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  1. Nikolai Fyodorovich Pogodin (Russian: Никола́й Фёдорович Пого́дин) (pseudonym of Nikolai F. Stukalov) (16 November [O.S. 3 November] 1900 – 19 September 1962) was a Soviet playwright.

  2. Pogodin, Nikolai Fyodorovich. (Pseudonym for Nikolai Stukalov.) Born 16 November 1900 (3 Nov, Old Style) to a peasant family at Gundorovskaya Stantsiya in what is now the Donetskaya Oblast.

  3. Overview. Nikolai Pogodin. (1900—1962) Quick Reference. (b. Rostov-on-the-Don, Russia, 16 Nov. 1900; d. Leningrad, Russia, 19 Sept. 1962) Playwright. Of peasant origin, Pogodin became a correspondent for Pravda before turning to playwriting. His plays embrace a ...

  4. Mar 14, 2012 · But "Gorki-10," which offers snippets of plays by celebrated Soviet playwrights Nikolai Pogodin, Viktor Rozov, Vsevolod Vishnevsky and Boris Vasilyev, is the first time I have seen him expose...

    • John Freedman
  5. Historians of nineteenth-century Russian intellectual life cannot delve far into their research without encountering Nikolai Barsukov’s monumental biography of Mikhail Pogodin. Stretching over twenty-two dense volumes, Barsukov’s work offers far more than its title promises — an account of the life and work of the Moscow historian.

  6. Nikolai Pogodin has 12 books on Goodreads with 41 ratings. Nikolai Pogodins most popular book is The Man with the Gun.

  7. The Man with the Gun ( Russian: Человек с ружьём, romanized : Chelovek s ruzhyom, lit. 'Person with a rifle') is a 1938 Soviet history drama film directed by Sergei Yutkevich. [1] [2] Plot. The film takes place during the October Revolution, when the army is approaching the army of General Krasnov.