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Lidiya Maslova
Lidiya is a feminine given name. People *Lidiya Alekseyeva (1924-2014) Russian basketball player *Lidiya Alfeyeva (born 1946), a Soviet long jumper *Lidiya Belozyorova (1945–2022), Ukrainian actresses *Lidiya Ginzburg (1902–1990), a major Soviet literary critic and a survivor of the siege of Leningrad *Lidiya Grigoryeva (born 1974), a Russian long-distance runner from the Chuvashia region *Lidiya Krylova (born 1951), a Russian rower who competed for the Soviet Union in the 1976 Summer Olympics *Lidiya Masterkova (1927–2008), a Russian-born French painter, non-conformist artist in USSR *Lidiya Rasulova, (1941–2012), Azerbaijani politician *Lidiya Skoblikova (born 1939), the most successful Olympic speed skater in terms of Olympic gold medals *Lidiya Sukharevskaya (1909–1991), a Soviet stage actress and playwright renowned for her work with Nikolay Akimov and Andrey Goncharov *Lidiya Shulaykina (1915–1995), Russian attack pilot during the Second World War *Lidiy ...
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Lidiya Alekseyeva
Lidiya Vladimirovna Alekseyeva (, 4 July 1924 – 26 June 2014) was a Russian basketball player and basketball coach, coach. Alekseyeva was born in Moscow. Alekseyeva was inducted into the inaugural class of the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 1999. She was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Famer, FIBA Hall of Fame in 2007. On 24 February 2012, Alekseyeva was announced as a member of the List of coaches in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2012; she was formally inducted on 7 September. Basketball playing career As a player, Alekseyeva won the Soviet Women's Basketball Championship, USSR Women's League with the WBC MAI, MAI Moscow team in 1947, 1951, 1954, 1955, and 1956, and the USSR Cup in 1952. While playing with the senior Soviet Union women's national basketball team, USSR National Team, she won the gold medal at the EuroBasket Women, in EuroBasket Women 1950, 1950, EuroBasket Women 1952, 1952, EuroBasket Wom ...
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Lidiya Alfeyeva
Lidiya Nikolayevna Alfeyeva (, ; 17 January 1946 – 18 April 2022) was a Soviet athlete who mainly competed in the women's long jump event during her career. Alfeyeva trained at the Armed Forces sports society in Moscow. She competed for the USSR in the 1976 Summer Olympics held in Montreal Montreal is the List of towns in Quebec, largest city in the Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Quebec, the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, second-largest in Canada, and the List of North American cit ..., Quebec, Canada where she won the bronze medal in the women's long jump event. References External links * * 1946 births 2022 deaths Ukrainian female long jumpers Soviet female long jumpers Olympic bronze medalists for the Soviet Union Athletes (track and field) at the 1976 Summer Olympics Athletes (track and field) at the 1980 Summer Olympics Olympic athletes for the Soviet Union Armed Forces (sports society) sportspeople ...
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Lidiya Belozyorova
Lidiya Oleksiivna Belozyorova (; ; 31 March 1945 – 15 February 2022) was a Ukrainian actress of stage and screen. She began working as an artist at the Mykola Kulish Theatre and spent her professional working career at between 1968 and 1969, then at Maria Zankovetska Theatre from 1969 to 1972 and finally at . Beloziorova performed in more than 100 drama and musical performances at Musical-Dramatic Theatre Mykola Sadovskiy. She was made a People's Artist of Ukraine, received the title of Merited Artist of Ukraine and earned the Order of Princess Olga, 3rd class. Biography On 31 March 1945, Belozyorova was born in Kherson under the maiden name of Lidiia Vakula. In 1963, she began working as an artist at the Mykola Kulish Theatre. Belozyorova was a 1968 graduate of the Kyiv National I. K. Karpenko-Kary Theatre, Cinema and Television University. She was an actress at the from 1968 to 1969 and then at Maria Zankovetska Theatre between 1969 and 1972. In 1972, Belozyorova joined ...
