstructed many ancient buildings in the Soviet Union. He is credited with saving Saint Basil's Cathedral from destruction in the early 1930s, founding and managing the Kolomenskoye and Andrei Rublev museums, and developing modern restoration technologies. Education and early career Petr Baranovsky was born in a peasant family in Shuyskoye, in the Vyazemsky Uyezd of the Smolensk Governorate of the Russian Empire, and completed a construction engineer's degree in Moscow in 1912, earning the medal of Russian Archeological Society for restoration of Boldino Trinity Monastery in his native Smolensk region. After a brief work on industrial and railway projects, with the outbreak of World War I, he was drafted into military engineers' corps. In 1918, he completed a second degree, in art studies, and joined the faculty of Moscow State University. In 192 ...
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Dmytro Baranovskyy
Dmytro Baranovskyi or Dmytro Baranovskyy ( uk, Дмитро Барановський; born July 28, 1979) is a male long-distance runner from Ukraine who specialises in the marathon. He represented his country in the event at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Career Baranovskyy won the 2005 edition of the annual Fukuoka Marathon, clocking 2:08:29 on December 4, 2005. He set his personal best of 2:07:15 at the competition the following year, but was beaten into the runner-up spot by Haile Gebrselassie. He was also the winner of the 10,000 metres gold medal at the 2001 European Athletics U23 Championships The 3rd European Athletics U23 Championships were held in Amsterdam, Netherlands ) , anthem = ( en, "William of Nassau") , image_map = , map_caption = , subdivision_type = Sovereign state , subdivision_name = Kingdom of the Netherland .... He returned to Fukuoka in 2011 and came seventh, the second European to finish after Dmitriy Safronov.Nakamura, Ken (2011-11-04)Running ...
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Baranauskas
Baranauskas is the masculine form of a Lithuanian family name. Its feminine forms are: Baranauskienė (married woman or widow) and Baranauskaitė (unmarried woman). Notable people with the surname include: *Antanas Baranauskas (1835–1902), Lithuanian poet and bishop *Tomas Baranauskas (born 1973), Lithuanian historian *Stasys Baranauskas (born 1962), Lithuanian football player See also *Baranowski, Polish version *Baranovsky Baranowski ( ; feminine: Baranowska, plural: Baranowscy) is a Polish surname. It is Lithuanised as Baranauskas and frequently transliterated from Russian as Baranovsky (feminine: Baranovskaya). The name is also frequently found among Ashkenazi Je ..., Russian version {{surname Lithuanian-language surnames ...
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Wojciech Baranowski
Wojciech Baranowski (1548 – 23 September 1615) was archbishop of Gniezno and primate of Poland. Biography In 1581 he was ordained a priest and became the royal secretary of Stefan Batory, accompanying him during the Pskov campaign. Later in 1581 he became grand secretary to the crown, and by 1585 he was the Crown Deputy Chancellor. In 1587 he signed a recession sanctioning the election of Sigismund III Vasa. Also in 1587, on behalf of the senate, he welcomed Zygmunt III's deputation on a ship in Gdańsk, insisting that he sign a pacta conventa containing a promise to join Estonia to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. In 1589, he was a signatory to the ratification of the Bytom-Będzin Treaty at the pacification of Sejm.Codex diplomaticus Regni Poloniae et Magni Ducatus Lituaniae, wydał Maciej Dogiel, t. I, Wilno 1758, page. 237. On 30 January 1591, he was appointed bishop of Płock. From 1595-1596 he worked on behalf of the king with Pope Clement VIII. On 14 May 1 ...
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