Jump to content

User:MarioGom/sandbox/UCDM

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Domnica Darienco (Q4155061)[edit]

Domnica Darienco
Stamp of Moldova; Domnica Darienco
Born(1919-01-15)January 15, 1919
DiedNovember 6, 2010(2010-11-06) (aged 91)
Awards

Domnica Darienco was a Moldovan actress.

Biography[edit]

Domnica Darienco was born in Valea Hoțului (present-day Dolyns'ke, Ukraine) on 15 January 1919.[1]

Awards[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "In memoriam. O legendă cu mai bine de 60 de ani de activitate și cu peste 100 de roluri". Vocea (in Romanian). 10 January 2019.

External links[edit]


Anatoliy Efimovitsj Belostotskiy (Q4082817)[edit]

Ivan Hontschar (Q12096793)[edit]

Halyna Kalchenko (Q4210596)[edit]

Mykhailo Lysenko (Q4270663)[edit]

Pinkhos Sabsay (Q4403587)[edit]

Halyna Petrashevych (Q12140117)[edit]

Pavel Bondarenko (Q4093220)[edit]

Yefim Belostotskiy (Q2589100)[edit]

(Q12103206)[edit]

Veniamin Pinchuk (Q4363076)[edit]

(Q116173082)[edit]

Sergey Ivanovich Aksenenko[edit]

uk:Ренессанс[edit]

Fyodor Berezin[edit]

Yuri Yurchenko (Q55107461)[edit]

Aleksey Mozgovoy (Q18058656)[edit]

Oksana Bayrak (Q4075669)[edit]

Boris Bilash (Q4081542)[edit]

Jan Tabachnyk[edit]

Mykhailo Poplavskyi (Q4372317)[edit]

(Q4396369)[edit]

Mykhaylo Holubovych (Q4142472)[edit]

The Shot in the Back[edit]

Memorial for the victims killed by OUN-UPA (Luhansk)[edit]

Diana Petrynenko (Q4360576)[edit]

Ivan Kavaleridze[edit]

Leonid Rabinovich (Q18740552)[edit]

Leonid Yudelevich Rabinovich
Леонид Юделевич Рабинович
Born
Died
Other namesLeonid Volynskii
Awards

Leonid Yudelevich Rabinovich (Russian: Леонид Юделевич Рабинович), also known as Leonid Volynskii, was a Soviet Ukrainian writer and military officer. During World War II he served in the Red Army, where he led a special group tasked with the recovery of cultural treasures hidden by the Nazis. After the war, he wrote several books about artists.[1]

Biography[edit]

Leonid was born in Odesa[1] on 7 February 1902.[citation needed]

Rabinovich died in Moscow in 1969[1]

Awards[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Leonid Rabinovich". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 6 March 2022.

External links[edit]