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Lidiya Ginzburg
Lidiya Yakovlevna Ginzburg (; March 18, 1902, Odessa, Russian Empire – July 17, 1990, Saint Petersburg, Leningrad, USSR) was a Soviet Union, Soviet literary critic, historian, writer of the Russian formalism, Russian Formalist school, and survivor of the siege of Leningrad. She is best known among English-reading audiences for her ''Blockade Diary'' (alternatively ''Diary of a Blockade Person''), written during and after the Siege of Leningrad. Ginzburg died at the age of 88 from a heart attack proceeded by a stroke. She is buried in a cemetery in Komarovo, Saint Petersburg, Komarovo. Early life Family Ginzburg was born to a wealthy, secularized Jewish merchant family in Odesa, Odessa, modern-day Ukraine. The Ginzburg family owned two homes in Odessa, of which they rented out parts. During the summertime, the Ginzburgs rented out Dacha, dachas where they hosted scholars living and working in Saint Petersburg, Leningrad. Ginzburg's father, Yakov Ginzburg, died in 1909 at the ...
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Lidiya Grigoryeva
Lidiya Grigoryeva (; born 25 January 1974 in Smychka, Chuvash ASSR) is a Russian long-distance runner from the Chuvashia region. Running career Grigoryeva won the bronze medal in the 10,000 metres at the 2006 European Championships in Athletics in Gothenburg, Sweden in a time of 30:32.72, a new personal best and the tenth-best time ever run by a European woman. She also won the 2006 Los Angeles Marathon in a time of 2:25:10 and the 2005 Paris Marathon in 2:27:01. Her personal best over the half marathon is 1:11:01, run in Edmonton at the 2005 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships. She was the women's 2007 Boston Marathon winner with a time of 2:29:18, and captured the 2008 Chicago Marathon title with a 2:27:17 time. Grigoryeva competed for Russia at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics in the 10,000 metres, finishing ninth and eighth respectively. Doping In 2016, the IAAF announced that the then-42-year-old Grigoryeva had been banned years for doping, based on the results ...
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Lidiya Krylova
Lidiya Evgenevna Krylova (, born 12 March 1951) is a Russian rower who competed for the Soviet Union in the 1976 Summer Olympics. In 1976 she was the coxswain The coxswain ( or ) is the person in charge of a boat, particularly its navigation and steering. The etymology of the word gives a literal meaning of "boat servant" since it comes from ''cock'', referring to the wiktionary:cockboat, cockboat, a ... of the Soviet boat which won the bronze medal in the coxed fours event. External links profile 1951 births Living people Russian female rowers Soviet female rowers Coxswains (rowing) Olympic rowers for the Soviet Union Rowers at the 1976 Summer Olympics Olympic bronze medalists for the Soviet Union Olympic medalists in rowing Medalists at the 1976 Summer Olympics 20th-century Russian sportswomen {{USSR-rowing-Olympic-medalist-stub ...
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Lidiya Masterkova
Lidiya Masterkova, also Lydia Masterkova, (, 1927 in Moscow, USSR – 12 May 2008 in Saint Laurent, France) was a Soviet-born French painter, and part of the non-conformist Lianozovo Group along with Oscar Rabin. She was strongly influenced by Abstract Expressionism, which she was exposed to at the exhibition of foreign artists held during the World Festival of Youth and Students in Moscow (1957). Masterkova studied under Mikhail Perutski at the Moscow Secondary School of Art (1943–46), the Vasily Surikov School of Art (1946) and Moscow Regional School of Art (1947–50). A dedicated abstractionist, Masterkova was associated with the Lianozovo Group, a diverse group of artists and poets who fought steadfastly and uncompromisingly for creative freedom. One of these artists, Vladimir Nemukhin, lived with her, although they never married. One of the significant personalities in the Moscow art world of the 1960s, Masterkova's work at the beginning of that decade included loo ...
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Lidiya Rasulova
Lidiya Khudat gizi Rasulova, (; 4 December 1941 – 5 February 2012), was an Azerbaijani politician. Lidiya Rasulova was born in Baku on 4 December 1941. After graduating from high school, she studied at the Institute of Pedagogical Languages of Azerbaijan between 1959 and 1965. Began her work in 1958 in educational establishments in Baku, and worked in different positions in youth organizations, parties and Soviet organizations between 1962 and 1981, becoming the president of the Council of Trade Unions of the Azerbaijani since 1981 until 1988. In 1984 was elected member of the Soviet of Nationalities. She was also member of the Soviet of the Union, between 1989 and 1991. Was named Minister of Social Security of Azerbaijan SSR in 1988, holding office until 1992, witnessing the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the independence of Azerbaijan. Heydar Aliyev appointed her as Minister of Education of the Republic of Azerbaijan on 2 September 1993, until her resignation due t ...
