Welcome! Check out today's deaths, recent deaths, or our deaths stats.

Feeling experimental? Head on over to our newest (and darkest) feature: Next-2-Die™ predictions

Deaths in...

620 Notable deaths
 in Saint Petersburg

Alexander Belov

Soviet basketball player (1951–1978).

Born November 9th, 1951 in Saint Petersburg.

Died October 3rd, 1978 at 26 years old in Saint Petersburg (heart sarcoma).

Aleksandr Demyanenko

Soviet and russian actor (1937–1999).

Born May 30th, 1937 in Yekaterinburg.

Died August 22nd, 1999 at 62 years old in Saint Petersburg (heart failure).

Mikhail Gorsheniov

Russian punk rocker (1973–2013).

Born August 7th, 1973 in Pikalyovo.

Died July 19th, 2013 at 39 years old in Saint Petersburg (myocardial infarction). [ref]

Vladimir Fock

Russian physicist (1898-1974).

Born December 22nd, 1898 in Saint Petersburg.

Died December 27th, 1974 at 76 years old in Saint Petersburg. [ref]

Alexander Sizonenko

Soviet basketball player (1959–2012).

Born March 21st, 1959 in Zaporizhzhia.

Died January 5th, 2012 at 52 years old in Saint Petersburg. [ref]

Agrippina Vaganova

Russian ballerina and founder of a ballet teaching method (1879-1951).

Born June 6th, 1879 in Saint Petersburg.

Died November 5th, 1951 at 72 years old in Saint Petersburg.

Nikolai Aleksandrovich Kozyrev

Russian astronomer/astrophysicist (1908–1983).

Born September 2nd, 1908 in Saint Petersburg.

Died February 27th, 1983 at 74 years old in Saint Petersburg. [ref]

Vyacheslav von Plehve

Russian politician (1846-1904).

Born April 20th, 1846 in Meshchovsk. [ref]

Died July 28th, 1904 at 58 years old in Saint Petersburg.

Alexander Ivanov

Russian artist (1806-1858).

Born July 28th, 1806 in Saint Petersburg.

Died July 15th, 1858 at 51 years old in Saint Petersburg (cholera).

Princess Charlotte of Württemberg

Russian grand duchess (1807-1873).

Born January 9th, 1807 in Stuttgart.

Died February 2nd, 1873 at 66 years old in Saint Petersburg.

Deaths 71 to 80 of 620

Want more? View other places of notable deaths.

Religion is the human response to being alive and having to die. Forrest Church