List of sons and daughters of Saint Petersburg
This is a list of well-known personalities who lived in Saint Petersburg (1914–1924 Petrograd , 1924–1991 Leningrad ; including the previously independent towns of Kolpino , Komarowo , Krasnoye Selo , Kronstadt , Lomonosov , Pavlovsk , Peterhof , Pushkin , Repino , Zelenogorsk and Sestrorezk ) were born.
18th century
1701-1750
- Christoph Hermann von Manstein (1711–1757), Prussian general
 - Peter II (1715–1730), Emperor of Russia from 1727 to 1730
 - Alexei Antropow (1716–1795), baroque painter
 - Michail Machajew (1718–1770), draftsman, graphic artist and cartographer
 - Xenija of St. Petersburg (~ 1719 / 1730–1803), Orthodox saint
 - Ivan Truskott (1721–1786), cartographer, professor of geography and member of the Russian Academy of Sciences
 - Semjon Kotelnikow (1723–1806), mathematician and university professor
 - Franz Moritz von Lacy (1725–1801), Austrian field marshal under Maria Theresa
 - Heinrich Bacheracht (1725–1806), German-Russian military doctor
 - Stepan Scheschkowski (1727–1794), privy councilor and chief investigator into particularly secret state affairs
 - Karl Blank (1728–1793), Baroque architect
 - Georg Thomas von Asch (1729–1807), physician and court official under Catherine II.
 - Johann Albrecht Euler (1734–1800), German astronomer and mathematician
 - Dmitri Golitsyn (1734–1803), diplomat, art agent, volcanologist, mineralogist and writer
 - Nikolai Repnin (1734–1801), Field Marshal General and diplomat
 - Johann Friedrich Karl Maximilian von Ostein (1735–1809), German nobleman
 - Nikolai Saltykow (1736–1816), statesman and field marshal
 - Michail Kamensky (1738–1809), Field Marshal during the reign of Empress Catherine II.
 - Ivan VI (1740–1764), nominal emperor of Russia from 1740 to 1741
 - Ivan Lepjochin (1740–1802), doctor, botanist, zoologist and explorer
 - Wassili Paschkewitsch (~ 1742–1797), composer
 - Alexei Wassiljew (1742–1807), civil servant, politician and finance minister
 - Wolfgang Ludwig Krafft (1743–1814), German astronomer
 - Ekaterina Voronzowa-Daschkowa (1743-1810), nobleman, head of the Russian Academy of Sciences under Catherine II.
 - Johann Jakob Weitbrecht (1744–1803), German typographer, music dealer, publisher and purveyor to the court
 - Michail Kutusow (1745–1813), Field Marshal General of the Russian Army, hero of the Patriotic War of 1812/1813 against Napoleon
 - Ivan Starow (1745–1808), architect
 
1751-1760
- Feodossi Shchedrin (1751–1825), sculptor and university professor
 - Alexander Belosselski (1752–1809), prince, diplomat and philosopher
 - Fyodor Alexejew (1753 / 1754–1824), landscape painter
 - Michail Koslowski (1753–1802), sculptor and university professor
 - Paul I (1754–1801), Emperor of Russia from 1796 to 1801
 - Nikolai Rumjanzew (1754–1826), statesman
 - Dmitri Gurjew (1758–1825), officer, civil servant and politician
 - Ivan Prokofiev (1758–1828), sculptor and university professor
 
1761-1770
- Jewstignei Fomin (1761–1800), composer
 - Philipp Ridder (1761–1838), mining engineer, administrator and major general of the infantry corps
 - Andrejan Sakharov (1761–1811), architect
 - Alexei Bobrinsky (1762–1813), major general
 - Nikolai Resanov (1764–1807), statesman
 - Pawel Sokolow (1764–1835), sculptor
 - Wassili Sewergin (1765–1826), chemist, mineralogist, geologist and university professor
 - Pavel Chichagov (1767–1849), admiral
 - Pavel Argunov (1768–1806), architect
 - Alexandra Chwostowa (1768-1853), writer
 - Alexei Titow (1769–1827), composer
 - Sergei Pushkin (1770–1848), major, military advisor and civil servant
 - Grigory Stroganov (1770-1857), diplomat
 
1771-1780
- Nikolai Argunow (1771–1830), painter, portraitist and miniature painter
 - Mikhail Miloradowitsch (1771–1825), general in the Imperial Russian Army
 - Nikolai Rajewski (1771-1829), General
 - Karl von Kügelgen (1772–1832), German landscape and history painter
 - Nikolai Demidow (1773-1828), industrialist
 - Andrei Mikhailov (1773–1849), architect
 - Thomas Tooke (1774-1858), English economist
 - Andrei Daschkow (1775–1831), diplomat; Ambassador of the Russian Empire to the USA 1808–1817
 - Pyotr Volkonsky (1776–1852), military man and statesman
 - Alexander I (1777–1825), Emperor of Russia (1801–1825), King of Poland (1815–1825) and first Russian Grand Duke of Finland (1809–1825)
 - Peter von der Pahlen (1777–1864), General in the Patriotic War of 1812
 - Paul von Nicolay (1777–1866), diplomat
 - Wassili Demut-Malinowski (1778–1846), sculptor and university professor
 - Konstantin Romanow (1779–1831), Crown Prince of the Romanov House, son of Tsar Paul I.
 - Alexander Staubert (1780–1843), architect
 
1781-1790
- Iossif Charlemagne (1782–1861), architect
 - Michail Voronzow (1782-1856), military man and statesman
 - Alexandra Romanowa (1783–1801), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, eldest daughter of Tsar Paul I.
 - Fyodor Tolstoy (1783–1873), painter, draftsman and sculptor
 - Ekaterina Voronzowa (1783-1856), Russian-British aristocrat and lady-in-waiting
 - Katharina von Württemberg (1783–1835), daughter of the first King of Württemberg, Friedrich I, from 1807 to 1813 Queen of Westphalia
 - Konstantin von Benckendorff (1784–1828), general in the Imperial Russian Army and diplomat
 - Joseph Bové (1784–1834), Russian-Italian architect
 - Ludwig Charlemagne (1784–1845), architect
 - Paul Alexander von Krüdener (1784–1858), diplomat
 - Stepan Pimenow (1784–1833), classicist sculptor and university professor
 - Helena Romanowa (1784–1803), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, second daughter of Tsar Paul I.
 - Paul von Württemberg (1785–1852), Prince of the House of Württemberg, grandfather of King Wilhelm II of Württemberg
 - Alexander Bodisko (1786–1854), diplomat and ambassador to the USA
 - Alexei Juschnewski (1786–1844), General Director, State Councilor and Decembrist
 - Maria Pawlowna (1786-1859), Grand Duchess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
 - Alexander Chavchavadze (1786–1846), Georgian poet and general
 - Nikolai Gretsch (1787–1867), State Councilor, author, linguist, literary critic and translator
 - Michail Lunin (1787–1845), Decembrist
 - Alexander Witberg (1787–1855), Russian architect and painter of Swedish descent
 - Wassilij Athanasieff (1788–1823), the first priest of the Russian Orthodox community in Stuttgart
 - Alexander Borowkow (1788–1856), senator and writer
 - Andrei Jentalzew (1788–1845), Lieutenant Colonel and Decembrist
 - Katharina Pawlowna (1788–1819), Queen of Württemberg from 1816 to 1819
 - Dmitri Sokolow (1788–1852), mineralogist, geologist and university professor
 - Friedrich Schubert (1789–1865), officer and geodesist
 
1791-1800
- Sylvester Schtschedrin (1791–1830), landscape painter
 - Ludwig von Seddeler (1791–1852), Austro-Russian lieutenant general, university professor and military historian
 - Alexander Friedrich von der Brüggen (1792-1859), German-Baltic nobleman, colonel and Decembrist
 - Anna Krüger (1792–1814), German theater actress
 - Carl Friedrich von der Borg (1794–1848), German-Baltic poet
 - Nikolai Golitsyn (1794–1866), nobleman, music lover and patron
 - Nikolai Muravyov (1794–1866), general in the Crimean War (1853–1856)
 - Sergei Stroganow (1794–1882), officer, civil servant, archaeologist, art collector and patron
 - Konstantin Thon (1794–1881), Russian architect of German origin
 - Anna Pavlovna (1795–1865), Queen of the Netherlands from 1840 to 1849
 - Sergei Muravjow-Apostol (1795–1826), Decembrist
 - Carl Friedrich von der Osten (1795–1878), German-born nobleman and imperial Russian officer
 - Frédéric Soret (1795–1865), Swiss private scholar and numismatist
 - Mikhail Terebenjow (1795–1865), painter and university professor
 - Nikita Muravyov (1796–1843), Decembrist
 - Nicholas I (1796–1855), Emperor of Russia from 1825 to 1855
 - Alexander Bestuschew (1797–1837), writer
 - Wilhelm Küchelbecker (1797–1846), poet
 - Friedrich Benjamin von Lütke (1797–1882), naval officer, circumnavigator, explorer and writer
 - Olga Pavlishcheva (1797–1868), sister of Alexander Pushkin
 - Nikolai Zyganow (1797–1832), poet, singer and actor
 - Alexander Brjullow (1798–1877), architect, watercolorist and university lecturer
 - Pawel Demidow (1798–1840), military man and businessman
 - Michael Romanow (1798–1849), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Karl Brjullow (1799–1852), painter and architect
 - Avdotja Istomina (1799-1848), ballerina
 - Sophie de Ségur (1799–1874), French writer
 - Modest von Korff (1800–1876), statesman, president of the imperial public library
 - Nikolai Titov (1800–1875), composer
 - Ekaterina Trubetskaya (1800–1854), wife of the Decembrist Prince Sergei Trubetskoy
 
19th century
1801-1810
- Wassili Fjodorow (1802–1855), astronomer and university rector
 - Wilhelm August Golicke (1802–1848), Baltic German painter
 - Wassili Karatygin (1802-1853), stage actor and translator
 - Wilhelm von Kügelgen (1802–1867), German portrait and history painter and writer
 - Alexander Odojewski (1802–1839), poet and Decembrist
 - Fjodor Rall (1802–1848), composer and conductor
 - Evfimi Putyatin (1803-1883), admiral, statesman and diplomat
 - Dmitri Sheremetew (1803–1871), chamberlain and benefactor
 - Katharina von Tiesenhausen (1803–1888), lady-in-waiting
 - Dorothea von Ficquelmont (1804–1863), lady-in-waiting, author and salonnière
 - Peter August d'Orville (1804–1864), German chess composer
 - Alexander Paul Ludwig Konstantin von Württemberg (1804–1885), Prince of Württemberg
 - Peter Clodt von Jürgensburg (1805–1867), German-Baltic sculptor
 - Alexis de Guignard, Comte de Saint-Priest (1805-1851), French diplomat and historian
 - Alexander Ivanov (1806-1858), painter
 - George Busk (1807–1886) British naval surgeon, zoologist and paleontologist
 - Geronimo Corsini (1808–1876), architect
 - Georg Kiesewetter (1808–1857), architect
 - Elisabeth Kulmann (1808–1825), German-Russian poet
 - Alexander Villoing (1808–1878), piano teacher and composer
 - Grigori Volkonsky (1808–1882), prince and diplomat
 - Nikolaus von Adelung (1809–1878), privy councilor from Württemberg
 - Nestor Kukolnik (1809–1868), novelist, poet and playwright
 - Nikolai Muravjow-Amursky (1809–1881), military, diplomat and statesman
 - Eugène Pluchart (1809–1880), painter and photographer
 - Wiktor Motschulski (1810–1871), colonel and entomologist (insect collector)
 
1811-1820
- 1811
 
- Juri Arnold (1811–1898), composer, musicologist, music critic, choir director and music teacher
 - Johann von Baranoff (1811–1884), general of the infantry
 
- 1812
 
- Ivan Panayev (1812–1862), writer, literary critic, journalist and editor
 - Wladimir Raschet (1812–1880), mining engineer and metallurgist
 - Michail Skotti (1812–1861), Italian-Russian painter
 
- 1813
 
- Nikolai Benois (1813–1898), architect
 - Andrei Delwig (1813–1887), engineer lieutenant general
 - Anatole Demidoff di San Donato (1813–1870), industrialist
 - Casimir Gzowski (1813–1898), Canadian engineer of Polish origin
 - Robert Krause (1813–1885), German landscape painter
 - Nikolai Ogarjow (1813–1877), socialist, publicist and poet
 - Vladimir Sollogub (1813–1882), writer
 - Karl Weltzien (1813–1870), German chemist
 
- 1814
 
- Paul von Baranoff (1814–1864), count, major general and governor
 - Alexander von Stieglitz (1814–1884), banker, industrialist, patron and philanthropist
 
- 1815
 
- Otto von Böhtlingk (1815–1904), German Indologist
 - Alexander Theodor von Middendorff (1815–1894), German-Baltic traveler and versatile naturalist in the Russian service
 
- 1816
 
- Vasily Grigoryev (1816–1881), orientalist and archaeologist
 - Ilja Vosnesensky (1816–1871), scientist and explorer
 
- 1817
 
- Theodosius Harnack (1817–1889), German-Baltic Lutheran theologian
 - Alexander Krakau (1817–1888), architect and university professor
 - Karl von Lingen (1817–1896), German-Baltic nobleman, doctor and Russian privy councilor
 - Alexander Resanow (1817–1887), architect and university professor
 - Nikolai Swertschkow (1817–1898), painter
 - Alexei Tolstoy (1817–1875), writer, playwright and poet
 
- 1818
 
- Konstantin Feofilaktow (1818–1901), geologist and university rector
 - Konstantin Kawelin (1818–1885), lawyer and university professor
 - Johann Reimers (1818–1868), German-Russian painter, sculptor and university professor
 - Wassili Sternberg (1818–1845), Romantic painter
 - Alexander Wassiltschikow (1818–1881), prince, writer and state councilor
 - Bogdan Willewalde (1818–1903), painter and teacher
 
- 1819
 
- Nikolai Adlerberg (1819–1892), count, councilor, court chamberlain, governor of Taganrog, Simferopol and administrator of Finland
 - Nikolai Ivaschinzow (1819–1871), hydrograph
 - Maria Romanowa (1819–1876), Grand Duchess, eldest daughter of Tsar Nicholas I.
 
