Anatol Peresselenzeff

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anatol_Peresselenzeff an entity of type: Thing

Анатолий Андреевич Переселенцев (1889–1956) — российский гребец. rdf:langString
Anatol Peresselenzeff (Russian: Анатолий Андреевич Переселенцев; 1889–1956) was a pioneer Russian rower and rowing coach. Competing in single sculls he won both the Russian (1908, 1909 and 1914) and French championships. In 1913 he also won the European title in double sculls, rowing with Hermann Barrelet; he was disqualified in the single sculls race, together with Giuseppe Sinigaglia. Peresselenzeff was married twice, first to Nina Teplyakova who was a leading Soviet tennis player, and then to Katya, a woman 15 years his junior. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Anatol Peresselenzeff
rdf:langString Переселенцев, Анатолий Андреевич
rdf:langString Anatol Peresselenzeff
rdf:langString Anatol Peresselenzeff
rdf:langString Moscow, Russia
rdf:langString Moscow, Russia
xsd:integer 47829651
xsd:integer 973661360
rdf:langString yes
xsd:integer 1889
rdf:langString Anatoly Andreevich Pereselentsev
rdf:langString Peresselenzeff in 1913
xsd:integer 1956
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rdf:langString Rowing
<kilogram> 80.0
rdf:langString Anatol Peresselenzeff (Russian: Анатолий Андреевич Переселенцев; 1889–1956) was a pioneer Russian rower and rowing coach. Competing in single sculls he won both the Russian (1908, 1909 and 1914) and French championships. In 1913 he also won the European title in double sculls, rowing with Hermann Barrelet; he was disqualified in the single sculls race, together with Giuseppe Sinigaglia. Peresselenzeff was born in a wealthy family and took up rowing in 1903. In 1909 his parents sent him to Germany and France to study commerce. He returned to Russia in 1914 and retired from competitions in 1923, after winning his last Russian title, in the double sculls with Yakov Shestoperov. He then coached rowers at Spartak Moscow and Russian State University of Physical Education, Sport, Youth and Tourism, using French textbooks which he translated into Russian. In 1941 he was arrested as part of Stalin's political repressions and released in 1948. He died in 1956. Peresselenzeff was married twice, first to Nina Teplyakova who was a leading Soviet tennis player, and then to Katya, a woman 15 years his junior.
rdf:langString Анатолий Андреевич Переселенцев (1889–1956) — российский гребец.
<centimetre> 185.0
<kilogram> 80.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3506
xsd:double 1.85
xsd:double 80000.0

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