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・ Gleb Maltsev
・ Gleb Odinokikh
・ Gleb of Kiev
・ Gleb Panfilov
・ Gleb Panfyorov
・ Gleb Pavlovsky
・ Gleb Pisarevskiy
・ Gleb Plaksin
・ Gleb Podkovyrov
・ Gleb Rassadkin
・ Gleb Savchenko
・ Gleb Savinov
・ Gleb Shishmaryov
・ Gleb Shulpyakov
・ Gleb Strizhenov
Gleb Struve
・ Gleb Svyatoslavich
・ Gleb Svyatoslavich (Prince of Chernigov)
・ Gleb Tikhonov
・ Gleb Travin
・ Gleb Uspensky
・ Gleb Verhovskiy
・ Gleb Vladimirovich Nosovsky
・ Gleb Vseslavich
・ Gleb W. Derujinsky
・ Gleb Wataghin
・ Gleb Yakunin
・ Gleba
・ Gleba cordata
・ Gleba, Masovian Voivodeship


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Gleb Struve : ウィキペディア英語版
Gleb Struve
Gleb Petrovich Struve (Russian: Глеб Петрович Струве; 1 May 1898 – 4 June 1985) was a Russian poet and literary historian.
==Biography==
Gleb Petrovich Struve was born on 1 May 1898. His father was the political theorist Peter Berngardovich Struve.
Struve came from St. Petersburg and joined the Volunteer Army in 1918.〔(Russkaja literatura v izgnanii ) (in German)〕 Later that year he fled to Finland, then to Britain, where he studied at the University of Oxford (Balliol College) until 1921. It was there that he met Vladimir Nabokov with whom he remained on friendly terms and corresponded until the novelist's death.
Between 1921 and 1924 Struve worked as a journalist in Berlin; and until 1932 in Paris.〔
In 1932 Struve replaced D.S. Mirsky at the University College London's (UCL) School of Slavonic Studies.
Later he moved to University of California, Berkeley, in the United States of America.
Struve's publications number around 900, including editions of works by Russian authors suppressed in the Soviet Union, such as Anna Akhmatova, Nikolai Gumilev, Marina Tsvetayeva, and Osip Mandelstam.〔
Struve died on 4 June 1985 in Oakland, California.
Struve's nephew is the writer, Nikita Struve.

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