📖 Über Lyudmila
Lyudmila ist die russische und ukrainische Form des alten slawischen Namens Ludmila, zusammengesetzt aus lyudy (Volk) und mila (gnaedig, lieb, geliebt), was so viel bedeutet wie 'vom Volk geliebt'. Historische Bedeutung erlangte der Name durch die Heilige Ludmila von Boehmen (um 860-921), eine christliche Herzogin und Maertyrerin, deren Kanonisierung die kirchliche Tradition Mittel- und Osteuropas fuer Jahrhunderte pragte. Alexander Puschkin verlieh der russischen Form im Gedicht 'Ruslan und Ljudmila' (1820) literarischen Ruhm. In der Sowjetunion erlebte der Name in den 1950er und 1960er Jahren seinen Hoehepunkt; er ist bis heute in Russland, der Ukraine, Bulgarien und Weissrussland verbreitet. Beliebte Koseformen sind Ljuda, Ljusja und das panslawische Mila.
🔀 Varianten & Verwandte Namen
⭐ Berühmte Persönlichkeiten
- Lyudmila Pavlichenko — Soviet military sniper credited with 309 confirmed kills during World War II — the most successful female sniper in recorded history, nicknamed 'Lady Death'. She toured the United States and Canada in 1942 as the first Soviet citizen officially received at the White House.
- Ludmila of Bohemia — 9th-century Bohemian duchess, the first documented Christian ruler in Bohemia and grandmother of Saint Wenceslaus I. Martyred in 921, she was later canonised and remains a patron saint of Bohemia and converts to Christianity.
- Lyudmila Gurchenko — Iconic Soviet and Russian actress and singer (1935–2011), widely regarded as one of the greatest performers in Russian cinema history. Her starring role in the 1956 musical film 'Carnival Night' made her a national star overnight, a status she maintained for over five decades.
- Lyudmila Alexeyeva — Pioneering Russian human rights activist (1927–2018) and co-founder of the Moscow Helsinki Group in 1976, one of the oldest and most respected civil rights organisations in post-Soviet Russia. She spent years in exile and returned to become an enduring voice for democratic freedoms.
- Lyudmila Ulitskaya — Prominent Russian author (born 1943), winner of the Russian Booker Prize and one of the most widely translated contemporary Russian writers. Her novels — including 'The Kukotsky Enigma' and 'Daniel Stein, Interpreter' — explore Soviet-era history, Jewish identity, and moral philosophy with nuanced compassion.