#Valeri Orlova
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sbibbo0 · 2 years ago
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Merry Christmas
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Alessandra Ambrosio
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Alexa Bliss
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Alina Lewis
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Anna Kendrick
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Barbara Palvin
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Behati Prinsloo
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Candice Swanepoel
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Dalia Gutierrez
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Darshelle Stevens
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Doutzen Kroes
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Galina Dubenenko
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Iris Mittenaere
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Jessica Nigri
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Jessica Vaugn
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Juli Annee
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Katelyn Runck
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Lais Ribeiro
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Marisol Yotta
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Michaela Dihlova
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Nata Lee
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Romee Strijd
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Valeri Orlova
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lookerweekly · 8 months ago
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Izložba pod nazivom „Nijanse plave“ čini kolaboraciju tri vizuelne umetnice Ivane Živić, Jane Stojanović, Valerie Orlove, čiji se radovi dodiruju u motivu vode, a koja će biti otvorena večeras, 4. aprila od 19 časova u Galeriji Nikola Radošević. Ulja na platnu ovih slikarki dočaravaju kontemplativne misli i osećanja kroz prizmu žene i njihovih ličnih „plavih“utopija, stvarajući jednu novu, nadrealnu koheziju.
| LookerWeekly
https://lookerweekly.com/izlozbe/u-nijansama-plave-izlazu-zivic-stojanovic-i-orlova/
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ao3feed-lokiangst · 4 years ago
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Along Came the Spiders (temp., please suggest titles) references
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/3uMqYOA
by Starfire2
If you can't tell, this is is a revamp of my first story, now with more characters! This time, I will not be accepting reader input for characters (other than aliases, ages, and the team name), or origin details, but I will be open to trope suggestions. Feel free to suggest those! Also, the format is different, lots of time has passed, so I know what I'm doing a little more.
Words: 213, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Fandoms: Marvel
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Peter Parker, Aaron Aikman, Anna-May Parker - Character, Anya Corazon, April Parker, Ashley Barton, Jessica Drew, Katherine Pryde, May "Mayday" Parker, Penelope Parker, Petra Parker, Charlotte Morales-Stacy, Teri Hillman, Mary Jane Watson, Jennifer Justice, Elizabeth Brant, Courtney Duran, Gwendolyn Stacy, Julia Carpenter, Benjamin Reilly, Antoine Tarantella, May Reilly, Martha Franklin, Charlotte Witter, Erin Hasko, Veranke (Marvel), Diane Jenkins, Laura Kinney, Roger Gocking, Parker Peters, Valerie the Librarian, Becky, Cindy Moon, Parker Peterman, Pavitr Prabhakar, Patton Parnel, Otto Octavius, Miguel O'Hara, Miguel Stone, Miles Morales, Ai Apaec, Benjamin Parker, Benjamin Parker II, William Braddock, Dmitri Smerdyakov, Edward brock, Ezekiel Sims, Eugene Thompson, Gerald Drew, Harold Osborn, Hobart Brown, Kaine (Spider-Man), MacDonald Gargan, Max Borne, Quentin Beck, Kamala Khan, Marc Noletti, Ron Corbett, Theodore Altman, Vincent Gonzales, Wade Wilson, Felix Lifson, Zoltan Amadeus, Daniel Rand, Loki Laufeyson, Jay T. Thomas, Norman Osborn, Buddy Tyson, Takuya Yamashiro, Yu Komori, Bruce Banner, Nino, Gabriel O'Hara II, Ethan Myers, Izumi, Joseph Wade, Michael, Van, Patrick, Felicity Hardy, Chu Chi-Huan, Sergei Kravinoff, Esteban Beach, Tom Hendricks, Yelena Belova, Benjamin Richard Parker, Bradley Shaw, Brian Kornfield, Carl King, George Stacy, Peter Parquagh, Benjamin Urich, Natalia Romanova, Natasha Romanoff, Natalia Romanoff, Natasha Romanova, Claire Voyant, Janet Van Dyne, Tania, Anya Derevkova, Carol Danvers, Dean Tarlek, Petra, Stefanya Melnikova, Galina Tsarfin, Monica Chang, Natasha, Layla, Virginia Stark, Peter Ross, Maximilian Morales-Stacy, Benjamin Simmons, Mig-El Gand (Amalgam Comics), Hida Haraka, Sylvie Yaqua, Carlos LaMuerto, Fabian LaMuerto, John Jonah Jameson III, Cassandra Webb, Anton Miguel Rodriquez, Luis Alvarez, Gwendolyne Stacy, Maria Vasquez, César Mendivil, Clay Riley, Jacinda Rodriquez, Miguel Santiago, Kevin Green, Peter Parkbury, Oliver Osnick, Nell Ruggles, Niko Constantin, Peni Parker (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), Amadeus Cho, Aaron Davis (Marvel), Petunia Parker, Polymnia Swan, River Verys, Venice Doadi, Felicia Hardy, Shannon Kane, Michael Bingham, Roderick Kingsley, Adriana Soria, Jesse Drew, Piotr Parkerov, Paul Palmer, Ava Orlova, Hercules, Eric Brooks, Steven Rogers, Tempest Monroe, Nathaniel, Sean Boyle, Lian Tang, Margo, Peter Urich, Claire Parker, Norman Osborn II, Reilly Tyne, Richard Parker II
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/3uMqYOA
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nanshe-of-nina · 5 years ago
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Wizarding Russian Empire and USSR || Nestor Feodorovich Voinov
Voinov was born in what is now the Krasnodar Krai region of Russia, as the fourth of the five children of Feodor Ivanovich Voinov, an ethnic Russian zemylanin farmer, and Melanippe Vardoulakis, a witch of Pontic Greek origins. Feodor, a habitual alcoholic, died in 1881 of drowning in during a storm and afterwords, the household was run by Melanippe and her eldest daughter, Penthesilea, who had become a journeyman healer. Melanippe was determined that her children get the best education possible, as she herself never had. Voinov excelled in his studies at Koldovstortez, much to his mother’s pleasure, though she was less happy that he renounced religion at 16.
In 1892, he and his sister, Antiopa, joined the newly formed Obshchina Ved’m i Volshebnikov and sided with the Bratstvo Koldunov faction in 1897. In 1898, his youngest sister, Mirina, also joined. Afterwards, he worked in both Lysaya Gora and Ledenets. In 1904, he married the Ukrainian and Bashkir halfblood, Sofiya Antonovna Yevtushenko, but they both fled to France in 1908, while she was pregnant with their first child, a daughter that they named Melanippa after his mother. In 1910, they returned to Russia but were promptly arrested and exiled to Siberia. There, they had a second child, Gektor, in 1911.
Revolution
Voinov and his family returned from Siberia to Ledenets in 1917. Like Yefrem Iosifovich Levandovsky and Zaria Kresnikovna Krasavkina, he was of the opinion that the BK should cooperate with the members of the Shabash Volshebnikov and Krug druzey materi Mokosh, though they were overruled by Babushkin and Oksana Iosifovna Lutsenko. 
During the Civil War, he proved himself to be a talented administrator, overseeing the basic running of operations and communications. In 1921, he and Lavrentiy Radigostovich Zemlianitsyn shared the title Commissar for Magic, though it was recognized from the beginning that Zemlianitsyn was essentially a figurehead.
In 1922, he became a member of the Sovet Koldunov. He, Anfisa Zoranovna Krupina, and Ustinya Feodorovna Orlova were recognized as the leaders of the moderates, who supported Afanasiy Anastasovich Kostov, Levandovsky, and Krasavkina against the Lutsenkos and their supporters. After the falling out between Kostov with the “twins”, Krasavkina and Levandovsky, Voinov, Krupina, and Orlova backed the former.
After the death of his youngest sister, Mirina, from Black Cat Flu in 1926, he and Sofiya took in her two half-Circassian sons, Dizchin and Discheshu Dzharimov, aged 19 and 16. 
Fall From Power
After the collapse of the alliance between Krasavkina, the Lutsenkos, and Levandovsky, Kostov abruptly turned on Krupina, Orlova, and Voinov in favor of pursuing more radical policies. Things came to a head in 1928 when Krupina was caught complaining to Levandovsky and Svarog Svetovidovich Zolotarev about Kostov and his then-most prominent sidekick, Svarog Volosevich Zhelezov. 
Though Voinov held onto his position for slightly longer than Krupina and Orlova, he too was ejected from the SK in 1930 in favor of Agrafena Yuliyevna Lebesheva and appointed as the Commissar of Communications. 
Meanwhile, Kostov found a brand new reason to hate Krupina and Voinov in 1932, he discovered that his second daughter, Yuliya, had been pursuing a romantic relationship with Voinov’s only son, Gektor, with the connivance of Krupina’s youngest daughter, Aglaya. Though Krupina and Voinov had not known what their children were up to, Kostov firmly believed otherwise.
Great Harvest
As 1934 dawned, things seemed to be improving, but this was shattered in the spring when M.V. Kulchytskaya was assassinated in Ledenets and the Vedmak of the area, D.K. Mironov, committed suicide shortly after.
At the end of September 1936, Zaria Krasavkina and Yefrem Levandovsky were put on trial with nine of their former supporters and three agent provocateurs where they implicated Voinov, among other things, in terrorism, espionage, and treason.
The day after the end of the trial, when it came out that Krasavkina and Levandovsky had both been executed, Orlova hung herself in her home. Voinov attempted to do the same, but was discovered by his daughter, Melanippa, while writing a suicide note and she talked him out of it.
