An Entity of Type: person, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Sofia Ivanovna Blyuvshtein (also spelled as Bluvstein, Bluvsztejn; better known as Sonia (Son'ka) the Golden Hand; 1846–1902), was a female con artist who lived in the Russian Empire and was eventually convicted of theft. She committed several carefully planned robberies, and was eventually captured and exiled to the Sakhalin penal colony. She became the basis of several books and films, in which she is romanticized as a Robin Hood figure, who never killed, and who stole only from the rich.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Sofia Ivanovna Blyuvshtein (also spelled as Bluvstein, Bluvsztejn; better known as Sonia (Son'ka) the Golden Hand; 1846–1902), was a female con artist who lived in the Russian Empire and was eventually convicted of theft. She committed several carefully planned robberies, and was eventually captured and exiled to the Sakhalin penal colony. She became the basis of several books and films, in which she is romanticized as a Robin Hood figure, who never killed, and who stole only from the rich. In 1890, she met Anton Chekhov, who was visiting Sakhalin during his investigations into prison reform; he subsequently described the incident in his book Sakhalin Island. A headless statue by an unmarked grave in Moscow's Vagankovo Cemetery is used as a shrine to Sonia; worshippers, who believe Sonya to be buried there, ask for her spiritual assistance in their own crimes. (en)
  • Sofia Bluwstein (z domu Sołomoniak, Szejndla-Sura Lejbowa) – legendarna słynna rosyjska złodziejka żydowskiego pochodzenia, znana pod pseudonimem Sońka Złota Rączka (ros. Сонька Золотая Ручка). (pl)
  • Софія Іванівна (Шейндля-Сура Лейбівна) Блювштейн (до шлюбу Соломоняк, рос. Софья Ивановна Блювштейн; 1846, Повонзки, Варшава, — 1902, пост Олександрівський, о. Сахалін) — російська злочинниця-авантюристка єврейського походження, відома під прізвиськом «Сонька Золота Ручка». (uk)
  • Со́фья Ива́новна (Шейндля-Сура Лейбовна) Блювштейн (в девичестве Соломониак; 1846, Повонзки, Варшавская губерния — 1902, пост Александровский, о. Сахалин) — российская преступница-авантюристка еврейского происхождения, известная под кличкой «Сонька Золотая Ручка». (ru)
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 10929419 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 9668 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1115259209 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Sofia Bluwstein (z domu Sołomoniak, Szejndla-Sura Lejbowa) – legendarna słynna rosyjska złodziejka żydowskiego pochodzenia, znana pod pseudonimem Sońka Złota Rączka (ros. Сонька Золотая Ручка). (pl)
  • Софія Іванівна (Шейндля-Сура Лейбівна) Блювштейн (до шлюбу Соломоняк, рос. Софья Ивановна Блювштейн; 1846, Повонзки, Варшава, — 1902, пост Олександрівський, о. Сахалін) — російська злочинниця-авантюристка єврейського походження, відома під прізвиськом «Сонька Золота Ручка». (uk)
  • Со́фья Ива́новна (Шейндля-Сура Лейбовна) Блювштейн (в девичестве Соломониак; 1846, Повонзки, Варшавская губерния — 1902, пост Александровский, о. Сахалин) — российская преступница-авантюристка еврейского происхождения, известная под кличкой «Сонька Золотая Ручка». (ru)
  • Sofia Ivanovna Blyuvshtein (also spelled as Bluvstein, Bluvsztejn; better known as Sonia (Son'ka) the Golden Hand; 1846–1902), was a female con artist who lived in the Russian Empire and was eventually convicted of theft. She committed several carefully planned robberies, and was eventually captured and exiled to the Sakhalin penal colony. She became the basis of several books and films, in which she is romanticized as a Robin Hood figure, who never killed, and who stole only from the rich. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Sonya Golden Hand (en)
  • Sońka Złota Rączka (pl)
  • Блювштейн, Софья Ивановна (ru)
  • Блювштейн Софія Іванівна (uk)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License