List of people from Chernivtsi
The Ukrainian city of Chernivtsi (Ukrainian: Чернівці) is/was home to many people. The following is a list of people from Chernivtsi.
Natives
- Aharon Appelfeld (1932-2018), Jewish writer
- Ninon Ausländer (1895-1966), art historian and wife of Hermann Hesse
- Rose Ausländer (1901–1988), Jewish German-language writer
- Elyakim Badian (1925-2000), Israeli politician
- Charles K. Bliss (1897–1985), inventor of Bliss-Symbole
- Ion Bostan (1914–1992), Romanian film director
- Octav Botnar (1913–1998), Romanian businessman, philanthropist, billionaire
- Josef Burg (1912–2009), last Yiddish poet in Czernowitz
- Vasile Cantemir (1794 - 1835), lexicographer
- Mihai Miron Călinescu (Chernivtsi, 1837-1912, Chernivtsi), priest, teacher, journalist
- Paul Celan (born Antschel; 1920–1970), Romanian-born, German-language writer, poet and translator
- George Drumur (born George Pavelescu ; 1911, Chernivtsi -1992, Timişoara) was a writer, journalist, musicologist and Romanian translator.
- Erwin Chargaff (1905–2002), Jewish biochemist
- Eugen Ehrlich (1862–1922), Jewish jurist
- Radu Grigorovici (November 20, 1911 – August 2, 2008) was a Romanian physicist
- Constantin Ritter von Isopescu-Grecul (or cavaler de Isopescu-Grecul; 1871–1938) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian jurist, politician, and journalist
- Raimund Friedrich Kaindl (1866-1930), historian of Bukovina, professor at Franz-Josef University, Czernowitz
- Frederick John Kiesler (1890–1965), theater designer, artist, theoretician and architect
- Ruth Klieger Aliav (born Polishuk; 1914–1979), Romanian-Israeli Jewish activist
- Sam Kogan (1946-2004), stage director, actor and founding principal of the Academy of the Science of Acting and Directing in London
- Mila Kunis (b. 1983), actress[1][2][3]
- Eusebius Mandyczewski (1857–1929), Romanian musicologist, composer (Greek Orthodox)
- Itzik Manger (1901–1969), Jewish writer, who wrote in Yiddish
- Georg Marco (1863–1923), Romanian chess-player and author
- Volodymyr Melnykov (b. 1951), Ukrainian poet, writer, songwriter, composer and public figure, Merited Figure of Arts of Ukraine.
- Carol Miculi (1821 –1892, Lemberg), Romanian pianist and composer, student of Frédéric Chopin
- Jan Mikulicz-Radecki (1850–1905), Polish surgeon
- Dan Pagis (1930–1986), Israeli writer
- Anton Pawlowski (June 11, 1830 – April 28, 1901), Imperial and Royal Senior Government Building Officer, Commander of the Royal Romanian Order of the Crown, Honorary Master of the Alemannia Student (Duelling) Corps
- Iacob Pistiner, lawyer and Member of the Romanian Parliament in the interwar years
- Traian Popovici (1892–1946), Romanian lawyer, mayor of this city, and Righteous Among the Nations (Chasidey Umoth HaOlam)
- Markus Reiner (1886-1976), one of the founders of rheology
- Gregor von Rezzori (born d'Arezzo; 1914–1998), Austrian Romanian German-language writer of Sicilian origin
- Ludwig Rottenberg (real name: Lazăr) (1864–1932), conductor and composer
- Ze'ev Sherf (1904-1984), Israeli Minister of Finance
- Stefanie von Turetzki (1868–1929), founder of the first girls' grammar school in Austria–Hungary in Czernowitz
- Viorica Ursuleac (1894–1985), Romanian opera singer (dramatic soprano)
- Mariya Yaremchuk, Ukrainian pop singer
- Arseniy Yatsenyuk (1974)
- Frederic Zelnik (born 1885), important German silent movie director-producer, born in Czernowitz
Residents
- Alexei Alexinschi (1899-1966), Romanian illustrious entomologist
- Hermann Bahr
- Grigore Vasiliu Birlic (1905-1970), Romanian actor of theater and cinema
- Nathan Birnbaum
- Ilie Bahrin (1931-1995), poet
- Isidor Bodea (1866-1938), first head physician of the Children's Hospital of Chernivtsi
- Epaminonda Anibal Bucevschi (1843-1891), painter
- Vasile Bumbac (1837-1918), writer, translator, teacher, folklorist
- Dimitrie Dan (1856-1927), Romanian priest, historian, folklorist
- Mihai Eminescu (1850–1889), the most famous and influential Romanian poet
- Karl Freiherr von Enzenberg (1725, Padova-1810, Sibiu), Governor of Bukovina
- Iancu Flondor (1865–1924), was an Austro-Hungarian-born ethnic Romanian activist who advocated Bukovina's unifion with the Kingdom of Romania
- Tudor cavaler de Flondor (Theodor Ritter von Flondor), was a Romanian composer and politician, lawyer and economist during the Austro-Hungarian Empire
- Karl Emil Franzos (1848–1904), Jewish writer and publicist, grew up in Czernowitz and wrote a literary memorial of the Jewish ghetto, The Jews of Barnow
- Gala Galaction, originally Grigore Pisculescu (1879–1961), Romanian writer
- Ion Grămadă
- Eugenie Hacman (1793-1873), Romanian Orthodox priest, bishop of Bucovina
- Eudoxiu Hurmuzachi
- Volodymyr Ivasyuk
- Joseph Kalmer
- Olha Kobylyanska
- Zvi Laron
- Anastasiya Markovich (1979-), painter
- Miron Nicolescu, mathematician
- Ion Nistor
- Israel Polack
- Ciprian Porumbescu
- Aron Pumnul
- Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957), Jewish psychoanalyst and sexologist, born in Dobrzanica, went to school in Czernowitz
- Eugenia de Reuss Ianculescu (1865-1938), was a Romanian teacher, writer, and women's rights activist
- Eric Roll
- Sofia Rotaru
- Maximilien Rubel
- Wojciech Rubinowicz
- Josef Schmidt (1904 – 1942), singer, actor and cantor
- Joseph Schumpeter (1883–1950), economist and Minister of Finance, 1909–1911 professor in Czernowitz
- Eliezer Steinbarg (Shtaynbarg; 1880 – 1932) was a Romanian teacher and Yiddish poetic fabulist
- Wilhelm Stekel (1868–1940), Jewish psychoanalyst and sexologist, born in Boiany, Bukowina, grew up in Czernowitz and attended the Gymnasium (grammar school)
- Vasile Tărâțeanu, journalist and writer
- Nazariy Yaremchuk
gollark: Mediawiki is open source. However, it's written in PHP.
gollark: Oh. Right. Backlinks too.
gollark: (again)
gollark: The next thing to do is to rework the content model in some slightly underdetermined way, actually add revisions, change the UI, ignore this list of things to do and randomly do something else instead, and add files.
gollark: Do you mean MediaWiki and redirects? If so, sure.
References
- Ukrainian Jews Archived 2013-11-03 at the Wayback Machine, Bible Discovered
- (in Ukrainian) Міла Куніс зіграє у трилері ”Чорний лебідь”, Gazeta.ua (August 13, 2009)
- 'EXTRACT' STAR MILA KUNIS ON HER RUSSIAN ROOTS, YouTube
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.