- 1820
 
- Alexander Dondukow-Korsakow (1820-1893), statesman
 - Wladimir Kastrioto-Skanderbek (1820–1879), composer
 - Carl von Küster (1820–1893), German diplomat, real privy councilor and Russian-Imperial State Secretary, natural scientist and botanist
 - Avdotja Panayeva (1820-1893), writer
 - Alexander Serow (1820–1871), composer and music critic
 
1821-1830
1821
- Michail Butaschewitsch-Petraschewski (1821–1866), thinker and founder of the Petraschewzen circle
 - Leopold Koenig (1821–1903), German entrepreneur
 - Pafnuti Chebyshev (1821-1894), mathematician
 
1822
- Ludwig Bohnstedt (1822–1885), German architect
 - Martin Eppinger (1822–1873), architect
 - Boleslaw Markewitsch (1822–1884), writer, journalist and literary critic
 - Olga Romanowa (1822–1892), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, Queen of Württemberg
 
1823
- Yuri Golitsyn (1823–1872), composer
 - Dawid Grimm (1823–1898), architect and researcher of the Byzantine Empire, Georgia and Armenia
 - Friedrich Wilhelm von Grote (1823–1895), German-Baltic nobleman
 - Dmitri von Schoeppingk (1823–1895), baron and a well-known ethnologist, mythologist and archaeologist
 
1824
- Iossif Charlemagne (1824–1870), architect, draftsman and watercolorist
 - Wilhelm von Herder (1824–1907), German manor owner and politician
 - Vladimir Stasov (1824–1906), art critic
 
1825
- Alexander von Gerschau (1825–1904), artillery general and privy councilor
 - Alexandra Romanowa (1825–1844), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, daughter of Tsar Nikolaus I.
 - Alexei Uvarow (1825-1885), archaeologist
 
1826
- Adolf Charlemagne (1826–1901), painter
 - Otto Pius Hippius (1826–1883), German Baltic architect
 - Pawel Sokolow (1826–1905), watercolorist and illustrator
 
1827
- Georg Asher (1827–1905), German legal scholar, historian and university professor
 - Nikolai Dellingshausen (1827–1896), German-Baltic natural scientist and state politician
 - Filipp Owsjannikow (1827–1906), physiologist, anatomist, histologist and embryologist
 - Konstantin Romanow (1827-1892), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, son of Tsar Nicholas I.
 - Pyotr Shuvalov (1827–1889), statesman and diplomat
 
1828
- Dmitri Stasov (1828–1918), lawyer
 
1829
- Rudolf von Gasser (1829–1904), Bavarian diplomat and court official
 - Robert Gödicke (1829–1910), architect
 
1830
- Charles Sillem Lidderdale (1830–1895), British portrait painter
 - Oskar von Löwis of Menar (1830–1885), Major General of the Imperial Russian Army
 - Karl Rachau (1830–1880), architect
 
1831-1840
1831
- Nikolai Romanow (1831-1891), Grand Duke, third son of Tsar Nicholas I.
 
1832
- Nikolai Ignatjew (1832–1908), general and diplomat
 - Robert August Pflug (1832–1885), architect
 
1833
- Alexander Borodin (1833–1887), composer, chemist and doctor
 - Michail Clodt von Jürgensburg (1833–1902), painter
 - Vladimir Lamanski (1833–1914), Slavist, historian and philologist
 - Hans von Prittwitz (1833–1880), Major General à la suite in the Imperial Russian Army
 
1834
- William Anderson (1834–1898), British engineer
 - Alexander Brückner (1834–1896), Baltic German historian
 - Wiktor Hartmann (1834–1873), architect, sculptor and painter
 - Friedrich von Rosen (1834–1902), mineralogist
 
1835
- Michail Annenkow (1835–1899), military
 - Maria Blank (1835–1916), mother of Lenin
 - Michail Klodt (1835–1914), genre painter and etcher
 - Nikolai Pomjalowski (1835–1863), writer
 - Nicolaus von Prittwitz (1835–1897), Lieutenant General à la suite of the Imperial Russian Army
 - Amand Struwe (1835–1898), military engineer and entrepreneur
 
1836
- Mitrofan Beljajew (1836–1904), music publisher and patron
 - Wilhelm Kress (1836–1913), Austrian aviation pioneer and designer
 - Olga von Lützerode (1836–1917), German nurse, founder, founder and director of the Clementine House in Hanover
 
1837
- Konstantin Arsenjew (1837–1919), journalist, literary scholar and encyclopaedist
 - Pjotr Lesgaft (1837–1909), physician, anatomist, university professor and founder of modern sports education
 - Konstantin Litke (1837–1892), naval officer, explorer and geographer
 - Franz Overbeck (1837–1905), German Protestant theologian
 - Andrei Saburow (1837–1916), lawyer and Minister of Public Education
 - Nikolaus von Wrede (1837–1909), Austrian officer and diplomat
 
1838
- Alexandra von Oldenburg (1838–1900), German princess from the house of Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorf, by marrying Grand Duchess Alexandra Petrovna Romanowna
 - Friedrich Konrad Beilstein (1838–1906), German-Russian chemist
 - Hermann Benrath (1838–1885), chemist
 - Léon Metchnikoff (1838–1888), geographer
 - Alexander von Prittwitz and Gaffron (1838–1915), major general in the Imperial Russian Army
 - Sofja Trubezkaja (1838–1898), Russian-French aristocrat and politician
 - Mikhail Voronin (1838–1903), botanist
 
1839
- Friedrich Arnd (1839–1911), German publicist
 - Nikolai Bobrikow (1839–1904), general and politician
 - Eduard Brandt (1839–1891), German-Russian physician and zoologist
 - Eduard Dobbert (1839–1899), German art historian and university professor
 - Elisabeth Järnefelt (1839–1929), patron of Finnish art and culture
 - Ieronim Kitner (1839–1929), architect and university professor
 - Vera Lyadowa (1839–1870), dancer, singer and actress
 - Leonhard Schaufelberger (1839–1894), architect
 - Viktor Schröter (1839–1901), German-Baltic architect
 - Dmitri Tschernow (1839–1921), metallurgist and university professor
 - Karel van Ark (1839–1902), Dutch-Russian pianist and music teacher
 
1840
- Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf (1840–1913), German pianist and composer
 - Alexander Goette (1840–1922), German zoologist and embryologist
 - Wladimir Kernig (1840–1917), physician and neurologist
 - Alexander von Uexküll-Güldenband (1840–1912), statesman
 
1841-1850
1841
- Maria von Leuchtenberg (1841–1914), daughter of Maximilian de Beauharnais, Duke of Leuchtenberg
 
1842
- Eugen Maria Albrecht (1842-1894), Russian violinist, conductor, music teacher and music writer of German descent
 - Friedrich Gelbcke (1842–1922), German-Russian educator
 - Nikolai von Kaulbars (1842–1905), general in the Imperial Russian Army and military writer
 - Nikolai Menschutkin (1842–1907), chemist
 - Alfred Parland (1842-1919), architect
 - Emanuel Severin (1842–1907), pediatric surgeon of German descent and Imperial Russian privy councilor
 - Heinrich Stöckhardt (1842–1920), German architect and craftsman
 - Pawel Wiskowatow (1842–1905), literary historian and librettist
 
1843
- Yevgeny Alexejew (1843–1917), admiral of the Imperial Russian Navy and statesman
 - Dmitri Anutschin (1843–1923), geographer, ethnologist and anthropologist
 - Gawriil Gustawson (1843-1908), chemist
 - Alexander Inostranzew (1843–1919), geologist and paleontologist
 - Jekaterina Junge (1843–1913), landscape, genre and portrait painter
 - Nikolai Romanow (1843–1865), Crown Prince of the Romanov House, son of Tsar Alexander II.
 - Gustav Sievers (1843–1898), German-Russian geologist and entomologist
 - Mikhail Skobelew (1843–1882), General in the Imperial Russian Army
 - Kliment Timirjasew (1843–1920), biologist
 - Georg Treu (1843–1921), German archaeologist
 
1844
- Anna Jewreinowa (1844–1919), lawyer, publicist and feminist
 - Hermann Halske (1844–1913), Schleswig-Holstein manor owner and politician
 - Alexander Möller-Sakomelski (1844–1928), General in the Imperial Russian Army
 - Henri Moser (1844–1923), Swiss explorer, businessman, art collector and patron
 - Alexander von Oldenburg (1844–1932), nobleman
 - Wassili Polenow (1844–1927), painter and teacher
 - Ferdinand von Wrangell (1844–1919), naval officer, university professor and writer
 
1845
- Alexander III (1845–1894), Emperor of Russia from 1881 to 1894
 - Georg Cantor (1845–1918), German mathematician and founder of set theory
 - Louis Homilius (1845–1908), German organist, cellist and conductor
 - Viktor Kirpichov (1845–1913), engineer, professor and university rector
 - Bogomir Korsow (1845–1920), opera singer (baritone)
 - Vladimir Graf Lamsdorf (1845–1907), diplomat, statesman and foreign minister of the Russian Empire from 1900 to 1906
 - Marie Stein (* before 1846; † 1866), Russian-German theater actress
 
1846
- Ella Adaïewsky (1846–1926), pianist and composer
 - Alexander von Bilderling (1846–1912), cavalry general in the Imperial Russian Army
 - Anna Dostojewskaja (1846–1918), wife of Fyodor Dostoyevsky
 - Peter Carl Fabergé (1846–1920), goldsmith and jeweler (Fabergé eggs)
 - Wladimir Peter Köppen (1846–1940), German geographer, meteorologist, climatologist and botanist
 - Adolf Rothermundt (1846–1930), industrialist, art collector and patron
 - Ekaterina Tschislowa (1846–1889), ballet dancer
 - Jelisaweta Zwanziger (1846–1921), German-Russian soprano and vocal teacher
 
1847
- Alexander Bari (1847–1913), engineer and entrepreneur
 - Julija Lermontowa (1847-1919), chemist and the first woman to receive a doctorate in chemistry
 - Karl Lessig (1847–1911), German engineer
 - Vladimir Romanow (1847–1909), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, third son of Tsar Alexander II.
 - Egor Solotaryov (1847–1878), mathematician
 
1848
- Wladimir Boeckmann (1848–1923), general and politician
 - Zinowi Roschestvensky (1848–1909), Admiral
 - Alexander Swedomski (1848–1911), genre and landscape painter
 - Boris Stürmer (1848–1917), Russian Prime Minister (1916)
 
1849
- Marija Ananjina (1849–1899), revolutionary
 - Jean Béraud (1849–1935), French painter and graphic artist
 - Friedrich von Bernhardi (1849–1930), German general and military historian
 - Iwan Borgman (1849–1914), physicist and university professor
 - Nikolai Jegorow (1849–1919), physicist and university professor
 - Eduard Nikolai von Middendorff (1849–1903), German-Baltic landowner and politician
 - Waldemar Rosenberger (1849–1918), railroad engineer of German descent and creator of the planned language Idiom Neutral
 - Vyacheslav Sresnewski (1849–1937), Slavist, photography pioneer and sports official
 - Pawel Swedomski (1849–1904), history, genre, portrait and landscape painter
 
1850
- Sergei Muromzew (1850–1910), lawyer and university professor
 - Anacleto Pasetti (1850–1912), Russian painter and photographer of Italian origin
 - Alexander Poehl (1850–1908), German pharmacist and chemist
 - Jelena Polenowa (1850–1898), painter and illustrator
 - Alexei Romanow (1850–1908), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp and Admiral General
 - Nikolai Romanow (1850–1918), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Emanuel Schiffers (1850–1904), Russian chess master of German origin
 - Woldemar von Seidlitz (1850–1922), German art historian
 - Alexander Taneyev (1850–1918), composer
 
1851-1860
1851
- Anna Jessipowa (1851-1914), pianist
 - Alexandra Krutikowa (1851-1919), opera singer
 - Paul Näcke (1851–1913), German psychiatrist and criminologist
 - Olga Romanowa (1851–1926), wife of George I of Greece from the Romanov family
 
1852
- Albert Benois (1852–1936), painter
 - Erwin Bernhard (1852–1914), Baltic German architect
 - Felicie Bernstein (1852–1908), German collector of French Impressionist painting
 - Orest Chwolson (1852-1934), physicist
 - Walter Winans (1852–1920), American marksman, horse breeder, sculptor and author
 
1853
- Peter von Bradke (1853-1897), linguist and Sanskritist
 - Ivan Grigorovich (1853–1930), admiral
 - Marija Romanowa (1853–1920), second daughter of Tsar Alexander II, Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
 - Otto Nikolaus Witt (1853–1915), Russian-German chemist and inventor of the dye theory
 
1854
- Elisabeth Dauthendey (1854–1943), German writer
 - Adolfo Hohenstein (1854–1928), German painter, illustrator, set designer and costume designer
 - Victor Jernstedt (1854–1902), classical philologist and Byzantinist
 - Nikolai Reitzenstein (1854–1916), admiral and from 1909 to 1916 member of the Admiralty Council of the Imperial Russian Navy
 - Vera Romanowa (1854–1912), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Wilhelm Schultz (1854–1921), German watchmaker and author
 - Hermann von Struve (1854–1920), German-Baltic astronomer and mathematician
 - Nikolai Sumzow (1854–1922), Russian-Ukrainian folklorist, ethnographer and literary scholar
 - Vladimir Tschertkow (1854–1936), founder of the Tolstoyans, close friend of Tolstoy and editor and publisher of his works
 
1855
- Lew Girard de Soucanton (1855–1918), German-Baltic nobleman and major general
 - Wilhelm Grube (1855–1908), German sinologist, linguist and ethnologist
 - Alexander Krakau (1855–1909), electrochemist and university professor
 - Anatoly Lyadow (1855–1914), composer
 - Konstantin Mereschkowski (1855–1921), biologist
 
1856
- Simon Alapin (1856–1923), chess master and theorist
 - Leonti Benois (1856–1928), architect
 - Eduard Bradtman (1856–1926), Russian architect of German origin
 - Samuel Eck (1856–1919), theology professor and liberal member of the state parliament
 - Willem Gevers (1856–1927), Dutch diplomat
 - Vladimir Golenishchev (1856–1947), Egyptologist
 - Samuel Keller (1856–1924), German theologian and writer
 - Armand Marseille (1856–1925), German-Russian doll manufacturer
 - Nikolai Romanow (1856–1929), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, military
 - Juli Schokalski (1856–1940), oceanographer and cartographer
 - Eduard Schütt (1856–1933), Austrian composer
 
1857
- Juri Arsenjew (1857-1919), Russian-Baltic nobleman
 - Vladimir Besobrasov (1857–1932), cavalry general, commander of the Guard Corps and adjutant general of the Tsar during World War I
 - Georg Dütsch (1857–1891), conductor, composer and folk song collector
 - Wilhelm Julius Ernst Christian Johannsen (1857 – after 1917), Danish-Russian architect
 - Helene zu Mecklenburg (-Strelitz) (1857–1936), member of the Russian branch of the grand ducal house of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
 - Sergei Romanow (1857–1905), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, fifth son of Tsar Alexander II.
 - Boris Sresnewski (1857–1934), meteorologist and university professor
 
1858
- Leopold Engel (1858–1931), German actor, occultist, theosophist and founder of the Illuminati
 - Olga Gebauer (1858–1922), German midwife and founder of the midwives' association
 - Philipp Heck (1858–1943), German lawyer
 - Alexander Koenig (1858–1940), German zoologist, founder of the Museum Koenig in Bonn
 - Nikolai Lange (1858–1921), psychologist
 - Waldemar Osterloff (1858–1933), architect in Strasbourg
 - Catherine Radziwill (1858–1941), aristocrat and writer
 - Marija Tenischewa (1858–1928), singer, artist, art collector, art patron and philanthropist
 
1859
- Robert Bach (1859–1933), sculptor and university professor
 - Friedrich Fiedler (1859–1917), Russian-German translator, educator, collector and founder of a literature museum
 - Arthur Friedheim (1859–1932), Russian-German pianist and composer
 - Emanuel Nobel (1859–1932), Swedish-Russian oil magnate and a nephew of Alfred Nobel
 - Jewgeni Raphof (1859–1919), pianist and music teacher
 - Nikolai Romanow (1859-1919), nobleman from the house of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, general, historian and entrepreneur
 - Hugo Salemann (1859–1919), sculptor and university professor
 - Fjodor Schechtel (1859–1926), Russian architect of German descent
 - Alexander Sheremetew (1859–1931), music lover, conductor and patron
 - Nikolai Sokolow (1859–1922), composer and university professor
 - Arkadi Tyrkow (1859-1924), revolutionary
 
1860
- Nikolai von Essen (1860–1915), Admiral of the Imperial Russian Navy , Commander-in-Chief of the Baltic Fleet in the First World War
 - Wiktor Ewald (1860–1935), composer, cellist, engineer and university professor
 - Adine Gemberg (1860–1902), German writer
 - Grigori Grum-Grschimailo (1860–1936), zoologist, geographer and explorer
 - Félia Litvinne (1860–1936), soprano
 - Max von Montgelas (1860–1938), Bavarian infantry general as well as German politician, military attaché and historian
 - Dmitri Romanow (1860–1919), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Pawel Romanow (1860-1919), Grand Duke, sixth son of Tsar Alexander II.
 - Anastasia Romanowa (1860–1922), Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin from the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Dmitri Tolstoy (1860–1941), art historian and director of the Hermitage
 - Michail Volkonsky (1860–1917), prince, writer, prose writer and playwright
 
1861-1870
1861
- Lou Andreas-Salomé (1861–1937), Russian-German writer, storyteller, essayist and psychoanalyst
 - Eugen Büchner (1861–1913), German-Russian zoologist
 - Arvid Järnefelt (1861–1932), Finnish writer
 - Franz Loewinson-Lessing (1861–1939), geologist and petrologist
 - Anna von Maydell (1861–1944), German-Baltic painter
 - Erik Meyer-Helmund (1861–1932), composer and singer
 - Michail Romanow (1861–1929), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, military
 - Vyacheslav Tishchenko (1861–1941), chemist
 
1862
- Friedrich Braun (1862–1942), Germanist and classical philologist
 - Boris Golitsyn (1862–1916), geophysicist and meteorologist
 - Varwara Komarowa (1862–1943), musicologist, literary scholar and writer
 - Alexander Kornilow (1862–1925), historian and politician
 - Semjon Nadson (1862-1887), poet
 - Robert von Ritter (1862–1945), German art historian, art collector and art patron
 - Filip Schtrauch (1862–1924), sailor
 
1863
- Georg von Fewson (1863–?), German local politician
 - Nikolai Schebeko (1863–1953), diplomat
 - Fyodor Sologub (1863-1927), writer
 - Wladimir Wernadski (1863–1945), geologist, geochemist and mineralogist, one of the founders of geochemistry
 
1864
- Leonid Breitfuß (1864–1950), German polar explorer
 - Alexander Eichenwald (1864–1944), physicist and university professor
 - Wladimir Grum-Grschimailo (1864–1928), metallurgist and university professor
 - Karl Hippius (1864–1941), German-Baltic-Russian architect
 - Vera Komissarshevskaya (1864–1910), stage actress
 - Nikolai Kochetov (1864–1925), composer
 - Leonid Lutugin (1864–1915), geologist and university professor
 - Alfred Meyer-Waldeck (1864–1928), German naval officer, governor of the Kiautschou protected area (1911–1914)
 - Peter Romanow (1864–1931), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Theodor Taube (1864–1919), German-Baltic pastor and Protestant martyr
 - Andreas von Tuhr (1864–1925), Russian-German lawyer
 - Axel Wallensköld (1864–1933), Finnish Romanist and Medievalist
 
1865
- Richard Bergholz (1865–1920), landscape painter
 - Yevgeny Botkin (1865–1918), physician and personal physician to Tsar Nicholas II.
 - Alexander Glasunow (1865–1936), composer
 - Theodor Hoffmann (1865–1919), German-Baltic pastor and Protestant martyr
 - Jelisaveta Kruglikowa (1865–1941), graphic artist and painter
 - Dmitri Mereschkowski (1865–1941), writer
 - Olga Paley (1865–1929), Countess von Hohenfelsen
 - Karl Schilling (1865–1905), German-Baltic pastor and Evangelical-Lutheran martyr
 - Valentin Serow (1865–1911), painter, graphic artist and portrait painter
 
1866
- Lyubow Gurewitsch (1866–1940), writer, theater and literary critic, translator, publicist and women's rights activist
 - Alexander Kiesewetter (1866–1933), historian, university professor and publicist
 - Nikolaus Revertera-Salandra (1866–1951), Austro-Hungarian diplomat
 - Alexei Troitsky (1866–1942), chess composer, theorist and author
 - Leopold Weber (1866–1944), German writer
 - Alexander Volkonsky (1866–1934), general staff officer, later a Catholic priest
 
1867
- Charlotte Basté (1867–1928), German actress
 - Michail Eisenstein (1867–1920), German-Baltic architect
 - Georgi Morosow (1867–1920), forest scientist
 - Wassili Nikitin (1867–1942), crystallographer, mineralogist and university professor
 - Vera Popowa (1867–1896), chemist and university professor
 - Robert Regel (1867–1920), botanist
 
1868
- Ladislaus von Bortkewitsch (1868–1931), Russian economist and statistician of Polish descent
 - Philipp Brozel (1868–1927), Russian-English opera singer (tenor) and singing teacher
 - Alexander von Bulmerincq (1868–1938), German-Baltic Protestant theologian and orientalist
 - Alexander Drenteln (1868–1925), major general
 - Amos Kasch (1868–1948), marksman
 - Nicholas II (1868–1918), Emperor of Russia from 1894 to 1917
 - Peter von Oldenburg (1868–1924), great-grandson of Tsar Nikolaus I.
 
1869
- Wilhelm Barthold (1869–1930), orientalist, anthropologist and historian
 - Vladimir Yurevich (1869–1907), chess player and journalist
 - Vladimir Komarov (1869–1945), botanist and geographer
 - Pyotr Krasnow (1869–1947), General of the Imperial Russian Army and leader against the October Revolution
 - Nadeschda Krupskaja (1869–1939), politician, revolutionary, educator and wife and comrade of Lenin
 - Marija Lochwizkaja (1869–1905), poet
 - Alexander Murski (1869–1943), actor
 - Boris Rosing (1869–1933), physicist, engineer and pioneer in the field of television
 - Konstantin Somow (1869–1939), painter and graphic artist
 - Michael von Taube (1869–1961), lawyer and statesman
 
1870
- Alexander Benois (1870–1960), painter, writer and art historian
 - Fredrik Lidvall (1870–1945), Russian-Swedish architect
 - Volodymyr Peretz (1870–1935), literary scholar, literary critic, folklorist and linguist
 - Sascha Schneider (1870–1927), German professor, sculptor and painter
 - Alexander Vasiliev (1870-1953), Byzantinist
 - Leon Wasilewski (1870–1936), Polish politician
 - Grigol Tsereteli (1870–1938), Georgian classical philologist
 
1871-1880
1871
- Esper Belosselski-Beloserski (1871–1921), sailor
 - Fyodor Dan (1871–1947), doctor and Menshevik
 - Isidor Gukowski (1871–1921), revolutionary and politician; People's Commissar for Finance (1918)
 - Nikolai Günter (1871–1941), mathematician
 - Anna Ostroumowa-Lebedewa (1871–1955), engraver, graphic artist and painter
 - Olga Preobrazhenskaya (1871–1962), dancer
 - Georgi Romanow (1871–1899), nobleman, third son of Tsar Alexander III.
 - Gustav Trautschold (1871–1944), German actor and director
 - Michail Weikone (1871–1922), journalist, translator, theater critic and author
 - Walerian Weber (1871–1940), geologist, paleontologist, seismologist and university lecturer
 
1872
- Vladimir Arsenjew (1872–1930), explorer and writer
 - Dmitri Filossofow (1872–1940), publicist, critic and newspaper editor
 - Alexandra Kollontai (1872–1952), revolutionary, writer and diplomat
 - Gleb Kotelnikow (1872–1944), inventor of the backpack parachute
 - Matilda Kschessinskaja (1872–1971), prima ballerina
 - Anatol Lieven (1872–1937), Baltic German officer in the Russian Civil War
 - Nadeschda Lochwizkaja (1872–1952), writer and poet
 - Misia Sert (1872–1950), French pianist and salonnière
 
1873
- Otto Buek (1873–1966), German philosopher, writer and translator
 - Kasimir Kalizki (1873–1941), geologist and university professor
 - George Washington Lambert (1873–1930), Australian artist
 - Friedrich von Postels (1873–1960), Russian-American architect and graphic artist
 - Jelena Stasowa (1873–1966), revolutionary and politician
 - Nikolai Tscherepnin (1873–1945), composer
 
1874
- Iwan Choultsé (1874–1939), painter of Russian realism
 - Michail Diterichs (1874–1937), General in the Imperial Russian Army in World War I and the White Army in the Russian Civil War
 - Vladimir Fyodorov (1874–1966), lieutenant general and designer
 - Alexander Kolchak (1874–1920), admiral and monarchist
 - Alexander Kuznetsov (1874–1954), architect, entrepreneur and university professor
 - Alexander Maximow (1874–1928), embryologist, hematologist, anatomist and histologist
 - Vyacheslav Menschinsky (1874–1934), revolutionary and politician
 - Nicholas Roerich (1874–1947), painter, writer, archaeologist, traveler and philosopher
 - Arnold Schaufelberger (1874–1938), Swiss stock broker
 - Nikolai Totleben (1874–1945), German-Baltic nobleman, Russian count and major general of the Imperial Russian Army
 
1875
- Noé Bloch (1875–1937), producer in German and French film
 - Sandra Droucker (1875–1944), Russian-German-Norwegian pianist and music teacher
 - Henry von Heiseler (1875–1928), German writer, playwright and translator
 - Paul von Kügelgen (1875–1952), Russian-German journalist and translator
 - Jewgeni Lansere (1875–1946), painter, book artist and member of the Mir Iskusstwa artists' association
 - Xenia Romanowa (1875–1960), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 
1876
- Iwan Bilibin (1876–1942), painter, book illustrator and theater maker
 - Carl Enckell (1876–1959), Finnish politician, officer and diplomat
 - Vladimir Karapetoff (1876–1948), American author, musician and professor of electrical engineering of Russian origin
 - Friedrich Wilhelm Kesselring (1876–1966), German botanist and director of the Botanical Garden in Darmstadt
 - Kyrill Romanow (1876–1938), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Dmitri Roschdestvensky (1876–1940), physicist and university professor
 - Nikolai Sergejew (1876–1951), ballet dancer
 - Benno von Siebert (1876–1926), diplomat of Baltic German origin
 - Gustav Trinkler (1876–1957), mechanical engineer
 
1877
- Waldemar Braun (1877–1954), German entrepreneur
 - Herman Gummerus (1877–1948), Finnish diplomat and historian
 - Jelena Guro (1877–1913), painter, book illustrator and author
 - Alexei Ignatjew (1877–1954), statesman and general
 - Boris Romanow (1877–1943), nobleman from the house of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 
1878
- Marga von Amburger (1878–1961), painter
 - Ossip Gabrilowitsch (1878–1936), pianist, conductor and composer
 - Nikolai Kolin (1878–1966), actor
 - Elena Luksch-Makowsky (1878–1967), painter, craftsman and sculptor
 - Sinaida von Minkwitz (1878–1918), botanist and translator
 - Michail Romanow (1878-1918), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, youngest son of Tsar Alexander III.
 - Grigori Schukowski (1878–1939), physical chemist and university professor
 - Juri Stark (1878–1950), naval officer and admiral
 - Eduard Tennmann (1878–1936), Estonian theologian
 
1879
- Angelina Beloff (1879–1969), painter and sculptor
 - Leonid Fjodorow (1879–1935), religious priest of the Studite Order and exarch of the Russian Catholic Church
 - Natalja Flittner (1879–1957), Egyptologist
 - Michail Kirpitschow (1879–1955), physicist and university lecturer
 - Nikolai Krylow (1879–1955), mathematician
 - Paul Morawitz (1879–1936), German internist and physiologist
 - Nikolai Nekrasov (1879–1940), engineer and politician; last Russian governor general of Finland
 - Helena Roerich (1879–1955), writer
 - Andrei Romanow (1879–1956), nobleman from the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Agrippina Waganowa (1879–1951), ballet dancer
 - Peter von Weymarn (1879–1935), chemist
 
1880
- Alexander Blok (1880–1921), poet of Russian modernism
 - Leonid Drosnés (1880 – after 1918), psychiatrist and psychoanalyst
 - Michel Fokine (1880–1942), Russian-American choreographer, is considered the founder of modern ballet
 - Alexander Schottmann (1880–1937), Russian revolutionary of Finnish origin
 - Lev Shcherba (1880–1944), Slavist
 - Arthur Schütz (1880–1960), Austrian engineer and writer
 - Ferdinand Carl von Stumm (1880–1954), German diplomat, industrialist and manor owner
 - Yevgeny Suvorov (1880–1953), zoologist and ichthyologist
 - Alexander Tyumenew (1880–1959), ancient historian and ancient orientalist
 - Michail Tomski (1880–1936), trade union official
 
1881-1890
1881
- Wassili Alexejew (1881–1951), sinologist
 - Vladimir Lebedew (1881–1947), aviation pioneer and industrialist
 - Anna Pawlowa (1881–1931), master dancer of classical ballet
 - Max Pfeiffer (1881–1947), German film producer
 - Curt Siegel (1881–1950), German sculptor
 
1882
- Dmitri Beling (1882–1949), hydrobiologist, limnologist and ichthyologist
 - Albert Coates (1882–1953), English conductor and composer
 - Sergei Maisel (1882–1955), physicist and university professor
 - Dmitri Muschketow (1882–1938), geologist and university professor
 - Jelena Romanowa (1882–1957), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, Princess of Greece and Denmark
 - Olga Romanowa (1882–1960), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Walter von Ruckteschell (1882–1941), German illustrator, sculptor and author
 - Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971), composer
 - Sergei Sudeikin (1882–1946), painter and set designer
 - Kornei Tschukowski (1882–1969), poet, literary critic and children's book author
 - Reinhold von Walter (1882–1965), Baltic German writer and translator
 
1883
- Boris Anrep (1883–1969), mosaicist
 - Sergei Belyawski (1883–1953), astronomer
 - Wiktor Bulla (1883–1938), photographer
 - Alexander Fersman (1883–1945), mineralogist, geochemist and crystallographer
 - Eugen Leviné (1883–1919), German revolutionary and KPD politician
 - Lydia Potechina (1883–1934), actress in Germany
 
1884
- Boris Assafjew (1884–1949), musicologist and composer
 - Leonid Kreutzer (1884–1953), Russian-German pianist and piano teacher
 - Otto von Kursell (1884–1967), Baltic German painter and graphic artist, Ministerialrat and member of the Reichstag
 - Wadim Meller (1884–1962), Ukrainian-Russian painter of the USSR, avant-garde artist, stage designer, book illustrator and architect
 - Eugen von Mercklin (1884–1969), German classical archaeologist
 - Pawel Nikiforow (1884–1944), geophysicist, seismologist and university professor
 - Leopold van der Pals (1884–1966), composer
 - Gregor Rabinovitch (1884–1958), Swiss graphic artist and caricaturist
 - Alexandre Roubtzoff (1884–1949), Russian-French painter
 - Apolinary Szeluto (1884–1966), Polish composer
 - Eduard Winkler (1884–1978), German painter, draftsman and graphic artist
 - Eugène Znosko-Borovsky (1884–1954), French chess master and author of Russian origin
 
1885
- Ferdinand von Alten (1885–1933), German actor
 - Nikolai Anitschkow (1885–1964), professor and head of the Department of Pathological Anatomy at the Institute for Experimental Medicine
 - Stella Arbenina (1885–1976), Anglo-Russian actress
 - Vladimir Artemjew (1885–1962), rocket designer
 - Vera Baranovskaya (1885–1935), actress
 - Heinz Fenner (* 1885; † after 1935), Baltic German writer
 - Sacha Guitry (1885–1957), French actor, film director, screenwriter and playwright
 - Wladimir Helreicher (1885–1967), architect and university professor
 - Tamara Karsawina (1885–1978), ballet dancer and dance teacher
 - Ivan Machonin (1885–1973), aircraft designer and inventor
 - Georg Masing (1885–1956), German chemist, metallurgist and university lecturer
 - Eugène Minkowski (1885–1972), Russian-French psychiatrist and philosopher
 - Alexandra Povòrina (1885–1963), Russian-German painter
 - Iwan Salkind (1885–1928), biologist and diplomat
 - Anton Soans (1885–1966), Estonian architect
 - Wladimir Woytinsky (1885–1960), Russian-American economist
 
