Yudin
Appearance
Yudin (male) and Yudina (female) (Template:Lang-ru) are Russian surnames derived from the name Yuda, a russified version of the former calendar name Jude (given after Jude the Apostle, no longer in use).[1] In Belarus and Western Ukraine the origin might be the Catholic name Judith. Also adopted by Jews following the Partitions of Poland, in reference to a village name Yudino or meaning "the son/daughter of Jude".[2] Not related to the word Jew.
Yudin may refer to:
- Aleksei Yudin (born 1981), Russian professional football player
- Andriy Yudin (born 1967), Ukrainian football player and coach
- Andrei Alekseyevich Yudin (born 1991), Russian professional football player
- Artyom Yudin (born 1989), Russian professional football player
- Benjamin Yudin, American rabbi
- Benjamin P. Yudin (1928–1983), Kazakh scholar of oriental studies
- Boris Stepanovich Yudin (1928–1986), Siberian theriologist
- Ivan Yudin (born 1990), Russian professional football player
- Erik Yudin, Russian philosopher
- Konstantin Yudin (1896–1957), Soviet cinema director and screenwriter
- Konstantin A. Yudin (1912–1980), Soviet zoologist
- Larisa Yudina (1945–1998), Russian journalist and the editor of the opposition newspaper
- Maria Yudina (1899–1970), Soviet pianist
- Mikhail Yudin (born 1976), Russian professional football player
- Robert Yudin (born 1939), Chairman of the Republican Party of the Bergen County, New Jersey
- Sergei Yudin (tenor) (1889–1963), Russian opera singer, a lyric tenor
- Sergei Yudin (surgeon) (1891–1954), Russian physician who developed early blood bank practices
- Stepan Yudin (born 1980), Russian race walker
- Jānis Judiņš (Yan Yudin, 1884–1918), Red Latvian Riflemen commander, hero of the Russian Civil War
- Yelena Yudina (born 1988), Russian skeleton racer
References
- ^ Yuri Fedosiuk. Russian Surnames. Popular Etymological Dictionary. Moscow: Russkie slovari, 1996. ISBN 5-89216-001-7
- ^ What Is the Meaning of the Yudin Surname? Judaism and Jews (in Russian)