For unclear reasons, Kostov dithered for months about whether to order the arrests of Krupina and Orlova, even though his new protege, Valery Vsevolodovich Medvednikov both wanted them arrested right away. They were both finally on 4 March 1937 and kept in prison for over a year before being tried between 6 – 21 March 1938 alongside the former diplomats, Vlasiy Dariyevich Kravtsovich and Zdravko Vlajković; the former Zhnetsy, Lyudmila Vyacheslavovna Vishnevskaya and Alena Torkanovna Cheremisina; Krupina’s son-in-law, Kiril Spiridonovich Vorobyov; the Uzbek leaders who had formerly been a married couple, Narimon Isfandiyorovich Niyazov and Tomiris Safarovna Karimova; and Lavrentiy Zemlianitsyn’s eldest daughter, Kseniya Lavrentiyevna Zemlianitsyna. Besides the standard charges of treason, espionage, and terrorism, he was also forced to confess to having helped Vishnevskaya poison his sister, Mirina.
All but Vlajković and Kiril Feognostovich Igumnov were executed afterwards. Supposedly, while awaiting their execution, Voinov angrily broke up an argument between Cheremisina and Mircha Perunovich Zelenko, telling them to be quiet so they could die in peace.
Aftermath
After his execution, his wife and two surviving sisters were both executed while his children and nieces and nephews were shipped off to Vyraj. At some point in the 1940s, the sons of Mirina, Nyasar and Vakha Varayev, were both executed because of their Chechen father and Gektor died of exhaustion and malnutrition in 1952. Before his death, though, he’d fathered a son in 1942 with Yevfemiya Rafaelovna Yastruba, the eldest daughter of the Auror, Varvara Grigoriyevna Sarychina. Though Yevfemiya died not long after the birth, their son somehow managed to survive.
Melanippa and her husband, the Polish rozhdennyy zemley Yakov Isaakovich Klimovich, were both released in 1953. She reestablished contact with Anfisa Krupina’s three daughters and they advocated strongly for their overturning of the verdicts against their parents.
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tasksweekly · 6 years ago
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[TASK 145: UZBEKISTAN]
In celebration of Asian American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 630+ Uzbek faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Matlyuba Alimova (1954) Uzbek, Russian - actress.
Elena Kats-Chernin (1957) Uzbek Jewish - pianist and composer.
Munojot Yo’lchiyeva (1960) Uzbek - singer.
Nasiba Abdullayeva (1961) Uzbek - actress and singer.
Rano Kubaeva (1961) Uzbek - actress and producer.
Yulduz Usmonova (1963) Uzbek - actress and singer.
Aziza / Aziza Muhamedova (1964) Uzbek, Uyghur / Tatar, Russian - singer-songwriter.
Nargiz Zakirova (1970) Uzbek / Uzbek Jewish - singer.
Gulnora Alimova (1971) Uzbek - pianist.
Sevara Nazarkhan / Sevara Nazarxon / Sevara Nazarxonova Anvarjonova (1974) Uzbek - singer-songwriter.
Rayhon / Rayhon G’aniyeva (1978) Uzbek - actress, singer-songwriter, and pianist.
Manzura / Yoʻldosheva Manzura Muborakovna (1978) Uzbek - singer.
Ravshana Kurkova (1980) Uzbek / Russian - actress.
Natasha Kizmet (1980) Uzbek - model, dancer, comedian, dance instructor, and filmmaker.
Rinat Matatov (1981) Uzbek Jewish - actress.
Gulchehra Eshonqulova (1981) Uzbek - actress.
Alina Gilmanova (1981) Uzbek - instagrammer (alinagilmanova).
Sevinch Mo'minova (1982) Uzbek - singer.
Lola Astanova (1982) Uzbek - pianist.
Jamilya Buranova (1982 or 1983) Uzbek - actress and model.
Natasha Alam (1983) Uzbek - actress and model.
Tatyana Zakirova (1983) Uzbek - model.
Sitora Farmonova (1984) Uzbek - actress, singer, and comedian.
Djamilya Abdullaeva (1984) Uzbek - actress, singer, and model.
Oydin Yusupova (1984) Uzbek - actress.
Feruza Jumaniyozova (1984) Uzbek / Tajik - singer.
Lola / Lola Yuldasheva / Lola Yo’ldosheva (1985) Uzbek - actress and singer-songwriter.
Yulduz Turdiyeva (1985) Uzbek - singer.
Kaniza / Kaniza Shahrizoda (1985) Uzbek, Spanish - singer.
Alina Kit (1985) Uzbek - model.
Dilnoza Kubayeva (1986) Uzbek - actress.
Gulnora Qosimova (1986) Uzbek - actress.
Nodira Sadikova (1986) Uzbek - model.
Shahzoda Matchanova (1987) Uzbek - actress.
Nilufar Usmonova (1987) Uzbek - actress and singer.
Adelya Alibekova (1988) Uzbek - singer.
Sugdiyona Azimova (1988) Uzbek - actress.
Tamila / Esmiralda Rahmatova (1988) Uzbek - singer.
Guzal Irgashova (1988 or 1989) Uzbek - model.
Ziyoda Gobilova (1989) Uzbek - actress and singer-songwriter.
Dilbar Fayzieva (1989) Uzbek - actress and tv presenter.
Anjelika Akbar (1989) Uzbek Jewish, Kazakh Jewish, Turkish Jewish, German Jewish - pianist, composer, and writer.
Zarina Nizomiddinova (1989) Uzbek - actress and singer.
Liliya Azyukova (1989) Uzbek - model.
Roza Gilles (1990) Uzbek - model.
Saiora Altinbekova (1990) Uzbek - model.
Adel Meylibaeva (1990) Uzbek - model.
Lina (1990) Uzbek - actress and model.
Elnara Musaeva (1990 or 1991) Uzbek - model.
Aziza Curly (1991) Uzbek - actress and model.
Zamzama (1991) Uzbek - singer.
Maria Sav (1991 or 1992) Uzbek - model.
Asal Shodiyeva (1992) Uzbek - actress and singer.
Irina Sharipova (1992) Uzbek / Tatar, Russian, Ukrainian - model and Miss World Russia 2010.
Zilola Ruzieva (1992) Uzbek - model.
Lyudmila Kan (1992) Uzbek, Korean, Japanese - model.
Darina Vladi (1992) Uzbek - model.
Umida Khalikova (1992) Uzbek - model.
Vasilina Ibragimova (1992) Uzbek - model.
Anastasia Eliseeva (1992) Uzbek - model.
Istora Artikova (1993) Uzbek - model.
Lola Naimova (1993) Uzbek - model.
Diyora Abdujabbarova (1993) Uzbek - model.
Ruxshona Matkarimova (1994) Uzbek - actress, singer, and tv presenter.
Zarina Mustaf (1994) Uzbek, Uyghur, Tatar, Azerbaijani - makeup artist and instagrammer (zaramustaf).
Kamilla Shermuh (1994) Uzbek - instagrammer (kamillashermuh).
Nadya Bondareva (1994) Uzbek - model.
Rakhima Ganieva (1994 or 1995) Uzbek - model and Miss Uzbekistan 2013.
Barchinoy Sadikova Abduvasieva
Sayyora Badalbaeva (1995) Uzbek - reality tv star.
Albina Kayumova (1995 or 1996) Uzbek - model.
Negina Khudaykulova (1995 or 1996) Uzbek - model.
Snowbaby / Cai Rui Xu / Cai Rui Xue (1996) Uzbek, Tibetan / Taiwanese - youtuber (snowbaby瑞雪) and kpop trainee.
Dilnaz Ametbekova (1996) Uzbek - model.
Angelica Miller (1996) Uzbek - model.
Nargiss Fiami / Nargiza Gulmuhammedova (1997) Uzbek - model (instagram: nargiss_fiami).
Madina Urinova (1997) Uzbek - model.
Anastasia Khvan (1997) Uzbek, Korean, Japanese - model.
Gina (1997) Uzbek - model.
Sevara Ravshanova (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model.
Carina Galieva (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model.
Elina Karimova (1998) Uzbek - cover singer, youtuber (Elina Karimova_엘리나), and instagrammer (elina_4_22).
Alek Seeevna (1998) Uzbek - model (instagram: alekseeevna_98).
Shakhzoda Begmatova (1998) Uzbek - model.
Alina Gimranova (1998) Uzbek - model.
Natali Ten (1998 or 1999) Uzbek, Korean, Japanese - model.
Anik (1999) Uzbek - model.
Camila Ismatillaeva (1999 or 2000) Uzbek - model.
Tammy Tamaytka (2000) Uzbek - youtuber (Tamaytka).
Sofiya Orlova (2000) Uzbek / Unspecified Black - model.
Rushana Kaxxarava (2000) Uzbek - model.
Kamila Shodieva (2000 or 2001) Uzbek - model.
Malika Rakhimova (2000 or 2001) Uzbek - model.
Dildora Khashimova (?) Uzbek / Korean - actress.
Jamila Gafurova (?) Uzbek - actress.
Hadicha / Hadicha Qurbonova (?) Uzbek - singer.
Olga Druzhinina (?) Uzbek - singer and pianist.
Zamira Beshimova (?) Uzbek - actress and model.
Diyora (?) Uzbek - singer.
Irina Nikotina (?) Uzbek - violinist.
Dilnoza Artikova (?) Uzbek - dancer.
Robiya Nabieva (?) Uzbek / Tajik - instagrammer (yaibor).
Shuhrat Razzaqov (?) Uzbek - dutar player and tanbur player.
Malicakson (?) Uzbek - singer.
Aly Sayd (?) Uzbek, Afghan, Syrian, Spanish - actress.
Mariam Salem (?) Uzbek - model.
Valerie Ko (?) Uzbek - model.
Mila Mironova (?) Uzbek - model.
Dinara (?) Uzbek - model.
F - Athletes:
Galina Shamrai (1931) Uzbek - gymnast.
Svetlana Babanina (1943) Uzbek - swimmer.
Tamara Golovey (1943) Uzbek Jewish / Belarusian Jewish - chess player.
Elvira Saadi (1952) Uzbek - gymnast.
Natalya Butuzova (1954) Uzbek - archer.
Elena Tornikidou (1965) Uzbek - basketball player.
Tatiana Levina (1965) Uzbek - canoer.
Inna Isakova (1967) Uzbek - canoer.
Irina Lyalina (1968) Uzbek - canoer.
Anisa Petrova (1970) Uzbek - fencer.
Elmira Urumbayeva (1973) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Anjelika Krylova (1973) 1/4 Uzbek, 3/4 Russian - figure skater.
Zulfiya Zabirova (1973) Uzbek - cyclist.
Oksana Chusovitina (1975) Uzbek - gymnast.
Dinara Nurdbayeva (1976) Uzbek - ice skater.
Yelena Lebedeva (1977) Uzbek - canoer.
Rozalia Galiyeva (1977) Uzbek - gymnast.
Anastasia Dzyundzyak (1979) Uzbek - gymnast.
Anastasia Gimazetdinova (1980) Uzbek - figure skater.
Saida Iskandarova (1980) Uzbek - swimmer.
Yuliya Borzova (1981) Uzbek - canoer.
Zarrina Mihaylova (1982) Uzbek - rower.
Ekaterina Khilko (1982) Uzbek - trampoline gymnast.
Yelena Usarova (1982) Uzbek - rower.
Iroda Tulyaganova (1982) Uzbek - tennis player..
Natalia Ponomareva (1982) Uzbek - pair skater.
Aida Khasanova (1983) Uzbek - fencer.
Anastasiya Korolyova (1983) Uzbek - swimmer.
Olga Akimova (1983) Uzbek - figure skater.
Akgul Amanmuradova (1984) Uzbek - tennis player..
Olga Drobysheva (1984) Uzbek - cyclist.
Irina Shlemova (1984) Uzbek - swimmer.
Marina Aganina (1985) Uzbek - pair skater.
Natalya Mikryukova (1985) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Zinura Djuraeva (1985) Uzbek - judoka.
Irina Kaydashova (1985) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Natalya Mamatova (1985) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Mariya Bugakova (1985) Uzbek - swimmer.
Kseniya Grigoreva (1987) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Olga Umaralieva (1988) Uzbek - canoer.
Natalya Koneva (1989) Uzbek - basketball player.
Vlada Ekshibarova (1989) Uzbek Jewish - tennis player.
Evgeniya Karimova (1989) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Olga Gnedovskaya (1989) Uzbek - swimmer.
Makhliyo Sarikova (1990) Uzbek - footballer.
Djamila Rakhmatova (1990) Uzbek - gymnast.
Ulyana Trofimova (1990) Uzbek - gymnast.
Gulnor Sulaymanova (1990) Uzbek - kurash practitioner.
Darya Elizarova (1991) Uzbek - gymnast.
Luiza Galiulina (1991) Uzbek - gymnast.
Albina Khabibulina (1992) Uzbek - tennis player.
Marina Sisoeva (1993) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Ganna Pustovarova (1993) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Ranohon Amanova (1994) Uzbek - swimmer.
Nigina Abduraimova (1994) Uzbek - tennis player.
Sabina Sharipova (1994) Uzbek - tennis player.
Victoria Kan (1995) Uzbek, Korean - tennis player.
Dilnoza Abdusalimova (1995) Uzbek - gymnast.
Polina Merenkova (1995) Uzbek - tennis player.
Luiza Ganieva (1995) Uzbek - gymnast.
Elizaveta Nazarenkova (1995) Uzbek - gymnast.
Zarina Kurbonova (1995) Uzbek - gymnast.
Gulnoza Matniyazova (1995) Uzbek - judoka.
Yodgoroy Mirzaeva (1996) Uzbek - boxer.
Ekaterina Knebeleva (1996) Uzbek - cyclist.
Anna Nagornyuk (1996) Uzbek - figure skater.
Marta Rostoburova (1996) Uzbek Jewish - gymnast.
Ida Mayrin (1997) Uzbek Jewish - gymnast.
Alina Khakimova (1997) Uzbek - cyclist.
Arina Folts (1997) Uzbek - tennis player.
Guzal Yusupova (1997) Uzbek - tennis player.
Mariya Shekerova (1988) Uzbek, Russian - judoka.
Renata Baymetova (1998) Uzbek - cyclist.
Samira Amirova (1998) Uzbek - gymnast.
Anora Davlyatova (1999) Uzbek - gymnast.
Fotimakhon Amilova (1999) Uzbek  - paralympic swimmer.
Nigora Tursunkulova (1999) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Komola Umarova (1999) Uzbek - tennis player.
Emiliya Kalehanova (2000) Uzbek - ice skater.
Madinabonu Mannopova (2001) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Sevil Yuldasheva (2002) Uzbek - tennis player.
Nargiza Abdurasulova (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Aziza Ermatova (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Zebo Juraeva (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Maria Moiseeva (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Kamola Riskieva (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Makhfuza Turapova (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Tanzilya Zarbieva (?) Uzbek - footballer.
Yulduz Kuchkarova (?) Uzbek - swimmer.
M:
Turgʻun Azizov (1934) Uzbek - actor.
Ari Babakhanov (1934) Uzbek Jewish - tanbur player, rubab player, and dutar player.
Stahan Rakhimov (1937) Uzbek / Russian - singer.
Ali Hamroyev / Ali Khamrayev (1937) Uzbek - actor, director, producer, and screenwriter.
Yoqub Ahmedov (1938) Uzbek - actor.
Bakhtiyor Ikhtiyarov (1940) Uzbek - actor.
Farrukh Zokirov (1946) Uzbek - actor, singer, pianist, and composer.
Sherali Jo’rayev (1947) Uzbek - actor, singer-songwriter, screenwriter, and poet.
Rustam Sagdullaev (1950) Uzbek - actor.
Vladimir Soultanov (1960) Uzbek - pianist.
Stanislav Ioudenitch (1971) Uzbek - pianist.
Tohir Sodiqov (1973) Uzbek - actor, singer-songwriter, and guitarist.
Yehezkel Lazarov (1974) Uzbek Jewish / Bulgarian Jewish - actor, director, and multidisciplinary artist.
Ozodbek Nazarbekov (1974) Uzbek - singer.
Eldar Nebolsin (1974) Uzbek - pianist.
Jahongir Poziljonov (1978) Uzbek - actor and singer.
Ulug'bek Rahmatullayev (1982) Uzbek - singer.
Michail Lifits (1982) Uzbek / German - pianist.
Otabek Mahkamov (1984) Uzbek - actor.
Alisher Uzoqov (1984) Uzbek - actor, singer, footballer, and director.
Shoxrux / Shohruh / Shohruh Shodmonov (1986) Uzbek - rapper and producer.
Talgat Batalov (1987) Uzbek / Russian - actor and director.
Farruh Yusupov (1987) Uzbek - actor and model.
Jasur Gaipov (1988) Uzbek - singer.
Aziz Aripov (1988) Uzbek - model.
Behzod Abduraimov (1990) Uzbek - pianist.
Roman Samoylov (1990) Uzbek - model.
Shakhboz Makhmudov (1990 or 1991) Uzbek - model.
Daler Ametist / Daler Makhumudov Ametist Ulfatovich (1991) Uzbek - actor, rapper, director, producer, screenwriter, and designer.
Sukhrob Zavqiyev (1991) Uzbek - model.
Davron Abilov (1991) Uzbek - model.
Amri Madiev (1991) Uzbek - model.
Oskar Tuychieva (1991) Uzbek - actor and model.
Jawani (1991) Uzbek - model.
Daler Yusuf (1992) Uzbek / Kelantanese Malay Malaysian - actor.
Model Sadish (1992) Uzbek - actor and model.
Ismail (1992) Uzbek - model.
Alem / Batyrkhan Malikov (1993) Uzbek - singer.
Sanjar Khalikov (1993) Uzbek - singer.
Bobur Vakhobov (1993) Uzbek - model.
Sherzod Yusuf (1993) Uzbek - singer and model.
Nikita Vasilchenko (1994) Uzbek - actor.
Gulomjonov Khakhraman (1994) Uzbek - singer and pianist.
Sardor Otajonov (1994) Uzbek - model.
Timur Khodjaev (1994 or 1995) Uzbek - model.
Amirkhon Oribjanov (1995) Uzbek - model.
Joni Obidov (1995) Uzbek - model.
Rimas Astrauskas (1995) Uzbek - model.
Bekzod Ziyayev (1995) Uzbek - model.
Saidakbar Ramankulov (1995) Uzbek - model.
Faruh Jon (1995) Uzbek - model.
Yoosoofjanof (1995) Uzbek - model.
Vladlen (1995) Uzbek - model.
Nurbek Khaydarov (1995 or 1996) Uzbek - model.
NAIM (1995 or 1996) Uzbek - model.
IS (1995 or 1996) Uzbek - model.
