Yelagin or Elagin (feminine: Yelagina, Elagina) is a Russian-language surname. It may refer to:
Yerofeyev (masculine) or Yerofyeva (feminine), also transliterated as Erofeev or Erofeyev, is a Russian surname. It means "(someone) related to Yerofey", Yerofey being a form of the archaic Christian masculine first name Ierofey.
Surikov is a Russian masculine surname originating from the word surik ; its feminine counterpart is Surikova. It may refer to the following notable people:
Abramov (male) and Abramova (female) are old Russian surnames originating around the 16th century. Variations of the former calendar name Avraam. The surname was common among all social estates and covered the whole territory of the Russian Empire. Sometimes it derived from patronymic.
Panin, or Panina is a Russian surname.
Volkov, or Volkova, is a common Russian surname. It is derived from the word волк.
Pashkevich is a Polish surname which ultimately comes from the East Slav personal name Pashka or Pashko, a diminutive of Pavel (Paul). The surname may refer to:
Novikov, Novikoff or Novikova is one of the most common Russian surnames. Derived from novik - a teenager on military service who comes from a noble, boyar or cossack family in Russia of 16th-18th centuries. It may refer to:
Zaytsev or Zaitsev is a Russian last name. It stems from the word заяц. Zaytseva or Zaitseva (За́йцева) is the feminine version of this surname.
Davydov, or Davydova, is a surname common in Russia and Ukraine.
Melnikov is a surname of Russian origin. Like many surnames, it derives from an occupation. The root "мельник" (melnik) meaning miller, means 'one who mills grain'.
Ilyin or Ilin is a Russian masculine surname that is derived from the male given name Ilya and literally means Ilya's. its feminine counterpart is Ilyina or Ilina. It may refer to
Ivanović, Ivanovych or Ivanovich is a surname, a patronymic derived from Ivan. It is a Slavic equivalent of Johnson. It is a common surname in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, and Serbia. It may refer to the following notable people:
Golubev or Golubeva is a Russian last name, derived from the Russian word голубь. It may refer to:
Sazonov or Sozonov and Sazonova is a common Russian surname derived from the baptismal name Sazon.
Shukshin is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Shukshina. It may refer to
Orlov or Orlova is a Russian surname derived from the noun орёл "eagle". It is shared by the following people:
Ivan Perfilievich Yelagin was a Russian Imperial historian, an amateur poet and translator who acted as unofficial secretary to Catherine the Great in the early years of her reign.
Ivan Elagin was a Russian émigré poet, one of the two most famous ones, along with Nikolai Morshen, of the second wave of Russian emigration, born in Vladivostok. He was the husband of poet Olga Anstei, best remembered for writing about the Holocaust.
Ivan Elagin may refer to:
Yelagin or Elagin may refer to: