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Andrei Tupolev

Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev (Russian: Андрей Николаевич Туполев; 10 November [O.S. 29 October] 1888 – 23 December 1972) was a Russian and later Soviet aeronautical engineer known for his pioneering aircraft designs as the director of the Tupolev Design Bureau.

Andrei Tupolev
Андрей Туполев
Tupolev in his office in 1944
Born
Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev

10 November [O.S. 29 October] 1888
Died23 December 1972(1972-12-23) (aged 84)
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
NationalityRussian, Soviet
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
DisciplineAeronautical Engineering
Employer(s)Tupolev Design Bureau
Significant designTu-95, Tu-104
AwardsHero of Socialist Labor
Order of Lenin
Order of the Red Banner of Labour
Signature

Tupolev was an early pioneer of aeronautics in Russia and served as a protégé of Nikolay Zhukovsky. Tupolev designed or oversaw the design of more than 100 types of civilian and military aircraft in the Soviet Union over 50 years, some of which set 78 world records. Tupolev produced many notable designs such as the Tu-2, Tu-16, Tu-95, and Tu-104, and the reverse engineered Tu-4.

Tupolev was highly honoured in the Soviet Union and awarded various titles and honours including the Hero of Socialist Labor three times, Order of Lenin eight times, Order of the Red Banner of Labour two times, made an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1953, and a Colonel-General of the Soviet Air Force in 1968.[1] Tupolev was also honoured outside the Soviet Union as an honorary member of the British Royal Aeronautical Society and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in recognition of his work.[2][3] In 2018, Vnukovo International Airport was formally renamed to Vnukovo Andrei Tupolev International Airport in his honour.

Early life Edit

 
The Beginning by Tatyana Ivanova, depicting Tupolev (in cherry-coloured kosovorotka shirt), Nikolay Zhukovsky, and other Russian aviation pioneers at Khodynka Field, preparing the ITU monoplane for a test flight in 1911.
External image
  Tupolev takes off on a glider during a test flight from the snow-covered Khodynka Field in 1910.

Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev was born on 10 November  [O.S. 29 October] 1888 in Pustomazovo (Russian: Пустомазово), a village near the city of Kimry in Tver Governorate, Russian Empire, the sixth of seven children born to his Russian parents.[4] Tupolev's father, Nikolai Ivanovich Tupolev (1842-1911), was a native of Surgut, who worked as a notary for the governorate. Nikolai had studied law at St. Petersburg University, but was expelled after the assassination of Alexander II for his ties to revolutionaries despite not being involved in their actions. Tupolev's mother, Anna Vasilievna (née Lisitsyna) (1850-1928) was born in Torzhok in the family of a judicial investigator, and graduated from the Mariinsky Gymnasium in Tver. Anna's parents purchased the small estate in Pustomazovo where Tupolev was born. After first being educated at home, Tupolev studied at the Gymnasium in Tver and finished in 1908. Tupolev then applied for courses at two Russian universities: Imperial Moscow Technical School (IMTU Russian: ИМТУ) and the Emperor Nicholas II Moscow State University of Railway Engineering. Tupolev accepted at both, but ultimately chose to attend at IMTU.

In 1909, Tupolev began studying aerodynamics under the Russian aviation pioneer Nikolay Zhukovsky, and volunteered for the Aeronautical workshop (Kruzhok) headed by Zhukovsky. In 1910, together with his workshop friends, Tupolev built and test piloted his first glider. During his workshop days, Tupolev also built a wind tunnel which led to the formation of an aerodynamic laboratory at IMTU. In 1911, Tupolev was accused of taking part in revolutionary activities, including demonstrations and distribution of subversive literature, and was arrested. Tupolev was later released on condition that he return to his family home in Pustomazovo. Tupolev was only allowed to return to IMTU in 1914, studying during World War I and the Russian Revolution. Tupolev completed his studies in 1918 and was awarded the degree of Engineer-Mechanic when he presented his thesis on the development of seaplanes. By 1920, the IMTU had been renamed the Moscow Higher Technical School (MVTU) and Tupolev was teaching a course there on the basics of aerodynamic calculations.[5]

Aircraft design Edit

 
Tupolev (right) with the crew of the ANT-25 aircraft at the Shchyolkovo airfield in 1936. Photo by Mikhail Kalashnikov.

Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute Edit

Tupolev was a leading figure of the Moscow-based Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute (TsAGI; Russian: Центральный аэро-гидродинамический институт; ЦАГИ) from 1929 until his death in 1972. The Central Design Office or TsKB (Russian: Центральное конструкторское бюро; ЦКБ) based there produced bombers for the Soviet Air Force and some airliners, which in the years before World War II and especially in his 1930s-era designs, were based partially on the all-metal aircraft design concepts pioneered by Hugo Junkers. In 1925, Tupolev designed a twin-engine bomber, the TB-1, which was considered one of the most advanced designs of the time. By 1934, Tupolev had led the design bureau that designed the largest aircraft flying in the world at the time, the 63-meter wingspan, eight-engined Maksim Gorki, again built with the Junkers metal structure airframe concepts. In 1937, an improved version of the earlier TB-1, the four-engined TB-3, made a landing at the North Pole. As the number of qualified aircraft designers increased, Tupolev set up his own office, producing a number of designs designated with the prefix ANT (Russian: АНТ) from his initials.

Sharashka Edit

However, on 21 October 1937, Tupolev was arrested together with Vladimir Petlyakov and the entire directorate of the TsAGI and EDO during the Great Purge on trumped up charges of sabotage, espionage and of aiding the Russian Fascist Party. Many of his colleagues were executed but Tupolev himself was imprisoned. In 1939, Tupolev was moved from a prison to an NKVD sharashka for aircraft designers in Bolshevo near Moscow, where many surviving ex-TsAGI people had already been sent to work. The sharashka soon moved to Moscow and was dubbed "Tupolevka" after Tupolev, its most prominent inmate. In 1940, Tupolev was tried and convicted with a ten-year sentence, and during this time he developed the Tupolev Tu-2 which would become one of the most important aircraft of World War II.[6] Tupolev was released in July 1941 around the time of the German invasion of the Soviet Union to "conduct important defence work" but was not fully rehabilitated by the Soviet state until 1955, two years after Joseph Stalin's death.

Post-war Edit

Tupolev headed the B-4 project, as it was initially designated, to reverse engineer the American Boeing B-29 Superfortress strategic bomber, which had been the first aircraft to deliver a nuclear weapon. The Soviet Union had repeatedly asked for B-29s through the World War II Lend Lease program but these requests were all denied by the US. Tupolev succeeded in the complex task of re-engineering the design with Russian engines, weapons, equipment and airfoil sections, while using available metric sheetmetal which required a nearly complete redesign as the original had been built to imperial measurements, while new alloys also had to be brought into production. They used four B-29s which had come down in Soviet controlled territory as references, after having sustained light damage while bombing Japan in 1945. Tupolev's own design for the role had been ignored in the interest of getting the new long range bomber into service as rapidly as possible to respond to the multiple illegal American overflights, mostly with Martin PBM-5 Mariners that had already begun, and the overt threat of nuclear attack. Tupolev had several examples of the resulting Tu-4 flying in time for the 1947 May Day parade.

By the time of his rehabilitation on 9 April 1955, Tupolev had designed and was about to start testing his unique turboprop strategic bomber, the Tu-95. In the following years, Tupolev overcame competition from Vladimir Myasishchev and his M-4 series of jet-powered strategic bombers, to get the Tu-16 design into service. This was in part thanks to Tupolev's close rapport with Nikita Khrushchev, the new leader of the Soviet Union who had denounced Stalin's terror, of which Tupolev had been a victim. At about the same time, Tupolev introduced into service the Tu-104, the world's second operational production jet airliner.

Later years and death Edit

After Khruschev's removal from office in late 1964 and the rise of Leonid Brezhnev, the ageing Tupolev gradually lost positions at the centres of Soviet power to rivals in the aircraft industry. The prestigious Tu-144 programme enjoyed top level support until 1973, as did the important Tu-154 airliner, but the favored position the Tupolev Design Bureau enjoyed through Tupolev's personal political connections was largely eclipsed by the Ilyushin aircraft manufacturing and design company. To his contemporaries, Tupolev was known as a witty but crude master of obscene vocabulary who invariably and energetically insisted on fast and adequate technical fixes at the expense of scholastic ideal solutions. A hallmark of Tupolev was to get an aeroplane into service very rapidly, then began an often interminable process of improving the shortcomings of the "quick and dirty" initial design. To his competitors among the Soviet aircraft design community, he was known above all as politically astute; a shrewd and unforgiving rival.[citation needed]

Tupolev died on 23 December 1972 and was buried in Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.

Memorials Edit

Various streets in cities across the Eastern Bloc were named in honour of Tupolev, as well as one in Western Europe, the Tupolevlaan near Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.

 
Russian strategic bomber Tupolev Tu-160 named after Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev

In 1973, the Kazan Aviation Institute was named after Tupolev, and a monument of him was erected in Kazan in a public square at the intersection of Dekabristov, Gagarin and Korolev Streets. In 1979, a bust of Tupolev was erected at a public square in Kimry, near his birthplace Pustomazovo which no longer exists. Another memorial to Tupolev was erected in the estimated location of Pustomazovo in the present-day Ustinovo, north of Kimry in Kimrsky District, Tver Oblast. The local high school in Ustinovo was renamed after Tupolev and a memorial plaque was installed. In 1988, the Soviet Union issued a postage stamp dedicated to Tupolev. The 1979 biographical film Poema o kryl'yakh (Поэма о крыльях) directed by Daniil Khrabrovitsky is about the life and works of Tupolev and Igor Sikorsky, the Russian-American aviation pioneer. Prospekt Tupoleva, the main avenue in the Aviatsionny microdistrict of Domodedovo located next to Domodedovo Airport, was named after Tupolev. A memorial mural of Tupolev was painted on the side of the 20 Prospekt Tupoleva apartment building. In 2018, Vnukovo International Airport in Moscow was formally renamed to Vnukovo Andrei Tupolev International Airport.

On December 1, 2022, in honor of the 100th anniversary of aircraft designer Andrei Tupolev, his first monument was opened in Moscow. He appeared next to the building of the design bureau on the embankment of Academician Tupolev in the square of the same name. The sculpture is made of bronze and represents the figure of an aircraft designer and the outline of a Tu-144 taking off.[citation needed]

Personal life Edit

Tupolev was married to Yuliya Nikolaevna Tupoleva (née Zheltyakova) until her death in 1962. Tupolev's daughter Yuliya (1920–2011) was a doctor who was awarded the title of Honored Doctor of the Russian Federation. Tupolev's son Alexei (1925-2001) was a successful pioneering aircraft designer who designed the Tupolev Tu-144 supersonic passenger jet, and helped design the Buran space shuttle and the Tu-2000 long-range heavy bomber.

Tupolev was never a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union despite his status and being elected to several deputy positions.

Awards and honors Edit

Aircraft designed by Andrei Tupolev Edit

List (partial) of retired or active airliners designed or made by aviation designer/engineer Andrei Tupolev; incl. both military and civilian planes, jets and other aircraft:

References Edit

  1. ^ Central Museum of the Military Air Forces of the Russian Federation. Monino.ru. Retrieved on 2012-08-09.
  2. ^ a b (PDF). Royal Aeronautical Society. p. 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-07-10. Retrieved 2014-09-29.
  3. ^ a b (PDF). American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. p. 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-20. Retrieved 2014-09-29. Credited as Andrie N. Tupelov.
  4. ^ Tupolev Company Website April 3, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Tupolev.ru. Retrieved on 2012-08-09.
  5. ^ Tupolev: The Man and His Aircraft, P. Duffy & A.I. Kandalov, 1996, page 9
  6. ^ George C. Larson (April 1973). "Reporting Points". Flying Magazine. 92 (4): 37.
  7. ^ Sprekelmeyer, Linda, editor. These We Honor: The International Aerospace Hall of Fame. Donning Co. Publishers, 2006. ISBN 978-1-57864-397-4.

Literature Edit

  • "S. P. Korolev. Encyclopedia of life and creativity" - edited by C. A. Lopota, RSC Energia. S. P. Korolev, 2014 ISBN 978-5-906674-04-3

