Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Bibikov was an officer of the Imperial Russian Army, who saw service during the Russo-Swedish War and the Napoleonic Wars. He was ambassador to several countries, and also served as a senator in the Governing Senate.
Aleksandr Ivanovich Artemyev was a Russian statistician, archeologist, ethnographer and geographer; State Councillor, senior editor of the Central Statistical Committee, member of the Statistical Council of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Empire.
Aleksandr Ilyich Bezymensky was a Soviet poet, screenwriter and journalist. He was the father of war historian Lev Bezymensky, who wrote The Death of Adolf Hitler (1968).
Aleksandr Yevgenyevich Bovin was a Soviet and Russian journalist, political scientist and diplomat, notable for being the first Soviet, and then Russian ambassador to Israel after the re-establishment of Soviet-Israeli diplomatic relations. He was a leading journalist of Soviet Union and Russia of the late 20th century. The New York Times called him "one of the most colorful and daring commentators of the late Soviet period" and The Washington Post also said he was "widely regarded as the Soviet Union's most sophisticated and best-informed political commentator".