Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Tatyana Mikhailovna Velikanova (Russian: Татья́на Миха́йловна Велика́нова, 3 February 1932, Moscow – 19 September 2002, Moscow) was a mathematician and Soviet dissident. A prominent member of the human rights movement in the Soviet Union, she was for a long while an editor of A Chronicle of Current Events, its underground periodical.Velikanova also co-founded the first human rights organizations in the post-Stalin Soviet Union, the Initiative Group on Human Rights in the USSR (sometimes known as the Action Group on Human Rights in the USSR). For nearly nine years she was condemned to life in a prison camp and internal exile within the USSR as a political prisoner."@en }
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- Tatyana_Velikanova abstract "Tatyana Mikhailovna Velikanova (Russian: Татья́на Миха́йловна Велика́нова, 3 February 1932, Moscow – 19 September 2002, Moscow) was a mathematician and Soviet dissident. A prominent member of the human rights movement in the Soviet Union, she was for a long while an editor of A Chronicle of Current Events, its underground periodical.Velikanova also co-founded the first human rights organizations in the post-Stalin Soviet Union, the Initiative Group on Human Rights in the USSR (sometimes known as the Action Group on Human Rights in the USSR). For nearly nine years she was condemned to life in a prison camp and internal exile within the USSR as a political prisoner.".
- Q4106206 abstract "Tatyana Mikhailovna Velikanova (Russian: Татья́на Миха́йловна Велика́нова, 3 February 1932, Moscow – 19 September 2002, Moscow) was a mathematician and Soviet dissident. A prominent member of the human rights movement in the Soviet Union, she was for a long while an editor of A Chronicle of Current Events, its underground periodical.Velikanova also co-founded the first human rights organizations in the post-Stalin Soviet Union, the Initiative Group on Human Rights in the USSR (sometimes known as the Action Group on Human Rights in the USSR). For nearly nine years she was condemned to life in a prison camp and internal exile within the USSR as a political prisoner.".