-
Belarusian human rights activist,
public figure, and geologist. Nina
Baginskaya was born in Minsk, Belarus, on 30
December 1946. From an
early age, she...
-
Vikturia Illivna Baginska-Gurji (c.
Vectokria Ilynichna Baginskaya; born Gurdjik; June 30, 1926, Krasnodar, USSR –
January 7, 2012,
Russian Federation)...
- Багінскі (Bahinski, Baginski) Багінская (Bahinskaja, Bahinskaya, Baginskaja,
Baginskaya)
Lithuanian Baginskas Baginskienė (married) Baginskaitė (unmarried) Romanian/Moldovan...
- city. Nina
Agadzhanova (1889–1974), film
writer and
director Viktoriya Baginskaya (1926–2012), Journalist,
folklorist (
collector of
songs and folklore...
- it somewhat. The
younger generation had no
knowledge of it.
Viktoriya Baginskaya was one of the last
speakers of the
living Krymchak language. A 2007 estimate...
- 19th century. Jews in
Russia Crimean Karaites Meir Ashke****
Viktoriya Baginskaya Kizilov, M. Krymchaks:
Modern situation of the community. "Eurasian Jewish...
-
Mironov N. P.,
Ivanova E. N.,
Chegin V. M.,
Laptev V. V.,
Brontwein A. T.,
Baginskaya I. S. “Postoperative
complications and the
efficiency of
utilization of...
- and
Nobel Prize laureate Bohdan Andrusyshyn,
journalist and
singer Nina
Baginskaya,
political and
human rights activist Jim Dingley,
translator of Belarusian...
- Belorussiya" post on its
Telegram channel,
claiming that
elderly activist Nina
Baginskaya had
roughly shoved an OMON
officer into a minibus.
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya...
-
people gathering on
Freedom Square,
including opposition figure Nina
Baginskaya.
After police tried to
detain her,
protesters shouted "Nina! Nina!" and...