1886
- Hans von Boetticher (1886–1958), German zoologist, ornithologist and entomologist
 - Nikolai Gumiljow (1886–1921), poet of the Silver Age
 - Vyacheslav Polonsky (1886–1932), literary critic and historian
 - Ivan Romanow (1886–1918), nobleman from the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Bruno Schneider (1886–19 ??), German politician (DNVP)
 - Robert Spies (1886–1914), German painter, graphic artist and sculptor
 - Max Vasmer (1886–1962), Russian-German Slavist
 - Wladimir Wiese (1886–1954), Russian oceanographer, geographer, meteorologist and polar explorer of German descent
 
1887
- Wiktor Bursian (1887–1945), physicist and university professor
 - Ilja Grebenschtschikow (1887–1953), chemist, physical chemist and university professor
 - Alexander Jakowlew (1887–1938), Russian-French painter, draftsman and designer
 - Felix Jussupow (1887–1967), nobleman, one of the masterminds behind the murder of Rasputin
 - Olga Knorring-Neustrujewa (1887–1978), botanist
 - Gawriil Romanow (1887–1955), nobleman from the house of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Adrian Schaposhnikov (1887–1967), composer
 - Igor Severyanin (1887–1941), poet
 - Vladimir Smirnov (1887–1974), mathematician
 
1888
- Ivan Akulow (1888–1937), party and state functionary as well as trade unionist
 - Nikolai Bauer (1888–1942), numismatist
 - Alexander Bessmertny (1888–1943), German writer
 - Elsa Brändström (1888–1948), Swedish philanthropist known as the "Angel of Siberia"
 - Serge von Bubnoff (1888–1957), German-Baltic geologist
 - Christoph of Greece (1888–1940), Prince of the House of Oldenburg
 - Sofja Fedortschenko (1888–1957), writer and nurse
 - Alexander Friedmann (1888–1925), physicist, geophysicist and mathematician
 - Sergei Krylow (1888–1958), lawyer and diplomat, first Soviet judge at the International Court of Justice
 - Waldemar von Poletika (1888–1981), German-Russian geographer and agricultural scientist
 - Jacques Rotmil (1888–1944), film architect
 - Ludmilla Schollar (1888–1978), ballet dancer
 - Nikolai Schwernik (1888–1970), politician, head of state of the Soviet Union from 1946 to 1953
 - Richard Vasmer (1888–1938), numismatist, orientalist and arabist
 
1889
- Vladimir Deschewow (1889–1955), composer
 - Serge Elisseeff (1889–1975), orientalist
 - Arwid Kubbel (1889–1938), chess player
 - Ekaterina Lermontowa (1889–1942), geologist and paleontologist
 - Nikolai Miljutin (1889–1942), revolutionary, politician and architectural theorist
 - Woldemar Mobitz (1889–1951), German physician
 - Dmitri Naliwkin (1889–1982), geologist and paleontologist
 - Ida Orloff (1889–1945), Russian-Austrian actress and translator
 - Leo Pasetti (1889–1937), German stage designer
 - Martin Ramming (1889–1988), German Japanologist
 - Joseph Ruttenberg (1889–1983), American cameraman
 - Wassili Struwe (1889–1965), philologist, ancient historian, orientalist, mathematician and Egyptologist
 
1890
- Mikalaj Aladau ( Russian Nikolai Ilyich Aladow ) (1890–1972), Soviet-Belarusian composer
 - Boris Delone (1890–1980), mathematician
 - Georg Achates Gripenberg (1890–1975), Finnish diplomat
 - Konstantin Jelissejew (1890–1968), Russian-Soviet graphic artist
 - Juri Krutkow (1890–1952), physicist
 - Constantin Andreas von Regel (1890–1970), Russian-Lithuanian botanist
 - Maria Romanowa (1890–1958), princess from the house of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Tatjana Romanowa (1890–1979), princess from the house of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Lidija Swerewa (1890–1916), aviation pioneer, entrepreneur and the first female pilot in the Russian Empire
 - Adrien Turel (1890–1957), Swiss writer
 
1891-1900
1891
- Michail Bujanowski (1891–1966), horn player and music professor
 - Wanda Chmielowska (1891–1980), Polish pianist and music teacher
 - Nikolai van Gilse van der Pals (1891–1969), Dutch musicologist and conductor
 - Nikolai Koschljakow (1891–1958), mathematician and university professor
 - Theodor Kröger (1891–1958), German writer
 - Vladimir Lebedew (1891–1967), painter and graphic artist
 - Lidija Lepin (1891–1985), physical chemist and university professor
 - Matwei Maniser (1891–1966), sculptor and art writer
 - Boris Morros (1891–1963), Russian and American film producer, film composer and musical director
 - Vladimir Nemilow (1891–1950), chemist, metallurgist and university professor
 - Alexander Neroslow (1891–1971), painter in Germany
 - Ilja Rabinowitsch (1891–1942), chess master
 - Anna Radlowa (1891–1949), poet
 - Alexander Rodchenko (1891–1956), painter, graphic artist, photographer and architect
 - Konstantin Romanow (1891–1918), nobleman from the house of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Georgi Safarow (1891–1942), revolutionary
 - Wiktor Schirmunski (1891–1971), Germanist, philologist and dialectologist
 - Marija Schkapskaja (1891–1952), poet and journalist
 - Michael Chekhov (1891–1955), Russian-American actor, director, and author
 
1892
- Pyotr Baranov (1892–1933), officer and politician; Commander in Chief of the Air Force of the Soviet Union (1924–1931)
 - Erté , eigtl. Romain de Tirtoff (1892–1990), Russian-French illustrator, set designer and fashion designer
 - Alexej A. Hackel (1892–1951), art historian and theologian
 - Leonid Kubbel (1892–1942), chess composer
 - Sarra Lebedewa (1892–1967), sculptor and university professor
 - Lydia Lopokova (1892–1981), Russian-British ballet dancer
 - Alexander Porokhovshchikov (1892–1941), aircraft designer
 - Iwan Puni (1892–1956), painter
 - Fyodor Raskolnikow (1892–1939), Communist Party functionary, naval commander and diplomat
 - Oleg Romanow (1892–1914), Prince of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Pyotr Romanowski (1892–1964), chess master
 - Pierre Schildknecht (1892–1968), film architect for French, Spanish and Portuguese films
 - Dmitri Skobelzyn (1892–1990), physicist
 - Edith Södergran (1892–1923), Finnish-Swedish poet
 - Erich Titschack (1892–1978), German zoologist
 - Kamilla Trewer (1892–1974), historian, orientalist and university professor
 
1893
- Mikołaj Bołtuć (1893–1939), Polish brigadier general
 - Klawdija Nikolajewa (1893–1944), revolutionary and women's rights activist
 - Paul of Yugoslavia (1893–1976), prince of the Karadjordjević royal house
 - Wiktor Schklowski (1893–1984), film critic and author
 - Jauhen Zikozki (1893–1970), composer
 - Ivan Wyschnegradsky (1893–1979), composer in France
 
1894
- Georgi Baimakow (1894–?), Swimmer
 - Witali Bianki (1894–1959), author of books for children and young people
 - Semjon Bogdanow (1894–1960), head of the Soviet military administration (SMAD) in Brandenburg
 - Alexander Ilyin-Schenewski (1894–1941), chess player
 - Pyotr Kapiza (1894-1984), physicist; Nobel laureate in physics 1978
 - Robert Mertens (1894–1975), German biologist and director of the Senckenberg Research Institute in Frankfurt am Main
 - Nina Pigulewskaja (1894–1970), Orientalist and Byzantinist
 - Igor Romanov (1894–1918), nobleman, great-grandson of Tsar Nicholas I.
 - Alexander Sacharjewski (1894–1965), physicist and university professor
 - Jelena Skrschinskaja (1894–1981), mediaevalist and university professor
 - Nicolas Slonimsky (1894–1995), American composer, conductor, musicologist and music critic
 - Mikhail Zoshchenko (1894–1958), writer
 - Vladimir Tscharnoluski (1894–1969), ethnographer and writer
 - Alexander Xenofontow (1894–1966), Lieutenant General and Hero of the Soviet Union
 
1895
- Walerian Frolow (1895–1961), Colonel General
 - Nikolai Jeschow (1895–1940), politician and secret service official
 - Wiktor Łabuński (1895–1974), Polish-American composer, pianist and music teacher
 - Charles Lamont (1895–1993), American film director and screenwriter
 - Nikolai Nikitin (1895–1963), Russian-Soviet writer
 - Wladimir Propp (1895–1970), folklorist, founder of morphological and structuralist folklore
 - Sasha Stone (1895–1940), photographer of Russian origin
 - Noi Trozki (1895–1940), architect
 - Wiktor Turin (1895–1945), film director
 - Wladimir Weidlé (1895–1979), Russian-French art scholar, art critic and author
 - Valentin Voloshinov (1895–1936), literary scholar
 
1896
- Pawel Antokolski (1896–1978), poet, translator and playwright
 - Felia Doubrovska (1896–1981), dancer
 - Leonid Kannegiesser (1896–1918), poet
 - Viktor Kossenko (1896–1938), composer, teacher and pianist
 - Stanisław Mackiewicz (1896–1966), Polish politician
 - Michail Ochitowitsch (1896–1937), sociologist, urban planner and architect
 - Roman Romanow (1896–1978), Grand Duke of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Leon Theremin (1896–1993), physicist and inventor
 - Nikolai Tikhonov (1896–1979), writer
 - Victor Trivas (1896–1970), American film director, screenwriter and production designer of Russian origin
 
1897
- Vladimir Kurasov (1897–1973), Army General
 - George Löwendal (1897–1964), Romanian painter and stage designer of Russian-Danish origin
 - Ernst Georg Nauck (1897–1967), German tropical medicine specialist and university professor
 - Wladimir Paley (1897–1918), Count von Hohenfelsen, poet
 - Antonina Pojarkowa (1897–1980), botanist
 - Georgi Prokofjew (1897–1942), linguist, ethnographer and university professor
 - Gregory Ratoff (1897–1960), Russian-American actor, film director, and producer
 - Tatiana Romanowa (1897–1918), Grand Duchess, second daughter of Tsar Nicholas II.
 - Roman Vishniac (1897–1990), American biologist, photographer, and pioneer of scientific photography
 - Zygmunt Waliszewski (1897–1936), Polish painter
 
1898
- Barbara von Annenkoff (1898–1978), German actress
 - Juri Ender (1898–1963), painter
 - Andreas Faehlmann (1898–1944), Estonian sailor
 - Wladimir Fock (1898–1974), physicist of quantum mechanics and quantum field theory
 - Léonide Moguy (1898–1976), Russian-French editor and film director
 - Pyotr Rehbinder (1898–1972), scientist
 - Sergei Tschebanow (1898–1965), military doctor and linguist
 
1899
- Sergei Frisch (1899–1977), physicist and university professor
 - Wera Gase (1899–1954), astronomer
 - Yevgeny Grigoryev (1899–1981), theater and film actor
 - Cyprian Kern (1899–1960), Orthodox theologian and professor of patristics at the Institut de Théologie Orthodoxe Saint-Serge in Paris
 - Arved Kurtz (1899–1995), classical violinist, conductor and music teacher
 - Anastassija Manzewitsch (1899–1982), ancient historian
 - Sergei Martinson (1899–1984), actor
 - Miliza Matje (1899–1966), Egyptologist, art historian and historian
 - Georg Herzog zu Mecklenburg (1899–1963), German nobleman from the House of Mecklenburg
 - Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977), writer, literary scholar and butterfly researcher
 - Priit Nigula (1899–1962), Estonian conductor and pianist
 - Oskar Rywkin (1899–1937), Soviet party functionary
 - Alexander Tscherepnin (1899–1977), composer and pianist
 - Eugène Vinaver (1899–1979), French Romanist and Medievalist of Russian origin
 - Konstantin Waginow (1899–1934), poet
 - Nikolai Voronow (1899–1968), chief marshal of the artillery
 
1900
- Nikolai Berezovsky (1900–1953), composer and violinist
 - Vladimir Bernstein (1900–1936), Russian-born Italian mathematician
 - Edward Caton (1900–1981), American dancer, ballet teacher and choreographer
 - Lidija Djomkina (1900–1994), physical chemist
 - Alexander Dragunow (1900–1955), sinologist and linguist
 - Nina Gagen-Torn (1900–1986), ethnographer, writer and poet
 - Tatjana Glebowa (1900–1985), painter, graphic artist and illustrator
 - Roman Hecker (1900–1991), paleontologist and geologist
 - George Hoyningen-Huene (1900–1968), American fashion photographer
 - Lew Krowizki (1900–1961 / 1962), theater and film actor
 - Efrem Kurtz (1900–1995), conductor
 - Lew Loitsjanski (1900–1991), mathematician, physicist and university professor
 - Léon Motchane (1900–1990), French mathematician and manager
 - Nikolai Parijski (1900–1996), astronomer, geophysicist and university professor
 - Sampson Sievers (1900–1979), Russian Orthodox clergyman in the USA
 - Valentin Tomberg (1900–1973), legal scholar and mystic
 - Vladimir Tributz (1900–1977), admiral
 - Melitta Wiedemann (1900–1980), German journalist and publicist
 - Vsevolod Wischnewski (1900–1951), writer
 - Oleg Volkov (1900–1996), writer, publicist and translator
 
20th century
1901-1910
1901
- Daniele Amfitheatrof (1901–1983), composer, orchestra conductor and film composer
 - Nina Berberova (1901–1993), writer
 - Bronisław Dardziński (1901–1971), Polish actor
 - Andrews Engelmann (1901–1992), German-Baltic actor
 - Paul Evdokimov (1901–1970), Russian-French Orthodox theologian and university professor
 - Jakow Gakkel (1901–1965), oceanographer
 - Karandasch (1901–1983), circus clown, people's artist of the USSR
 - Nikolai Kotschin (1901–1944), mathematician
 - Georges Lampin (1901–1979), French film director, screenwriter and film producer
 - Vera Lourié (1901–1998), poet
 - Lew Lunz (1901-1924), writer
 - Andrei Moskvin (1901–1961), cameraman
 - Yuri Panteleev (1901–1983), Soviet admiral, politician and professor
 - Eugene Rabinowitch (1901–1973), American biophysicist of Russian origin
 - Nikolaus Riehl (1901–1990), Russian-German physicist and nuclear chemist
 - Georgi Rimski-Korsakow (1901–1965), composer
 - Anastasia Romanowa (1901–1918), Grand Duchess of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp, daughter of Tsar Nicholas II.
 - Lev Schubnikow (1901–1937), physicist
 - Wassili Simbirzew (1901–1982), architect and university professor
 - Vladimir Sofronitsky (1901–1961), pianist
 - Nikolai Suikow (1901–1942), Rear Admiral
 - Alexander Werth (1901–1969), British journalist and historian
 
