- male, deceased (1952)
- Itzik Feffer was a Soviet Yiddish poet who fell victim to Stalin's purges. Itzik Feffer was born in Shpola, a town in Zvenigorod "uyezd" (district)...
- male, deceased (1937)
- Gayk Bzhishkyan - Hayk Bzhishkyan (–December 11, 1937) was a Soviet military commander of the Russian Civil War and Polish-Soviet War. (Russian: Га...
- male, deceased (1774)
- Józef Andrzej Załuski was a Polish Catholic priest, Bishop of Kiev, sponsor of science and culture, and known bibliophile. A member of Polish no...
- male
- Osip Mikhailovich Lerner was a 19th century Russian Jewish intellectual and lawyer. Originally a "maskil"-a propagator of the "Haskala", or "Jewish...
- male, deceased (1956)
- Otto Yulievich Schmidt ((September 7, 1956) was a Soviet scientist, mathematician, astronomer, geophysicist, statesman, academician (Corresponding...
- male, deceased (1834)
- Gamzat-bek (1789 — October 1(September 19), 1834) was the second imam of Dagestan, who succeeded Ghazi Mollah upon his death in 1832. Gamzat-bek wa...
- male
- N.M. Sheikevitch was a Yiddish novelist and, beginning around 1880, a playwright in Yiddish theater in Odessa, Ukraine. Jacob Adler wrote of his...
- male, deceased (1959)
- David Pinski (1872-1959) was a Yiddish language writer, probably best known as a playwright. At a time when Eastern Europe was only beginning to...
- male, deceased (1911)
- Dmitry Grigoriyevich Bogrov was the assassin of the Russian Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin. Born Mordekhai Gershkovich Bogrov ("Мордехай Гершкови...
- male, deceased (1953)
- Stanislaw Wojciechowski was born on March 15, 1869 in Kalisz, and died near Warsaw on April 9, 1953. He was born into a family of Polish nobility,...
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