Count | Count Basie | Sergei Rachmaninoff | count | Sergei Prokofiev | Count Dracula | The Count of Monte Cristo | Sergei Eisenstein | Sergei Parajanov | Sergei Diaghilev | Imperial Count | Count of Flanders | Count of Barcelona | Count Basie Orchestra | Sergei Witte | Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares | Count of Soissons | You Can Count on Me | Sergei Ivanov | Jean-Frédéric Phélypeaux, Count of Maurepas | Count Palatine | Count palatine | Count of Paris | Zhukovsky | Vasily Zhukovsky | Sergei Ivanovich Osipov | Sergei Bondarchuk | Sergei Bagapsh | John II, Count of Rietberg | Ivan Sergei |
The Access road to Zhukovsky from M5 highway (also known as the Access road from M5 highway to LII) is a road running across a distance of 9 km from settlement Imeni Telmana to the Zhukovsky.
The name was chosen from the village of Belyov in the province of Toula where his grandfather poet was born.
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Count Sergei Alexeevich Belevsky-Zhukovsky (17 February 1903 Moscow – 27 November 1956 Los Angeles) married in 1926 Nina Botkine (1901–1966) and had one daughter Helene.
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Alexei Alexeevich was born to Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich of Russia, the son of Czar Alexander II of Russia, and Alexandra Vasilievna Zhukovskaya, daughter of famous Russian poet Vasily Zhukovsky.
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Countess Elizabeta Alexeevna Belevskya-Zhukovskya (8 September 1896 Russia – 30 July 1975 New Jersey) married Petr Ghika-Perevostchikov (1872–1937) and had two children.
His outdoor personal best is also 5.80 metres, achieved in June 2006 in Zhukovskiy.
Unlike the other departments based in Dolgoprudny this one is situated in Zhukovsky, in a result of this the functioning of the department and its traditions are different.
Born October 27, 1987 in Zhukovsky, Russia, in 2011 Volkhov graduated from the Municipal Institute (МИ '11) of Zhukovsky, from the department of "Crisis Management" (Антикризисное управление).
The river also flows through the towns of Mozhaysk, Zvenigorod, Zhukovsky, Bronnitsy, Voskresensk, and — at the confluence of the Moskva and Oka — Kolomna.
Disappointed by Zhukovsky's mellifluent translation of Bürger's Lenore, Katenin brought out his own version of the ballad, whose title was Russified as Olga (1816).
Mullova was born in Zhukovsky, near Moscow, in Soviet Russia.