Madame Krassotkin (Anna Fyodorovna) Kolya's doting and widowed mother.
Lizaveta Smerdyastchaya The town's deformed idiot, who is seduced by Karamazov and then gives birth to Smerdyakov.
Lyagavy See Gorstkin.
Makarov (Mihail Makarovitch Makarov) The district police inspector who questions Dmitri about the murder.
Marfa Ignatyevna Grigory's wife and another of the Karamazov servants.
Marya Kondratyevna The daughter of Dmitri's landlady who is in love with Smerdyakov.
Maximov An old, destitute landowner who lives off the generosity of others, especially Grushenka, in the closing chapters of the novel.
Miusov (Pyotr Alexandrovitch Miusov) A cousin of Karamazov's first wife, who was instrumental in having Dmitri taken away from Fyodor.
Mussyalovitch Grushenka's ex-lover, whose return precipitated Dmitri's strange behavior on the night of the murder.
Father Paissy The learned theologian and devoted friend of Father Zossima who tries to console Alyosha.
Pyotr Ilyitch Perhotin The young civil servant from whom Dmitri borrows money on the night of the murder.
Mihail Ospovitch Rakitin A young seminarian who professes to have very liberal and advanced ideas and who betrays his friendship with Alyosha.
Sanmonov (Kuzma Samsonov) A wealthy landowner who befriends Grushenka.
Captain Snegiryov Ilusha's father, who is destitute and broken by misfortunes. He is attacked by Dmitri one night because he earned money from Fyodor.
Varvinsky A district doctor who testifies as to Dmitri's mental condition.
Vrublevsky Mussyalovitch's companion on the night of the orgy in Mokroe.
Father Zossima The revered elder at the monastery and the spiritual guardian for Alyosha, whose teachings become central to all the ideas in the novel.






















