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Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov ForMemRS, [3] HFRSE (Russian: Никола́й Ива́нович Вави́лов, IPA: [nʲɪkɐˈlaj ɪˈvanəvʲɪtɕ vɐˈvʲiləf] ⓘ; 25 November [O.S. 13 November] 1887 – 26 January 1943) was a Russian and Soviet agronomist, botanist and geneticist who identified the centers of origin of cultivated plants.
1990 — Nikolai Vavilov as episode; 1992 — Our American Borya as Anna; 1997 — At the Dawn of a Misty Youth as Anna; 2004 — Opera. The Chronicles of slaughter as episode; 2005 — You are My Happiness as Alexandra Fyodorovna; 2006 — Airport-2 as Svetlana; 2006 — Detectives 5 as Tatyana Totsiltsina
Nikolai Vavilov (Russian: Николай Вавилов) is a 1990 6-part biographical television film. Joint production of the USSR and East Germany. Joint production of the USSR and East Germany. Biopic devoted to the history of the life of Soviet biologist, academician Nikolai Vavilov .
The Institute of Plant Industry was established in 1921 in Leningrad by Nikolai Vavilov who set about to create the world's first and largest collection of plant seeds. . Already in 1916 he did his first collection trip abroad, to Iran, and by 1932 he had collected seeds from almost every country in the world, which by 1933 had made the institute the largest seed bank in the world, with more ...
Barulina and her son with Vavilov (Yuri, born 1928) returned to Saratov where they spent the rest of World War II in great poverty. Not knowing that her husband had also been moved to a prison in Saratov, Barulina sent food parcels for him to Moscow, which never reached him. [3] Vavilov died in 1943 but was rehabilitated in 1955. Barulina was ...
A Vavilov Center (of Diversity) is a region of the world first indicated by Nikolai Vavilov to be an original center for the domestication of plants. [4] For crop plants, Nikolai Vavilov identified differing numbers of centers: three in 1924, five in 1926, six in 1929, seven in 1931, eight in 1935 and reduced to seven again in 1940. [5] [6]
Navalny's parents, Lyudmila and Anatoly (center left), visit their son's grave at a Moscow cemetery on Sunday with Alla Abrosimova (right), the mother of his widow. - Evgenia Novozhenina/Reuters
She was born in Tomsk, then part of the Soviet Union, to parents Stanislav Platonovich Vavilov [6] and Svetlana Konstantinovna Vavilova. [7] From 1970 to 1980, she attended a school where she learned German. In 1985, she graduated from Tomsk State University with a degree in history via a distance learning program. [8]