From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of events
Events from the year 1900 in
Russia.
Incumbents
Events
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adding to it. (July 2016) |
Births
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adding to it. (July 2016) |
- 17 January –
Prince Nikita Alexandrovich of Russia, a nephew of Tsar
Nicholas II of Russia (died 1974)
- 19 January –
Mikhail Vasilyevich Isakovsky, poet, lyricist, and translator (died 1973)
- 24 January –
Johannes Reesen, politician (died 1937)
- 28 February –
Vsevolod Vitalyevich Vishnevsky, writer, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist (died 1951)
- 12 March –
Sergey Vladimirovich Nabokov, poet and translator,
Vladimir Nabokov's brother (died 1945)
- 22 March –
Suleyman Huseyn oglu Rahimov, writer, novelist, prosaist, and politician, a chairman of the
Union of Azerbaijani Writers (died 1983)
- 30 March –
Nikolai Demyanovich Psurtsev, Colonel General of the
Communication Troops,
Minister of Communications of the Soviet Union, Knight–Commander of the
Order of the British Empire (died 1980)
- 6 April –
Konstantin Aleksandrovich Vialov, poster artist, graphic artist, illustrator, set designer (died 1976)
- 14 April –
Nikolay Andreyevich Prishchepa, Red Army major general killed in World War II (died 1941)
- 15 April –
Alexander Fyodorovich Kazankin, a Red Army Lieutenant general who commanded the
Soviet airborne (died 1955)
- 17 April –
Elisabeth Pinajeff, actress (died 1995)
- 18 April –
Nikolai Nikolaevich Vashugin, general and a
political officer (died 1941)
- 19 April –
Aleksandr Lukich Ptushko, animation and fantasy film director (died 1973)
- 24 April –
Vasily Filippovich Gerasimenko, the lieutenant general who held field army command during
World War II (died 1953)
- 28 May –
Dmitry Ivanovich Ivanyuk, a Red Army colonel killed in
World War II (died 1941)
- 30 June –
Pyotr Mikhaylovich Gavrilov, an officer known as the hero of the
Defense of Brest Fortress (died 1979)
- 3 July –
Margarita Ivanovna Rudomino, librarian, founder of the
All-Russia State Library for Foreign Literature (died 1990)
- 23 August –
Sergey Ivanovich Ozhegov, linguist and lexicographer, author of the
Dictionary of the Russian Language (died 1964)
- 11 September –
Semyon Alekseyevich Lavochkin, aerospace engineer, and aircraft designer who founded the
Lavochkin aircraft design bureau (died 1960)
- 11 September –
Ivan Nikitich Russiyanov, lieutenant general and
Hero of the Soviet Union (died 1984)
- 2 October –
Nicolai Poliakoff
OBE, the creator of Coco the Clown (died 1974)
- 5 October –
Varvara Sergeyevna Myasnikova, actress (died 1978)
- 21 October –
Dmitri Ivanovich Vasilyev, film director (died 1984)
- 26 October –
Zvi Preigerzon, an author who specialized in historical prose of a historically fictional nature (died 1969)
- 27 October –
Lidia Andreevna Ruslanova, folk singer (died 1973)
- 4 November –
Sergei Dmitrievich Vasilyev, film director, screenwriter, and actor (died 1959)
- 6 November –
Iosif Leonidovich Prut, a playwright, and the first Soviet screenwriter (died 1996)
- 16 November –
Nikolai Fyodorovich Pogodin, playwright (died 1962)
- 2 December –
Nina Ivanovna Gagen-Torn, poet, writer, historian, and ethnographer (died 1986)
- 2 December –
Aleksandr Andreyevich Prokofiev, poet, journalist, war correspondent, and public figure (died 1971)
- 18 December –
Nikolai Vladimirovich Nekrasov,
Esperanto writer, translator, and critic (died 1938)
Deaths
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adding to it. (July 2016) |
- 3 January –
Dmitry Vasilyevich Grigorovich, writer (born 1822)
- 11 January –
Aleksey Tillo, geographer, cartographer, land surveyor, lieutenant general of the
Imperial Russian Army (born 1839)
- 12 January –
Giorgi Davidovich Tsereteli, a Georgian writer, and the father of
Irakli Tsereteli – a leading figure in the
Georgian Mensheviks (born 1842)
- 18 January –
Count Fyodor Logginovich Heiden, military commander of German-Dutch ancestry who served in the
Imperial Russian Army (born 1821)
- 21 January –
Solomon Zalkind Minor, rabbi and writer (born 1827)
- 23 March –
Constantin Aleksandrovich Shapiro, a Hebrew lyric poet, and photographer (born 1839)
- 28 March –
Apolinary Horawski, painter (born 1833)
- 20 April –
Leonid Nikolaevich Maikov, a prominent researcher in the history of
Russian literature, a full member of the
Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences, president of the Russian Bibliological Society,
Privy Councillor, the son of the painter
Nikolay Maykov (born 1839)
- 25 April –
Grand Duchess Alexandra Petrovna of Russia, great-granddaughter of Emperor
Paul I of Russia, the wife of
Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (born 1838)
- 1 May –
Sergei Sergeyevich Korsakov, neuropsychiatrist (born 1854)
- 2 May –
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky, painter (born 1817)
- 10 May –
Mikhail Pavlovich Sabinin, a Russo-Georgian monk, historian of the Georgian Orthodox Church, and icon painter (born 1845)
- 21 June –
Count Mikhail Nikolayevich Muravyov, Minister of Foreign Affairs (born 1845)
- 30 June –
Ivan Mikheevich Pervushin, a clergyman and mathematician (born 1827)
- 30 June –
Alexey Dmitriyevich Startsev, a merchant and industrialist (born 1838)
- 16 July – Prince
Alexander Ivanovich Urusov, lawyer, literary critic, translator, and philanthropist (born 1843)
- 19 July – Prince
Nikolai Petrovitch Troubetzkoy, a Privy Counsellor and Chamberlain of the Russian Imperial Court (born 1828)
- 30 July –
Grigory Avetovich Dzhanshiyev, lawyer, publicist, and historian of Armenian descent (born 1851)
- 4 August –
Isaac Ilyich Levitan, painter (born 1860)
- 12 August –
Pavel Vasilyevich Shejn, a major Russian and Belarusian ethnographer and folklorist of Jewish origin (born 1826)
- 15 September –
Nikolay Ivanovich Krasnov, a writer and lieutenant general of the
Imperial Russian Army (born 1833)
- 11 October –
Nikolai Mikhailovich Tikhomirov, engineer, public figure, one of the founders of
Novosibirsk (born 1857)
- 17 November –
Alexander Konstantinovich Bagration-Imeretinsky, a
Georgian royal prince, a General of the
Imperial Russian Army, and a hero of the
Russo-Turkish War (1877-1878) (born 1837)
- 4 December –
Alexander Konstantinovch Sheller, writer (born 1838)
References
Media related to
1900 in Russia at Wikimedia Commons
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