Arteezy / Artour Babaev (1996) Uzbek - youtuber and twitch star.
Shakhboz Ibodullaev (1996) Uzbek - model.
Chivu Khamraev (1996) Uzbek - model.
Jakhongir Abdumalikov (1996) Uzbek - model.
Temur Akramov (1996 or 1997) Uzbek - model.
Rakhmatullo Numonov (1996 or 1997) Uzbek - model.
Bobur Abdukadirov (1996 or 1997) Uzbek - model.
Sarvar Turdibaev (1996 or 1997) Uzbek - model.
Shavkat Sabitov (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model.
Muhammadali Mamadaliyev (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model.
Khurshid Sayfiev (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model.
Mukhammad Jon (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model.
Sardor Abdumajitov (1997 or 1998) Uzbek - model and dancer.
Axmedjan (1998 or 1999) Uzbek - model.
Umid (1998 or 1999) Uzbek - model.
Allan (1999) Uzbek - model.
Kamoliddinbekzod (1999 or 2000) Uzbek - model.
Utkirbek (1999 or 2000) Uzbek - model.
AMIRKHAN (1999 or 2000) Uzbek - actor and model.
Mirabdullokh Mirsalikhov (2000) Uzbek - actor and model.
Yuri Andryushkov (2001 or 2002) Uzbek - model.
Daniel Rakhimov (2002 or 2003) Uzbek - model.
Jamik (2002 or 2003) Uzbek - model.
Islam Gaynutdinov (?) Uzbek - model and Face Of Uzbekistan 2018 (instagram: islamgaynutdinov).
Jahongir Otajonov (?) Uzbek - singer.
Imran Usmanov (?) Uzbek - model.
Khalid Bukhari (?) Uzbek, Iranian - actor.
Bek Vlogs (?) Uzbek - youtuber (Bek Vlogs).
Young Zapik (?) Uzbek - rapper.
Qahramon G'ulomjonov (?) Uzbek - singer.
Bobomurod Hamdamov (?) Uzbek - singer.
Akhmed Bek (?) Uzbek, Unspecified - actor.
Shavkat Tashmatov (?) Uzbek - singer.
Islam Duysenbayev (?) Uzbek - model.
Jakhongir Danaev (?) Uzbek - model.
Alisher Madumarov (?) Uzbek - musician (Dado).
Sherzod Madumarov (?) Uzbek - musician (Dado).
Rustam Madumarov (?) Uzbek - musician (Dado).
Vitaly Popeloff (?) Uzbek - singer and guitarist (Fromuz).
Albert Khalmurzaev (?) Uzbek - singer and bassist (Fromuz).
Evgeniy Popelov (?) Uzbek - singer and keyboardist (Fromuz).
Vagif Zokirov (?) Uzbek - keyboardist (Bolalar).
Timur Gaynutdinov (?) Uzbek - guitarist (Bolalar).
Anvar Salohutdinov (?) Uzbek - bassist (Bolalar).
Tofik Morduxayev (?) Uzbek - drummer (Bolalar).
Victor Nazarov (?) Uzbek - singer (Night Wind).
Robert Burhanov (?) Uzbek - bassist (Night Wind).
Dmitriy Korotkov (?) Uzbek - drummer (Night Wind).
Alex Gustov (?) Uzbek - guitarist (Night Wind).
M - Athletes:
Sergey Konov (1948) Uzbek - swimmer.
Nikolay Anfimov (1950) Uzbek - boxer.
Gennadiy Belkov (1955) Uzbek - high jumper.
Boris Budayev (1957) Uzbek - wrestler.
Mustafa Belyalov (1957) Uzbek - footballer.
Sergey Kot (1960) Uzbek - shot putter.
Farkhad Magametov (1962) Uzbek - footballer.
Dmitry Solovyov (1963) Uzbek - judoka.
Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (1964) Uzbek - cyclist.
Usmon Toshev (1965) Uzbek - footballer.
Orzubek Nazarov (1966) Uzbek / Kyrgyz - boxer.
Stepan Atayan (1966) Uzbek - footballer.
Azamat Abduraimov (1966) Uzbek - footballer.
Rustam Durmonov (1969) Uzbek - footballer.
Ivan Kireyev (1967) Uzbek - canoer.
Vitaliy Khozhatelyov (1967) Uzbek - hammer thrower.
Anatoly Tyurin (1968) Uzbek - canoer.
Ravshan Bozorov (1968) Uzbek - footballer.
Dmitry Polyunin (1969) Uzbek - javelin thrower.
Georgi Georgiev (1970) Uzbek - footballer.
Sergey Shayslamov (1970) Uzbek - canoer.
Soslan Fraev (1970) Uzbek - wrestler.
Ruslan Khinchagov (1970) Uzbek - wrestler.
Shukhrat Maqsudov (1970) Uzbek - footballer.
Oleg Tsvetkovskiy (1970) Uzbek - swimmer.
Vladimir Shayslamov (1970) Uzbek - canoer.
Sergey Andreyev (1970) Uzbek - footballer.
Anvar Kuchmuradov (1970) Uzbek - sprinter.
Nariman Ataev (1971) Uzbek - boxer.
Konstantin Sarnatskiy (1971) Uzbek - long jumper.
Shermukhammad Kuziyev (1971) Uzbek - wrestler.
Grigory Pulyayev (1971) Uzbek - wrestler.
Rustam Abdullaev (1971) Uzbek - footballer.
Timur Mukhamedkhanov (1971) Uzbek - judoka.
Igor Khalilov (1972) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Bakhodir Kurbanov (1972) Uzbek - wrestler.
Roman Poltoratsky (1972) Uzbek - discus thrower.
Igor Dzyuba (1972) Uzbek - cyclist.
Fevzi Davletov (1972) Uzbek - footballer.
Vladimir Kazantsev (1972) Uzbek - canoer.
Rafayel Islamov (1972) Uzbek - canoer.
Armen Bagdasarov (1972) Uzbek - judoka.
Andrey Shturbabin (1972) Uzbek - judoka.
Alisher Mukhtarov (1973) Uzbek - judoka.
Vladimir Shmakov (1973) Uzbek - judoka.
Aleksandr Urinov (1973) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Akram Yurabayev (1973) Uzbek - canoer.
Konstantin Yashin (1973) Uzbek - canoer.
Vladimir Alimdyanov (1973) Uzbek - canoer.
Ramil Islamov (1973) Uzbek - wrestler.
Muhammad Abdullaev (1973) Uzbek - boxer.
Karim Tulaganov (1973) Uzbek - boxer.
Yury Aristov (1973) Uzbek - hurdler.
Rafkat Ruziyev (1973) Uzbek - boxer.
Erkinjon Isakov (1974) Uzbek - middle distance runner.
Andrey Shilin (1974) Uzbek - canoer.
Kamol Muradov (1974) Uzbek - judoka.
Farkhod Turayev (1974) Uzbek - judoka.
Yorqin Nazarov (1974) Uzbek - footballer.
Abdumajid Toirov (1974) Uzbek - footballer.
Nikolay Shirshov (1974) Uzbek - footballer.
Ravil Nachaev (1974) Uzbek - swimmer.
Aleksey Cheglakov (1974) Uzbek, Russian - wrestler.
Vyacheslav Skoromnov (1974) Uzbek - sports shooter.
Oleg Pashinin (1974) Uzbek - footballer.
Ikrom Berdiev (1974) Uzbek - boxer.
Viktor Ustinov (1974) Uzbek - hammer thrower.
Ruslan Agalarov (1974) Uzbek, Dargin - footballer.
Ariel Mastov (1974) Uzbek Jewish - kickboxer.
Ruslan Biktyakov (1974) Uzbek - wrestler.
Utkirbek Haydarov (1974) Uzbek - boxer.
Yevgeny Astanin (1974) Uzbek - canoer.
Evgeni Sviridov (1974) Uzbek - skater.
Yevgeny Yerofaylov (1975) Uzbek - wrestler.
Nikolay Yeroshenko (1975) Uzbek - sprinter.
Rustam Khusnutdinov (1975) Uzbek - long jumper.
Yevgeniy Petin (1975) Uzbek - triple jumper.
Bakhtiyor Nurullaev (1975) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Michael Kolganov (1975) Uzbek Jewish - sprint kayaker.
Aleksandr Popov (1975) Uzbek - canoer.
Oleg Pukhnatiy (1975) Uzbek - swimmer.
Aleksandr Agafonov (1975) Uzbek - swimmer.
Mansur Zhumayev (1975) Uzbek - judoka.
Timur Ibragimov (1975) Uzbek - boxer.
Ulugbek Ibragimov (1975) Uzbek - boxer.
Alisher Tuychiev (1976) Uzbek - footballer.
Davron Fayziev (1976) Uzbek - footballer.
Zafar Kholmurodov (1976) Uzbek - footballer.
Bakhtiyor Ashurmatov (1976) Uzbek - footballer.
Sergey Krushevskiy (1976) Uzbek - cyclist.
Dmitry Tsutskarev (1976) Uzbek - swimmer.
Konstantin Zhuravlyov (1976) Uzbek - sprinter.
Egamnazar Akbarov (1976) Uzbek - judoka.
Sergey Mihaylov (1976) Uzbek - boxer.
Dilshod Yuldashev (1976) Uzbek - boxer.
Damir Zakhartdinov (1976) Uzbek - wrestler.
Artur Tavkazakhov (1976) Uzbek - wrestler.
Adkhamdzhon Akhilov (1976) Uzbek - wrestler.
