Gleb (Russian: Глеб; Belarusian: Глеб; Ukrainian: Гліб, Old East Slavic: Г(ъ)лѣбъ) is a Slavic male given name derived from the Old Norse name Guðleifr, which means "heir of god." According to another version, the name Gleb comes from the name Olaf.[citation needed] It is popular in Russia due to an early martyr, Saint Gleb, who is venerated by Eastern Orthodox churches.[1] It is also commonly used in Ukraine and Belarus. Notable people with the name include:
People
edit- Gleb of Kiev (died 1171), Rus’ prince
- Gleb Axelrod (1923–2003), Russian pianist
- Gleb Baklanov (1910–1976), Russian general
- Gleb Boglayevskiy (born 1986), Russian football player
- Gleb Botkin (1900-1969), Russian-born American memoirist, illustrator and founder of a neo-pagan religion who was the son of Eugene Botkin, the court physician to the Romanov family
- Gleb Brussenskiy (born 2000), Kazakh Cyclist
- Gleb W. Derujinsky (1888–1975), Russian-American sculptor
- Gleb Galperin (born 1985), Russian diver
- Gleb Ilyin (1889–1968), Russian-American painter
- Gleb Kotelnikov (1872–1944), Russian inventor
- Gleb Krotkov (1901–1968), Canadian scientist
- Gleb Krzhizhanovsky (1872–1959), Russian economist
- Gleb Lozino-Lozinskiy (1909–2001), Russian engineer
- Gleb Vladimirovich Nosovsky (born 1958), Russian mathematician
- Gleb Panfilov (born 1934), Russian film director
- Gleb Panfyorov (born 1970), Russian football player
- Gleb Pavlovsky (born 1951), Russian political scientist
- Gleb Pisarevskiy (born 1976), Russian weightlifter
- Gleb Sakharov (born 1988), French tennis player
- Gleb Savchenko (born 1984), Russian dancer
- Gleb Savinov (1915–2000), Russian painter
- Gleb Shishmaryov (1781–1835), Russian admiral
- Gleb Shulpyakov (born 1971), Russian writer
- Gleb Strizhenov (1923–1985), Russian actor
- Gleb Struve (1898–1985), Russian poet and literary historian
- Gleb Svyatoslavich (died 1078), Rus' prince
- Gleb Svyatoslavich (Prince of Chernigov) (1168–1215), Rus' prince
- Gleb Syritsa (born 2000), Russian Cyclist
- Gleb Uspensky (1843–1902), Russian writer
- Gleb Wataghin (1899–1986), Italian scientist
- Gleb Yakunin (1934–2014), Russian priest and dissident
- Gleb Golubin (born 1996), Russian rapper and songwriter, leader of Dead Dynasty
Fictional characters
edit- Gleb Nerzhin, leading character, mathematician, prisoner, and Solzhenitsyn's alter ego in In the First Circle; Solzhenitsyn also uses Nerzhin in some of his writings about his experiences in World War II
- Gleb, a female character in the 2017 video game Star Wars Battlefront II
- Gleb Vaganov, main antagonist in 2017 musical Anastasia (musical)
- Gleb Zheglov, main character in 1979 Soviet mini-series The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed
See also
edit- Boris Gleb, village in Murmansk, Russia
- Church of Boris and Gleb, Russia
- Saints Boris and Gleb