1902
- Reginald Beck (1902-1992), British film editor
 - Eduard Ellman-Eelma (1902–1941), Estonian football player from the interwar period
 - Victor Gsovsky (1902–1974), ballet dancer, choreographer, ballet master and dance teacher
 - Waldemar Gurian (1902–1954), German-American political scientist and publicist
 - Olaf Hansen (1902–1969), German-Russian Iranist and Indo-Europeanist
 - Henryk Kłoczkowski (1902–1962), Polish naval officer in World War II
 - Georges Kopp (1902–1951), Belgian engineer and military
 - Nadeschda Koschewerowa (1902–1989), film director
 - Andrei Lebedinski (1902–1965), physiologist, biophysicist and university professor
 - Sigismund Lewanewski (1902–1937), pilot, hero of the Soviet Union
 - Bronislaw Malakowski (1902–1937), architect, caricaturist and illustrator
 - Véra Nabokov (1902–1991), wife of the writer Vladimir Nabokov
 - Georg Ostrogorsky (1902–1976), Yugoslav Byzantinist of Russian origin
 - Alisa Poret (1902–1984), painter and illustrator
 
1903
- Maximilian Braun (1903–1984), German Slavist, translator and author
 - Alexandra Danilowa (1903–1997), ballet dancer, choreographer and teacher
 - Wilhelm Gallas (1903–1989), German lawyer, criminal law theorist and university professor
 - Grigori Gamburzew (1903–1955), geophysicist, seismologist and university professor
 - Gaito Gasdanow (1903–1971), writer and journalist
 - Andrei Gerschun (1903–1952), physicist and university professor
 - Leonid Kinskey (1903-1998), Russian-American actor
 - Anatole Kitain (1903–1980), Russian-American concert pianist
 - Zoia Korvin-Krukovsky (1903–1999), Russian-Swedish artist
 - Michail Leontowitsch (1903–1981), physicist
 - Oleg Ljalin (1903–1974), architect and university professor
 - Andrei Markow (1903–1979), mathematician
 - Yevgeny Mrawinsky (1903–1988), conductor
 - Nikolai Novikov (1903-1989), diplomat
 - Tatjana Passek (1903–1968), prehistoric
 - Boris Pomeranzew (1903–1939), acarologist and parasitologist
 - Georgi Romanow (1903–1938), Prince of the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Xenija Romanowa (1903-1965), princess from the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - Sergius Ruegenberg (1903–1996), German architect, designer and draftsman
 - Willi Schatz (1903–1976), German-Baltic film architect
 - Artur Tammiko (1903–1981), Estonian football player and theologian of German-Baltic origin
 - Nikolai Cherkassov (1903–1966), actor
 - Giuseppe Zamboni (1903–1986), Italian Germanist and Italianist
 - Ralf Zeitler (1903–1953), Baltic German economist and SA leader
 
1904
- Lydia Aadre (1904–1957), Estonian singer
 - George Balanchine (1904–1983), choreographer, founder of the American Ballet
 - Nikolai Bersarin (1904–1945), Colonel General and first Soviet city commander of Berlin (1945)
 - Juli Chariton (1904–1996), physicist
 - Alexander Kharkevich (1904–1965), scientist, pioneer of communications technology
 - Tito Colliander (1904–1989), Finnish-Swedish writer
 - Tom Conway (1904–1967), British actor and radio play speaker
 - Viktor Gaidukewitsch (1904–1966), classical archaeologist
 - Sergei Jutkewitsch (1904–1985), film director
 - Dmitri Kabalewski (1904–1987), composer
 - Dmitri Kasanli (1904–1959), physicist and geologist
 - Valentin Kiparsky (1904–1983), Finnish Slavist and linguist
 - Alexei Kosygin (1904–1980), politician, Prime Minister of the Soviet Union (1964–1980)
 - Leonid Lipawski (1904–1941), writer
 - Leonid Nikolajew (1904–1934), assassin
 - Genia Nikolajewa (1904–2001), German-American actress
 - Konstantin Reichardt (1904–1976), German-American Germanist and Nordicist
 - Svetoslav Roerich (1904–1993), Russian-Indian painter
 - Alexei Romanow (1904–1918), Crown Prince of the Romanov House, only son of Tsar Nicholas II.
 - Tamara Talbot Rice (1904–1993), Russian-British art historian
 - Michail Sadowski (1904–1994), geophysicist
 - Nikolai Sokolow (1904–1990), architect
 - Alexander Vwedensky (1904–1941), poet
 
1905
- Boris Arapov (1905-1992), composer
 - Mischa Auer (1905–1967), American film and theater actor of Russian origin
 - Daniil Charms (1905-1942), writer
 - Boris Goldenberg (1905–1980), socialist politician, journalist and historian
 - Oleg Alexander Kerensky (1905–1984), civil engineer
 - Burkhard Nadolny (1905–1968), German writer
 - Ayn Rand (1905–1982), Russian-American writer and philosopher
 - Robert Rompe (1905–1993), German physicist and politician in the GDR
 - Alexander Schalnikow (1905–1986), physicist
 
1906
- Andreas von Amburger (1906–1970), German criminalist and SS Untersturmführer in Einsatzgruppe B
 - Andria Balantschiwadze (1906–1992), Georgian composer
 - Boris Schwarz (1906–1983), Russian-American violinist and musicologist
 - Jacques Companéez (1906–1956), French screenwriter of Russian-Jewish origin
 - Hans Jürgen Eggers (1906–1975), German prehistorian
 - Michel Emer (1906–1984), French composer, lyricist and pianist
 - Andrei Fjodorow (1906–1997), translator, philologist, literary historian and educator
 - Alexander Gelfond (1906–1968), mathematician
 - Ludmilla Herzenstein (1906–1994), German architect, urban planner and children's book author of Russian origin
 - Tatiana Jakowlewa (1906–1991), one of the muses of Vladimir Mayakovsky
 - Raissa Kochanowa (1906–1992), architect
 - Dmitri Lichachev (1906–1999), philologist and Slavist
 - Albert Manfred (1906–1976), historian
 - Platon Morosow (1906–1986), lawyer, judge at the International Court of Justice in The Hague
 - Boris Piip (1906–1966), geologist and volcanologist
 - Anna-Lülja Praun (1906–2004), Austrian architect and designer
 - Vera Romanowa (1906–2001), princess from the House of Romanow-Holstein-Gottorp
 - George Sanders (1906–1972), British actor
 - Dmitri Shostakovich (1906–1975), composer, pianist and educator
 
1907
- Erik Amburger (1907–2001), German Eastern European historian
 - Vera Broido (1907-2004), writer
 - Michail Gerasimow (1907–1970), archaeologist, anthropologist and sculptor
 - Semyon Kozyrev (1907-1991), diplomat
 - Lew Kowarski (1907–1979), Russian-French physicist
 - Boris Maisel (1907–1986), composer
 - Jan Savitt (1907–1948), American violinist, band leader, composer and arranger
 - Wassili Solowjow-Sedoi (1907–1979), composer
 - Sofka Skipwith (1907–1994), Russian-British aristocrat and communist
 - Théodore Stravinsky (1907–1989), painter
 - Sergei Tolstow (1907–1976), archaeologist, ethnographer and historian
 - Victor Vacquier (1907–2009), Russian-American geophysicist and oceanographer
 
1908
- Georgi Alexandrow (1908–1961), philosopher and politician
 - Irakli Andronikow (1908–1990), literary scholar and writer
 - Natalja Baranskaja (1908-2004), writer
 - Sergei Christianowitsch (1908–2000), mathematician, physicist and university professor
 - Nina Dorliak (1908–1998), singer
 - Ilja Frank (1908–1990), physicist and Nobel Prize winner (1958)
 - Alexander Guljajew (1908–1998), specialist in metallurgy, professor and chess composer
 - Valentin Ivanov (1908–1992), mathematician
 - Rostislaw Kaischew (1908–2002), Bulgarian physical chemist
 - Margarete Kaufmann (1908–1942), German resistance fighter
 - Nikolai Kozyrev (1908-1983), astronomer
 - Edmund Kurtz (1908-2004), cellist
 - Alexandre Mnouchkine (1908–1993), Russian-French film producer
 - Leonid Panteleev (1908–1987), writer
 - Boris Piotrowski (1908–1990), archaeologist and director of the Hermitage in Saint Petersburg
 - Vyacheslav Ragosin (1908–1962), chess grandmaster and 2nd world chess champion
 - Alexander Sarchi (1908–1997), director and screenwriter
 - Marina Semyonova (1908-2010), prima ballerina
 - Sergei Sobolew (1908–1989), mathematician
 - Witali Chekhower (1908–1965), chess player and composer
 - Sergei Urusevsky (1908–1974), cameraman and director
 - Boris Vildé (1908–1942), Russian-French ethnologist, linguist and resistance fighter in the Résistance
 
1909
- Wladimir Admoni (1909–1993), German and Scandinavian scholar, linguist and literary scholar, translator, writer and poet
 - Georgi Boki (1909–2001), physical chemist, crystal chemist, crystallographer and university professor
 - Bruno Freindlich (1909–2002), actor
 - Jacques Gelman (1909–1986), Mexican film producer and art collector
 - Lilja Kedrowa (1909–2000), actress
 - Mikhail Kosodajew (1909–1986), nuclear physicist and university professor
 - Georgi Lissizyn (1909–1972), chess master and theorist
 - Wassili Rakow (1909–1996), pilot and two-time hero of the Soviet Union
 - Nina Rosenson (1909–1942), mathematician
 
1910
- Elewter Andronikaschwili (1910–1989), physicist and university professor
 - Koka Antonowa (1910-2007), Indologist
 - Georg Birukow (1910–1985), German zoologist and university professor
 - Olga Bergholz (1910–1975), writer
 - Anatole de Grunwald (1910–1967), Russian-British film producer
 - Michail Ignátieff (1910–1991), German balalaika virtuoso and composer of Russian origin
 - Barys Kit (1910–2018), mathematician, physicist and chemist
 - Pavel Klushanzew (1910–1999), film director
 - Vera Kopetz (1910–1998), German painter and graphic artist
 - Boris Konstantinow (1910–1969), physicist and university professor
 - Hans Leberecht (1910–1960), Russian-Estonian writer
 - George G. Lorentz (1910–2006), Russian-American mathematician
 - Léon Poliakov (1910–1997), French historian
 - Eva Priester (1910–1982), Austrian journalist and historian
 - Konstantin Sergejew (1910–1992), ballet dancer
 - Alexander Tolusch (1910–1969), chess grandmaster
 - Galina Ulanowa (1910-1998), prima ballerina
 - Vitaly Ustinov (1910–2006), First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad from 1985 to 2001
 
1911-1920
1911
- Marija Barabanowa (1911–1993), theater and film actress and voice actress
 - Michail Botvinnik (1911–1995), sixth world chess champion
 - Yrjö von Grönhagen (1911–2003), Finnish author and researcher
 - George MA Hanfmann (1911–1986), American classical archaeologist of Russian origin
 - Benjamin Idelson (1911–1972), Israeli architect
 - Alexander Issachenko (1911–1978), Austrian linguist of Russian origin
 - Harald Kalnins (1911–1997), Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Central Asia
 - Nicholas Kemmer (1911–1998), British physicist with Russian-German roots
 - Boris Kostelanetz (1911–2006), American lawyer
 - Janusz Minkiewicz (1911–1981), writer, poet, satirist, journalist and translator
 - Nikolai Nowotelnow (1911-2006), chess player
 - Alexis Scamoni (1911–1993), German forest and hunting scientist
 - David Shoenberg (1911-2004), British physicist
 - Jakob Segal (1911–1995), German biologist
 - Pyotr Spiwak (1911–1992), physicist
 
1912
- Irina Benua (1912–2004), architect and restorer
 - Marija Glasowskaja (1912–2016), soil scientist, geochemist and university professor
 - Lev Gumiljow (1912–1992), historian, ethnologist, poet and translator from the Persian language
 - Leonid Kantorowitsch (1912–1986), mathematician and economist; 1975 Nobel Prize in Economics
 - Nathan Leites (1912–1987), American social researcher and political scientist of Russian origin
 - Maximilian Leo (1912–1998), German-Finnish painter
 - Nikita Magaloff (1912-1992), pianist
 - Alfred Mansfeld (1912–2004), Israeli architect
 - Arseni Maximow (1912–2003), architect
 - Assia Noris (1912–1998), Italian actress of Russian origin
 - Vadim Salmanov (1912–1978), composer
 - Yevgeny Samoilov (1912-2006), actor
 - Georgi Swishchev (1912–1999), aerodynamicist and university professor
 - Jakow Terlezki (1912–1993), theoretical physicist
 - Michail Wolkenstein (1912–1992), biophysicist
 
1913
- Pierre Basilewsky (1913–1993), Belgian entomologist of Russian origin
 - Alexandre Bennigsen (1913–1988), Russian-French historian
 - Raissa Berg (1913–2006), Soviet-US-American-French geneticist and university professor
 - Nikita Bogoslowski (1913–2004), composer, conductor, pianist, music journalist, author and humorist
 - Nikolai Gwosdezki (1913–1994), geographer and university professor
 - Ansa Ikonen (1913–1989), Finnish film and theater actor and singer
 - Horst W. Janson (1913–1982), German-American art historian, curator and university professor
 - Boris Stepanow (1913–1987), physicist and university professor
 - Cyrille Toumanoff (1913–1997), Georgian-Russian-American historian
 - Jurij A. Treguboff (1913–2000), Russian-German writer
 - Alexander Tschakowski (1913–1994), writer and journalist
 
1914
- Marina von Ditmar (1914–2014), German-Baltic theater and film actress
 - Mark Gallai (1914–1998), test pilot and engineer
 - Marija Kapnist (1914–1993), Soviet-Ukrainian film actress
 - Lyudmila Kupriyanova (1914–1987), botanist
 - Bernt von Kügelgen (1914–2002), German journalist
 - Gottfried Lessing (1914–1979), German lawyer and diplomat from the GDR
 - Hans Hellmuth Ruete (1914–1987), German diplomat
 - Nicolas de Staël (1914–1955), French painter of Russian-Baltic origin
 
1915
- Jakow Belenki (1915–1989), theater and film actor and voice actor
 - Lidija Charlemagne (1915–1963), painter
 - Igor Djakonow (1915–1999), ancient orientalist, linguist and historian
 - Grigori Frid (1915–2012), composer, painter and writer
 - Pawel Kadotschnikow (1915–1988), actor, director and screenwriter
 - Walter Masing (1915-2004), German physicist and entrepreneur
 - Tatiana von Metternich-Winneburg (1915–2006), German painter, writer and patron of Russian origin
 - Georg Puchert (1915–1959), German-Baltic arms dealer
 - Boris Rauschenbach (1915–2001), Russian-German physicist and one of the founders of Soviet space travel
 - Anatoli Regel (1915–1989), physicist and university professor
 - Sergei Schilkin (1915–2007), German entrepreneur of Russian origin
 - Georgi Schschonow (1915-2005), actor
 - Konstantin Simonow (1915–1979), writer, poet and war correspondent
 
1916
- Dmitri Bibikow (1916–1997), zoologist
 - Tatjana Lietz (1916–2001), German painter, language and art teacher
 - Zoé Oldenburg (1916–2002), painter, historian and writer
 - Marija Orbeli (1916–1949), nuclear physicist
 - Alexander Rutsch (1916–1997), Austrian portrait painter and draftsman
 - Kyra Vayne (1916–2001), Russian-British opera singer
 
1917
- Paul Limberg (1917–1997), German crop scientist
 - Richard Breyer (1917–1999), German historian
 - Anna Marly (1917–2006), French singer and songwriter
 - Roman Matsov (1917–2001), Estonian conductor and violinist of German Baltic origin
 - Boris Rosenfeld (1917–2008), mathematician and mathematician
 - Valery Troitskaya (1917–2010), geophysicist
 - Wladislaw Wojewodski (1917–1967), chemist and university professor
 
