Kingisepp
Kingisepp ranks 3,415th in number of biographies on Pantheon, behind North Adams, Massachusetts, Hilversum, and Glen Ellyn, Illinois. Memorable people born in Kingisepp include Gustav Heinrich Johann Apollon Tammann, Aleksandr Kerzhakov, and Mikhail Kerzhakov. Kingisepp has been the birth place of many soccer players, and chemists. Kingisepp is located in Russia.
Kingisepp, formerly Yamburg (Я́мбург), Yam (Ям), and Yama, is a town and the administrative center of Kingiseppsky District of Leningrad Oblast, Russia, located along the Luga River 138 kilometers (86 mi) southwest of St. Petersburg, 20 kilometers (12 mi) east of Narva, and 40 kilometers (25 mi) south of the Gulf of Finland. Population: 48,488 (2010 Census); 50,295 (2002 Census); 49,954 (1989 Soviet census). Read more on Wikipedia
People
Between 1861 and 1993, Kingisepp was the birth place of 5 globally memorable people, including Gustav Heinrich Johann Apollon Tammann, Aleksandr Kerzhakov, and Mikhail Kerzhakov.
People Born in Kingisepp
Go to all RankingsGustav Heinrich Johann Apollon Tammann
CHEMIST
1861 - 1938
HPI: 54.86
Rank: 1
Aleksandr Kerzhakov
SOCCER PLAYER
1982 - Present
HPI: 52.58
Rank: 2
Mikhail Kerzhakov
SOCCER PLAYER
1987 - Present
HPI: 38.88
Rank: 3
Aleksei Ionov
SOCCER PLAYER
1989 - Present
HPI: 38.51
Rank: 4
Pavel Mogilevets
SOCCER PLAYER
1993 - Present
HPI: 34.15
Rank: 5
Occupations
Most individuals born in present day Kingisepp were soccer players (4), and chemists (1), while most who died were .
Occupational Trends
Over the past 100 years, soccer players have been the top profession of globally memorable people born in Kingisepp, including Aleksandr Kerzhakov, Mikhail Kerzhakov, and Aleksei Ionov. Whereas, throughout history, soccer players have been the profession with the most memorable people born in present day Kingisepp, including Aleksandr Kerzhakov, Mikhail Kerzhakov, and Aleksei Ionov.
Places
Overlapping Lives
Below is a visual represetation of the lifespans of the top 1 globally memorable people born in Kingisepp since 1700.