Category
page 3Russian-language surnames
Galkin
Galkin (masculine, ) or Galkina (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. It is derived from Galka (, jackdaw)
Alternatively, among Eastern European Jews, Galkin may be an altered transliteration of Halkin, consistent with the common Eastern Slavic shift of the /h/ sound to /g/.
Nekrasov
Nekrasov (), feminine: Nekrasova (), is a Russian surname sometimes transliterated as Nekrassov/Nekrassova. Notable people with the surname include:
Kostin
Kostin () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Kostina. The surname is derived from Kostya, a pet form of the male given name Konstantin, and literally means ''Kostya's''. It may refer to:
Bondar
Bondar (Cyrillic: Бондар, Бондарь) is a common surname of East Slavic origin meaning "cooper" (barrel maker). Notable people with the surname include:
Kniazev
Knyazev () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Knyazeva. It may refer to
Andrei Knyazev (footballer) (born 1974), Russian football player
Andrei Knyazev (mathematician) (born 1959), Russian-American mathematician
Andrei Knyazev (musician) (born 1973), Russian rock musician and songwriter
Artem Knyazev (born 1980), Uzbekistani figure skater
Boris Knyazev (1900–1975), Russian ballet dancer and choreographer
Hanna Knyazeva (born 1989), Ukrainian triple jumper and long jumper
Helena Knyazeva (born 1959), Russian philosopher
Igor Knyazev (born 1983), Russian ice hockey de
Agafonov
Agafonov (; masculine) or Agafonova (; feminine) is a Russian surname. It derives from the given name Agafon, borrowed from Greek, where it meant kindness, goodness.
Krasovsky
Krasovsky (; ) may refer to:
Krasovsky ellipsoid
Krasovskii–LaSalle principle
Krasovskiy (crater)
Basov
Basov () and Basova (; feminine) is a common Russian surname.
Blokhin
Blokhin (, ) might refer to one of the following:
People
Alexander Viktorovich Blokhin (born 1951), Russian diplomat
Alexis Blokhina (born 2004), American tennis player
Iryna Blokhina (born 1983), Ukrainian singer and poet, daughter of Oleh Blokhin
(1912 - 1993), Soviet surgeon and oncologist
Oleg Blokhin (born 1952), Soviet and Ukrainian football coach
Oleh Olehovych Blokhin (born 1980), Ukrainian football player
Sofia Blokhin (born 2006), Estonian chess player
Tatyana Blokhina (born 1970), Russian heptathlete
Vasili Blokhin (1895–1955), chief executioner during Stalin's purges
Yevg
Kabanov
Kabanov is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Voronets
Voronets is a Russian surname associated with the Russian noble . Notable people with the surname include:
Nadezhda Voronets, Russian and Soviet geologist and paleontologist
Olga Voronets, Russian mezzo-soprano folk singer
Gorshkov
Gorshkov (masculine, ) or Gorshkova (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Kostomarov
Kostomarov (, masculine) or Kostomarova (, feminine) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Dmitry Kostomarov (1929–2014), Soviet Russian mathematician
Grigory Kostomarov (1896–1970), Soviet historian
Mykola Kostomarov (1817–1885), Russo–Ukrainian historian
Nikita Kostomarov (born 1999), Belarusian association football player
Roman Kostomarov (born 1977), Russian ice dancer
Kovalchuk
Kovalchuk (Ukrainian and Russian: Ковальчук), Kavalchuk (), Kowalczuk, Later Kovalčuk (Polish), Covalciuc (Romanian), also transliterated as Kowalchuk (in the North American diaspora), is a common East Slavic surname (one of the most popular in Ukraine). The Kovalchuk name extends back to before 1500 AD in Kievan Rus.
