MILITARY PERSONNEL

Maksim Purkayev

1894 - Today

Photo of Maksim Purkayev

Icon of person Maksim Purkayev

Maksim Alexeyevich Purkayev (Russian: Максим Алексеевич Пуркаев; August 26 [O.S. August 14] 1894 – January 1, 1953) was a Soviet military leader, reaching service rank of Army General. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Maksim Purkayev is the 1,281st most popular military personnel (up from 1,314th in 2019), the 1,071st most popular biography from Russia (up from 1,126th in 2019) and the 93rd most popular Russian Military Personnel.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Maksim Purkayev by language

Loading...

Among MILITARY PERSONNELS

Among military personnels, Maksim Purkayev ranks 1,281 out of 2,058Before him are Nuri Killigil, Mikhail Kovalyov, Teutobod, Caupolicán, J. F. C. Fuller, and John C. Woods. After him are Felix von Luckner, Gustav Lombard, Joachim Lemelsen, Violette Szabo, Max Wünsche, and Demetrios Ypsilantis.

Most Popular Military Personnels in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1894, Maksim Purkayev ranks 119Before him are E. C. Segar, Aleksandr Khinchin, Werner March, Boris Pilnyak, Eduard Wagner, and Henry Hazlitt. After him are Warren Weaver, Maria Restituta Kafka, Ivan Papanin, Mikheil Chiaureli, Kyuichi Tokuda, and Ernesto Ambrosini.

Others Born in 1894

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Maksim Purkayev ranks 1,071 out of 3,761Before him are Pavel Dybenko (1889), Mikhail Kovalyov (1897), Max Vasmer (1886), Yelena Isinbayeva (1982), Vitaly Vorotnikov (1926), and Dmitry Belyayev (1917). After him are Carl Jaenisch (1813), Maria Ilyinichna Ulyanova (1878), Evgeny Kissin (1971), Sergei Shchukin (1854), Issa Pliyev (1903), and Şihabetdin Märcani (1818).

Among MILITARY PERSONNELS In Russia

Among military personnels born in Russia, Maksim Purkayev ranks 93Before him are Pavel Grachev (1948), Nikolai Nebogatov (1849), Semyon Krivoshein (1899), Ivan Yefimovich Petrov (1896), Alexander Tormasov (1752), and Mikhail Kovalyov (1897). After him are Issa Pliyev (1903), Pavel Kurochkin (1900), Alexander Chavchavadze (1786), Oleg Kalugin (1934), Sergei Shtemenko (1907), and Alexey Maresyev (1916).