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  1. Nikolay Petrovich Krasnov (Russian: Николай Петрович Краснов; 23 November 1864 – 8 December 1939) was a Russian Serbian architect and painter, who served as Chief Architect of Yalta, Crimea, between 1887 and 1899. [1] From 1922 he lived and worked in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and was a key figure in the ...

    • Николай Петрович Краснов
  2. 5 mag 2021 · Nikolay Krasnov is considered the most important representative of academic historicism in Serbian architecture. His signature is carried by almost all of the most impressive, grandiose and monumental buildings in the centre of Belgrade that don’t belong to the category of modern architecture.

    • Nikolay Krasnov1
    • Nikolay Krasnov2
    • Nikolay Krasnov3
    • Nikolay Krasnov4
  3. Nikolay or Nikolai Krasnov may refer to: Nikolay Krasnov (soldier) (1833-1900), General of the Imperial Russian Army and Cossack historian; Nikolay Krasnov (architect) (1864-1939), Russian-Serbian architect; Nikolai Krasnov (pilot) (1914-1945), Soviet flying ace

  4. Nikolay Ivanovich Krasnov (Russian: Краснов, Николай Иванович, 29 January 1833 – 15 September 1900) was a lieutenant general of the Imperial Russian Army. Nikolay Krasnov was born in the stanitsa Veshenskaya of the Don Host Oblast, the son of lieutenant-general Ivan Krasnov (1800 –1871).

  5. È l’agosto del 2000 e Nikolay Krasnov è un giovane di leva che per un colpo di fortuna si ritrova a bordo del sottomarino Kursk, esaudendo così il suo sogno di bambino. Fino a che, un incidente non porterà il gioiello della Flotta del Nord a inabissarsi nel mare di Barents.

  6. Times of Malta. An executive board, meeting under the auspices of the Russian Cultural Centre in Valletta, is currently researching documents, photographs, works of art or similar material...

  7. This article analyzes the individual projects of Tatishchev and Karamzin as Russian historians. Vasily N. Tatishchev (1686–1750), a civil servant during the Petrine era, spent thirty years creating his Russian History as a set of commentaries on “chronicle records.”. Nikolai M. Karamzin (1766–1826) gained entrance to European ...