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・ Nadia Arslan
・ Nadia Awni Sakati
・ Nadia Azzi
・ Nadia Bakhurji
・ Nadia Barentin
・ Nadia Batson
・ Nadezhda Kosintseva
・ Nadezhda Kotlyarova
・ Nadezhda Kouteva
・ Nadezhda Kovalevich
・ Nadezhda Kozhevnikova
・ Nadezhda Kozhushanaya
・ Nadezhda Krupskaya
・ Nadezhda Kurchenko
・ Nadezhda Ladygina-Kohts
Nadezhda Lappo-Danilevsky
・ Nadezhda Levchenko
・ Nadezhda Lukashevich
・ Nadezhda Lyubimova
・ Nadezhda Mandelstam
・ Nadezhda Markina
・ Nadezhda Metro Station
・ Nadezhda Mikhalkova
・ Nadezhda Misyakova
・ Nadezhda Muravyeva
・ Nadezhda Myskiv
・ Nadezhda Neynsky
・ Nadezhda Noginsk
・ Nadezhda Obukhova
・ Nadezhda Olimpievna Ziber-Shumova


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Nadezhda Lappo-Danilevsky : ウィキペディア英語版
Nadezhda Lappo-Danilevsky

Nadezhda Lappo-Danilevsky (born in 1874, Kiev, Russian Empire - died on March 17, 1951, Charolles, Department of Saône-et-Loire, France) was a Russian writer and a member of Russian apostolate.
==Biography==

She was born into a military family, graduated from the Saint Petersburg Institute of Elizabethan, traveled to Europe and lived in Italy, where she made her debut as a singer in the lyrical La Scala Opera House in Milan. In 1898 Danilevsky married Sergei Sergeyevich Lappo-Danilevsky, the younger brother of the historian Alexander Lappo-Danilevsky. After 1917 Nadezhda unsuccessfully tried to cross the border with Finland, was arrested and kept in jails of the Cheka, in 1920 with her children fled to Latvia. She lived in Warsaw and Berlin. In 1923 in Rome, it was received in audience by Pope Pius XI, and in 1924 in Paris she converted to Catholicism. She was among the founders and active members of the Holy Trinity parish in Paris and participated in pastoral projects addressing charitable work, published in the parish edition of " Our parish ".

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