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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
Sergei Pugachev This page was last edited on 24 September 2022, at 21:22 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
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]
In the late 2000s, the company was bought by the businessman Sergeï Pugachev, becoming one of the companies of his new luxury group, including: Hédiard, and the channel Luxe TV. The physical remnants of First Moscow Watch Factory were purchased by a group of former Poljot employees, forming the basis for a new company, Volmax.
Economists Sergei Guriev and Andrei Rachinsky contrast older oligarchs with nomenklatura ties and younger-generation entrepreneurs such as Kakha Bendukidze who built their wealth from scratch because Gorbachev's reforms affected a period "when co-existence of regulated and quasi-market prices created huge opportunities for arbitrage." [11]
Pugachev envisioned the nobles returning to their previous status as the czar's servicemen on salary instead of estate and serf owners. He emphasized the peasants' freedom from the nobility. Pugachev still expected the peasants to continue their labor, but he granted them the freedom to work and own the land.
Land of Scoundrels (Russian: Страна негодяев, Strana Negodyayev) is a poem by Russian poet Sergei Yesenin completed in 1923. It depicts a conflict between a freedom-loving anarchist rebel named Nomakh (anagram alluding to Nestor Makhno) and Bolshevik commissar Rassvetov, who dreams of forcefully modernized Russia.