Konstantin Andreevich Trenyov (Константи′н Андре′евич Тренё′в, May 21 (June 2) 1876, Baksheevka, Kharkiv, Russian Empire, now Ukraine - May 19, 1945, Moscow, USSR) was a Russian, Soviet playwright and author, USSR State Prize laureate (1941), best known for his Russian Civil War history drama Lyubov Yarovaya (1926).
Konstantin Simonov | Konstantin Zatulin | Konstantin Wecker | Konstantin Krause | Konstantin Kinchev | Konstantin Ushinsky | Konstantin Thon | Konstantin Somov | Konstantin Biebl | Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia | Konstantin Rykov | Konstantin Raikin | Konstantin Paustovsky | Konstantin Novoselov | Konstantin Melnikov | Konstantin Meladze | Konstantin Leselidze | Konstantin Chernenko | Konstantin Buteyko | Traugott Konstantin Oesterreich | ''The Bulgarian martyresses'' by Konstantin Makovsky | ''The Bulgarian Martyresses'' (1877), a painting by Konstantin Makovsky | Phil Konstantin | Konstantin Trenyov | Konstantin Svechkar | Konstantin Rokossovsky | Konstantin Pobedonostsev | Konstantin Mikhailov | Konstantin Kuznetsov (cinematographer) | Konstantin Kostenko |
He wrote over twenty plays, and translated such classic works of world and Russian drama as "The Inspector" by Gogol, Othello and The Taming of the Shrew 'by Shakespeare, Aristocrats by Nikolai Pogodin, Spring Love by Konstantin Trenyov, and Officer of the Navy by A. Kron.