1918
- Efim Etkind (1918–1999), literary scholar and translator
 
1919
- Vera Altaiskaja (1919–1978), actress
 - Irina Baronova (1919–2008), Russian-British ballet dancer and actress
 - Michail Schulz (1919–2006), physical chemist and university professor
 - Galina Ustvolskaya (1919–2006), composer
 
1920
- Wiktor-Andrei Borowik-Romanow (1920–1997), physicist
 - Wladimir Kibaltschitsch (1920–2005), revolutionary and artist
 - Georg Ots (1920–1975), Soviet-Estonian singer
 
1921-1930
1922
- Aris Alexandrou (1922–1978), writer
 - Igor Gramberg (1922–2002), geologist
 - Juri Lotman (1922–1993), literary scholar and semiotic
 - Lidija Schtykan (1922–1982), theater and film actress
 - Lidija Selichowa (1922–2003), speed skater
 
1923
- Valentina Leontjewa (1923-2007), television presenter
 - Daniil Schafran (1923-1997), cellist
 
1924
- Natalja Bechterewa (1924–2008), neurophysiologist
 - Eugene Dynkin (1924–2014), Russian-American mathematician
 - Alexander Jessenin-Wolpin (1924–2016), Russian-American mathematician and poet
 - Boris Lurie (1924–2008), American artist and author
 - Mikhail Nossyrew (1924–1981), composer
 - Wladimir Uchow (1924–1996), walker, European champion (1954)
 
1925
- Kirill Lavrov (1925–2007), theater and film actor
 - Hanns Simons (1925–1984), German civil engineer and professor at the TU Braunschweig
 - Wiktorija Strusman (1925–2016), architect
 - Vladimir Wawilow (1925–1973), guitarist, lutenist and composer
 - Wiktor Wilner (1925–2017), artist
 - Dmitri Volkov (1925–1996), theoretical physicist
 
1926
- Valentin Falin (1926–2018), diplomat and author
 - Leonid Grigoryev (* 1926), long jumper
 - Sergej Jachontow (1926–2018), linguist and sinologist
 - Ninel Myshkova (1926–2003), actress
 - Sinaida Portnowa (1926–1944), partisan
 - Lev Russow (1926–1987), painter
 - Larissa Volpert (1926–2017), Estonian philologist and chess player
 - Soja Wassilkowa (1926–2008), actress
 - Galina Vishnevskaya (1926–2012), opera singer
 - Anahit Zizikjan (1926–1999), Armenian violist
 
1927
- Igor Dmitrijew (1927–2008), film and theater actor
 - Iwan Hecker (1927–1989), plasma physicist
 - Werner Jarowinsky (1927–1990), GDR politician
 - Nikolai Tatarinov (1927-2017), pentathlete
 
1928
- Tatjana Birschtein (* 1928), physicist and university professor
 - Witali Bujanowski (1928–1993), horn player and composer
 - Yuri Nikolajewitsch Ivanov (1928–1994), writer
 - Boris Khazanov (* 1928), author
 - Nikolai Dobronrawow (* 1928), poet
 - Wiktor Golant (1928–2008), physicist and university professor
 - Alexander Gomelski (1928–2005), basketball player and coach
 - Yuri Ivanov (1928–1994), writer
 - Anatoli Kolodkin (1928–2011), lawyer, judge at the International Tribunal for the Sea
 - Igor Kon (1928–2011), sociologist and sexologist
 - Margarita Maslennikowa (* 1928), cross-country skier
 
1929
- Yuri Arzutanow (1929–2019), engineer, pioneer of the space elevator
 - Roland Dobruschin (1929–1995), mathematician
 - Leonid Glikman (1929-2000), paleichthyologist
 - Levan Kalyayev (1929-1984), sprinter
 - Nikolai Karlow (1929–2014), physicist and university professor
 - Sofja Muratowa (1929-2006), gymnast
 - Lyubow Rebane (1929–1991), physicist and university professor
 - Klara Rumjanowa (1929-2004), actress and singer
 - Juli Vorontsov (1929–2007), diplomat
 
1930
- Lasar Berman (1930-2005), pianist
 - Leonid Kharitonov (1930–1987), theater and film actor
 - Gerassim Eliaschberg (* 1930), theoretical physicist
 - Vladimir Filov (1930–2006), toxicologist and library director
 - Ilja Glasunow (1930–2017), painter
 - Wladimir Gribow (1930–1997), physicist
 - Alexander Kapljanski (* 1930), solid state physicist and university professor
 - Valentina Litujewa (1930-2008), track and field athlete
 - Ekaterina Mamlejewa (* 1930), electrical engineer and mountaineer
 - Boris Parygin (1930–2012), philosopher, sociologist and psychologist
 - Andrei Petrow (1930–2006), composer
 - Dmitri Rundquist (* 1930), geologist, mineralogist and university professor
 - Yuri Tjukalow (1930-2018), rower and Olympic champion ( 1952 and 1956 )
 - Pavel Wostryakov (* 1930), racing cyclist
 
1931-1940
1931
- Anatoli Bogdanow (1931–2001), marksman and Olympic champion in 1952 , 1956
 - Rostislaw Boiko (1931–2002), composer
 - Irina Fyodorova (1931-2010), historian and ethnographer
 - Andrei Gontschar (1931–2012), mathematician
 - Georgi Grechko (1931-2017), cosmonaut
 - Viktor Kortschnoi (1931–2016), Swiss chess grandmaster of Russian origin
 - Vladimir Kuznetsov (1931–1986), javelin thrower
 - Anatoli Lein (1931–2018), American and Soviet chess master
 - Mark Lubotsky (* 1931), violinist
 - German Okunew (1931–1973), composer, pianist and educator
 - Wiktor Schamburkin (1931–2018), marksman and Olympic champion in 1960
 - Galina Sybina (* 1931), athlete
 - Alexander Voronel (* 1931), Russian-Israeli physicist, university professor and publicist
 - Wladimir Zytowitsch (1931–2012), composer, pianist, musicologist and music teacher
 
1932
- Juri Aronowitsch (1932–2002), Israeli conductor
 - Yevgeny Avrorin (1932–2018), physicist and university professor
 - Juri Baldin (* 1932), Soviet-Ukrainian sculptor
 - Mark Ermler (1932–2002), conductor
 - Vladimir Fedosejew (* 1932), conductor
 - Nina Golubkowa (1932-2009), lichenologist
 - Ildar Ibragimow (* 1932), mathematician
 - Igor Kobsarew (1932–1991), theoretical particle physicist
 - Leopold Mitrofanow (1932–1992), chess composer
 - Vyacheslav Osiko (1932–2019), solid-state physicist
 - Oleg Protopopov (* 1932), figure skater
 - Gennady Shatkov (1932-2009), boxer
 - Sergei Slonimski (1932–2020), composer, pianist and musicologist
 - Yuri Stepanov (1932–1963), athlete
 - Peter Wegner (1932–2017), American computer scientist
 - Yuri Wolynzew (1932–1999), film and theater actor
 
1933
- Irina Belezkaja (* 1933), chemist and organometallic chemist
 - Valentin Boreiko (1933–2012), rower and rowing coach
 - Wiktor Chawin (1933–2015), mathematician
 - Georgi Georgiev (* 1933), molecular biologist
 - Anatoly Lutikow (1933–1989), chess player
 - Rosetta Schilina (1933–2003), mathematician and computer scientist
 - Anatoli Stolbow (1933–1996), theater and film actor
 - Boris Strugazki (1933–2012), astronomer and science fiction author
 - Anatoli Werschik (* 1933), mathematician
 
1934
- Sinaida Doinikova (1934-2011), shot putter
 - Ludwig Faddejew (1934–2017), physicist and mathematician
 - Alissa Freindlich (* 1934), actress and singer
 - Andrei Gagarin (1934–2011), physicist
 - Oleg Golowanow (1934–2019), rower, Olympic champion and rowing coach
 - Vadim Gurewitsch (* 1934), physicist and university professor
 - Anatoly Ivanov (1934–2012), solo timpanist, composer and conductor
 - Oleg Kalugin (* 1934), political activist and former KGB major general
 - Wladimir Lobaschow (1934–2011), physicist
 - Marina Salje (1934–2012), geologist and politician
 - Tatiana Samoilowa (1934-2014), actress
 - Nina Uralzewa (* 1934), mathematician
 - Dmitri Warschalowitsch (1934–2020), astrophysicist and university professor
 
1935
- Rid Gratschow (1935-2004), writer
 - Sergei Jurski (1935–2019), actor, screenwriter and director
 - Olga Larionova (* 1935), writer and science fiction writer from the Soviet Union
 - Valery Mironenko (1935–2000), geologist and university professor
 - Irina Turowa (1935–2012), track and field athlete
 
1936
- Anatoli Albul (1936-2013), wrestler
 - Nikolai Dobrezow (* 1936), geologist and university professor
 - Yevgeny Alexandrov (* 1936), physicist and university professor
 - German Lukjanow (1936–2019), jazz musician
 - Anatoly Michailow (* 1936), athlete
 - Eugenijus Petrovas (* 1936), Lithuanian politician of Russian origin
 - Lyudmila Werbizkaja (1936–2019), linguist, Russianist and university professor
 
1937
- Andrei Bitow (1937-2018), writer
 - Olga Bondarewa (1937–1991), mathematician and university professor
 - Vladimir Buslaev (1937–2012), mathematical physicist
 - Dolores Hoffmann (* 1937), Estonian glass painter and restorer
 - Anatoly Liberman (* 1937), Russian-American linguist and medievalist
 - Wladimir Masja (* 1937), mathematician
 - Alexei Petrov (1937–2009), racing cyclist
 - Boris Spasski (* 1937), Russian-French chess player and the 10th world chess champion
 - Valentina Schaprunowa (* 1937), long jumper
 - Juri Schmidt (1937–2013), lawyer and human rights activist
 - Viktorija Tokarewa (* 1937), writer and screenwriter
 - Victor Zaslavsky (1937–2009), sociologist
 
1938
- Nina Andrejewa (1938–2020), chemist, university professor and politician
 - Ārons Bogoļubovs (* 1938), judoka
 - Lyudmila Buldakova (1938–2006), volleyball player
 - Daniil Chomski (* 1938), physicist
 - Alexei Efros (* 1938), Russian-American theoretical solid-state physicist
 - Leo Feigin (* 1938), British music producer and radio host
 - Alexei German (1938–2013), film director and screenwriter
 - Gennadi Golstein (* 1938), jazz musician, composer and alto saxophonist
 - Vitaly Efimov (* 1938), theoretical physicist
 - Alexander Lazarev (1938-2011), actor
 - Boris Melnikow (* 1938), fencer
 - Andrei Myagkov (born 1938), actor
 - Konstantin Nossow (1938–1984), jazz trumpeter, flugelhorn player and composer of modern jazz
 - Ilja Resnik (* 1938), poet
 - Viktor Schdanowitsch (* 1938), fencer, three-time Olympic champion in 1960 and 1964
 - Maxim Shostakovich (* 1938), conductor and pianist
 - Boris Selizki (* 1938), weightlifter and Olympic champion in 1968
 
1939
- Alexander Andrejew (* 1939), physicist
 - Tatjana Anodina (* 1939), aeronautical engineer
 - Wladimir Atlantow (* 1939), opera singer (tenor)
 - Eduard Bersudski (* 1939), sculptor
 - Tamara Danilowa (* 1939), discus thrower
 - Nikolai Kisseljow (1939–2005), Nordic combined athlete
 - Jelena Obraszowa (1939–2015), opera singer
 - Elvīra Ozoliņa (* 1939), Soviet-Latvian athlete
 - Valery Roshdestvensky (1939–2011), cosmonaut
 - Valery Sablin (1939–1976), corvette captain and mutiny leader on the Storoschewoi
 - Lyudmila Samotjossowa (* 1939), sprinter
 - Alewtina Schastitko (* 1939), javelin thrower
 - Rimma Shpakowa (1939-2006), sociologist
 - Marina Skrschinskaja (* 1939), ancient historian
 - Boris Tishchenko (1939–2010), composer
 - Jelena Tschaikowskaja (* 1939), figure skating coach
 
1940
- Joseph Brodsky (1940–1996), Russian-American poet and Nobel Prize for Literature
 - Dmitri Kitajenko (* 1940), conductor
 - Lev Lipatow (1940-2017), physicist
 - Natalja Makarowa (* 1940), ballet dancer
 - Seva Novgorodzew (* 1940), radio presenter and musician
 - Leon Petrosian (* 1940), mathematician
 - Yuri Solovyov (1940–1977), ballet dancer
 
1941-1950
1941-1945
- Irina Asmus (1941–1986), actress and circus performer
 - Anri Dschergenija (1941-2020), Abkhazian politician
 - Igor Feld (1941–2007), pole vaulter
 - Tamara Moskwina (* 1941), figure skater
 - Irina Schnittke (* 1941), pianist
 - Igor Smirnow (* 1941), literary scholar and Slavist
 - Lyudmila Savelyeva (born 1942), actress
 - Wiktor Suslin (* 1944), rower
 - Grigori Schislin (1945–2017), violinist and teacher
 
1946
- Margarita Albedil (* 1946), ethnographer, historian, religious scholar and Indologist
 - Andrei Balaschow (1946–2009), sailor
 - Nikolai Dranitsyn (1946-2010), composer
 - Jakow Eliaschberg (* 1946), mathematician
 - Andrei Hoteev (* 1946), pianist in Germany
 - Kyrill I (* 1946), Patriarch of Moscow and all of Russia since 2009 and thus the head of the Russian Orthodox Church
 - Sergei Leiferkus (* 1946), opera and concert singer ( hero baritone )
 - Irena Szewińska , b. Kirszenstein (1946–2018), Polish athlete and Olympic champion
 
1947
- Tatjana Goritschewa (* 1947), philosopher
 - Igor Ivanov (1947-2005), Canadian chess player of Russian origin
 - Yuri Matijassewitsch (* 1947), mathematician and computer scientist
 - Marina Nejolowa (born 1947), actress
 - Gennadi Nessis (* 1947), chess player and trainer
 - Boris Revut (* 1947), Russian-German scientist, inventor and writer
 
1948
- Martina Haedrich (* 1948), German legal scholar and international law expert
 - Sergei Ignatjew (* 1948), finance and economic politician
 - Pawel Jegorow (1948–2017), pianist, music teacher and music researcher
 - El Kazovskij (1948–2008), Hungarian painter and avant-garde artist
 - Boris Pergamenschtschikow (1948–2004), cellist
 - Mikhail Peunov (* 1948), archer
 - Michail Ryklin (* 1948), philosophy professor and author
 - Andrei Suraikin (1948–1996), figure skater
 - Oleg Wiro (* 1948), mathematician
 
1949
- Mikhail Boyarsky (* 1949), actor, singer and TV presenter
 - Andrei Fursenko (* 1949), politician; Minister of Education and Science from 2004 to 2012
 - Nikolai Ivanov (1949–2012), rower and Olympic champion in a four-man with a helmsman
 - Gennadi Korschikow (* 1949), rower and Olympic champion
 - Natalja Kutschinskaja (* 1949), gymnast and two-time Olympic champion
 - Mikhail Nepomnyashchi (* 1949), chess player
 - Viktor Perevalov (1949-2010), actor
 - Alexander Rogoschkin (* 1949), film director and screenwriter
 - Boris Shcherbakov (born 1949), actor
 - Alexander Sokolow (* 1949), politician and musicologist
 - Galina Stepanskaja (* 1949), speed skater and Olympic champion in 1976
 
1950
- Vyacheslav Dawydow (* 1950), painter in Germany
 - Jelena Firsowa (* 1950), composer
 - Leonid Gosman (* 1950), politician
 - Viatcheslav Kharlamov (* 1950), French-Russian mathematician
 - Alexander Klepikow (* 1950), rower
 - Galina Kreft (1950–2005), canoeist and Olympic champion in 1976
 - Vyacheslav Kulebjakin (* 1950), hurdler
 - Viktor Novoschilow (1950–1991), wrestler; World Champion and European Champion 1974
 - Yuri Ovtschinnikow (* 1950), figure skater
 - Konstantin Raikin (born 1950), actor
 - Grigori Sokolow (* 1950), pianist
 - Vyacheslav Soloduchin (1950–1979), ice hockey player
 - Andrei Suslin (1950–2018), mathematician
 - Boris Tsirelson (1950–2020), Russian-Israeli mathematician
 
1951-1960
1951
- Alexander Below (1951–1978), basketball player
 - Wladimir Kischkun (* 1951), athlete
 - Ilja Klebanow (* 1951), politician and entrepreneur
 - Yuri Kovalchuk (* 1951), physicist, financial businessman and billionaire
 - Nikolai Patrushev (* 1951), secret service official
 - Nikolai Polyakov (* 1951), sailing enthusiast
 - Alexander Rosenbaum (* 1951), songwriter
 - Arkadi Rotenberg (* 1951), entrepreneur
 - Alexei Spiridonow (1951–1998), athlete
 - Dmitri Stukalow (* 1951), hurdler
 - Tatjana Tolstaja (* 1951), writer
 - Alexei Utschitel (* 1951), film director and producer
 
1952
- Semjon Bychkov (* 1952), American conductor of Russian origin
 - Leonid Chatschijan (1952-2005), mathematician
 - Alexander Its (* 1952), mathematician
 - Vladimir Putin (* 1952), politician, President of Russia from 2000 to 2008, and since 2012
 - Alexander Saizew (* 1952), figure skater
 - Vyacheslav Saizew (* 1952), volleyball player
 
1953
- Igor Bobrin (* 1953), figure skater
 - Valeri Dolinin (* 1953), rower
 - Boris Grebenschtschikow (* 1953), poet and musician
 - Sergei Ivanov (* 1953), politician, Defense Minister of Russia from 2001 to 2007
 - Vera Komissowa (* 1953), track and field athlete and Olympic champion in the 100 m hurdles ( 1980 )
 - Olga Krause (* 1953), songwriter and writer
 - Nikolai Levitschew (* 1953), politician
 - Sergei Mironov (* 1953), politician
 - Eugene S. Polzik (* 1953), Soviet-Danish physicist
 - Michail Zurabow (* 1953), politician and diplomat
 - Vladimir Churov (* 1953), politician
 
1954
- Alexander Aksinin (1954-2020), athlete and Olympic champion ( 1980 )
 - Valeriu Caceanov (* 1954), decathlete
 - Alexandre Egorov (* 1954), Russian-Swiss painter, graphic artist and haiku poet
 - Vyacheslav Fursov (* 1954), walker
 - Dmitri Grigoryev (* 1954), mathematician
 - Irina Levitina (* 1954), American chess and bridge player of Russian origin
 - Sergei Naryschkin (* 1954), economist and politician
 - Vladimir Ossokin (* 1954), racing cyclist
 
1955
- Alexander Etkind (* 1955), psychologist and cultural scientist
 - Alexander Feklistow (* 1955), actor
 - Aljaksandr Hryhorjeu (* 1955), high jumper
 - Anna Kondraschina (* 1955), rower
 - Evgenij Kozlov (* 1955), painter
 - Alexander Radwilowitsch (* 1955), composer and pianist
 - Iwan Soltanowski (* 1955), diplomat
 
1956
- Dmitri Dmitrijew (* 1956), long-distance runner
 - Irina Fetissowa (* 1956), swimmer and rower
 - Alexander Kochiev (* 1956), chess player
 - Andrei Krylow (* 1956), swimmer and Olympic champion in 1980
 - Oleg Sokolow (* 1956), historian
 - Alexander Volberg (* 1956), Russian-American mathematician
 
1957
- Michail Bezrodnyj (* 1957), literary scholar and writer
 - Andrei Boreiko (* 1957), conductor
 - Wiktor Diduk (* 1957), rower
 - Jelena Tschischowa (* 1957), writer
 - Alexander Ditjatin (* 1957), gymnast and Olympic champion in 1980
 - Elena Donaldson-Akhmilovskaya (1957–2012), Soviet and American chess player
 - Nikolai Drosdezki (1957–1995), ice hockey player
 - Alexei Junejew (* 1957), chess master and coach
 - Andrei Kossinski (* 1957), composer and singer
 - Leonid Reiman (* 1957), politician
 - Jefim Reswan (* 1957), Arabist and Islamic scholar
 - Boris Rotenberg (* 1957), Russian-Finnish oligarch
 - Alexander Zheleznyakov (* 1957), writer, journalist, rocket and space technician
 - Andrei Smirnow (1957-2019), swimmer
 
1958
- Andrej Barov (* 1958), German photo artist
 - Oxana Dmitrijewa (* 1958), economist, politician and university professor
 - Sergey Fomin (* 1958), Russian-American mathematician
 - Valery Kleschnjow (* 1958), rower
 - Sergei Krikaljow (* 1958), cosmonaut
 - Arkadi Marasch (* 1958), violinist
 - Andrei Nekrasow (* 1958), screenwriter and film director
 - Alexander Newsorov (* 1958), journalist, reporter, moderator, publicist and member of the State Duma
 - Nikolai Reschetichin (* 1958), mathematician
 - Irina Vorobyova (* 1958), figure skater
 - Alex Yermolinsky (* 1958), American chess grandmaster
 - Arkadi Zenzipér (* 1958), pianist, piano professor and music organizer
 
1959
- Dmitry Barash (* 1959), American chess player
 - Leonid Judassin (* 1959), Israeli chess master of Russian origin
 - Oleg Jurjew (1959–2018), Russian and German poet, novelist, playwright, essayist and translator
 - Alexei Kassatonov (born 1959), ice hockey player
 - Yakov Kreizberg (1959–2011), American conductor of Russian origin
 - Oleg Wassiljew (* 1959), figure skater (pair skating) and Olympic champion
 
1960
- Kirill Ivanov (* 1960), marksman
 - Vyacheslav Yakovlev (* 1960), boxer
 - Vladimir Matuchin (* 1960), actor, acting teacher, theater pedagogue and director
 - Misha Quint (* 1960), cellist
 - Gal Rasché (* 1960), Russian-Austrian conductor, pianist and university professor
 - Vladimir Salnikow (* 1960), swimmer
 - Igor Sechin (* 1960), politician and manager
 - Sergei Smirnow (1960–2003), shot putter
 - Vladimir Volkov (* 1960), jazz musician
 
1961-1970
1961
- Ilona Bronewitskaja (* 1961), actress, singer and presenter
 - Weniamin But (* 1961), rower and rowing official of the Russian Rowing Association
 - Igor Butman (* 1961), jazz saxophonist, big band leader and composer
 - Georgi Gurjanow (1961–2013), singer and artist
 - Andrei Illarionow (* 1961), economist
 - Sergei Ivanov (* 1961), chess grandmaster
 - Marusja Klimowa (* 1961), writer and translator
 - Jekatherina Lebedewa (* 1961), German linguist and translation scholar
 - Ivan Mishchenko (* 1961), racing cyclist
 - Alexander Oreschkin (* 1961), darts player
 - Marina Serkowa (* 1961), high jumper
 - Juri Sokolow (1961–1990), judoka
 
1962
- Valeri Broschin (1962–2009), football player and coach
 - Sergei Dowgalyuk (* 1962), horn player
 - Nikolai Fomenko (* 1962), entrepreneur, actor, musician and racing driver
 - Yevgeny Jelin (* 1962), politician
 - Oleg Makarov (* 1962), figure skater
 - Alexei Miller (* 1962), entrepreneur, CEO of Gazprom
 - Alexander Puliaev (* 1962), pianist
 - Dmitri Sidorow (1962–2016), documentary filmmaker and university professor
 - Tatjana Rubzowa (* 1962), chess player
 - Andrei Ryabov (* 1962), jazz musician
 - Sergei Tchoban (* 1962), German architect of Russian descent
 - Alexei Tschistjakow (1962–2012), painter and artist of Abstract Expressionism
 - Andrei Wassiljew (* 1962), rower
 - Dmitri Wassiljew (* 1962), biathlete
 - Wiktor Zoi (1962–1990), rock musician and actor
 
1963
- Olga Borodina (* 1963), opera singer
 - Yevgeny Fyodorov (* 1963), politician
 - Yuri Golowschtschikow (* 1963), ski jumper
 - Juri Kasparjan (* 1963), guitarist
 - Michail Krawez (* 1963), ice hockey player and coach
 - Michail Krotow (* 1963), lawyer and statesman
 - Andrei Lankow (* 1963), orientalist
 - Viktor Naimark (* 1963), German painter, sculptor and architect
 - Nik Perumow (* 1963), fantasy and science fiction author
 - Larissa Selesnjowa (* 1963), figure skater
 - Gennady Timofeev (* 1963), football player
 - Jelena Walowa (* 1963), figure skater in pair skating and Olympic champion
 
1964
- Julija Bogdanowa (* 1964), swimmer
 - Sergei Dmitrijew (* 1964), football player and coach
 - Alexei Gussarow (* 1964), ice hockey player
 - Sergei Pushkov (* 1964), ice hockey player and coach
 - Daniel Sarezki (* 1964), organist and university professor
 - Sergei Schendelew (* 1964), ice hockey player and coach
 - Yevgeny Sidichin (* 1964), actor and television presenter
 - Svetlana Varganowa (* 1964), swimmer
 
1965
- Konstantin Bronsit (* 1965), animator and film director
 - Nina Gawriljuk (* 1965), cross-country skier
 - Vladimir Jepishin (* 1965), chess player
 - Juri Khanon (* 1965), writer, composer and award winner of Felix for the best film music (1988)
 - Dmitri Medvedev (* 1965), politician, President from 2008 to 2012 and Prime Minister of Russia since 2012
 - Svetlana Medvedeva (* 1965), wife of Dmitri Medvedev
 - Igor Ponomarev (1965-2006), diplomat
 
1966
- Andrei Abduwalijew (* 1966), Uzbek hammer thrower; Olympic champion 1992
 - Jelena Betschke (* 1966), figure skater
 - Oleg Butman (* 1966), jazz drummer
 - Alexander Chalifman (* 1966), chess player and chess grandmaster
 - Ekaterina Golubewa (1966–2011), Russian and French actress
 - Jekaterina Oertel (* 1966), makeup artist and film director
 - Grigori Perelman (* 1966), mathematician
 - Jelena Petrowa (* 1966), judoka
 - Leonid Roschezkin (* 1966), entrepreneur, lawyer and financier
 - Yevgeny Sinichev (* 1966), intelligence officer and governor of Kaliningrad Oblast since 2016
 - Yevgeny Soloshenkin (born 1966), chess player
 - Igor Trandenkow (* 1966), pole vaulter
 - Misha Tsiganov (* 1966), jazz musician
 - Vladimir Vertlib (* 1966), Austrian writer of Russian-Jewish origin
 
1967
- Nischan Daimer (* 1967), German walker
 - Dmitri Nagijew (* 1967), actor, musician, showman and television and radio presenter
 - Yuri Nesterow (* 1967), handball player
 
1968
- Juri Gilbo (* 1968), Russian violist and conductor
 - Irina Kazakova (* 1968), French marathon runner of Russian origin
 - Alexander Konovalov (* 1968), politician
 - Jura Margulis (* 1968), pianist and music teacher
 - Alexander Mostovoi (* 1968), football player
 - Philipp Nikandrov (* 1968), architect
 - Denis Petrow (* 1968), figure skater
 - Alexei Ratmansky (* 1968), dancer and choreographer
 - Maxim Sokolow (* 1968), politician
 - Svetlana Surganowa (* 1968), composer and writer
 - Boris Yoffe (* 1968), Israeli composer
 - Dmitri Zwetkow (* 1968), ice hockey player
 
1969
- Mariella Ahrens , since 2006 Mariella Countess von Faber-Castell (* 1969), German actress
 - Tatiana Bulanova (* 1969), pop singer
 - Vjačeslavs Fanduls (* 1969), Latvian ice hockey player
 - Julia Loktev (* 1969), American film director and video artist
 - Wadim Naumow (* 1969), figure skater
 - Oleg Salenko (born 1969), football player
 - Jelena Schuschunowa (1969-2018), artistic gymnast and two-time Olympic champion
 - Alexander Shnaider (* 1969), Canadian entrepreneur and billionaire
 - Ivan Shvedoff (* 1969), Russian-German actor
 
1970
- Gleb Filschtinski (* 1970), lighting designer
 - Marina Jelzowa (* 1970), figure skater
 - Stanislaw Smirnow (* 1970), mathematician
 - Nikolai Starikow (* 1970), writer, publicist and political activist
 
1971-1980
1971
- Wladislaw Galkin (1971-2010), actor
 - Vasily Karassjow (* 1971), basketball player and coach
 - Dmitri Neljubin (1971-2005), cyclist
 - Mikhail Saizew (* 1971), chess player
 - Peter Tchernyshev (* 1971), figure skater
 
1972
- Alexander Baumgärtel (* 1972), German speed skater
 - Aljoscha Blau (* 1972), German-Russian artist and picture book illustrator
 - Konstantin Chabensky (* 1972), actor
 - Alexei Kulashko (* 1972), New Zealand chess player
 - Yevgenia Shishkova (* 1972), figure skater
 - Gary Shteyngart (* 1972), American cultural journalist and writer of Russian origin
 - Maxim Sokolow (* 1972), ice hockey goalkeeper
 - Dmitri Torgovanov (* 1972), handball player
 - Arcadi Volodos (* 1972), pianist
 - Vladimir Volodenkov (* 1972), rower and bronze medalist at the 1996 Summer Olympics
 
1973
- Aleksey Igudesman (* 1973), Russian-German violinist, composer, conductor and actor
 - Sergei Schnurow (* 1973), rock musician, film music composer and actor
 - Vladimir Tikhonov (* 1973), Korean journalist and historian of Russian origin
 - Wladimir Trojanowski (* 1973), poker player
 - Dina Ugorskaja (1973–2019), Russian-born German pianist
 - Alexei Urmanow (* 1973), figure skater; Olympic champion from 1994
 - Nikolai Walujew (* 1973), professional boxer and former world heavyweight champion of the WBA
 - Mikhail Zaritski (* 1973), Luxembourg soccer player
 
1974
- Joe Deninzon (* 1974), American jazz violinist, band leader and composer
 - Sergei Jekimow (* 1974), composer
 - Yevgenia Malinnikova (* 1974), mathematician
 - Olga Markowa (* 1974), figure skater
 - Vitaly Milonov (* 1974), politician
 - Valery Popov (* 1974), chess player and coach
 - Xenija Rappoport (* 1974), actress
 - Konstantin Sakajew (* 1974), chess master
 - Oleg Snetkov (* 1974), German conductor of Russian origin
 - Maxim Suschinski (* 1974), ice hockey player
 
1975
- Alexei A. Efros (* 1975), American computer scientist and professor
 - Tatiana Grigorieva (* 1975), Australian pole vaulter and Olympic runner-up of Russian origin
 - Alexei Yegorov (1975–2002), ice hockey player
 - Oxana Kazakowa (* 1975), figure skater
 - Lenn Kudrjawizki (* 1975), German actor
 - Viktoria Lakissova (* 1975), pianist in Germany
 - Ilya Lushtak (* 1975), jazz musician living in the United States
 - Olga Matwejewa (* 1975), Spanish beach volleyball player of Russian origin
 - Anastasia Michaeli (* 1975), Israeli politician
 - Ekaterina Panikanova (* 1975), artist
 - Vladislav Radimow (* 1975), national soccer player
 - Konstantin Tschaikin (* 1975), watchmaker
 - Andrei Turchak (* 1975), politician
 
1976
- Dmitry Baevsky (* 1976), jazz saxophonist
 - Alexej Barchevitch (* 1976), violinist and concert master
 - Alexei German (* 1976), film director and screenwriter
 - Wassili Jemelin (* 1976), chess player
 - Vyacheslav Kunayev (* 1976), biathlete
 - Andrejs Mamikins (* 1976), Latvian journalist and politician
 - Jana Nekrasowa (* 1976), curler
 - Wassili Petrenko (* 1976), conductor
 - Dmitri Sennikow (* 1976), national soccer player
 - Anton Sicharulidze (* 1976), figure skater
 - Marija Strelenko (1976-2011), biathlete
 - Pjotr Swidler (* 1976), chess player and chess grandmaster
 - Diana Vishnyova (* 1976), ballet dancer
 
1977
- Dmitri Borodin (* 1977), football goalkeeper
 - Boris Netsvetaev (* 1977), jazz musician
 - Dmitri Patrushev (* 1977), bank manager and economist
 - Marija Petrowa (* 1977), figure skater
 - Sergei Rosin (* 1977), ice hockey player
 - Andrei Semjonow (* 1977), sprinter
 - Alexei Volodin (* 1977), pianist
 
1978
- Valentina Ciurina (* 1978), Moldovan biathlete
 - Alexei Dyachenko (* 1978), fencer
 - Yevgenia Issakova (* 1978), athlete
 - Marina Kislowa (* 1978), athlete
 - Jewgenija Olschewskaja (* 1978), water diver
 - Nikolai Rybakov (* 1978), politician and environmental activist
 - Iwan Urgant (* 1978), television presenter, actor and musician
 
1979
- Vyacheslav Malafeyev (* 1979), football goalkeeper
 - Jelena Nechayeva (* 1979), fencer
 - Svetlana Pospelowa (* 1979), track and field athlete
 - Natalja Russakowa (* 1979), sprinter
 - Anastassija Schwedawa (* 1979), Belarusian athlete of Russian origin
 - Alexei Sokolow (* 1979), marathon runner
 - Dmitri Tschelkak (* 1979), mathematician
 
1980
- Mihail Gribușencov (* 1980), Russian-born Moldovan biathlete
 - Alexei Jagudin (* 1980), figure skater, Olympic champion and four-time world champion
 - Andrei Kapralow (* 1980), swimmer
 - Jelena Karpowa (* 1980), basketball player
 - Wladimir Karpez (* 1980), cyclist and participant in the Tour de France 2004 and 2005
 - Sergei Klimow (* 1980), racing cyclist
 - Margarita Levieva (* 1980), American gymnast and actress
 - Maimuna (* 1980), Belarusian violinist of Russian origin
 - Olga Peretyatko (* 1980), singer
 - Stas Pjecha (* 1980), pop singer, musician and poet
 - Olga Sabelinskaja (* 1980), racing cyclist
 - Alexei Severinov (* 1980), squash player
 - Yevgeny Sudbin (* 1980), pianist
 - Igor Syssojew (* 1980), professional triathlete
 
1981-1990
1981
- Natalja Antjuch (* 1981), track and field athlete and Olympian
 - Andrei Arshavin (* 1981), football player
 - Lidia Baich (* 1981), Austrian violinist
 - Anatoli Bogdanow (* 1981), Russian-Kazakh football player
 - Olga Dmitrijewa (* 1981), triathlete
 - Lena Gorelik (* 1981), German journalist and writer
 - Andrei Ivanov (* 1981), ice hockey player
 - Michail Jelgin (born 1981), tennis player
 - Kat Kaufmann (* 1981), German-Russian writer and composer
 - Evgeni Kozhevnikov (* 1981), Israeli ice hockey player
 - Michail Kozhevnikov (* 1981), Israeli ice hockey player
 - Peter Ovtcharov (* 1981), pianist
 - Kirill Safronow (* 1981), ice hockey player
 - Xenija Sobchak (* 1981), TV presenter
 
1982
- Ekaterina Abramova (* 1982), speed skater
 - Jelena Bogomasowa (* 1982), swimmer
 - Victoria Chalaya (* 1982), American-Russian actress and model
 - Marina Goschkijewa (* 1982), Russian pianist
 - Maxim Kedrin (* 1982), ski racer
 - Ekaterina Marennikowa (* 1982), handball player
 - Alexander Markunzow (* 1982), figure skater
 - Jelena Perepelkina (* 1982), wrestler
 - Sergei Slavnov (* 1982), figure skater
 - Kirill Troussov (* 1982), violinist and violin teacher
 - Viktorija Woltschkowa (* 1982), figure skater
 
1983
- Konstantin Bogdanowski (* 1983), ice hockey player
 - Nikita Jeskow (* 1983), track and road cyclist
 - Marina Kim (* 1983), TV presenter and actress
 - Sergei Malow (* 1983), violinist and violist
 - Konstantin Menschow (* 1983), figure skater
 - Darja Moros (* 1983), actress
 - Julija Novikowa (* 1983), coloratura soprano
 - Alina Pogostkina (* 1983), German violinist
 - Alexandra Schirjajewa (* 1983), beach volleyball player
 - Lola Woronina (* 1983), politician
 - Zara (* 1983), pop singer and actress
 
1984
- Daniel Austrich (* 1984), violinist
 - Natalia Belitski (* 1984), German actress
 - Anna Bogdanowa (* 1984), heptathlete
 - Svetlana Bolshakova (* 1984), Belgian triple jumper of Russian origin
 - Igor Denisov (* 1984), football player
 - Pawel Durow (* 1984), entrepreneur, founder of vk.com
 - Pyotr Pawlensky (* 1984), conceptual artist and political activist
 - Ilja Smorguner (* 1984), German karateka
 - Irina Terentjeva (* 1984), Lithuanian cross-country skier
 
1985
- Yevgeny Alexejew (* 1985), chess player
 - Jelisaveta Boyarskaya (* 1985), theater and cinema actress
 - Salvador Hidalgo Oliva (* 1985), German-Cuban volleyball player
 - Michail Ignatjew (* 1985), racing cyclist
 - Jekaterina Jurlowa-Percht (* 1985), biathlete
 - Alexandra Kirjaschowa (* 1985), pole vaulter
 - Miroslaw Kultyshev (* 1985), pianist
 - Olga Kuschela (* 1985), synchronized swimmer and 2008 Olympic champion
 - Svetlana Kuznetsova (* 1985), tennis player, winner of the US Open 2004 and the French Open 2009
 - Anton Malyshev (* 1985), ice hockey player
 - Marija Muchortowa (* 1985), figure skater
 - Palina Rojinski (* 1985), German presenter of Russian origin
 - Natalya Rudakova (* 1985), actress and model
 - Mikhail Zhukov (* 1985), ice hockey player
 - Nadseja Skardsina (* 1985), Belarusian biathlete
 - Serafim Smigelskiy (* 1985), Russian-American cellist
 - Nikolai Trussow (* 1985), track and road cyclist
 - Konstantin Volkov (* 1985), ice hockey player
 - Ilja Zaragatski (* 1985), German chess grandmaster of Russian origin
 - Jurijs Žigajevs (* 1985), Latvian football player
 
1986
- Andrei Baranow (* 1986), violinist and concert master
 - Wadim Bogdanow (* 1986), handball goalkeeper
 - Olga Esina (* 1986), ballet dancer
 - Mike Gorodinsky (* 1986), American poker player
 - Yekaterina Kostezkaja (* 1986), middle-distance runner
 - Alexander Lubyantsev (* 1986), pianist
 - Polina Michailowa (* 1986), table tennis player
 - Igor Misko (1986-2010), ice hockey player
 - Timofej Mosgow (* 1986), basketball player
 - Anna Nasarowa (* 1986), long jumper
 - Iwan Nedelko (* 1986), tennis player
 - Anton Ponkraschow (* 1986), basketball player
 - Marija Prokopjewa (* 1986), beach volleyball player
 - Boris Rotenberg (* 1986), Finnish-Russian soccer player
 - Igor Teplyi (* 1986), Danish chess player of Russian origin
 - Ekaterina Vasilyeva (* 1986), figure skater
 
1987
- Oxana Akinschina (* 1987), actress
 - Denis Alexejew (* 1987), athlete
 - Ekaterina Djatschenko (* 1987), saber fencer and Olympic champion
 - Maya Fadeeva (* 1987), singer
 - Grigori Falko (* 1987), swimmer
 - Vladimir Garin (1987-2003), actor
 - Andrei Gawrilow (* 1987), ice hockey goalkeeper
 - Margarita Gritskova (* 1987), opera and lieder singer
 - Nikita Khartchenkov (* 1987), German basketball player of Russian origin
 - Alina Kudrjaschewa (* 1987), poet
 - Sergei Kuzmin (* 1987), boxer
 - Ivan Rowny (* 1987), racing cyclist
 - Natalja Schljachtenko (* 1987), triathlete
 - Grigory Shklyar (* 1987), director and video artist
 - Sofya Skya (* 1987), ballerina, actress and director
 - Zhenya Strigalev (* 1987), jazz musician
 - Nikita Witjugow (* 1987), chess grandmaster
 
1988
- Ljukman Adams (* 1988), triple jumper
 - Arkimedes Arguelyes (* 1988), road cyclist
 - Markus Dupree (* 1988), porn actor
 - Denis Ignatov (* 1988), German-Russian photographer and director
 - Yevgeny Kabayev (* 1988), football player
 - Leonid Krasnow (* 1988), track and road cyclist
 - Igor Kurganov (* 1988), poker player
 - Marija Orlowa (* 1988), skeleton athlete
 - Alexandra Rojkov (* 1988), German journalist
 - Michail Schubin (* 1988), professional triathlete
 - Alexandre Sidorenko (* 1988), French tennis player
 - Wiktor Wassin (* 1988), football player
 
1989
- Natalja Bojewa (* 1989), mezzo-soprano
 - Carolina Dementiev (* 1989), triathlete
 - Alexander Enbert (* 1989), figure skater
 - Sergei Fessikow (* 1989), swimmer
 - Katarina Gerboldt (* 1989), figure skater
 - Alexei Grigoryev (* 1989), pianist
 - Nadezhda Grischajewa (* 1989), basketball player
 - Andrij Jarmolenko (* 1989), Ukrainian football player
 - Michail Koslowski (* 1989), racing car driver
 - Alex Lenderman (* 1989), American chess master of Russian origin
 - Tatyana McFadden (* 1989), American wheelchair athlete of Russian origin
 - Valeri Minkenen (* 1989), Finnish football player
 - Anna Polina (* 1989), porn actress and model
 - Maxim Rodshtein (* 1989), Israeli chess player
 - Maryja Schkanawa (* 1989), Belarusian ski racer
 - Grigori Schkarupa (* 1989), opera singer
 - Kirill Sokolow (* 1989), film director and screenwriter
 - Alexandra Strunin (* 1989), Polish singer of Russian origin
 - Anna Wosakowa (* 1989), beach volleyball player
 - Anton Yelchin (1989–2016), American film actor of Russian-Jewish origin
 
1990
- Maxim Dadaschew (1990-2019), professional boxer
 - Danyyil Dvirnyy (* 1990), Italian chess player
 - Tatiana Feldman (* 1990), German actress
 - Fyodor Klimow (* 1990), figure skater
 - Marija Komissarowa (* 1990), ski crosser
 - Aljona Leonowa (* 1990), figure skater
 - Xenia Polikarpova (* 1990), badminton player
 - Alexandra Rasarjonowa (* 1990), triathlete
 - Sofia Rudjewa (* 1990), model
 - Nikolai Sabolotny (* 1990), football goalkeeper
 - Marija Schorez (* 1990), triathlete
 - Georgi Surkov (* 1990), biathlete
 - Jekaterina Syrzewa (* 1990), beach volleyball player
 - Julia Vlassov (* 1990), American figure skater
 
1991-2000
1991
- Juryj Danilachkin (* 1991), Belarusian ski racer
 - Alexander Majorov (* 1991), Swedish figure skater of Russian origin
 - Maxim Matlakow (* 1991), chess player
 - Natalija Paulauskaitė (* 1991), Lithuanian biathlete
 - Ilya Sakharov (* 1991), water diver
 - Alexei Stadler (* 1991), cellist
 - Nikita Totschizki (* 1991), ice hockey player
 
1992
- Vyacheslav Barkov (* 1992), Nordic combined athlete
 - Anastassija Brysgalowa (* 1992), curler
 - Kirill Grigorjan (* 1992), marksman
 - Andrei Jakowlew (* 1992), tennis player
 - Anastassija Kedrina (* 1992), ski racer
 - Alexander Kruschelnizki (* 1992), curler
 - Xenija Makarowa (* 1992), figure skater
 - Viktor Manakow (* 1992), cyclist
 - Denis Nagulin (* 1992), automobile racing driver
 - Alexei Romaschow (* 1992), ski jumper
 - Yevgeny Shalunov (* 1992), racing cyclist
 - Alexander Schimanow (* 1992), chess player
 - Xenija Stolbowa (* 1992), figure skater
 - Kirill Sweschnikow (* 1992), racing cyclist
 
1993
- Sergei Karassjow (* 1993), basketball player
 
1994
- Alexander Barabanov (* 1994), ice hockey player
 - Anish Giri (* 1994), Dutch chess grandmaster of Russian-Nepalese origin
 - Antonio Morella (* 1994), football player
 - Julia Muzychenko (* 1994), opera singer
 
1995
- Vladimir Fedosejew (* 1995), chess grandmaster
 - Veronika Ivanovskaia (* 1995), German pool player
 - Mikhail Koljada (* 1995), figure skater
 - Boris Kotschkin (* 1995), Russian-Georgian ice hockey player
 - Yegor Orudschew (* 1995), automobile racing driver
 - Kirill Prigoda (* 1995), swimmer
 - Denis Shevyrin (* 1995), German ice hockey player
 - Artyom Simonjan (* 1995), Armenian football player
 - Alexandra Stepanova (* 1995), ice dancer
 - Valentin Sykow (* 1995), ice hockey player
 - Anastassija Tschursina (* 1995), racing cyclist
 - Uljana Wassiljewa (* 1995), curler
 
1996
- Anna El-Khashem (* 1996), opera and concert singer
 - Alexei Gassilin (* 1996), football player
 - Dmitri Popko (* 1996), Kazakh-Russian tennis player
 - Ramil Şeydayev (* 1996), Azerbaijani-Russian football player
 
1997
- Lilija Achaimowa (* 1997), artistic gymnast
 - Sofja Proswirnowa (* 1997), short tracker
 
1998
- Darja Gruschina (* 1998), ski jumper
 - Sofja Tichonowa (* 1998), ski jumper
 
1999
- Maria Jakowlewa (* 1999), ski jumper
 - Iwan Kakowski (* 1999), snooker player
 - Dmitri Koslowski (* 1999), figure skater
 - Robert Schwarzman (* 1999), racing driver
 - Marija Walowa (* 1999), snowboarder
 
2000
- Alexandra Glasunowa (* 2000), Nordic combined athlete
 
21st century
- Alexandra Boikowa (* 2002), figure skater
 
Year of birth not known
- Ilya Finkelshteyn , American cellist and music teacher
 
Web links
Commons : People of Saint Petersburg  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files