Komil Urunbayev (1976) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Elvir Rahimić (1976) Uzbek - footballer.
Rafael Nuritdinov (1977) Uzbek - cyclist.
Alisher Rahimov (1977) Uzbek - boxer.
Spartak Murtazayev (1977) Uzbek - footballer.
Zayniddin Tadjiyev (1977) Uzbek - footballer.
Vitaly Anosov (1977) Uzbek - canoer.
Rashidjon Gafurov (1977) Uzbek - footballer.
Vadim Kutsenko (1977) Uzbek - tennis player.
Tulkunbay Turgunov (1977) Uzbek - boxer.
Rustam Saidov (1978) Uzbek - boxer.
Pavel Andreev (1978) Uzbek - devathlete.
Asror Aliqulov (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Ulugbek Bakayev (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Anvar Berdiev (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Aleksey Babadjanov (1978) Uzbek - canoer.
Danila Turchin (1978) Uzbek - canoer.
Umid Isoqov (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Vyacheslav Ponomarev (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Anvarjon Soliev (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Hayrulla Karimov (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Bakhtiyor Hamidullaev (1978) Uzbek - footballer.
Murat Kalikulov (1978) Uzbek - judoka.
Andrei Karyaka (1978) Uzbek, Russian, Ukrainian - footballer.
Aleksey Shevtsov (1979) Uzbek - wrestler.
Ilkhom Muminjonov (1979) Uzbek - footballer.
Yury Vitt (1980) Uzbek - wrestler.
Sherzod Husanov (1980) Uzbek - boxer.
Botir Qoraev (1980) Uzbek - footballer.
Vyacheslav Pereteyko (1980) Uzbek - judoka.
Ruslan Kudayev (1980) Uzbek - fencer.
Hamza Karimov (1980) Uzbek - footballer.
Artem Knyazev (1980) Uzbek - skater.
Ramil Sarkulov (1981) Uzbek - ice skater.
Sergey Borzov (1981) Uzbek - canoer.
Petr Vasiliev (1981) Uzbek - swimmer.
Tulashboy Doniyorov (1981) Uzbek - boxer.
Mikhail Tarasov (1981) Uzbek - canoer.
Andrei Vlasichev (1981) Uzbek - footballer.
Oleg Normatov (1981) Uzbek - hurdler.
Bekzod Khidirov (1981) Uzbek - boxer.
Abdullo Tangriev (1981) Uzbek - judoka.
Vladimir Chernenko (1981) Uzbek - rower.
Oleg Shamaev (1982) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Dmitry Strykov (1982) Uzbek - canoer.
Sherzod Abdurahmonov (1982) Uzbek - boxer.
Sherzodjon Yusupov (1982) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Shuhrat Mirkholdirshoev (1982) Uzbek - footballer.
Sergei Karaulov (1982) Uzbek - basketball player.
Akmal Irgashev (1982) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Igor Alborov (1982) Uzbek - boxer.
Sergey Voytsekhovich (1982) Uzbek - swimmer.
Oleg Lyashko (1982) Uzbek - swimmer.
Dilshod Mahmudov (1982) Uzbek - boxer.
Ramziddin Sayidov (1982) Uzbek - judoka.
Oleg Juravlyov (1982) Uzbek - sprinter.
Muradjan Khalmuratov (1982) Uzbek - cyclist.
Dilshod Mansurov (1983) Uzbek - wrestler.
Vladimir Tuychiev (1983) Uzbek - cyclist.
Oleg Sidorov (1983) Uzbek - swimmer.
Shokir Muminov (1983) Uzbek - judoka.
Roman Dronin (1983) Uzbek - cyclist.
Olim Navkarov (1983) Uzbek - footballer.
Ilhom Suyunov (1983) Uzbek - footballer.
Kamoliddin Tajiev (1983) Uzbek - footballer.
Ikboljon Akramov (1983) Uzbek - footballer.
Utkir Kurbanov (1983) Uzbek - judoka.
Sanjar Zokirov (1983) Uzbek - judoka.
Leonid Andreev (1983) Uzbek - pole vaulter and decathlete.
Mansurbek Chashemov (1983) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Bakhram Mendibaev (1983) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Sergey Bogdanov (1983) Uzbek - rower.
Magomed Ibragimov (1983) Uzbek - wrestler.
Gayratjon Hasanov (1983) Uzbek - footballer.
Jasur Hasanov (1983) Uzbek - footballer.
Islom Inomov (1984) Uzbek - footballer.
Temur Juraev (1984) Uzbek - footballer.
Ildar Magdeev (1984) Uzbek - footballer.
Ilyos Zeytulayev (1984) Uzbek - footballer.
Kayrat Ermetov (1984) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Ruslan Naurzaliev (1984) Uzbek - rower.
Erkin Boydullayev (1984) Uzbek - footballer.
Jasur Matchanov (1984) Uzbek - boxer.
Murad Inoyatov (1984) Uzbek - tennis player.
Navruz Jurakobilov (1984) Uzbek - judoka.
Anzur Ismailov (1985) Uzbek - footballer.
Azizbek Haydarov (1985) Uzbek - footballer.
Shavkat Salomov (1985) Uzbek - footballer.
Soslan Gattsiev (1985) Uzbek - wrestler.
Andrey Morkovin (1985) Uzbek - swimmer.
Dilshod Choriev (1985) Uzbek - judoka.
Bahodirjon Sultonov (1985) Uzbek - boxer.
Khurshid Nabiev (1985) Uzbek - judoka.
Adiljan Tulendibaev (1985) Uzbek - judoka.
Ivan Efremov (1986) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Abbos Atoev (1986) Uzbek - boxer.
Farrukh Dustov (1986) Uzbek - tennis player.
Sergey Tsoy (1986) Uzbek - swimmer.
Elshod Rasulov (1986) Uzbek - boxer.
Shavkat Mullajanov (1986) Uzbek - footballer.
Vokhid Shodiev (1986) Uzbek - footballer.
Timur Yafarov (1986) Uzbek - footballer.
Nikita Polyakov (1986) Uzbek - swimmer.
Aziz Ibragimov (1986) Uzbek - footballer.
Ruslan Karimov (1986) Uzbek - cyclist.
Rishod Sobirov (1986) Uzbek - judoka.
Andrey Petrov (1986) Uzbek - long distance runner.
Sherali Juraev (1986) Uzbek - judoka.
Ruslan Makarov (1987) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Mirali Sharipov (1987) Uzbek - judoka.
Vadim Menkov (1987) Uzbek - canoer.
Sakhob Juraev (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Vagiz Galiulin (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Gerasim Kochnev (1987) Uzbek - canoer.
Kamoliddin Murzoev (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Bahodir Nasimov (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Vadim Afonin (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Vadim Afonin (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Odil Ahmedov (1987) Uzbek - footballer.
Orzubek Shayimov (1987) Uzbek - boxer.
Marsel İlhan (1987) Uzbek / Turkish - tennis player.
Gleb Sakharov (1988) Uzbek - tennis player.
Vaja Uzakov (1988) Uzbek - tennis player.
Soyib Kurbonov (1988) Uzbek - judoka.
Sergey Pankov (1988) Uzbek - swimmer.
Mirzohid Farmonov (1988) Uzbek - judoka.
Anvar Rajabov (1988) Uzbek - footballer.
Lutfulla Turaev (1988) Uzbek - footballer.
Ibrahim Nazarov (1988) Uzbek - swimmer.
Ivan Zaytsev (1988) Uzbek - javelin thrower.
Rafikjon Sultonov (1988) Uzbek - boxer.
Serik Mirbekov (1988) Uzbek - canoer.
Danil Bugakov (1988) Uzbek - swimmer.
Abbos Rakhmonov (1988) Uzbek - wrestler.
Kamil Agalarov (1988) Uzbek, Dargin - footballer.
Alexander Petrovsky (1989) Uzbek - cyclist.
Vladimir Broun (1989) Uzbek Jewish - footballer.
Yakhyo Imamov (1989) Uzbek - judoka.
Ivan Demyanenko (1989) Uzbek - swimmer.
Jasur Hasanov (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Shukhrat Mukhammadiev (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Islom Tukhtakhodjaev (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Kenja Turaev (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Akbar Turaev (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Sherzod Karimov (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Abduqahhor Hojiakbarov (1989) Uzbek - footballer.
Muminjon Abdullaev (1989) Uzbek - wrestler.
Hurshid Tojibaev (1989) Uzbek - boxer.
Ikhtiyor Navruzov (1989) Uzbek - wrestler.
Dmitriy Kim (1989) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Ulugbek Alimov (1989) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Artem Dyatlov (1989) Uzbek - hurdler.
Petr Romashkin (1989) Uzbek - swimmer.
Uktamjon Rahmonov (1990) Uzbek - boxer.
Sherzod Azamov (1990) Uzbek - footballer.
Murod Kholmukhamedov (1990) Uzbek - footballer.
Bobur Shokirjonov (1990) Uzbek - javelin thrower.
Aleksey Mochalov (1990) Uzbek - canoer.
Sergey Dementev (1990) Uzbek - shot putter.
Bekzod Abdurakhmonov (1990) Uzbek - wrestler and mixed martial artist.
Utkirjon Nigmatov (1990) Uzbek - paralympic judoka.
Elmurat Tasmuradov (1991) Uzbek - wrestler.
Sardor Mirzaev (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Shahzodbek Nurmatov (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Farrukh Nurliboev (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Farrukh Sayfiev (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Sardor Rashidov (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Eldorbek Suyunov (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Dilshod Turdiev (1991) Uzbek - wrestler.
