Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Boris
Boris Dolto
Boris Ivanov
Boris Vladimirovich Ivanov was a Soviet and Russian film and theater actor. People's Artist of the RSFSR (1981).
Boris Borovsky
Boris Markovich Borovsky was a Russian tennis player and sports journalist; Master of Sports of the USSR; and member of the Russian Union of Journalists.
Boris Aleksandrovich Arbuzov
Boris Aleksandrovich Arbuzov, was a Russian and Soviet chemist and a representative of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union of 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th convocations.
Boris Konstantinovich
Boris Yakovlevich Zel'dovich
Boris Yakovlevich Zeldovich was a Russian-American physicist and a son of the famous Soviet physicist Yakov Borisovich Zeldovich. He was doctor of the Physical and Mathematical sciences and a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Since 1994 Zeldovich worked as a professor at the College of Optics and Photonics at the University of Central Florida. During his lifetime he received a number of prestigious awards, including the USSR State Prize in 1983 and the Max Born Award in Physical Optics from the Optical Society (OSA) in 1997.
Boris Stenin
Boris Andrianovich Stenin was a Soviet speed skater, speed skating coach, and speed skating scientist.
Boris Kolomanović
Boris Kolomanović (1114-1153/1154) fue un pretendiente del trono húngaro. Hijo repudiado del rey Colomán de Hungría y su segunda esposa Eufemia de Kiev.
Boris Vildé
Boris Vildé was a linguist and ethnographer at the Musée de l'Homme, in Paris, France. He specialised in polar civilizations. He was born in St. Petersburg into a family of Eastern Orthodox Russians. When his father died, his mother moved with him to her family estate in Yastrebino. Because of the Russian Revolution, the family then moved to Tartu, Estonia in 1919. He studied first at the high school and then at the University of Tartu, where he did not complete his courses but learned the German language and some notions of chemistry. He also acquired a taste for literature and poetry and moved to Germany in 1930 hoping for a literary career there. In 1933, as a militant against Nazism, he felt unsafe in Germany and moved to France.
Boris Teterev
Boriss Teterevs or Boris Teterev was a Latvian philanthropist and private patron.