Category
page 1Russian-Jewish surnames
Rabinovich
Rabinovich or Rabinovitch (Рабино́вич, רבינוביץ), is a Russian Ashkenazi Jewish surname, Slavic for "son of the rabbi". The Polish/Lithuanian equivalents are Rabinowitz or Rabinowicz.
Aaronovich
Aaronovich, Aaronovitch or Aharonovich () is a Russian-Jewish patronymic surname literally meaning "son of Aaron". Notable people with the surname include:
Igor Aharonovich (born 1982), Australian physicist
Yitzhak Aharonovich (born 1950), Israeli politician
Sam Aaronovitch (1919–1998), economist and British communist activist and his sons:
David Aaronovitch (born 1954), English journalist, broadcaster, and author
Owen Aaronovitch (born 1956), English actor
Ben Aaronovitch (born 1964), English writer
Yankelevich
Yankelevich is a Russian-language patronymic surname derived from the Yiddish given name Yankel. Polish-language version is Jankieliewicz.
Blanter
Blanter () is a Yiddish-language Russian-Jewish surname, literally meaning "someone from one of the places named Blanty" (Бланты).
Levitin
Levitin (masculine) or Levitina (feminine) is a Russian Jewish surname (Леви́тин). It may refer to:
Rubashkin
Rubashkin (; feminine: Rubashkina) is a Russian Jewish surname (see Рубашка). Notable people with the surname include:
Rubashkin family, a family of American Haredi Jews
Aaron Rubashkin, American founder and owner of the Agriprocessors meat company, and his sons:
Moshe Rubashkin
Sholom Rubashkin
(1906—1975), Soviet screenwriter, cameraman and artist
Eliana Rubashkyn, Colombian pharmacist, chemist, human rights activist, former stateless gender refugee
Kagan
family name
Gershkovich/Hershkovych
Gershkovich is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Dvorkin
family name (Дворкин)