Shohrux Gadoyev (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Akbar Ismatullaev (1991) Uzbek - footballer.
Fazliddin Gaibnazarov (1991) Uzbek - boxer.
Shohjahon Ergashev (1991) Uzbek - boxer.
Azizbek Abdugofurov (1992) Uzbek - boxer.
Navruzbek Olimov (1992) Uzbek - footballer.
Davron Khashimov (1992) Uzbek - footballer.
Dilshod Juraev (1992) Uzbek - footballer.
Sherzod Namozov (1992) Uzbek - paralympic judoka.
Timur Gumerov (1992) Uzbek - cyclist.
Shakhram Giyasov (1993) Uzbek - boxer.
Jamshid Iskanderov (1993) Uzbek - footballer.
Sardorbek Dusmurotov (1993) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Jaloliddin Masharipov (1993) Uzbek - footballer.
Hasanboy Dusmatov (1993) Uzbek - boxer.
Shokhrukhbek Abdulazizov (1993) Uzbek - boxer.
Shakhobidin Zoirov (1993) Uzbek - boxer.
Ruslan Kurbanov (1993) Uzbek - triple jumper.
Diyorbek Urozboev (1993) Uzbek - judoka.
Suhrob Khodjaev (1993) Uzbek - hammer thrower.
Artem Voronov (1993) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Qudratillo Abduqaxorov (1993) Uzbek - boxer.
Rustam Djangabaev (1993) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Shakhzodbek Sabirov (1993) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Nikita Rafalovich (1993) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Jahongir Abdumominov (1993) Uzbek - footballer.
Artyom Savatyugin (1994) Uzbek - badminton player.
Bakhodir Jalolov (1994) Uzbek - boxer.
Elnur Abduraimov (1994) Uzbek - boxer.
Khurshidjon Tursunov (1994) Uzbek - swimmer.
Nikita Pavlenko (1994) Uzbek - footballer.
Diyorjon Turapov (1994) Uzbek - footballer.
Murodjon Akhmadaliev (1994) Uzbek - boxer.
Ikromjon Alibaev (1994) Uzbek - footballer.
Husniddin Gafurov (1994) Uzbek - footballer.
Sanjar Fayziev (1994) Uzbek - tennis player.
Temur Mustafin (1995) Uzbek - footballer.
Temur Ismailov (1995) Uzbek - tennis player.
Vladislav Mustafin (1995) Uzbek - swimmer.
Eldor Shomurodov (1995) Uzbek - footballer.
Andrey Sidorov (1995) Uzbek - footballer.
Javokhir Sokhibov (1995) Uzbek - footballer.
Zabikhillo Urinboev (1995) Uzbek - footballer.
Doston Yokubov (1995) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Odiljon Abdurakhmanov (1996) Uzbek - footballer.
Bektemir Melikuziev (1996) Uzbek - boxer.
Odiljon Hamrobekov (1996) Uzbek - footballer.
Rustam Ashurmatov (1996) Uzbek - footballer.
Jamshid Boltaboev (1996) Uzbek - footballer.
Shakhboz Kholmurzaev (1996) Uzbek - rower.
Javokhir Sidikov (1996) Uzbek - footballer.
Jasurbek Yakhshiboev (1997) Uzbek - footballer.
Rustam Vazitdinov (1997) Uzbek - footballer.
Komiljon Tukhtaev (1997) Uzbek - alpine skier.
Rustam Normatov (1997) Uzbek - footballer.
Farkhodbek Sobirov (1997) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Ömer Yurtseven (1998) Uzbek - basketball player.
Niyaz Pulatov (1998) Uzbek - taekwondo practitioner.
Jurabek Karimov (1998) Uzbek - tennis player.
Azizjon Ganiev (1998) Uzbek - footballer.
Artyom Kozlyuk (1998) Uzbek - swimmer.
Khumoyun Sultanov (1998) Uzbek - tennis player.
Akbar Djuraev (1999) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Adkhamjon Ergashev (1999) Uzbek - weightlifter.
Shamseddin Khudoyberdiev (?) Uzbek - wrestler.
Jasurbek Latipov (?) Uzbek - boxer.
Oybek Mamazulunov (?) Uzbek - boxer.
9 notes · View notes
nanshe-of-nina · 5 years ago
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Wizarding Russian Empire and USSR || Zhnetsy, Medvednikov’s Inner Circle
Alsu Andreyevna Zherebtsova (11 April 1885 – 18 March 1940) Zherebtsova was born in Tatarstan as the daughter of an ethnic Russian and a Tatar woman. Her father was originally from what’s know the Saratov oblast, but left his home after a falling out with his older brother, Svyatogor, though he remained on speaking terms with his twin sister, Vasilisa. Though her parents wanted her to have an education, she was expelled from Koldovstortez in 1901 and became a thief instead. In 1905, she was arrested and sentenced to five years of imprisonment. While in Siberia, she met a revolutionary and terrorist affiliated with the KDMM named Boris Stefanovich Luchnikov and became romantically involved with him. They had two sons, but didn't get around until marrying until 1909, while she was pregnant with their second son. (This was done at the behest of her mother). In 1914, both of them were arrested again and sent to prison, while their sons were sent to live with their maternal grandmother in Tatarstan, and were not freed until 1917.
Zherebtsova and Luchnikov both joined the BK in 1918 and she joined the Zhnetsy shortly after and quickly gained a reputation for brutality, operating mostly in the Ukraine and Crimea. In 1923, she was appointed head of the Zhnetsy of the North Caucasus, a notoriously lawless region, and there was introduced to her lifelong associates: Chernyshova, Zabrodina, Zelinsky, and others. She and her associates became favourites of Afanasiy Kostov, due to a combination of their brutality and fawning loyalty to him. During the late 1920s, a period when D.I. Zalischenko was getting sicker and sicker and M.V. Kulchytskaya was distracted by her own increasingly poor health and feud with her daughter, Zherebtsova became one of the most outspoken members of the “We Hate Lyudmila Vishnevskaya” faction among the Zhnetsy, especially after she was transferred to Lysaya Gora.
In 1928, however, she ran afoul of Kulchytskaya and Zalischenko by claiming that the Kladenets (dwarf-like creatures who inhabited mines) were again plotting rebellion, this time with the assistance of foreigners. Though the two of them were skeptical, Kostov was far more receptive to her views and authorized her to arrest as many of them as possible to root out the supposed conspiracy. The following year, though, a story came out that Vishnevskaya and Yeva Naumovna Yablochkova were willing to support a coup with A.Z. Krupina, N.F. Voinov, and U.F. Orlova, which lowered the appreciation of the Lysaya Gora Zhnetsy in Kostov’s eyes, and led to Zherebtsova being transferred there. Afterwards, when the two were assigned to crush lingering resistance by non-humans, Vishnevskaya and Zherebtsova competed to see who could more ruthlessly suppress dissent. In 1931, in view of the the terminal illness of Zalischenko, a shake up of the Zhnetsy occurred and Zherebtsova and most of her supporters⁠ were demoted, transferred, or fired.
In 1933, she became the Vedma of the North Caucasus, but continued to correspond frequently with her former Zhnetsy underlings, especially Chernyshova. Around 1926 or 1927, she had first met and befriended the young Valery Vsevolodovich Medvednikov and probably introduced him to Miroslava Volkova, who in turn introduced him to Kostov. Their fortunes all improved greatly after the assassination of Kulchytskaya in March 1934. The repeated bungling of Vishnevskaya and her people (which included G.A. Golubtsov’s repeated defiance, Z.K. Krasavkina almost dying due to the negligence of Saranchin and Malinina, and the provocateur witness A.G. Zakite constantly mixing up the names of the Lutsenkos during the trial) caused Kostov to lose faith in them. In October 1936, Vishnevskaya was displaced as head by Medvednikov, who ordered the demotions of most of her people and replaced with former underlings of Zherebtsova.
After March 1938, though, it was all downhill for Zherebtsova, Medvednikov, and the others. After finding out that Kostov intended to replace Chernyshova with Nane Aslanyan, Medvednikov had a breakdown and Zherebtsova was no less frightened. She had first met Aslanyan in 1930 and knew of her gruesome reputation. After Aslanyan’s arrival, the arrests began with Minfa Zabrodina. Zherebtsova was herself arrested on 6 December 1938 and tortured for six months. After the arrests of Medvednikov and Chernyshova, they quickly turned on each other. She was executed 15 March 1940, five days before Chernyshova and Medvednikov. Her husband, sons, and daughter-in-law were also executed and her infant granddaughter was sent to an orphanage.
Zherebtsova is often confused with her first cousin, Violetta Dimitriyevna Solovieva, the long-time lover and companion of Zaria Krasavkina, because Solovieva often used the surname of her mother, Vasilisa Dobrynichna Zherebtsova, as an alias. However, Alsu and Violetta were extremely unfond of each other as adults, though they had been friendly as children. Ironically, the two of them were also cousins of the Auror, Mikhail Svyatogorovich Zherebtsov, who somehow came through the Great Harvest unscathed.
Melanippa Ippolitovna Chernyshova (4 January 1892 – 20 March 1940) Chernyshova was born in a large (mostly wizarding) village in Mordovia as the youngest of eight daughters. Her father was a Russian Orthodox priest and strict disciplinarian. As a girl, she was extremely religious, but became rebellious as a teenager.
She completed her studies at Koldovstortez in 1910 and later found work as a journeyman healer. When World War I began, Chernyshova volunteered as a nurse in Saransk, hoping to secretly aid her country, despite the Volshebny Duma’s ban on interference. She was discovered in 1915 when the Volshebny Duma began receiving reports about the seemingly miraculous recoveries of soldiers in Mordovia. They responded by sending out Obliviators to modify the memories of the Zemlyane involved and ordered that she be arrested. Instead, she fled, embittered, and became in anti-VD terrorist groups. In 1916, she helped a group kidnap an Auror and torture him to death.
In 1917, Chernyshova was in Lysaya Gora, where she participated in further terrorist attacks against the Volshebny Duma. She participated in the storming of the Dubovaya Roshcha, during which she was seriously wounded. After her recovery, she joined the Zhnetsy in 1919 and was stationed in Kiev. In November 1923, she was transferred to the North Caucasus branch under Zherebtsova before being transferred to Lysaya Gora in the summer of 1927. In Lysaya Gora, Chernyshova became one of the protegees of Vishnevskaya, but the two later experienced a falling-out. From 1918 until 1932, Chernyshova was involved in a romantic relationship with Alena Torkanovna Cheremisina, who was also originally from Mordovia and had joined the Zhnetsy in 1921 on Chernyshova’s advice.
In the fall of 1936, Chernyshova became associated with Valery Medvednikov and Zherebtsova and was appointed as Medvednikov's deputy in October 1936. In April 1937, she was given the responsibility of arresting Vishnevskaya and then directed her former superior’s questioning. As the deputy head of the Zhnetsy, Chernyshova was intensely involved in the repressions that occurred during the Great Harvest. By February 1938, though, she had began making private complaints to the Sovet Koldunov about Medvednikov’s increasingly drunken and erratic behavior that had reached the point that she and Baltais had had to do most of the work grooming the numerous defendants of the last show trial on what to say. The period after the last show trial in March 1938 was, in retrospect, the beginning of the end for Medvednikov, Chernyshova, and Zherebtsova, who were all beginning to despise and resent each other. In September 1938, Chernyshova was replaced as deputy head of the Zhnetsy by Aslanyan and transferred to the Commissariat of of Magical Games and Sports.
However, beginning in November 1938, Chernyshova began showing signs of a mental breakdown that only accelerated as time went on. By April 1939, she stopped going to work and spent all day in her apartment with the shades drawn, barely able to move. When she arrested in the early morning hours of 30 April 1939, she was found sitting on the sofa wearing a dirty nightgown, smoking a cigarette and staring into space. She did not react for several minutes after being told she was under arrest, but then slowly turned her head and said slowly, “What took you so long?”
Chernyshova agreed to confess to whatever they wanted her to right away and so avoided torture and allowed reasonably comfortable confinement. However, her attempts to write a confession fell flat because it admitted that the charges against all the prominent victims of the Great Harvest were fabrications and expressed the belief that if Grindelwald and his army attacked the Soviet Union, they were almost certainly doomed. So, that was scrapped and Aslanyan and A.N. Orlov wrote up another confession that Chernyshova signed. In a desperate attempt to save himself, Medvednikov repeatedly brought up her lesbian relationship with Cheremisina and apparent grief at the deaths of some of her former colleagues in his own confession as proof that she had also been in Vishnevskaya’s pocket all along, but this proved fruitless, as Chernyshova openly admitted to the first two charges. She was executed 20 March 1940, the same day as Medvednikov and Zabrodina.
After her death, her older sister, Antiopa, (who just so happened to have been married to Melanippa’s associate, Gavril Saulovich Leichenberg) and her three Leichenberg nieces were all likewise executed. The other Chernyshova sisters who were still alive, Androktasia and Ksanthippa, and their respective families were left alone, likely because they had not spoken to either Antiopa or Melanippa in over 30 years.
Viktor Arkhipovich Baltais (9 June 1888 – 15 September 1938) Born into a poor Latvian family, Baltais was expelled from Koldovstortez in his second year for unclear reasons. He joined the BK in 1908, but also was associated with the militant faction of the Krug druzey materi Mokosh, then mostly represented by the notorious terrorists like Olimpiya Feodorovna Zmeyeva and Vasilisa Alekseyevna Saburova, who had both been involved in the assassinations of officials of the Volshebny Duma's government. He later hid his affiliation with the KDMM and falsely claimed that he had completed his studies at Koldovstortez.
By 1917, he was living in Lysaya Gora and took part in the Revolution. He first joined the Zhnetsy in 1918, shortly after its founding. In the 1920s, he was based in the Ukraine and accused of corruption, but managed to evade punishment and was, in fact, promoted and transferred to the Urals and, later, Siberia where he helped Velonia Volosovna Kukulka set up the series of the camps that were known as Vyraj.
In March 1934, Kostov personally picked him out to investigate the assassination of Marena Kulchytskaya. His over-vigilance was probably a major factor in the suicides of both D.K. Mironov and S.T. Akhmatova in April of that same year. While Mironov had been hesitant, his appointed successor, Rodion Feodorovich Gornostaev proved less so and happily rubber-stamped every operation Baltais undertook to root out supposed traitors and spies in the city and even came up with some himself.
However, Baltais was himself arrested on 2 July 1938, on account of his Latvian origins and former links with the KDMM and tortured severely. However, instead of being immediately executed, he languished in prison along with his former Zhnetsy colleagues, Arkhipienka and Saranchin.
Two years after the fact, Chernyshova admitted that this was because she forgot that the three of them were still alive. In September, though, after receiving news that Nane Aslanyan would be taking her spot of the deputy head of the Zhnetsy, Zherebtsova told her to have them executed so that they wouldn't turn traitor and incriminate them when Aslanyan and her Caucasians arrived. Baltais, Arkhipienka, and Saranchin were thus executed the next day. 
Ksantip Kiprianovich Zelinsky (30 October 1889 – 10 March 1940) Zelinsky was born in the Ukraine into a poor, halfblood family, the only son of a Polish zemlyanin father and a Ukrainian witch mother. He had no formal education, though he harbored dreams of becoming an auror. Around 1910, his oldest sister, Isidora, attempted to convince him to join the Bratsvo, but he was deeply uninterested and regularly mocked her political convictions, causing a rift between them.
During the Civil War, Ksantip had finally come around and joined the BK’s cause and also fought in the Civil War. However, he was uninterested in political wrangling for the most part and instead joined the Zhnetsy in 1920. He cut his teeth serving in the North Caucasus under Zherebtsova and became a close friend of several of his cohorts, including Chernyshova, whom he later served with in Kazakhstan. In 1929, he married the half-Greek, half-Armenian beauty, Pelagiya Yuriyevna Vartanian, and adopted her two daughters by her first husband as his own.
In the fall of 1932, Isidora was arrested because of her anti-Kostov pamphlets and Zelinsky rushed to Lysaya Gora to denounce her. Kulchytskaya, the head of the Zhnetsy, found his behavior deeply obnoxious; however, Kostov may have been more amenable to his views, because it is possible that Zelinsky was responsible for planting the idea in his head that Anfisa Zoranovna Krupina was responsible for actually composing his sister’s pamphlets.
Zelinsky panicked again when Lyudmila Vyacheslavna Vishnevskaya was displaced at the head of the Zhnetsy by Medvednikov, but managed to survive by becoming a sycophantic yes-man toward Medvednikov, Chernyshova, and Zherebtsova, who sent him to manage the Zhnetsy in Siberia and, later, Central Asia. In the spring of 1938, Zelinsky was transferred back to Lysaya Gora and given a cushy office job. However, this respite proved short-lived. He was arrested 2 February 1939 and executed 10 March 1940.
Grigori Lukyanovich Alatyrtsev (29 April 1894 – unknown) Alatyrtsev was a rozhdennyy zemley born in Kiev, Ukraine. He attended Koldovstortez from 1904 until 1912 and then moved to Lysaya Gora in search of work. He only joined the BK in 1917, but joined the Zhnetsy soon after its founding in 1918. From this period until 1930, he was based in the Ukraine until he was transferred to Lysaya Gora in 1931.
He then came into his own in 1934 when he was one of the Zhnetsy sent to Ledenets to investigate the deaths of Kulchytskaya and Mironov. He privately came to the conclusion that Kulchytskaya’s assassin, Maria Iosifovna Kovalskaya, was simply a mentally unstable person with a Messiah complex and delusions of grandeur and was irritated by the attempts to V.V. Medvednikov and Ilifiya Dmitriyevna Zhuravleva (the head of MBiS and obsessive Kostovist) to portray Kovalskaya as an agent of Zaria Krasavkina and her former political supporters. However, Alatyrtsev kept those opinions to himself and became a favourite of Medvednikov, who regarded him as one of the only Zhnetsy at the time who was not a creature of Vishnevskaya.
In 1935, he helped frame the cousins, Shalva Irakliyevich Zalkaliani, the caretaker of Dubovaya Roshcha, and Shushanik Khosrovovna Tehlirian, the headmistress of Koldovstortez, for nurturing conspiracies in their midst and get them exiled to the Crimea. In the summer of 1936, he was one of those who helped prepare the first show trial of Krasavkina, Yefrem Iosifovich Levandovsky, and others. He was retained by Medvednikov and was then sent to the Black Sea region to root out to counter-revolutionary elements.
In mid-1937, he was sent to eastern Siberia where he ordered the arrests and executions of, among others, the Zhnets, Snezhana Kurbatovna Barsova. Around this time, Chernyshova turned up to oversee his operations and he decided that she was spying on him when he found one of the Zhnetsy she’d brought with her from Lysaya Gora going through his room. Though the Zhnets in question was actually looking for valuables to sell and Chernyshova wasn’t aware of his actions, Alatyrtsev sensed that clouds were gathering.
This was true, as several former Zhnetsy had implicated Alatyrtsev in their supposed conspiracy. Medvednikov, however, refused to believe it and told Chernyshova to question the recently arrested Vishnevskaya to prove his innocence. Meanwhile, in the east, Alatyrtsev had had run-ins with Ksantip Zelinsky and the well-respected Auror, Varvara Grigoriyevna Sarycheva, also seemed suspicious of him. After hearing news that Chernyshova and Yuri Sylenovich Kozachenko, Kostov’s former private secretary, were coming to investigate, Alatyrtsev panicked and fled south to Mongolia, leaving behind his wife and stepdaughters. From there, Alatyrtsev sent an owl to Grindelwald and let it be known that he was willing to join him if he would protect him.
In August, Alatyrtsev met with two supporters of Grindelwald, who helped him escape to China. There, he confessed that the show trials were all fabrications and their defendants had all been framed and that the ranks of the Aurors had been severely thinned as a result of the Great Harvest. What happened to him afterwards is unclear, for he disappears from the historical record in 1942.
Melinoye Zinovyevna Sapranenko (17 October 1896 – 10 February 1940) Sapranenko was born in what is now the Gomel region of Byelorussia. Her father was an ethnic Ukrainian wizard while her mother was a Belarusian zemylanin. She attended Koldovstortez from 1906 until 1914 with the intent of becoming a potioneer. She joined the BK only in 1917 and the Zhnetsy in 1920 and worked mainly in the Urals region before being transferred to Lysaya Gora in 1931.
She was one of those who benefited from the advancement of Valery Medvednikov and in 1936, she and Ksantip Zelinsky were both assigned to Siberia and then Central Asia. In 1937, she was made the head of the Ukraine’s Zhnetsy and oversaw the Great Harvest there. However, she grew increasingly wary of Medvednikov as time progressed, especially when he showed up in the Ukraine in February of 1938 and proudly boasted that he'd ordered the arrests and beatings of the former Black Crones, Ausrine Avreliyevna Kalnietyte, Laima Perkunasovna Liepa, and Vanda Kazimirovna Krukovskaya, and Zemlyanitsyn’s eldest daughter, Kseniya Lavrentyevna Zemlyanitsyna and then showed her a wig he’d had made from the hair of Krasavkina after her execution.
In December 1938, after hearing of the arrest of Zherebtsova, Sapranenko panicked and tried to make it look like she’d committed suicide by drowning herself in the Dnieper River. Instead, she fled west, hoping that she could make it across the Poland border. However, she found that the border was too heavily guarded and was forced to change plans, instead hiding in northern Belarus. However, she was discovered during the spring of 1939 and arrested 20 May. She was executed 10 February 1940.
Kronos Dmitrievich Geyer (24 December 1886 – 5 December 1937) A halfblood of Baltic German descent, Geyer completed his studies at Koldovstortez in 1896. In 1905, he joined the Shabash Volshebnikov, but switched to the BK in 1914. His activities between that period and 1917 are obscure. He joined the Zhnetsy in 1919 and was stationed in various regions of the Ukraine throughout the Civil War.
In the 1930s, he was sent to Lysaya Gora to help escort the SK member, Yelisaveta Ivanovna Lisitsyna to Kiev and then was the head of her security where they traveled around the region. The Zemlyane of the region during this time had, of course, been struck with a terrible famine and the two were tasked to make sure that witches and wizards of the region didn’t try to intervene in any way. Geyer was chosen for the duty mainly because of his reputation of brutality and sadism. In 1932, he was also given the honor of personally torturing and interrogating Isidora Zelinskaya about her dissident activities, with the assistance of Milica Bogdanovna Malinina, though Zelinskaya proved uncooperative.
No diehard supporter of Vishnevskaya, he didn’t make a peep when she was replaced by Medvednikov. He helped organize the second show trial, but was one of those denounced by Malinina as a traitor after she was tortured nearly to death so that she would incriminate Vishnevskaya. Geyer was arrested in August 1937 and executed on 5 December 1937 on charges of spying for the Polish and Germany Ministries, alongside Nikita Kassiyevich Likharev, the former head of the Ledenets Zhnetsy. 
Sigizmund Ivanovich Sobiesky (10 August 1885 – 28 February 1940) A Polish halfblood, Sobiesky’s father died soon after his birth. He did not attend Koldovstortez, because his mother couldn’t afford the school fees, instead learning at home. As a boy, he had dreams of being a Quidditch star and was uninvolved in politics prior to 1915, when he joined the BK. He was one of the earliest members of the Zhnetsy, joining in 1918. From 1919, he was sent to work in the underwater city of Kitezh and there met Svetoslava Konvalinkova (”Svatava” in Czech), the younger sister of Lyudmila Konvalinkova, the second wife of Afanasiy Kostov. They married in 1920 and had a daughter and two sons.
In 1923, he was transferred to the Crimea and stayed there before being appointed as the head of the South Caucasus Zhnetsy in 1929. There, he quickly made a mess of things, by repeatedly insulting the locals, failing to understand the differences between the vastly different ethnic groups there, and repeatedly clashing with the then-head of the Georgian Zhnetsy, Nane Aslanyan, who regarded him as a buffoon. Sobiesky also had the habit of not doing any work he found boring (which was most of it) and leaving it to mostly to his underlings. While at a party in Tifilis the winter of 1931, he became extremely intoxicated and then was found the next morning passed out drunk in the middle of town. Afterwards, Kostov had him transferred to the Ukraine, but removed him from that post again in 1933 after deciding that he was too soft and transferring him to Lysaya Gora
In Lysaya Gora, Sobiesky helped batter the ten associates of Krasavkina and Ye.I. Levandovsky into submission and then help organize their trial. No friend of Vishnevskaya, he became part of Medvevnikov’s inner circle after her downfall and took an extremely active part of the purging the Aurors’ Office on fabricated charges of espionage and treason. In March 1938, after the last of the three show trials, he was transferred to Kazakhstan.
After Medvednikov was himself displaced by Aslanyan, she ordered Sobiesky’s arrest in December 1938 with Kostov’s foreknowledge, though his wife, Svetoslava, was convinced it was solely Aslanyan’s doing. He was executed 28 February 1940. In the late 1940s, Svetoslava was herself arrested on charges of being a spy for the Czechs and Slovaks and sentenced to fifteen years in prison. She had a nervous breakdown in prison and after being released in 1954, became a recluse. 
Minfa Akheloyevna Zabrodina (29 January 1891 – 20 March 1940) Zabrodina was born into a moderately prosperous Russian Pureblood family from the Volga, though her mother was French. Her parents sent her to Beauxbatons, but she dropped out in the spring of 1908 and moved back to Ledenets where she got a job as a secretary.
She was uninterested in politics before joining the BK in 1917 and joined the Zhnetsy in 1919. In 1921, she was appointed as the deputy of Zherebtsova in the North Caucasus. Around the same time, she was expelled from the BK because of her mother’s French origins and was only allowed to rejoin in 1925 after Zherebtsova pulled some strings. Afterwards, in the early 1930s, she served with Chernyshova in Kazakhstan.
Thus, it was only natural that she would also became one of Medvednikov's minions after his takeover of the Zhnetsy in 1936. In 1936, she was appointed as the deputy head of the Ledenets Zhnetsy. She was arrested 28 November 1938 and executed 15 March 1940, on the same day as Medvednikov and Chernyshova.
In a lurid tell-all published in September 1953, Vsevolod Vladislavovich Sorokin-Kargin (son of the defector Zhnets, Zlata Bogdanovna Sorokina) claimed that while working together in Kazakhstan, Zabrodina and Chernyshova were involved in a romantic relationship, but it came to an abrupt end in November 1935 after Chernyshova found Zabrodina in bed with a male colleague and threw a colossal fit. 
Olivera Lazarevna Kargina (3 March 1892 – 10 March 1940) Overseer of Vyraj, 1936–1938.
A protégée of Zherebtsova, Kargina was born into a middle class Halfblood family in southern Ukraine, but was ethnically of Russian Jewish origin. She attended Koldovstortez, but did not complete her studies. Medvednikov’s second wife, Srebrenka Veselinovna Sorokina, was her former sister-in-law, as Sorokina’s first husband was Kargina’s older brother, Konstantin Lazarevich Kargin. She had worked for several years in foreign intelligence alongside Zlata Bogdanovna Sorokina, a cousin of Srebrenka who had married another of Kargina’s brothers, Vladislav Lazarevich Kargin.
In 1936, after V.V. Kukulka was sacked, she was promoted as head of the Vyraj. Kargina was widely regarded as cruel and uncaring of the high death tolls at the prison camps, but was also somewhat incompetent and a whiner who frequently complained that the number of inmates of the Vyraj was swelling faster than she could build. She was relieved to be sacked in October 1938 when Nane Aslanyan was appointed as Medvednikov’s deputy.
On 3 February 1939, Kargina attempted suicide by slitting her own throat, after hearing of the arrest of Zelinsky, but failed to kill herself, though she did permanently lose the ability to speak. After being treated at Zhiva’s Hospital, she was promptly arrested and testified in writing against Medvednikov, Zherebtsova, and Chernyshova. She was executed 10 March 1940.
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