Caesar Korolenko
Born(1933-10-03)3 October 1933
Died14 July 2020(2020-07-14) (agedย 86)
CitizenshipRussia
AwardsHonoured Scientist of the Russian Federation
Scientific career
FieldsPsychiatry
InstitutionsNovosibirsk State Medical University

Caesar Petrovich Korolenko (Russian: ะฆะตฬะทะฐั€ัŒ ะŸะตั‚ั€ะพฬะฒะธั‡ ะšะพั€ะพะปะตฬะฝะบะพ; 3 October 1933 โ€“ 14 July 2020) was a Russian psychiatrist. His scientific work was mainly onย addictive disorders.

Biography

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Caesar Korolenko was born on 3 October 1933 in the city of Brest-on-the-Bug (then part of Poland).

From 1941 to 1943, Korolenkoโ€™s family lived in the occupied territory. After the arrival of Soviet troops, the family moved to relatives in Novosibirsk. There he completed school and was admitted to the Faculty of Medicine of the Novosibirsk Medical Institute, from which he graduated in 1956.[1]

From 1956 to 1958, Korolenko was a clinical resident; from 1958 to 1961, a postgraduate student; and from 1961 to 1964, he worked as an assistant at the Department of Psychiatry of the Novosibirsk Medical Institute. In 1962, he defended his Candidate of Sciences dissertation titled โ€œClinical Data and Pathogenesis of Alcohol Delirium,โ€ and in 1966, he defended his doctoral dissertation โ€œClinical Data and Pathogenesis of Alcoholism and Alcohol Psychoses.โ€ In 1968, he was awarded the title of professor.[2]

Korolenko developed an interest in psychiatry and psychology after graduating from the institute, when he began working at the Department of Psychiatry and Narcology of the Novosibirsk Medical Institute, which at the time was headed by Professor M. A. Goldenberg. After Goldenbergโ€™s death in 1964, Korolenko became head of the department and held this position until 2006.[1]

Main stages of scientific activity

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At the early stage of his scientific career, Korolenko studied alcohol-related disorders, including the clinical features and pathogenesis of alcoholism and alcohol psychoses. These works led to the development of the concept of addictive disorders. The term โ€œaddictive disordersโ€ was first introduced in Russia (then the USSR) by Korolenko in the early 1970s.[3]

He is regarded as one of the founders of modern addictology. He established a scientific school of psychiatrists working in this field, who defended more than 50 Candidate and Doctoral dissertations. In 2001, he proposed the first Russian classification of non-chemical addictions.[4]

Korolenko authored 25 monographs and more than 300 scientific publications. One of his articles,[6] co-written with Dikovskiy during the Soviet period, could not be published in the USSR due to ideological restrictions in Soviet psychiatry. The stateโ€™s control limited the possibility of analyzing and describing alcoholism even from a strictly biological perspective. As a result, the article, which proposed a classification of alcoholism based on distinguishing psychological and physical dependence, was published in Yugoslavia.[5]

Korolenko presented papers at numerous international congresses on psychiatry and addictology, including those held in Montreal, Vancouver, Toronto, Andorra, Quebec City, and Warsaw. He spoke several foreign languages, including English, German, Polish, and Hungarian.[6]

Christian Faith

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Caesar Korolenko (far left) meeting with Evangelical Christian leaders in Novosibirsk to discuss matters of faith. (2017)

During the latter years of his life Caesar became friends with an American evangelical pastor and through this relationship, became a believer in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.[citation needed]

Death

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He died on 14 July 2020 at the age of 87 from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia and was buried at the Zayeltsovskoye Cemetery.[6][7]

Membership in scientific societies

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Awards

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Professor Korolenko held the title of Honoured Scientist of the Russian Federation (ru).

Publications in English

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Books

Segal, Bernard E.; Korolenko, Caesar, eds. (January 1991). Addictive Disorders in Arctic Climates: Theory, Research and Practice at the Novosibirsk Institute. Drugs and Society Series. Routledge. ISBNย 978-1-56024-036-5Has also been published as Drugs & society, volume 4, numbers 3/4, 1990 โ€“ T.p. verso. Includes papers translated from the Russian.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)

Papers

References

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  1. ^ a b ะ”ะพะบัƒะผะตะฝั‚ะฐะปัŒะฝั‹ะน ะฟั€ะพะตะบั‚ "ะ’ั€ะตะผั ะธ ะปัŽะดะธ" (2013-11-04). ะฆะตะทะฐั€ัŒ ะŸะตั‚ั€ะพะฒะธั‡ ะšะพั€ะพะปะตะฝะบะพ. Retrieved 2025-12-01 โ€“ via YouTube.
  2. ^ ะฟะพะด ั€ะตะดะฐะบั†ะธะตะน ะฐะบะฐะดะตะผะธะบะฐ ะ ะะœะ ะข.ะ‘. ะ”ะผะธั‚ั€ะธะตะฒะพะน, ะฟั€ะพั„ะตััะพั€ะฐ ะฎ.ะ. ะะปะตะบัะฐะฝะดั€ะพะฒัะบะพะณะพ. "ะ’ั‹ะดะฐัŽั‰ะธะตัั ะฟัะธั…ะธะฐั‚ั€ั‹ ะ ะพััะธะธ (ะธัั‚ะพั€ะธั ะธ ัะพะฒั€ะตะผะตะฝะฝะพัั‚ัŒ)" (PDF). www.otrok.ru. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2024-04-23. Retrieved 2025-12-01.
  3. ^ Korolenko C., Dikovsky A. (1972). The Clinical Classification of Alcoholism // Anali zavoda za mentalno zdravlje. Beograd.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ ะ•ะณะพั€ะพะฒ ะ.ะฎ. (2005). ะะตั…ะธะผะธั‡ะตัะบะธะต (ะฟะพะฒะตะดะตะฝั‡ะตัะบะธะต) ะฐะดะดะธะบั†ะธะธ (ะพะฑะทะพั€). ะกะฐะฝะบั‚-ะŸะตั‚ะตั€ะฑัƒั€ะณ: ะะดะดะธะบั‚ะพะปะพะณะธั.
  5. ^ ะšะพั€ะพะปะตะฝะบะพ ะฆ.ะŸ., ะ”ะผะธั‚ั€ะธะตะฒะฐ ะ.ะ’. (2000). ะกะพั†ะธะพะดะธะฝะฐะผะธั‡ะตัะบะฐั ะฟัะธั…ะธะฐั‚ั€ะธั. ะœะพัะบะฒะฐ: ะะบะฐะดะตะผะธั‡ะตัะบะธะน ะฟั€ะพะตะบั‚.
  6. ^ a b ะšะพั€ะพะปะตะฝะบะพ ะฆะตะทะฐั€ัŒ ะŸะตั‚ั€ะพะฒะธั‡. ะŸะฐะฝั‚ะตะพะฝ ะ ะพััะธะธ.
  7. ^ ะžั‚ ะบะพั€ะพะฝะฐะฒะธั€ัƒัะฝะพะน ะธะฝั„ะตะบั†ะธะธ ัƒะผะตั€ ะฆะตะทะฐั€ัŒ ะšะพั€ะพะปะตะฝะบะพ (in Russian)
  8. ^ Anthropology & Medicine: Board of Editors
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