Georgy Gogol-Yanovsky Explained

Georgy Gogol-Yanovsky
Native Name:Георгий Иванович Гоголь-Яновский
Birth Date:20 April 1868
Birth Place:Poltava Governorate, Russian Empire
Death Place:Leningrad, Soviet Union
Citizenship:Russian Empire (1868–1917) → RSFSR (1917–1922) → Soviet Union (1922–1931)
Nationality:Russian, Soviet
Fields:Oenology, Viticulture
Work Institutions:Narkomzem of the USSR, Moscow Timiryazev Agricultural Academy
Alma Mater:Saint Petersburg Imperial University
Known For:wine-making technology

Georgy Ivanovich Gogol-Yanovsky (Russian: Гео́ргий Ива́нович Го́голь-Яно́вский; 20 April 1868  - 2 February 1931) was a Russian and Soviet botanist, teacher, wine-maker and government official.

Life

Georgy Gogol-Yanovsky was born in 1868 in Poltava Governorate of the Russian Empire. His lineage was of the noble family house of Gogol-Yanovsky. In 1890, he graduated from the Physics and Mathematics faculty of the Saint Petersburg Imperial University. After briefly working at the botany department of the university, he traveled to the Caucasus. Starting from 1893 he worked as a wine-maker in Kakheti, in the estate Tsinandali, and from 1893 as the head of the Crown Land Office's wine cellar in Tiflis, where Caucasus wines were produced. In 1908, Gogol-Yanovsky was appointed as the lead manager of the Tempelhof estate with 150 desyatinas of vineyards, belonging to the Crown Land Office. There he managed the production of table wines and cognacs. From 1912 he worked as an assistant of the inspector of viticulture and wine-making, and then as a manager of the Moscow wine cellar of the Crown Land Office. After the October Revolution, Gogol-Yanovsky was in charge of a department at Narkomzem of the USSR and worked as a viticulture and wine-making specialist there. He wrote books on wine-making and viticulture as well as visited various scientific conferences in the USSR, where he met such prominent botanists as Nikolai Vavilov. Starting from the 1920 he was a senior lecturer and professor at the Moscow Timiryazev Agricultural Academy, where he led the department of viticulture.

Gogol-Yanovsky died in Leningrad on February 2, 1931, after a brief illness.

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