Timur Gaidar

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Timur Gaidar
Birth nameTimur Arkadievich Gaidar
Born(1926-12-08)December 8, 1926
Archangelsk, RSFSR, USSR
DiedDecember 23, 1999(1999-12-23) (aged 73)
Moscow, Russia
Allegiance Soviet Union
Service/branch Soviet Navy
Years of service1948-?
RankRear Admiral
Battles/warsCold War
Other workjournalist, Military correspondent of Pravda

Timur Arkadievich Gaidar (Russian: Тиму́р Арка́дьевич Гайда́р; December 8, 1926 – December 23, 1999) was a Soviet/Russian rear admiral, writer and journalist. He was supposed to be the prototype for Timur from Arkady Gaidar's book Timur and His Squad that was the inspiration for the Timurite movement.

Early life and career[]

Gaidar was born in Arkhangelsk, the son of famous writer Arkady Gaidar and Leah Lazarevna Solomyanskaya. He graduated from the in 1948 and the faculty of journalism of the Lenin Military-Political Academy in 1954, and served on submarines of the Baltic Fleet and the Pacific Ocean Fleet. Beginning in 1957 he worked for newspapers, including , the Red Star, and Pravda. He fought in the Bay of Pigs Invasion and was a friend of Cuban General Raúl Castro.

Gaidar died in Moscow. His widow is Ariadna Bazhova (born 1925, daughter of the Russian writer Pavel Bazhov). Yegor Gaidar, a Russian politician, was their son.


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