Wikipedia
Vinogradov
Vinogradov or Vinogradoff is a common Russian last name derived from the Russian word Vinograd, meaning Grape. Vinogradova is a feminine version of the same name.
for ' People'
- Askold Ivanovich Vinogradov (1929–2005), a Russian mathematician
- Aleksandr Vinogradov (1930–2011), a Russian writer
- Aleksandr Vinogradov (born 1951), Russian sprint canoer
- Alexander Pavlovich Vinogradov, (1895–1975), Soviet geochemist, academician
- Alexander Vinogradov, (born 1976), a Russian bass opera singer
- Dagnis Vinogradovs, Latvia flatwater canoeing born 1981)
- Alexei Vinogradov, a Soviet World War II brigade commander
- Dmitry Ivanovich Vinogradov (1720–1758), a Russian scientist, inventor of porcelain
- Elvira Vinogradova (born 1934), a Russian TV editor
- Georgi Pavlovich Vinogradov (1908–1980), a Russian tenor
- Ivan Matveyevich Vinogradov (1891–1983), a Russian mathematician
- Nadezhda Vinogradova, a Soviet Union heptathlete born 1958
- Nikolay Vinogradov, the governor of Vladimir Oblast
- Olga Vinogradova, (1929–2001), Russian neurophysiologist
- Pavel Vladimirovich Vinogradov (born 1953), a Russian cosmonaut
- Paul Vinogradoff (1854–1925), a Russian historian
- Sergei Vinogradov, a Russian soccer player
- Sergei Aleksandrovich Vinogradov (1958–2010), Russian author, journalist and translator
- Vasili Vinogradov, a Russian Tatar opera composer, violinist and pedagogue
- Viktor Vinogradov (1894–1969), a Russian linguist, literary critic, and academician
- Vladimir Vinogradov, a Russian businessman, the President of Inkombank
- Vladimir Mikhailovich Vinogradov (born 1921), a Soviet diplomat
- Vladislav Petrovich Vinogradov, general
- Yelena Vinogradova (born 1964), a Russian sprinter
for Places:
- Mons Vinogradov — Lunar mountains named after Alexander Pavlovich Vinogradov
- Vynohradiv — City in Western Ukraine
Vinogradov (crater)
Vinogradov Crater is an impact crater in the Margaritifer Sinus quadrangle of Mars, located at 20.2°S°S latitude and 37.7°W°W longitude. It is 223.5 km in diameter and was named after Alexander Pavlovich Vinogradov, and the name was approved in 1979 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN).