Dmitri Popov (born 1967) is a Russian footballer.
Dmitri Popov may also refer to:
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Dmitry ; Church Slavic form: Dimitry or Dimitri (Дими́трий); ancient Russian forms: D'mitr(iy) or Dmitr is a male given name common in Orthodox Christian culture, the Russian version of Greek Demetrios. The meaning of the name is "devoted to, dedicated to, or follower of Demeter", "mother-earth", the Greek goddess of agriculture.
Popov or Popoff (masculine) or Popova (feminine) is a common Russian, Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbian last name. Derived from a Slavonic word pop (priest). The fourth most common Russian surname, it may refer to:
Dmitry Ivanovich Popov was a Left SR and anarchist revolutionary of Russia, the leader of the Left SR uprising.
Dmitry Smirnov may refer to:
Dmitri Pavlov may refer to:
Dmitri Leonidovich Radchenko is a Russian football coach and a former player who played as a striker.
Dmitri Lvovich Popov is a Russian retired footballer who played as a left midfielder, and is the director of football of FC Spartak Moscow.
Dmitri Yuryevich Capyrin is a Russian composer of contemporary classical music. He graduated from Lviv Conservatory in 1984. He lives in Moscow and works as a freelance composer. His music "successfully combines a variety [of] techniques, often using literary sources and motifs in his works." He won the second prize in the 1994 ICONS competition in Turin and received a scholarship in 1995 from the Berlin Akademie der Künst. In 2010 he was the finalist of the YouTube Online Composers Competition. His compositions have been performed by "numerous prominent ensembles and soloists, and has also been featured in a variety of concert and festival venues, including the Moscow Autumn (1999), the Paris Presences (1993), Warsaw Autumn (2005) and the Music Biennale Zagreb ." He has become "one of the most prominent composers of the younger generation of Russians." His style combines modal scales procedures with new tonal and atonal idioms. He prefers polyphonic texture and dense stratification of flexible melodic voices. At the same time he widely uses isolated tones and brief solo phrases surrounded with silence which resembles quasi-Webernian pointillism. His work list includes pieces of various genres from opera, symphonies and one movement poems for full and chamber orchestras, concertos for harp and oboe with orchestra, pieces for various chamber ensembles, duo and solo works. Among the performers of his music there are Yvar Mikhashoff, Claude Delangle, Vladimir Jurowski, Vincent Kozlovsky, Marc Sieffert, Valery Popov, Moscow Contemporary Music Ensemble, State Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Russian Federation, Russian National Orchestra, Lviv National Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, National Academic Symphonic Band of Ukraine, Kyiv Sinfonietta, Da Capo Chamber Players.
Dmitri Nikolayevich Cheryshev is a Russian football coach and a former player who played as a forward.
The V. S. Popov Big Children's Choir of Russia Today Media is one of the most popular children's choirs from the former USSR and Russia. It is affiliated with the Rossiya Segodnya agency.
Dmitri Nikolayevich Smirnov is a Russian footballer. He is not related to Dmitry Alexandrovich Smirnov with whom he played on the same team for several years for FC Torpedo-ZIL Moscow, Luch and Tom. To avoid confusion, he is usually referred to as Dmitri N. Smirnov.
Dmitri Ivanov may refer to:
Dmitry Vasilyev may refer to:
Dmitry Golubev may refer to:
Kalinin, or Kalinina, is a Russian surname, derived from the word kalina or name Kalinik. Notable people with the surname include:
Dmitri Borisovv may refer to: