•
Ivan Sechenov (1829–1905) – Russian physiologist •
Nikodim Kondakov (1844–1925) – Russian historian •
Sergei Witte (1849–1915) – first prime minister of the Russian Empire •
Evgeny Kozubsky (1851–1911) – Russian-Dagestani scholar, educator, and public official •
Aleko Konstantinov (1863–1897) – Bulgarian intellectual who founded the tourist movement in Bulgaria •
Vladimir Lipsky (1863–1937) – Ukrainian botanist •
Danylo Zabolotny (1866-1922) – pioneer in microbiology •
Mariusz Zaruski (1867–1941) – brigadier-general in the Polish Army •
Krste Misirkov (1874–1926) – philologist, journalist, historian and ethnographer •
Ion Nistor (1876–1962) – Romanian historian and politician •
Leon Trotsky (1879–1940) – Russian revolutionary, chairman of the Petrograd Soviet •
Moses Schönfinkel (1888–1942) – Russian logician and mathematician •
Grigorii Fichtenholz (1888–1959) – mathematician •
Volodymyr Kedrowsky (1890–1970) – Ukrainian military leader, diplomat, author, and activist •
Lev Kritzman (1890–1938) – Soviet agrarian economist •
Georges Florovsky (1893–1979) – Russian Orthodox priest and theologian •
Nikolai Chebotaryov (1894–1947) – Ukrainian and Russian mathematician •
Gherman Pântea (1894–1968) – Bessarabian-born soldier, later Military Director of the Moldavian Democratic Republic •
Kadish Luz (1895–1972) – Israeli politician •
Joshua L. Goldberg (1896–1994) – Belarusian-born American rabbi •
Mordechai Namir (1897–1975) – Israeli minister •
George Gamow (1904–1968) – theoretical physicist and cosmologist •
Petro Karyshkovsky (1921–1968)– Ukrainian historian, numismatist •
Ali Mohamed Shein (born 1948) – 7th President of Zanzibar •
Alla Dzhioyeva (born 1949) – South Ossetian teacher turned politician •
Yevhen Streltsov (born 1949) – Ukrainian professor and scientist in law and theology •
Oksana Mas (born 1969) – Ukrainian artist • Valeria Kuharenko (born 1927) – doctor of philological sciences • Olga Hritsenko (1935–2020) – teacher, scientist •
Tetiana Vilchynska (born 1962) – linguist == See also ==