Prominent Tajik Figures of the Twentieth Century
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fields, animals, and birds are not completely compatible with traditional
Tajik painting designs. "Guli azhdar," "Guli butta," "Guli sada," and
"Nilufar" are among the designs he employed frequently.
During the 1950s and 1960s, he directed his efforts toward the clas-
sical and modern styles, and as a result, contributed a great deal to the
art of Tajik painting. He has painted a number of the prominent govern-
ment buildings still in use in and around Khujand. The Palace of
Civilization in the Urun Khujaev region and the Pushkin Theater for
Music in Leninabad can be cited as examples of his later contributions.
Mansurov became a distinguished Artist of Tajikistan in 1965. He
also received the Red Banner of Labor, two medals, and the Honorary
Order of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of Tajikistan. He died in
Khujand in 1977.
Mansurov, Hamid
Tajik therapist Hamid Huseinovich Mansurov was born on Decem-
ber 20, 1925, in Samarqand. He joined the CPSU in 1948.
Mansurov graduated from the Samarqand Medical Institute in 1947.
Thereafter, he became a post-graduate working under the supervision of
A. L. Miasnikov. Between 1951 and 1954, he was an Assistant Profes-
sor in, as well as the Director of, the Department of Therapeutics of the
Tajikistan State Medical Institute Hospital. From 1954 to 1975, he was
a therapist at the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. He became
a Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of Tajikistan,
and a professor in 1961. He became an Academician there in 1978.
Mansurov's research deals with gastroenterology--mostly cardiology,
hematology, and pulmonology.
Mansurov's contributions include Instrumental'naia Diagnostika
zabolevania pecheni (Diagnostic Instruments of Liver Disease, Mos-
cow, 1965); "Bolezni pecheni i zhelchnikh putei," in Spravochnik
terapeveta ("Liver Diseases and Bile," in Therapeutics Encyclopedia,
Moscow, 1973).
Mansurov received the Order of Lenin and other medals.
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