List of Saint Petersburg State University people
The following is a list of notable alumni and faculty of Saint Petersburg State University in Russia.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Alumni
Nobel laureates
- Ivan Pavlov - physiologist, psychologist, and physician; Nobel laureate in Physiology or Medicine in 1904
- Ilya Mechnikov - Physiology or Medicine in 1908
- Nikolay Semyonov - Chemistry in 1956
- Lev Landau - physicist; Nobel laureate in Physics in 1962
- Aleksandr Prokhorov - Physics in 1964
- Wassily Leontief - economist; Nobel laureate in Economics in 1973
- Leonid Kantorovich - economist, Nobel laureate in Economics in 1975
- Joseph Brodsky - Literature in 1987
Fields medal
Academia
- Volodymyr Barvinok — Ukrainian historian and writer
- Kazimieras Būga — Lithuanian linguist and philologist
- Lev Gumilev — Russian historian
- Igor Ivanov — pedagogue
- Dmitry Likhachev — scholar
- Vladimir Lossky — Eastern Orthodox theologian
- Stepan Malkhasyants — Armenian academician, philologist, linguist, and lexicographer
- Nikolay Marr — historian and linguist
- Sergey Oldenburg — orientalist
- Boris B. Piotrovsky — academician, historian-orientalist and archaeologist
- Sergey Platonov — historian
- Fyodor Shcherbatskoy — Indologist
- Mikhail Shultz — chemist, academician
- Pitirim Sorokin — sociologist
- Vasily Vasilievich Struve — orientalist
- Max Vasmer — German linguist
Government and politics
- Dalia Grybauskaite - President of Lithuania 2009–present
- Ion Inculeţ, president of the Moldavian Democratic Republic
- Alexander Kerensky, second Prime Minister of the Russian Provisional Government
- Vladimir Lenin - first head of the Russian SFSR
- Dmitry Medvedev - politician, businessman, lawyer, and the third President of the Russian Federation (2008–2012)
- Vladimir Putin - second President of the Russian Federation (2000–2008, 2012-present); Prime Minister of Russia (2008–2012)
- Antanas Smetona - President of Lithuania (first term 1919-1920; second term 1926-1940)
- Anatoly Sobchak - Russian politician and a co-author of the Constitution of the Russian Federation
- Levon Ter-Petrosyan - first President of Armenia (1991–1998)
- Augustinas Voldemaras - Prime Minister of Lithuania
Literature and the arts
- Ivan Turgenev - writer
- Alexander Blok - poet
- Ilia Chavchavadze - Georgian writer, politician and public benefactor
- Solomon Dodashvili - Georgian philosopher, grammarian, belletrist
- Ayn Rand - Russian-born American novelist and philosopher[1]
- Mahapandit Rahul Sankrityayan - Indian historian, scholar
- Nicholas Roerich - artist
- Igor Stravinsky - composer
Science and mathematics
- Pafnuty Chebyshev - mathematician
- Vladimir Fock - physicist
- George Gamow - cosmologist
- Mikhail Gromov - Franco-Russian mathematician, Abel Prize winner
- Alexander Alfonsovich Grossheim - Ukrainian botanist
- Cecil Hoare FRS - British protozoologist and parasitologist
- Ivan Ivanov - mathematician
- Dmitry Ivanovsky - biologist
- Wladimir Köppen - geographer, meteorologist, climatologist and botanist
- Yuri Linnik - mathematician
- Mikhail Lomonosov - scientist, writer and polymath
- Aleksandr Lyapunov - mathematician, mechanician and physicist
- Andrey Markov - mathematician
- Dmitri Mendeleev - chemist; creator of the first version of the periodic table of elements
- Boris Nikolsky - chemist
- Grigori Perelman - mathematician, Fields Medal winner (2006, declined), and only man to solve a Millennium Prize Problem (2010, prize declined)
- Konstantin Petrzhak - physicist
- Lev Pavlovich Rapoport - theoretical physicist
- Vladimir Rokhlin - mathematician
- Nikolai Semenov - physicist and chemist
- Stanislav Smirnov - mathematician, Fields Medal winner (2010)
- Vladimir Vernadsky - mineralogist and geochemist
- Georgy Voronoy - mathematician
- Emil Wiesel - Russian-German artist; museum curator; full member of the Russian Imperial Academy of Arts (since 1914); organizer of international art exhibitions; councilor of Hermitage and Russian museum
- Sergei Winogradsky - microbiologist, ecologist and soil scientist
- Yuri Yappa - theoretical physicist
Other
- Vladas Petronaitis - Lithuanian patriot, soldier and martyr
- Józef Pluskowski - Polish poet and member of the Polish Resistance
- Yakov Rekhter - co-founder of BGP and MPLS networking protocols
- Gennadiy Shatkov - Olympic champion in boxing
Faculty only
- Leonhard Euler - Swiss mathematician and physicist
- Nikolai Gogol - greatest Russian literature writer of Ukrainian origin; historian
- Ivan Sechenov - physiologist
References
- ↑ Page 54, Barbara Branden, The Passion of Ayn Rand, Doubleday (1986), hardcover, 442 pages, ISBN 0-385-19171-5
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