Arbusow
Arbuzov (masculine, ) or Arbuzova (feminine, ) is a Russian surname, derived from the word арбуз (arbooz, meaning "watermelon"). It may refer to:
Moskvin
Moskvin (masculine, Russian: Москвин) or Moskvina (feminine) is a Russian surname, derived from the word Москва (Moskva, meaning Moscow). It is also a toponym that may refer to
Kulakov
Kulakov (masculine, ) or Kulakova (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Abakumov
Abakumov (; masculine) or Abakumova (; feminine) is a Russian surname. Variants of this surname include Abbakumov/Abbakumova (/), Avakumov/Avakumova (/), Avvakumov/Avvakumova (/). All these are patronymic surnames derived from various forms of the Christian male first name Avvakum.
Rozhkov
Rozhkov (), or Rozhkova (feminine; Рожкова) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Boytsov
Boytsov (masculine, ) or Boytsova (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Korovin
Korovin (), or Korovina (feminine; Коровина), is a Russian last name, which is derived from the Russian word korova (корова, or cow). Notable persons with that surname include:
Cherkasov
Cherkasov (masculine, ) or Cherkasova (feminine) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Averyanov
Averyanov (; masculine) or Averyanova (; feminine) is a Russian last name.
Strakhov
Strakhov (, from страх meaning fear) is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Strakhova. It may refer to
Alexei Strakhov (born 1975), Ukrainian ice hockey player
Daniil Strakhov (born 1976), Russian actor
Gennady Strakhov (1944–2020), Russian wrestler
Irina Strakhova (born 1959), Russian race walker
Nikolai Mikhailovich Strakhov (1900–1978), Soviet geologist
Nikolay Strakhov (1828–1896), Russian philosopher, publicist and literary critic
Roman Strakhov (born 1995), Russian football midfielder
Valeriya Strakhova (born 1995), Ukrainian tennis player
Vyacheslav Strakhov (born
Vereshchagin
thumb|150px|Coat of arms of the Vereshchagin noble family
Vereshchagin () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Vereshchagina. It was also a name of an old Russian Boyar family.
Gvozdev
Gvozdev or Gvozdyov (Russian: Гвоздев, Гвоздёв) is a Russian masculine surname originating from the word gvozd meaning a nail. Its feminine counterpart is Gvozdeva or Gvozdyova. The surname may refer to
Bocharov
Bocharov and Bocharova () are respectively male and female Slavic occupational surnames derived from Bochar (бочар) which means cooper.
Yemelyanov
Yemelyanov or Emelyanov () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Yemelyanova or Emelyanova. It may refer to
Leontyev
'''Leontyev, Leontief, Leontiev, Leontjew, Leontjev, or Leont'ev () and Leontyeva''' (Леонтьева; feminine) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Safarov
Safarov (, ) is a surname, found in Russia, Azerbaijan, and Tajikistan. Its feminine version is Safarova (; ). It is a slavicised version of Safar adding the suffix -ov. People with this name include:
Obruchev
Obruchev (masculine, ) or Obrucheva (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Dobrovolsky
Dobrovolsky, sometimes spelled Dobrovolskiy or Dobrovolski (), or Dobrovolskaya (feminine; Добровольская), is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Stassov
Stasov, feminine: Stasova is a Russian-language surname associated with the Russian noble House of Stasov. Notable people with the surname include:
Karasyov
Karasyov, Karasyow or Karasev () is an East Slavic male surname. Its feminine counterpart is Karasyova or Karaseva. It may refer to:
Tsaryov
Tsaryov or Tsarev (, from царь meaning czar) is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Tsaryova or Tsareva. Notable people with the surname include:
Seleznyov
Seleznyov, often spelled as Seleznev, Selezniev (, rarely Селезнев), or Seleznyova, Selezneva (feminine; Селезнёва), is a Russian surname, derived from the word "селезень" (drake, duck). Notable people with the surname include:
Beketov
