Tikhonova heads the Innopraktika company, which unites two initiatives ofMoscow State University: the National Intellectual Development Foundation (NIDF) and the National Intellectual Reserve Centre (NIRC).[2] She is also deputy director of the Institute for Mathematical Research of Complex Systems at Moscow State University.[5]
Tikhonova was born inDresden,East Germany, the younger of two daughters ofVladimir Putin andLyudmila Putina (née Shkrebneva). The family moved toLeningrad (now Saint Petersburg) in the spring of 1991. She attendedPeterschule (Russian:Петершуле), a GermanGymnasium in Saint Petersburg.[6] Later, during violent gang wars involving theTambov Gang while it was taking control of Saint Petersburg's energy trade, she and her sisterMaria were sent by their father, who feared for their safety, toGermany where their legal guardian was formerStasi officerMatthias Warnig, who had worked with their father in Dresden as part of a KGB cell and established the Dresdner Bank branch in Saint Petersburg.[7] After her family moved to Moscow, she attendedGerman School Moscow.[8] She dropped the Putin surname and took thepatronymic name of her maternal grandmother,[9] Yekaterina Tikhonovna Shkrebneva,[10] as her surname.[2]
Tikhonova is the director of Innopraktika, a $1.7 billion development project to create a science center at Moscow State University.[1][2] Innopraktika is competing with theSkolkovo Innovation Center and is referred to byStanislav Belkovsky as being the "anti-Skolkovo".[9] In February 2020, Innopraktika announced that Tikhonova was appointed head of a new artificial intelligence institute at Moscow State University.[16]
In May 2019, she defended her dissertation and received a degree in physics and mathematics.[16] The scientific work was called "Mathematical problems of correcting the activity of vestibular mechanoreceptors". This was preceded by a series of scientific publications in collaboration with well-known scientists.[17][18] The rector of the Moscow State UniversityViktor Sadovnichiy was the scientific supervisor.[19][20][21] The legitimacy of her degree, however, has not yet been confirmed by independent sources.
In December 2019, Tikhonova became a member of the Council for the Development of Physical Culture and Mass Sports under the Government of the Russian Federation.[22][23][24]
In the mid-2010s, Tikhonova was fond ofacrobatic rock'n'roll – a rare, non-Olympic sport, in the world ranking of which there are only about two hundred people. She and partner Ivan Klimov came in fifth place at a 2013 world championship event in Switzerland.[27] In 2014, at the Russian Championship, the pair took second place.[28] In theWorld Federation, Tikhonova at one time held the post of Vice President for Expansion & Marketing.[29] Then, acrobatic rock and roll began to gain popularity in Russia. From 2016 to 2019, in the Moscow region, at the sports school where Tikhonova studied, an acrobatic rock and roll center was built for 2 billion rubles.[28][30]
In 2013, Tikhonova married businessmanKirill Shamalov,[4][38] the son ofNikolay Shamalov, a co-owner ofRossiya Bank.[2] He is vice-president ofSibur Holding, which is a Russian gas processing and petrochemicals company headquartered in Moscow. The Russian government holds 38% of the shares of the gas company. At the time, the couple was estimated to hold assets worth around $2 billion.[2] In January 2018,Bloomberg News reported that Tikhonova and Shamalov had separated.[39]
^Herszenhorn, David M. (5 May 2012)."In the Spotlight of Power, Putin Keeps His Private Life Veiled in Shadows".The New York Times. Retrieved2 March 2020.Both daughters attended German-language schools and St. Petersburg State University, where Maria studied biology and Yekaterina majored in Asian Studies.
^"Список. выпускников Санкт-Петербургского государственного университета" [List. graduates of St. Petersburg state university].St. Petersburg State University (spbu.ru) (in Russian). 15 June 2009. Archived fromthe original on 3 June 2010. Retrieved5 March 2021."See the Восточный (Oriental studies) section under Бакалавры (Bachelors) where she is listed as "Путина Катерина Владимировна" (Putina Katerina Vladimirovna). The list was published as № 11 (3797), 29 июня 2009 года (29 June 2009).
^Petrequin, Samuel; Casert, Raf; Cook, Lorne (8 April 2022). Written at Brussels."EU imposes sanctions on Putin's daughters". New York City: Associated Press.Archived from the original on 9 April 2022. Retrieved9 April 2022.