Category
page 1Surnames of Russian origin
Pushkin
Wikimedia disambiguation page
Lebedev
Lebedev (), or Lebedeva (feminine; Ле́бедева) is a common Russian family name derived from the word лебедь (lebed, meaning "swan"). Its Ukrainian equivalent is Lebedyev, Belarusian: Lebedzew. Notable persons with the surname include:
Gubin
Gubin may refer to:
Gubin, Poland, a town on the Polish-German border
Polish and Sorbian name for Guben, a town in Brandenburg, Germany
Gubin, Bosnia and Herzegovina, a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Gmina Gubin, a rural administrative district in Lubusz Voivodeship, western Poland
Gubin Coal Mine, a large mine in the west of Poland in Gubin, Lubusz Voivodeship
Gubin Do, a village in the Užice municipality of Serbia

Ushakov
thumb|right|200px|Coat of arms of Ushakov family
The House of Ushakov is the name of an old and influential Russian noble family, whose members occupied many important positions within the Russian Empire.
Joffe
Joffe (Joffé, Иоффе, Ioffe, Yoffe) is a Hebrew-language surname, a variant of Jaffe. Notable people with this surname include:
Gubarev
Gubarev (masculine form) or Gubareva (feminine form) may refer to:
Terekhov
Terekhov, Terekhova () is a common Russian surname. In Estonian it may be transliterated as Terehhov.
Sobolevsky
Sobolevsky (, masculine), Sobolevskaya (feminine), or Sobolevskoye (neuter), is a Polish and Belarusian family name related to the word "". It is shared by the following people:
Pyotr Sobolevsky (1904–1977), Soviet actor
Nadezhdin
Nadezhdin (feminine: Nadezhdina) is a surname of Russian origin, derived from the Russian word for "hope". Notable people with the surname include:
Plaksin
Plaksin (male) and Plaksina (female) (Russian: Плаксин, Плаксина) are Russian surnames. They derived from the non-calendar given name Plaksa (translates as "crybaby, weeper") that belonged to the apotropaic group of names that were supposed to turn away harm or misfortune from a child. First mentions of Plaksa and Plaksin surnames date back to the first half of the 16th century and include both peasants and boyars of Veliky Novgorod, Nizhny Novgorod and Arzamas. A well-known noble house (see The Plaksins) was founded in by Trofim Lukyanovich Plaksin of the Cossack Hetmanate who was granted Rus