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Lidiya Skoblikova
Lidiya Pavlovna Skoblikova (; born 8 March 1939) is a retired Russian speed skater and coach. She represented the USSR Olympic team during the Winter Olympic Games in 1960, 1964 and 1968, and won a total of six gold medals, a record she shares with Dutch speed skater Ireen Wüst. She also won 25 gold medals at the world championships and 15 gold medals at the USSR National Championships in several distances. She was also the first athlete to earn six gold medals in the Winter Olympics and the first to earn four gold medals at a single Olympic Winter Games. She was the most successful athlete at the 1960 and 1964 Winter Olympics, sharing the honour for 1960 Games with her compatriot Yevgeny Grishin. Career Skoblikova was born in Zlatoust, Soviet Union, some 160 km west of Chelyabinsk, Ural. She trained at Burevestnik and later at Lokomotiv sports societies. At age 19 in 1959, Skoblikova qualified for the Soviet team and placed third in the national championships. She repe ...
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Lidiya Sukharevskaya
Lidiya Petrovna Sukharevskaya (; 30 August 1909 – 11 October 1991) was a Soviet stage actress and playwright renowned for her work with Nikolay Akimov and Andrey Goncharov. Her frequent stage partner was Boris Tenin, her husband. She also appeared in 14 films between 1939 and 1981. Sukharevskaya was named a People's Artist of the USSR in 1990. Selected filmography * '' We from the Urals'' (1943) * ''Encounter at the Elbe'' (1949) * '' Girl No. 217'' (1945) * ''Mussorgsky'' (1950) * '' Rimsky-Korsakov'' (1952) * '' The Star'' (1953) * '' Kain XVIII'' (1963) * ''Anna Karenina ''Anna Karenina'' ( rus, Анна Каренина, p=ˈanːə kɐˈrʲenʲɪnə) is a novel by the Russian author Leo Tolstoy, first published in book form in 1878. Tolstoy called it his first true novel. It was initially released in serial in ...'' (1967) References External links * 1909 births 1991 deaths Actresses from Saint Petersburg People from Petergof Soviet film actresses Re ...
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Lidiya Shulaykina
Lidiya Ivanovna Shulaykina (; 22 June 1995) was one of the few women Ilyushin Il-2 pilots and the only female ground-attack pilot in naval aviation during the Second World War. In 1993 she was awarded the title Hero of the Russian Federation. Early life Shulaykina was born in 1915 to a Russian family in Orekhovo-Zuyevo near Moscow. After completing her seventh grade of school in 1930 she went on to attend the Moscow Industrial and Pedagogical College, which she graduated from in 1933. From then she worked as a schoolteacher until 1939, having moved on to work as a flight instructor full time. While a teacher, she trained at her local aeroclub, graduating in 1937 and then working as a flight instructor in addition to her teaching job. After her husband, Sergey Kiryushkin, graduated from the Kachin flying school and was sent to the Caucasus, she came with him and gave birth to their daughter Tamara in 1940. Until May 1941, she worked for the Civil Air Fleet in Abkhazia, after whi ...
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Lidiya Vertinskaya
Lidiya Vladimirovna Vertinskaya (), born Tsirgvava ( ka, წირღვავა; ) (14 April 1923 – 31 December 2013), was a Russian-Georgian actress and artist. Vertinskaya was born in Harbin to an emigre family of mixed Georgian and Russian origin. Her paternal grandparents had moved to China from Georgia with their children, but retained Russian citizenship. Her father, Vladimir Konstantinovich Tsirgvava, was a Soviet official who served on the Chinese Eastern Railway; he died when Vertinskaya was nine years old. Her mother, Lydia Pavlovna Tsirgvava, (née Fomina), originally from a Siberian family of Old Believers, was a housewife.''Lidiya Vertinskaya (2004)''. The Blue Bird of Love. — Moscow: Vagrius, 452 pages (Memoirs) In 1940, Vertinskaya met the Russian singer Aleksandr Vertinsky in Shanghai. Although he was 34 years older than she, the two were married two years later. In 1943, they emigrated to the Soviet Union. She gave birth to Marianna Vertinskaya (born ...
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