Gleb
Gleb (Russian: Глеб, Ukrainian: Гліб) is a Slavic male given name derived from the Old Norse name Guðleifr, which means "heir of god." It is popular in Russia due to an early martyr, Saint Gleb, who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox churches.[1] It is also commonly used in Ukraine. The name may refer to:
People
- Gleb of Kiev (died 1171), Russian prince
- Gleb Axelrod (1923–2003), Russian pianist
- Gleb Baklanov (1910–1976), Russian general
- Gleb Boglayevskiy (born 1986), Russian football player
- Gleb W. Derujinsky (1888–1975), Russian-American sculptor
- Gleb Galperin (born 1985), Russian diver
- Gleb Ilyin (1889–1968), Russian-American painter
- Gleb Kotelnikov (1872–1944), Russian inventor
- Gleb Krotkov (1901–1968), Canadian scientist
- Gleb Krzhizhanovsky (1872–1959), Russian economist
- Gleb Lozino-Lozinskiy (1909–2001), Russian engineer
- Gleb Vladimirovich Nosovsky (born 1958), Russian mathematician
- Gleb Panfilov (born 1934), Russian film director
- Gleb Panfyorov (born 1970), Russian football player
- Gleb Pavlovsky (born 1951), Russian political scientist
- Gleb Pisarevskiy (born 1976), Russian weightlifter
- Gleb Sakharov (born 1988), French tennis player
- Gleb Savchenko (born 1984), Russian dancer
- Gleb Savinov (1915–2000), Russian painter
- Gleb Shishmaryov (1781–1835), Russian admiral
- Gleb Shulpyakov (born 1971), Russian writer
- Gleb Strizhenov (1923–1985), Russian actor
- Gleb Struve (1898–1985), Russian poet and literary historian
- Gleb Svyatoslavich (Prince of Chernigov) (1168–1215), Rus' prince
- Gleb Uspensky (1843–1902), Russian writer
- Gleb Wataghin (1899–1986), Italian scientist
- Gleb Yakunin (1934–2014), Russian priest and dissident
Fictional characters
- Gleb Nerzhin, leading character, mathematician, prisoner, and Solzhenitsyn’s alter ego in The First Circle; Solzhenitsyn also uses Nerzhin in some of his writings about his experiences in World War II.
- Gleb, a female character in the 2017 video game Star Wars Battlefront II
- Gleb Vaganov, main antagonist in 2017 musical Anastasia (musical)
gollark: They just say "but TERRORISM" to shut down any critical reasoning about it and paint anyone who disagrees as *unpatriotic* and *eeeevil*.
gollark: Wikipedia notes misuse of *non-*mass surveillance in past. Spying on everyone and everything they do online will make it worse.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_surveillance_in_the_United_States
gollark: Oh, this too:- ignoring relevant laws and gathering data anyway until new laws can retroactively allow it- getting around limits on spying on citizens by sharing data with other "Five Eyes" nations and spying on them as foreigners
gollark: Well, it's pretty known that they do go around intercepting lots of stuff. There are many problems with this:- having private data like your internet traffic stored somewhere is kind of bad in itself.- if it's not abused yet it's basically only a matter of time.- there's no transparency anywhere and even a system of secret courts to judge things- it may help slightly to stop terrorists (no transparency so we can't check really) but is just a massive breach of privacy
gollark: GNU+Windows?
See also
- Boris Gleb, village in Murmansk, Russia
- Church of Boris and Gleb, Russia
- Saints Boris and Gleb
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