Putin (surname): Difference between revisions
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**''[[Putin's Kiss]]'', a 2012 documentary about Russian youth activist Masha Drokova |
**''[[Putin's Kiss]]'', a 2012 documentary about Russian youth activist Masha Drokova |
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**''[[Pussy versus Putin]]'', a 2013 Russian documentary film about the Russian feminist punk rock protest group Pussy Riot |
**''[[Pussy versus Putin]]'', a 2013 Russian documentary film about the Russian feminist punk rock protest group Pussy Riot |
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*[[Spiridon Putin]] (1879–1965), a Russian chef who was the personal cook of Lenin and Stalin, and paternal grandfather of Vladimir Putin |
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*[[Igor Putin]] (born 1953), a Russian businessman and politician, and cousin of Vladimir Putin |
*[[Igor Putin]] (born 1953), a Russian businessman and politician, and cousin of Vladimir Putin |
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*[[Roman Putin]] (born 1977), a Russian businessman and politician, and nephew of Vladimir Putin |
*[[Roman Putin]] (born 1977), a Russian businessman and politician, and nephew of Vladimir Putin |
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*[[Vera Putina]] (born 1926), a woman who claims to be Vladimir Putin's mother |
*[[Vera Putina]] (born 1926), a woman who claims to be Vladimir Putin's mother |
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*[[P. T. Narasimhachar]] (1905–1998), a Kannada Indian poet commonly known as "Pu Ti Na" or "Putina" |
*[[P. T. Narasimhachar]] (1905–1998), a Kannada Indian poet commonly known as "Pu Ti Na" or "Putina" |
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===Fictional people=== |
===Fictional people=== |
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*[[Ivan Putin]] |
*[[Ivan Putin]] |
Revision as of 00:56, 7 June 2022
Putin (Template:Lang-ru) is a masculine Russian surname. Its feminine counterpart is Putina (Template:Lang-ru).
Geographical distribution
As of 2014, 73.8% of all known bearers of the surname Putin were residents of Russia (frequency 1:22,479), 6.5% of Uzbekistan (1:54,530), 2.5% of Tajikistan (1:38,622), 2.4% of France (1:313,715), 2.2% of Belarus (1:50,006), 1.7% of Kazakhstan (1:118,628), 1.3% of Moldova (1:32,673), 1.2% of Romania (1:191,218), 1.1% of Ukraine (1:465,553) and 1.1% of India (1:8,160,269).
In Russia, the frequency of the surname was higher than national average (1:22,479) in the following subjects of the Russian Federation:[1]
- 1. Perm Krai (1:3,181)
- 2. Altai Republic (1:4,161)
- 3. Moscow (1:7,200)
- 4. Saint Petersburg (1:10,861)
- 5. North Ossetia-Alania (1:14,563)
- 6. Astrakhan Oblast (1:14,649)
- 7. Novosibirsk Oblast (1:15,626)
- 8. Irkutsk Oblast (1:17,411)
- 9. Kaliningrad Oblast (1:18,825)
- 10. Novgorod Oblast (1:19,510)
- 11. Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug (1:20,672)
- 12. Saratov Oblast (1:21,599)
People
- Vladimir Putin (born 1952), President of Russia from 2000 to 2008 and from 2012–present, and Prime Minister of Russia from 1999 to 2000 and 2008 to 2012
- Vladimir Putin Peak, a mountain in Kyrgyzstan
- Putin's Palace, a palace in Krasnodar Krai, Russia
- Putin's Plan, the political and economic program of Vladimir Putin
- Putin must go, a Russian website and public campaign against Vladimir Putin
- Putin khuilo, a Ukrainian song deriding Vladimir Putin
- Direct Line with Vladimir Putin, an annual Russian television program, a live Q&A broadcast with Vladimir Putin
- Putin's Progress, a 2004 book by Peter Truscott
- Putin's Russia, a 2004 book by Anna Politkovskaya
- Putin, Russia and the West, a 2012 British documentary television series
- Putin's Kiss, a 2012 documentary about Russian youth activist Masha Drokova
- Pussy versus Putin, a 2013 Russian documentary film about the Russian feminist punk rock protest group Pussy Riot
- Spiridon Putin (1879–1965), a Russian chef who was the personal cook of Lenin and Stalin, and paternal grandfather of Vladimir Putin
- Igor Putin (born 1953), a Russian businessman and politician, and cousin of Vladimir Putin
- Roman Putin (born 1977), a Russian businessman and politician, and nephew of Vladimir Putin
- Lyudmila Putina (born 1958), the former wife of Vladimir Putin
- Vera Putina (born 1926), a woman who claims to be Vladimir Putin's mother
- P. T. Narasimhachar (1905–1998), a Kannada Indian poet commonly known as "Pu Ti Na" or "Putina"