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・ Viktor Mazin
・ Viktor Mednov
・ Viktor Medvedchuk
・ Viktor Melantev
・ Viktor Melin
・ Viktor Melnyk
・ Viktor Meshkov
・ Viktor Meyer
・ Viktor Michailovich Ladviščenko
・ Viktor Mikhalchuk
・ Viktor Mikhaylov
・ Viktor Mikhaylovich Zimin
・ Viktor Miklós
・ Viktor Mineyev
・ Viktor Minibaev
Viktor Mirolyubov
・ Viktor Miroshnichenko
・ Viktor Mitev
・ Viktor Mitic
・ Viktor Mitrou
・ Viktor Modzolevsky
・ Viktor Mokhov
・ Viktor Moroz
・ Viktor Morozov
・ Viktor Mostovik
・ Viktor Mucha
・ Viktor Muravin
・ Viktor Musiyaka
・ Viktor Muyzhel
・ Viktor Muzhenko


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Viktor Mirolyubov : ウィキペディア英語版
Viktor Mirolyubov

Viktor Sergeyevich Mirolyubov ((ロシア語:Виктор Серге́евич Миролюбов), January 22, 1860, Moscow, Russian Empire, – October 26, 1939, Leningrad, USSR) was a Russian journalist, editor and publisher. Having started out as an opera singer (who up until 1897 performed, as V.Mirov, at the Bolshoi Theatre), he became widely known for his work as a head of ''Zhurnal Dlya Vsekh'' (Journal for Everyone, 1898–1906), originally a minor publication which he then bought out to turn into one of the leading literary Russian magazines of the time. In 1901 Mirolyubov became a co-founder (along with Dmitry Merezhkovsky and Zinaida Gippius among others) of the Religious-Philosophic Meetings (1901–1903).
After the 1917 Revolution Viktor Mirolyubov, encouraged and supported by Maxim Gorky (whom he became friends with in the early 1900s, while working for Znanie Publishers), remained in the Soviet Russia. He worked as an editor, later librarian, eventually became unemployed and died in poverty in 1939.
==See also==

*Znanie Publishers

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