Kuntsevo Cemetery

The 19th-century graves
The Kuntsevo Cemetery is a cemetery servicing Kuntsevo, Moscow. It is located on the bank of the Setun River, to the south of the Mozhaisk Highway (the continuation of the Kutuzovsky Prospekt).[1] The local five-domed church was commissioned in 1673 by Artamon Matveyev. The cemetery is administered as part of the Novodevichy Cemetery complex.
Interred
Tomb of Kirill A. Yevstigneyev
- Anatoly Rybakov[2]
 - Georgy Malenkov, Premier of the Soviet Union
 - Leonid Gaidai[2]
 - Valeri Kharlamov[2]
 - Nadezhda Mandelshtam[2]
 - Mark Naimark,[3] Soviet mathematician
 - Mamuka Kikaleishvili[2]
 - Larisa Shepitko[2]
 - Lyubov Sokolova[4] 
A 17th-century church - Ramón Mercader, the murderer of Leon Trotsky
 - Varlam Shalamov, Russian poet and writer, Gulag survivor
 - Kim Philby, English-Soviet double agent[1]
 - Paul Tatum[5]
 - Iskhak Razzakov, leader of the Communist Party of Kyrghyz SSR, reburied at the Ala Archa Cemetery, Bishkek in 2000[6]
 - Tankho Israelov, dancer, choreographer, People's Artist of the USSR
 - Tatyana Tess (Tatyana Tass, Татьяна Тесс),[7] Soviet writer, journalist, scenarist
 - Trofim Lysenko[2]
 - Vsevolod Bobrov,[8]
 - Glenn Michael Souther (aka Mikhail Yevgenyevich Orlov),[9] a spy inside the United States Navy who defected to Soviet Union [10][11]
 - Morris Cohen, spy
 - Lona Cohen, his wife, spy
 - Kirill A. Yevstigneyev, Major General
 - Yuri Trifonov[2]
 - Yuri Vizbor[2]
 
References
- 1 2 "Kuntsevo Cemetery at Kim Philby’s Grave", Passport Moscow magazine
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 List of interred at Find A Grave
 - ↑ "Они тоже гостили на земле... Наймарк Марк Аронович (1909-1978)". nec.m-necropol.ru. Retrieved 2016-09-01.
 - ↑ "Lyubov Sokolova" at Find A Grave
 - ↑ Imaging Russia 2000: film and facts By Anna M. Lawton p. 105 at Google Books
 - ↑ Central Eurasian Studies Review, 2007, vol. 6, no. 1/2
 - ↑ Bio of sculptor Lyubov Muravyeva (Lyubov Muravyeva) who created a monument to Tatyana Tess
 - ↑ An excerpt The Moscow Times, Jule 12, 2000
 - ↑ "KGB Says Defector Killed Self Over Psychological Problems;`He ... Displayed a Nervous State of Mind'". The Washington Post. June 29, 1989.
 - ↑ Fein, Esther B. (June 28, 1989). "Defector to Moscow Is Dead; Work for K.G.B. Is Lauded". the New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
 - ↑ Ronald Kessler (1992). The Spy in the Russian Club: How Glenn Souther Stole America’s Nuclear War Plans and Escaped to Moscow. Pocket. ISBN 978-0-671-73890-7.
 
Coordinates: 55°42′28″N 37°25′0″E / 55.70778°N 37.41667°E
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