Vernon, Robert, first Baron Lyveden, 1800–1873, politician
Vernon, Emma Mary, Lady Lyveden, d.1882, nee Fitzpatrick
Venclova, Tomas, 1937-, poet, prose writer, scholar and translator
Tomas Venclova was born in 1937 in Klaipeda, Lithuania. After graduating from Vilnius University, he travelled in the Eastern Bloc, where he met and translated Anna Akhmatova and Boris Pasternak. Venclova took part in the Lithuanian and Soviet dissident movements and was one of the five founding members of the Lithuanian Helsinki Group. His activities led to a ban on publishing, exile and the stripping of his Soviet citizenship in 1977. Since 1985 Venclova has taught Slavic languages and literature at Yale University. He has been the recipient of numerous prizes including the Vilenica 1990 International Literary Prize, the Lithuanian National Prize in 2000, the 2002 Prize of Two Nations, which he received jointly with Czeslaw Milosz, the 2005 Jotvingiai Prize, and the New Culture of New Europe Prize, 2005. His works include volumes of poetry, essays, literary biography, conversations and works on Vilnius.
Vane, Christopher William, 1888-1964, 10th Baron Bernard
van Heyningen, William Edward, 1911-1989, Chemist.
Valéry, Ambroise Paul Toussaint Jules, 1871-1945, poet
Ambroise Paul Toussaint Jules Valéry (1871 - 1945) was a French poet, essayist, and philosopher.
Válek, Miroslav, 1927-1991, poet, publicist and politician
Miroslav Válek (1927 - 1991) was a Slovak poet, publicist and politician. He was also the Minister of Culture in the government of Slovak Socialistic Republic within the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic.
When the Ceaucescu regime was toppled, Liliana Ursu was finally able to give readings abroad. The American poet Tess Gallagher heard her in Spain and was stunned. She spoke of "a woman's voice so carnivorous and tender… her poems yielded a humanly political veracity which did not accede to cynicism, but seemed to have witnessed with a clear gaze what had befallen her country, its people."