Valery Pavlovich Alekseyev, sometimes Alexeev (Russian: Russian: Валерий Павлович Алексеев; 22 August 1929 – 7 November 1991) was a Soviet anthropologist, director of the Institute of Archaeology in Moscow (1987–1991) and member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, exceptionally without having been a member of the Communist Party.
The Moscow-born Alekseyev proposed Homo rudolfensis in 1986. In 2006, the Russian Academy of Sciences established the Valery Alekseyev Award for Outstanding Achievements in Anthropology and Archaeology.[1] Alekseyev died suddenly from thromboses in Moscow on 7 November 1991, aged 62.
The award-winning popular science book on human evolution Who Asked the First Question? Origins of Human Choral Singing, Intelligence, Language and Speech (2006) is dedicated to the memory of Alekseyev and his lifelong friend, Georgian anthropologist Malkhaz Abdushelishvili.[2]
Alekseev (together with A.I. Pershits) authored such university textbooks as The History of primitive society, which has already passed six editions (the last in 2007). In the division of humans into races, he distinguished Caucasians, Negroids and Mongoloids. Moreover, he connected Caucasians with Negroids. In the characteristic of the first, V.P. Alekseev has seen the Neanderthal addition. The peculiarity of the Mongoloids was the influence by synanthropes. He divided the Caucasians into northern (Baltic) and southern (Mediterranean, Armenoid and Indo-Afghan). Alekseev also singled out "mixed" or "transitional" races, for example, the Ural race.
Alekseyev published 20 books and some 500 articles, including: