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Sergei Viktorovich Pugachev, also spelled Sergey Pugachyov (French: Sergueï Pougatchev; Russian: Сергей Викторович Пугачёв; born 4 February 1963), is a Russian-born French business magnate. [1] He is a doctor of technical sciences and a member of the International Engineering Academy. Pugachev moved to the United States ...
Yemelyan Pugachev (c. 1742–1775), leader of the Cossack insurrection in Russia Sergei Pugachev (born 1963), Russian politician Shneur Zalman Pugachov [ he ] (1878–1934), Jewish Zionist educator active in Warsaw, Moscow, Berlin, and Palestine
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Her distant cousin Alexander Nekrassov broke the news that Pugachev was the father of Tolstoy's son. [11] By 2011, Tolstoy and Pugachev were reported to be a couple, with homes in Monaco, London, and Moscow, but Pugachev, by then living in exile in London, [12] remained married to his wife Galina, with whom he has children and grandchildren. [13]
Within the framework of administrative divisions, Pugachyov serves as the administrative center of Pugachyovsky District, [3] even though it is not a part of it. [10] As an administrative division, it is incorporated separately as Pugachyov Town Under Oblast Jurisdiction [10] —an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts.
The Polotsk Four was a group of Belarusian criminals and robbers, active from 2001 to 2002, led by serial killers Sergey Pugachev and Alexander Burdenko.With the aid of thieves Dmitry Ignatovich and Sergey Astafurov, the gang robbed numerous places around the Vitebsk Region and Brest Region, with Pugachev and Burdenko themselves killing two girls and two car enthusiasts.
He died in 1806 at his home in Moscow, and was buried at the village of Voskresensky in northern Moscow Governorate, which he had acquired in the preceding years. Kar was married to Princess Maria Sergeyevna Khovanskaya (1756-1833), and together they had four children: Ekaterina, Anna, Aleksey, and Sergei (died 1869).
Lewis W. Green (January 28, 1806 – May 26, 1863) was an American Presbyterian minister, educator, and academic administrator. Born in Danville, Kentucky, and educated in Woodford County, he enrolled at Transylvania University but transferred to Centre College to complete his degree.