Beketov is a Russian male surname. Its feminine counterpart is Beketova. Notable people with the surname include:
Pashkevich
Pashkevich (; ) is a Polish surname which ultimately comes from the East Slav personal name Pashka or Pashko, a diminutive of Pavel (Paul). The surname may refer to:
Kireyev
thumb|Coat of arms of the Kireyev family
Pakhomov
Pakhomov () is a Russian surname. The female form is Pakhomova (). The surname came from Pakhom (), a Russian adaptation of the Coptic-Greek name Παχώμιος. Notable people with the surname include:
Kasyanov
Kasyanov or Kasjanov () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Kasyanova or Kasjanova. It may refer to:
Starostin
Starostin () may refer to:
Pochinok
Pochinok may refer to:
Pochinok (inhabited locality), name of several inhabited localities in Russia
Pochinok, a type of rural locality in Russia
Alexander Pochinok (1958–2014), Russian politician
Yurin
Yurin may refer to:
Annenkov
Annenkov () or Annenkova (; feminine) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Gavrikov
Gavrikov () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Gavrikova. It may refer to
Dmitri Gavrikov (born 1994), Russian football player
Viktor Gavrikov (1957–2016), Lithuanian-Swiss chess grandmaster
Vladislav Gavrikov (born 1995), Russian ice hockey defenceman
Prudnikov
Prudnikov () or Prudnikoff is a Russian male surname originating from the word prudnik meaning worker at a water mill. Its feminine counterpart is Prudnikova. It may refer to
Buturlin
Buturlin, feminine: Buturlina () is a Russian surname of a Russian noble . Notable people with this surname include:
Ilinykh
Ilinykh or Ilinikh () is a Russian surname.
Dmitriy Ilinikh (born 1987), Russian volleyball player
Elena Ilinykh (born 1994), Russian ice dancer
Kristina Ilinykh (born 1994), Russian diver
Vladimir Ilinykh (born 1975), Russian politician
Yulia Ilinykh (born 1985), Russian road cyclist
Sannikow
Sannikov () is a Russian masculine surname derived from the word sannik, sledge-maker; its feminine counterpart is Sannikova. It is transliterated in German as Sannikoff and in Belarusian as Sannikau. Notable people with the surname include:
Ryzhov
Ryzhov (masculine, ) or Ryzhova (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Sverdlov
Wikimedia disambiguation page
Danilovich
Danilovich () is a surname of Slavic origin.
Khokhlov
Khokhlov or Hohlov (), feminine: Khokhlova or Hohlova, is a Russian surname derived from the word khokhol.
Grigorowitsch
Grigorovich, in its original language: (), is a patronymic meaning "Son of Grigory" and may refer to:
Bazhenov
Bazhenov (; masculine) is a Russian surname. Its feminine form is Bazhenova ()
Abrikosov
Abrikosov (; masculine) or Abrikosova (; feminine) is a Russian surname. It derives from the Russian word "" (abrikos), meaning apricot and is associated with the of merchants. The line of Abrikosovs began with the Penza peasant Stepan Nikolayev, who migrated to Moscow in 1802 and later opened a confectionery plant there. As he started his business with importing and selling fruit (including apricots), he petitioned, and in 1814 was allowed, to change his name to .
Danilevsky
Danilevsky, also Danilevski, Danilewsky (), feminine: Danilevskaya/Danilewskaya is a surname. It may refer to:
Musayev
Musayev, Musaev, Muzayev or Muzaev (Russian: Мусаев, Музаев) is a Russian-language masculine patronymic surname originating from the masculine given name Musa by the addition of the Slavic patronymic suffix '-ev'. Its feminine counterparts are Musayeva, Musaeva, Muzayeva or Muzaeva. The surname may refer to
Mostovoi
Mostovoi or Mostovoy (, from мост meaning bridge) is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Mostovaya. It may refer to
Aleksandr Mostovoi (born 1968), Russian football player
Andrei Mostovoy (born 1997), Russian football player
Artem Mostovyi (born 1983), Ukrainian football player
Ruslan Mostovyi (born 1974), Ukrainian football player
Sergey Mostovoy (1908–1979), Red Army private and Hero of the Soviet Union