10 results found for: “Lyudmila_Putina”.

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Lyudmila Putina

public role to supportive statements about her husband. As First Lady, Lyudmila Putina was a curator of a fund that aimed to develop the Russian language...

Last Update: 2024-07-07T00:30:14Z Word Count : 1797

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Maria Vorontsova

Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg), the elder daughter of Vladimir Putin and Lyudmila Putina (née Shkrebneva). She attended German school at Dresden, East Germany...

Last Update: 2024-07-16T09:29:04Z Word Count : 1645

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First Lady of Russia

divorce of the current president Vladimir Putin and Lyudmila Putina in 2014. Lyudmila Shkrebneva (Putina) - Rodovid Biography of Svetlana Medvedeva Putin...

Last Update: 2024-07-16T04:57:51Z Word Count : 77

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Katerina Tikhonova

East Germany, the younger of two daughters of Vladimir Putin and Lyudmila Putina (née Shkrebneva). The family moved to Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg)...

Last Update: 2024-07-10T22:26:34Z Word Count : 1993

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Putin (surname)

politician, cousin of Vladimir Putin Lyudmila Putina (born 1958), the former wife of Vladimir Putin Maria Putina (born 1985), a Russian pediatric endocrinologist...

Last Update: 2024-01-08T21:28:01Z Word Count : 189

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Family of Vladimir Putin

president of the country which he returned to in 2012. In 1983, Putin married Lyudmila Aleksandrovna Shkrebneva, who gave birth to two daughters, Maria (1985)...

Last Update: 2024-07-11T10:49:45Z Word Count : 525

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Vladimir Putin

Putin married Lyudmila Shkrebneva, and they lived together in East Germany from 1985 to 1990. They have two daughters, Mariya Putina, born on 28 April...

Last Update: 2024-07-20T16:44:55Z Word Count : 38927

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Ludmila (given name)

Lyudmyla Pushkina, Ukrainian long-distance runner Lyudmila Putina, former wife of Vladimir Putin Lyudmila Rudenko (1904–1986), Soviet chess player and second...

Last Update: 2024-06-17T11:26:39Z Word Count : 599

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Naina Yeltsina

President Boris Yeltsin Preceded by Post established Succeeded by Lyudmila Putina Personal details Born Anastasia Iosifovna Girina (1932-03-14) 14 March...

Last Update: 2024-01-20T14:16:39Z Word Count : 258

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Moskovsky Korrespondent

story that Russian president Vladimir Putin had divorced his wife Lyudmila Putina and was to marry gymnast Alina Kabaeva. It was relaunched on 1 September...

Last Update: 2024-01-02T19:05:51Z Word Count : 885

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Main result

Lyudmila Putina

Lyudmila Aleksandrovna Ocheretnaya (Russian: Людмила Александровна Очеретная, pronounced [lʲʊdˈmʲilə ɐlʲɪkˈsandrəvnə ɐtɕɪˈrʲetnəjə]; née Shkrebneva (Шкребнева) and formerly Putina (Путина, pronounced [ˈputʲɪnə]); born 6 January 1958) is a Russian linguist who served as the First Lady of Russia from 2000 to 2008 and from 2012 to 2014 while married to her then-husband Vladimir Putin, the current president and former prime minister of Russia. Lyudmila was born in Kaliningrad, Soviet Union, the daughter of Alexander (his patronym is reported variously as either Abramovich or Avramovich) Shkrebnev (Александр Абрамович Шкребнев or Александр Аврамович Шкребнев) and Yekaterina Tikhonovna Shkrebneva (Екатерина Тихоновна Шкребнева). Her father worked at Kaliningrad Mechanical Plant. She was educated as a linguist. In 1986, Lyudmila graduated from the branch of Spanish language and philology of the Department of Philology of Leningrad State University. In her early adult years, Lyudmila was a flight attendant for the Kaliningrad branch of Aeroflot. She met Vladimir Putin at a Arkady Raikin concert in Leningrad, and they married on 28 July 1983. The couple has two daughters, Maria (born on 28 April 1985 in Leningrad, Soviet Union) and Katerina (born on 31 August 1986 in Dresden, East Germany). From 1990 to 1994, Lyudmila taught German at the Department of Philology of Leningrad State University. For a few years prior to Vladimir's appointment as Prime Minister of Russia in August 1999, she was a Moscow representative of the company Telecominvest from 1998 to 1999 where she, as the only employee in the Moscow office, answered phone calls and organized meetings. After Vladimir's rise to political power, Lyudmila maintained a low profile on the Russian political stage, generally avoiding the limelight except as required by protocol and restricting her public role to supportive statements about her husband. As First Lady, Lyudmila Putina was a curator of a fund that aimed to develop the Russian language and sometimes produced statements concerning Russian language and education. Her preference for "maintaining and preserving" the Russian language led her to make public statements against orthographic reform. The Russian Academy of Science sponsored a commission to study the orthography of the Russian language and propose changes. Their recommendations were made public in 2002 after eight years of work, but were subsequently rejected by Putina, who used Russia's burgeoning economy as one of her reasons why the orthographic reform was not just unnecessary but untimely. However, although one newspaper in Moscow alleged that "Lyudmila Putina de facto cancelled any attempts to reform spelling", the fact remains that public and academic reaction to the reforms was sufficiently negative to have that particular reform attempt abandoned. On 6 June 2013, she and Putin publicly announced the termination of their marriage based on a mutual decision. The divorce announcement was made on camera for the Russian news media at the State Kremlin Palace during the intermission of a performance by the Kremlin Ballet, ending years of speculation about their relationship. In April 2014, the Kremlin confirmed that their divorce had been finalized. In January 2016, a number of media outlets reported that Lyudmila married Artur Ocheretny in early 2015. In documents on the ownership of her former St. Petersburg apartment, she was referred to as Lyudmila Aleksandrovna Ocheretnaya. According to Reuters, Lyudmila helped create and supports the foundation called the Centre for the Development of Inter-personal Communications (CDIC) which generates millions of dollars. The CDIC's offices are located in the center of Moscow, on Vozdvizhenka Street in the building previously known as Volkonsky House, which is its own property. The building, which once belonged to Leo Tolstoy's grandfather, was listed in Russian cultural heritage register but was completely rebuilt in 2013, raising its height from two stories to four, despite numerous objections and protests by Moscow citizens including an unanswered appeal to Vladimir Putin signed by 200 famous science and cultural persons of the city. The building is mainly occupied by commercial tenants, including VTB Bank, Sberbank, a construction company called Severstroygroup, a sushi restaurant, and a Burger King. Total rent from the building is about $3–4 million. Tenants pay their rent to a company known as Meridian, which is in turn owned by a company known as Intererservis, which is wholly owned by Lyudmila. Her sister, Olga Alexandrovna Tsomayeva, was previously General Director of Intererservis. Artur Ocheretny, Lyudmila's second husband, chairs the CDIC's management board. Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Lyudmila was sanctioned by the United Kingdom on 13 May 2022. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office stated that Lyudmila has "benefited from preferential business relationships with state-owned entities". National Laureate of the "Persons of the Year 2002" contest by Komsomolskaya Pravda in the category of "Educator of the Year" (2002) Honorary Citizen of Kaliningrad (2007) Foreign Germany: Laureate of the Jacob Grimm Prize (2002) Kyrgyzstan: Laureate of the "Rukhaniyat" prize of the International Association for the Rebirth of Spirituality (2002) Kazakhstan: Honorary Professor of the Eurasian National University named after Gumilev (2005) Golden Warrior medal (2005) Official biography (in Russian)


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