External links Edit

andrei, tupolev, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, nikolayevich, family, name, tupolev, andrei, nikolayevich, tupolev, russian, Андрей, Николаевич, Туполев, november, october, 1888, december, 1972, russian, later, sov. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Nikolayevich and the family name is Tupolev Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev Russian Andrej Nikolaevich Tupolev 10 November O S 29 October 1888 23 December 1972 was a Russian and later Soviet aeronautical engineer known for his pioneering aircraft designs as the director of the Tupolev Design Bureau Andrei TupolevAndrej TupolevTupolev in his office in 1944BornAndrei Nikolayevich Tupolev10 November O S 29 October 1888Pustomazovo Tver Governorate Russian EmpireDied23 December 1972 1972 12 23 aged 84 Moscow Soviet UnionResting placeNovodevichy Cemetery MoscowNationalityRussian SovietOccupationEngineerEngineering careerDisciplineAeronautical EngineeringEmployer s Tupolev Design BureauSignificant designTu 95 Tu 104AwardsHero of Socialist Labor Order of Lenin Order of the Red Banner of LabourSignatureTupolev was an early pioneer of aeronautics in Russia and served as a protege of Nikolay Zhukovsky Tupolev designed or oversaw the design of more than 100 types of civilian and military aircraft in the Soviet Union over 50 years some of which set 78 world records Tupolev produced many notable designs such as the Tu 2 Tu 16 Tu 95 and Tu 104 and the reverse engineered Tu 4 Tupolev was highly honoured in the Soviet Union and awarded various titles and honours including the Hero of Socialist Labor three times Order of Lenin eight times Order of the Red Banner of Labour two times made an academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1953 and a Colonel General of the Soviet Air Force in 1968 1 Tupolev was also honoured outside the Soviet Union as an honorary member of the British Royal Aeronautical Society and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in recognition of his work 2 3 In 2018 Vnukovo International Airport was formally renamed to Vnukovo Andrei Tupolev International Airport in his honour Contents 1 Early life 2 Aircraft design 2 1 Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute 2 2 Sharashka 2 3 Post war 3 Later years and death 3 1 Memorials 4 Personal life 5 Awards and honors 6 Aircraft designed by Andrei Tupolev 7 References 8 Literature 9 External linksEarly life Edit nbsp The Beginning by Tatyana Ivanova depicting Tupolev in cherry coloured kosovorotka shirt Nikolay Zhukovsky and other Russian aviation pioneers at Khodynka Field preparing the ITU monoplane for a test flight in 1911 External image nbsp Tupolev takes off on a glider during a test flight from the snow covered Khodynka Field in 1910 Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev was born on 10 November O S 29 October 1888 in Pustomazovo Russian Pustomazovo a village near the city of Kimry in Tver Governorate Russian Empire the sixth of seven children born to his Russian parents 4 Tupolev s father Nikolai Ivanovich Tupolev 1842 1911 was a native of Surgut who worked as a notary for the governorate Nikolai had studied law at St Petersburg University but was expelled after the assassination of Alexander II for his ties to revolutionaries despite not being involved in their actions Tupolev s mother Anna Vasilievna nee Lisitsyna 1850 1928 was born in Torzhok in the family of a judicial investigator and graduated from the Mariinsky Gymnasium in Tver Anna s parents purchased the small estate in Pustomazovo where Tupolev was born After first being educated at home Tupolev studied at the Gymnasium in Tver and finished in 1908 Tupolev then applied for courses at two Russian universities Imperial Moscow Technical School IMTU Russian IMTU and the Emperor Nicholas II Moscow State University of Railway Engineering Tupolev accepted at both but ultimately chose to attend at IMTU In 1909 Tupolev began studying aerodynamics under the Russian aviation pioneer Nikolay Zhukovsky and volunteered for the Aeronautical workshop Kruzhok headed by Zhukovsky In 1910 together with his workshop friends Tupolev built and test piloted his first glider During his workshop days Tupolev also built a wind tunnel which led to the formation of an aerodynamic laboratory at IMTU In 1911 Tupolev was accused of taking part in revolutionary activities including demonstrations and distribution of subversive literature and was arrested Tupolev was later released on condition that he return to his family home in Pustomazovo Tupolev was only allowed to return to IMTU in 1914 studying during World War I and the Russian Revolution Tupolev completed his studies in 1918 and was awarded the degree of Engineer Mechanic when he presented his thesis on the development of seaplanes By 1920 the IMTU had been renamed the Moscow Higher Technical School MVTU and Tupolev was teaching a course there on the basics of aerodynamic calculations 5 Aircraft design Edit nbsp Tupolev right with the crew of the ANT 25 aircraft at the Shchyolkovo airfield in 1936 Photo by Mikhail