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  1. 12 de abr. de 2024 · Vasily II (born 1415—died March 27, 1462, Moscow) was the grand prince of Moscow from 1425 to 1462.. Although the 10-year-old Vasily II was named by his father Vasily I (ruled Moscow 1389–1425) to succeed him as the grand prince of Moscow and of Vladimir, Vasily’s rule was challenged by his uncle Yury and his cousins Vasily the Squint-Eyed and Dmitry Shemyaka.

  2. The Yuriy Ivanov class ( Project 18280) is a type of Russian SIGINT intelligence collection ship. The ship is designed by the JSC Central Design Bureau "Iceberg". The displacement of the ship is more than 4,000 tons, the cruising range not less than 8,000 miles (13,000 km) and its armament consists of light anti-aircraft weapons. [1]

  3. Russian propagandist, so-called "war correspondent" of the Telegram channel “The world today with Yuriy Podolyaka”. Actively supports Russia's aggression against Ukraine and the actions of the Russian authorities. Participated in the meeting between Vladimir Putin and "war correspondents" on June 13, 2023.

  4. Yury Ivanovich is on Facebook. Join Facebook to connect with Yury Ivanovich and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and connected.

  5. Gulko Yury Ivanovich – plastic surgeon of the first qualification category. The first certified plastic surgeon in the Republic of Belarus. He was born on February 20 th, 1964. He graduated from Minsk Order of the Red Banner of Labour of the State Medical Institute with a degree in Oral Medicine, then was requalified in Plastic Surgery in the ...

  6. Yuri Ivanovich Malenchenko (Russian: Юрий Иванович Маленченко; born December 22, 1961) is a retired Russian cosmonaut. Malenchenko became the first person to marry in space, on 10 August 2003, when he married Ekaterina Dmitrieva, who was in Texas , while he was 240 miles (390 km) over New Zealand, on the International Space Station . [2]

  7. 27 de abr. de 2013 · Humanity well remembers and respects those bright, committed great and sonorous events. People know commanders, famous for their victories, and very rarely those who forged in the silence the coming bursts of military glory. Semyon Ivanovich, aka Simeon the Proud, was a Russian prince in the middle of the fourteenth century,