| Mr Dzhugashvili - seen here in 2009 with his grandchildren - was fiercely defensive of Josef Stalin's record |
One of the grandsons of Soviet leader Josef Stalin has been found dead in the Russian capital Moscow, ambulance officials say.
| Mr Dzhugashvili spent most of his time with his family in Georgia - where his grandfather Josef Stalin was born |
The court rejected a complaint brought by Mr Dzhugashvili over an article accusing the Soviet leader of being a "bloodthirsty cannibal".
Published in the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, the article said Soviet leaders including Stalin were "bound by much blood" by ordering the execution of about 20,000 Polish prisoners of war at Katyn.
Mr Dzhugashvili argued that the article blackened his grandfather's reputation and was defamatory. He took his case to the European court after various courts in Russia threw it out.
He also argued that the Soviet Union would not have gone downhill if his father lived longer. More recently he accused President Putin of being "without brains".
Evgeny Dzhugashvili
- His father Yakov was captured by the Nazis in WWII and is believed to have died in a concentration camp in 1943
- Was a lecturer at military academies for more than 20 years
- Complained that his grandfather was being blamed "for everything" wrong in Russia
- Took part in a number of space missions
- Also took part in Duma elections during the 1990s
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Western biographies of Stalin record three children - Yakov by his first wife Ekaterina and a son and a daughter - Vasily and Svetlana - by his second wife Nadezhda.
Both sons are dead. Svetlana defected from the Soviet Union in 1966 and died in 2011 in the US.
Stalin was thought to have at least eight grandchildren.