Kalashnikov Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute Edit Tupolev was a leading figure of the Moscow based Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute TsAGI Russian Centralnyj aero gidrodinamicheskij institut CAGI from 1929 until his death in 1972 The Central Design Office or TsKB Russian Centralnoe konstruktorskoe byuro CKB based there produced bombers for the Soviet Air Force and some airliners which in the years before World War II and especially in his 1930s era designs were based partially on the all metal aircraft design concepts pioneered by Hugo Junkers In 1925 Tupolev designed a twin engine bomber the TB 1 which was considered one of the most advanced designs of the time By 1934 Tupolev had led the design bureau that designed the largest aircraft flying in the world at the time the 63 meter wingspan eight engined Maksim Gorki again built with the Junkers metal structure airframe concepts In 1937 an improved version of the earlier TB 1 the four engined TB 3 made a landing at the North Pole As the number of qualified aircraft designers increased Tupolev set up his own office producing a number of designs designated with the prefix ANT Russian ANT from his initials Sharashka Edit However on 21 October 1937 Tupolev was arrested together with Vladimir Petlyakov and the entire directorate of the TsAGI and EDO during the Great Purge on trumped up charges of sabotage espionage and of aiding the Russian Fascist Party Many of his colleagues were executed but Tupolev himself was imprisoned In 1939 Tupolev was moved from a prison to an NKVD sharashka for aircraft designers in Bolshevo near Moscow where many surviving ex TsAGI people had already been sent to work The sharashka soon moved to Moscow and was dubbed Tupolevka after Tupolev its most prominent inmate In 1940 Tupolev was tried and convicted with a ten year sentence and during this time he developed the Tupolev Tu 2 which would become one of the most important aircraft of World War II 6 Tupolev was released in July 1941 around the time of the German invasion of the Soviet Union to conduct important defence work but was not fully rehabilitated by the Soviet state until 1955 two years after Joseph Stalin s death Post war Edit Tupolev headed the B 4 project as it was initially designated to reverse engineer the American Boeing B 29 Superfortress strategic bomber which had been the first aircraft to deliver a nuclear weapon The Soviet Union had repeatedly asked for B 29s through the World War II Lend Lease program but these requests were all denied by the US Tupolev succeeded in the complex task of re engineering the design with Russian engines weapons equipment and airfoil sections while using available metric sheetmetal which required a nearly complete redesign as the original had been built to imperial measurements while new alloys also had to be brought into production They used four B 29s which had come down in Soviet controlled territory as references after having sustained light damage while bombing Japan in 1945 Tupolev s own design for the role had been ignored in the interest of getting the new long range bomber into service as rapidly as possible to respond to the multiple illegal American overflights mostly with Martin PBM 5 Mariners that had already begun and the overt threat of nuclear attack Tupolev had several examples of the resulting Tu 4 flying in time for the 1947 May Day parade By the time of his rehabilitation on 9 April 1955 Tupolev had designed and was about to start testing his unique turboprop strategic bomber the Tu 95 In the following years Tupolev overcame competition from Vladimir Myasishchev and his M 4 series of jet powered strategic bombers to get the Tu 16 design into service This was in part thanks to Tupolev s close rapport with Nikita Khrushchev the new leader of the Soviet Union who had denounced Stalin s terror of which Tupolev had been a victim At about the same time Tupolev introduced into service the Tu 104 the world s second operational production jet airliner Later years and death EditAfter Khruschev s removal from office in late 1964 and the rise of Leonid Brezhnev the ageing Tupolev gradually lost positions at the centres of Soviet power to rivals in the aircraft industry The prestigious Tu 144 programme enjoyed top level support until 1973 as did the important Tu 154 airliner but the favored position the Tupolev Design Bureau enjoyed through Tupolev s personal political connections was largely eclipsed by the Ilyushin aircraft manufacturing and design company To his contemporaries Tupolev was known as a witty but crude master of obscene vocabulary who invariably and energetically insisted on fast and adequate technical fixes at the expense of scholastic ideal solutions A hallmark of Tupolev was to get an aeroplane into service very rapidly then began an often interminable process of improving the shortcomings of the quick and dirty initial design To his competitors among the Soviet aircraft design community he was known above all as politically astute a shrewd and unforgiving rival citation needed Tupolev died on 23 December 1972 and was buried in Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow Memorials Edit Various streets in cities across the Eastern Bloc were named in honour of Tupolev as well as one in Western Europe the Tupolevlaan near Amsterdam Airport Schiphol nbsp Russian strategic bomber Tupolev Tu 160 named after Andrei Nikolayevich TupolevIn 1973 the Kazan Aviation Institute was named after Tupolev and a monument of him was erected in Kazan in a public square at the intersection of Dekabristov Gagarin and Korolev Streets In 1979 a bust of Tupolev was erected at a public square in Kimry near his birthplace Pustomazovo which no longer exists Another memorial to Tupolev was erected in the estimated location of Pustomazovo in the present day Ustinovo north of Kimry in Kimrsky District Tver Oblast The local high school in Ustinovo was renamed after Tupolev and a memorial plaque was installed In 1988 the Soviet Union issued a postage stamp dedicated to Tupolev The 1979 biographical film Poema o kryl yakh Poema o krylyah directed by Daniil Khrabrovitsky is about the life and works of Tupolev and Igor Sikorsky the Russian American aviation pioneer Prospekt Tupoleva the main avenue in the Aviatsionny microdistrict of Domodedovo located next to Domodedovo Airport was named after Tupolev A memorial mural of Tupolev was painted on the side of the 20 Prospekt Tupoleva apartment building In 2018 Vnukovo International Airport in Moscow was formally renamed to Vnukovo Andrei Tupolev International Airport On December 1 2022 in honor of the 100th anniversary of aircraft designer Andrei Tupolev his first monument was opened in Moscow He appeared next to the building of the design bureau on the embankment of Academician Tupolev in the square of the same name The sculpture is made of bronze and represents the figure of an aircraft designer and the outline of a Tu 144 taking off citation needed Personal life EditTupolev was married to Yuliya Nikolaevna Tupoleva nee Zheltyakova until her death in 1962 Tupolev s daughter Yuliya 1920 2011 was a doctor who was awarded the title of Honored Doctor of the Russian Federation Tupolev s son Alexei 1925 2001 was a successful pioneering aircraft designer who designed the Tupolev Tu 144 supersonic passenger jet and helped design the Buran space shuttle and the Tu 2000 long range heavy bomber Tupolev was never a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union despite his status and being elected to several deputy positions Awards and honors EditHero of Socialist Labour three times 1945 1957 1972 Eight Orders of Lenin 1933 1945 1947 January 1949 December 1949 1953 1958 1968 Order of the October Revolution 1971 Order of the Red Banner of Labour twice 1927 1933 Order of the Red Star 1933 Order of the Badge of Honour 1936 Order of Suvorov 2nd class 1944 Order of the Patriotic War 1st class 1943 Lenin Prize 1957 Stalin Prize 1943 1948 1949 1952 USSR State Prize 1972 Order of Georgi Dimitrov People s Republic of Bulgaria 1964 Laureate of the Zhukovskii Academy of Sciences of the USSR 1958 Gold Medal of the FAI Aviation 1958 Leonardo da Vinci Prize 1971 Gold Medal of the Society of the founders of Air France 1971 Honorary Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society of Great Britain 1970 2 and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics 1971 3 Honorary Citizen of Paris 1964 New York and the city of Zhukovsky Moscow Oblast 1968 Inducted into the International Air amp Space Hall of Fame at the San Diego Air amp Space Museum in 1988 7 Aircraft designed by Andrei Tupolev EditList partial of retired or active airliners designed or made by aviation designer engineer Andrei Tupolev incl both military and civilian planes jets and other aircraft Tupolev Tu 16 Tupolev Tu 22 Tupolev Tu 95 Tupolev Tu 116 Tupolev Tu 104 Tupolev Tu 114 Tupolev Tu 124 Tupolev Tu 126 Tupolev Tu 134References Edit Central Museum of the Military Air Forces of the Russian Federation Monino ru Retrieved on 2012 08 09 a b 2013 Honours Medals amp Awards PDF Royal Aeronautical Society p 13 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 07 10 Retrieved 2014 09 29 a b Fellow and Honorary Fellow Roster 2014 PDF American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics p 13 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 03 20 Retrieved 2014 09 29 Credited as Andrie N Tupelov Tupolev Company Website Archived April 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine Tupolev ru Retrieved on 2012 08 09 Tupolev The Man and His Aircraft P Duffy amp A I Kandalov 1996 page 9 George C Larson April 1973 Reporting Points Flying Magazine 92 4 37 Sprekelmeyer Linda editor These We Honor The International Aerospace Hall of Fame Donning Co Publishers 2006 ISBN 978 1 57864 397 4 Literature Edit S P Korolev Encyclopedia of life and creativity edited by C A Lopota RSC Energia S P Korolev 2014 ISBN 978 5 906674 04 3External links EditBiography Andrei Tupolev at Find a Grave nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andrei Tupolev amp oldid 1176356976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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