Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Salome Andronikashvili ( Russian: Саломея Николаевна Андроникова) (also known as Salomea Ivanovna Andronikova), born Salome Andronikashvili ( Georgian: სალომე ანდრონიკაშვილი) (October 1888 – May 8, 1982) was a Georgian socialite of the literary and artistic world of pre-revolutionary St. Petersburg.

  2. Jul 19, 2019 · From 1925 he was married to Salomea Andronikova, a Georgian princess who was an influential figure in literary and artistic circles in pre-revolutionary St Petersburg and later in emigration in Paris and Britain. During the Second World War Halpern allegedly worked as an MI6 agent in America as part of the British Government Mission.

  3. Salomeya Nikolayevna Andronikashvili Andronikoff-Halpern. Birth. Oct 1888. Tbilisi, Tbilisi, Georgia. Death. 8 May 1982 (aged 93) London, City of London, Greater London, England. Burial. Putney Vale Cemetery and Crematorium. Putney Vale, London Borough of Wandsworth, Greater London, England Add to Map. Plot.

    • Putney Vale, Greater London
    • October 1, 1888
    • Tbilisi, Tbilisi, Georgia
  4. Dedication to Salomea AndronikovaAuthor: Anna AkhmatovaPresented by Dimitry Devdariani, Director of Russian Classics Theatre

  5. Salomea Andronikova married Alexander Halpern in 1925. In 1928 he gave an interview about Freemasonry to Boris Nikolayevsky , later published in the book "Russian Masons and Revolution." He married Salomea Andronikova ; for a long time the couple lived separately, Halpern in London , and his wife in Paris.

  6. His father, Iesse Ivanovich Andronicov, was an officer in the Imperial Russian army; and his father's sister, Salomea Andronikova (1888-1982), was a prominent socialite in the Silver Age of Russian culture and an inspiration for many Russian modernist poets and artists.

  7. Category. : Salomea Andronnikova. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Salome Andronikashvili. Georgian-Russian socialite of the literary and artistic world of pre-revolutionary St. Petersburg. Upload media. Wikipedia. Name in native language.