Talk:Dmitrii Bogrov

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Glengrail in topic Old/New Style Dates

Name

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People, I think we need clearance with the name spelling. If we transliterate the original one - it should be exactly as I did it in the text (Dmitriy Bogrov) - as I'm a native speaker. While the ending of Dmitry is I guess phonetically ambiguous. Otherwise, somebody should explain why Dmitry is a common English spelling of a Russian name. Best wishes, AlexPU

Hi, I changed the spelling to what seems to me more a more common version of the Russian name "Dmitriy". There is not much material on Bogrov in English, so I checked how the names of more famous Russian Dmitriys are spelled. Namely Tsarevich Dmitry, Dmitry Donskoi, Dmitry Pozharsky and Dmitry Shostakovich. All except the last one are overwhelmingly spelled as Dmitry, Shostakovich is spelled Dmitri in WP but Britannica also calls him Dmitry. Dmitriy is not widely used, hence I changed the name here. However, I don't feel strongly about this (unlike Kiev/Kyiv name where the English usage preference is clear), so I don't mind if the name is changed back. As for his last name, it was my mistake, sorry. I new him as Bagrov but I checked more sources and, while Bagrov is often used , it seems to be a common error and Bogrov is correct. I really appreciate your extensive contributions to Wikipedia. Hope you don't mind my editing of the articles in the areas of common interest. Regards, Irpen 15:29, Mar 18, 2005 (UTC)

Whose two daughters?

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We read in the article:

On 14 September 1911, Dmitry Bogrov shot the Russian Prime Minister, Pyotr Stolypin, in the Kiev Opera House, in front of Tsar Nicholas II and two of his daughters.

In front of whose two daughters, Stolypin's, or Tsar Nicholas' ? Toddcs (talk) 14:23, 25 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Old/New Style Dates

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Someone with access to a better source than I have offhand needs to clear up the Old Style/New Style dates in the article. The O.S. dates given here are later than the N.S. dates--it should at the very least be the other way around, but I'm not sure which set of dates are accurate or where the mistake crept in. Glengrail (talk) 08:44, 14 January 2023 (UTC)Reply