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・ Vladimir Denissenkov
・ Vladimir Derer
・ Vladimir Derevenko
・ Vladimir Derevyanko
・ Vladimir Dergach
・ Vladimir Dergachev
・ Vladimir Dezhurov
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・ Vladimir Dimitrovski
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Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov
・ Vladimir Dmitriyevich Gerasimov
・ Vladimir Dolbonosov
・ Vladimir Dolbonosov (footballer, born 1949)
・ Vladimir Dolbonosov (footballer, born 1970)
・ Vladimir Dolgikh
・ Vladimir Dolgopolov
・ Vladimir Dolgorukov
・ Vladimir Dolgov
・ Vladimir Dorokhov
・ Vladimir Drachev
・ Vladimir Dragičević
・ Vladimir Dragomirov
・ Vladimir Dragović
・ Vladimir Dragovozov


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Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov : ウィキペディア英語版
Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov

Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov (Russian: Владимир Дмитриевич Набоков; 21 July 1870 – 28 March 1922) was a Russian criminologist, journalist, and progressive statesman during the last years of the Russian Empire. He was the father of Russian-American author Vladimir Nabokov. He was murdered in Berlin on 28 March 1922 by far-right Russian monarchists.
== Life ==
Nabokov was born in Tsarskoe Selo, into a wealthy and aristocratic family. His father Dmitry Nabokov (1827–1904) was a Justice Minister in the reign of Alexander II from 1878 to 1885, and his mother Maria von Korff (1842–1926) was a Baroness from a prominent Baltic German family in Courland.
He studied criminal law at the University of St. Petersburg and taught criminology at the Imperial School of Jurisprudence.
V. D. Nabokov married Elena Ivanovna Rukavishnikova in 1897, with whom he had five children. Their eldest son was the writer and lepidopterist Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov, who portrayed his father in his memoirs (''Speak, Memory'', 1967); V. V. Nabokov included in his novel ''Pale Fire'' a scene of misdirected assassination evoking the death of his father. Other children were Sergey (1900–1945), Kirill (1911–1964), Elena (1906–2000) and Olga (1903–1978), who was a childhood friend of novelist Ayn Rand.〔Heller, Anne C., ''Ayn Rand and the World She Made'', 2009, Nan A. Talese, p. 26-27.〕

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