List of Austrians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location of Austria

This is a list of notable Austrians.

Arnold Schwarzenegger

Actors/actresses[]

  • Helmut Berger (born 1944), actor
  • Senta Berger (born 1941), actress
  • Klaus Maria Brandauer (born 1943), actor
  • Marie Geistinger (1836–1903), actress and opera singer
  • Käthe Gold (1907-1997), stage actress
  • Liane Haid (1895-2000), first Austrian movie star
  • Attila Hörbiger (1896-1987), actor
  • Christiane Hörbiger (born 1938), actress
  • Paul Hörbiger (1894-1981), actor
  • Boris Kodjoe (born 1973), actor
  • Melanie Kogler (born 1985), television and theatre actress
  • Hedy Lamarr (1914-2000), actress; also co-inventor of spread spectrum radio technology; became U.S. citizen
  • Karl Merkatz (born 1930), actor (most notable for his role as a Viennese in "Mundl")
  • Birgit Minichmayr (born 1977), actress
  • Hans Moser (1880-1964), comedy actor
  • Reggie Nalder (1907-1991), actor
  • Maximilian Schell (1930-2014), actor
  • Romy Schneider (1938-1982), actress
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger (born 1947), bodybuilder, actor, became U.S. citizen, governor of the U.S. state of California (2003–2011)
  • Erich von Stroheim (1885-1957), actor and film director
  • Christoph Waltz (born 1956), actor
  • Maria Weiss, mezzo-soprano and actress
  • Oskar Werner (1922-1984), actor
  • Gilla (born 1950), also known as Gisela Wuchinger. She's a singer and actor from the disco era

Artists/architects[]

  • Felix de Weldon, sculptor
  • Maria Auböck, landscape architect
  • Bernhard Cella, conceptual artist
  • Albin Egger-Lienz, painter
  • Karl Ehn, architect, designer of the Karl-Marx-Hof
  • Trude Fleischmann, photographer
  • Ernst Fuchs, artist
  • Xenia Hausner, painter
  • Gottfried Helnwein, artist, born in Vienna
  • Kurt Hentschlager, new media artist
  • Friedensreich Hundertwasser, artist
  • Gustav Klimt, artist, helped found Vienna Secession
  • Oskar Kokoschka,[1] painter
  • Alfred Kubin, graphic artist
  • Adolf Loos, architect, born in Brno (Moravia, present-day Czech Republic)
  • Hans Makart, history painter, designer and decorator
  • Inge Morath, photographer
  • Richard Neutra, architect
  • Willy Puchner, photographer
  • Arnulf Rainer, painter
  • Johann Michael Rottmayr, Baroque painter
  • Egon Schiele, painter
  • Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, architect and political activist
  • De Es Schwertberger, artist
  • Harry Seidler, architect
  • Aloys Wach, painter
  • Otto Wagner, Jugendstil architect behind much of turn-of-the-century Viennese architecture
  • Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, painter
  • Franz West, artist
  • Olga Wisinger-Florian, painter
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Falco with the Swiss singer Ursela Monn

Composers/musicians[]

Joseph Haydn
Johann Strauss II
Arnold Schoenberg, Los Angeles, 1948
  • Wolfgang Ambros, pop musician
  • Louie Austen (born 1946), composer and musician
  • Ernst Bachrich (1892/1893-1942), composer and conductor
  • Caroline Bayer (1758-1803), 18th-century violinist and composer
  • Alban Berg[2] (1885-1935), composer
  • Alfred Brendel (born 1931), pianist
  • Anton Bruckner (1824-1896), composer
  • Friedrich Cerha (born 1926), composer and conductor
  • Carl Czerny (1791-1857), pianist and composer
  • Anton Diabelli (1781-1858), publisher, editor and composer
  • Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf (1739-1799), composer
  • Karlheinz Essl (born 1960), composer and electronical musician
  • Falco (1957-1998), pop musician
  • Christian Fennesz (born 1962), electronic musician
  • Bernhard Gál (born 1971), composer and artist
  • Georg Friedrich Haas (born 1953), composer
  • Natascha Hagen, singer-songwriter
  • Nikolaus Harnoncourt (1929-2016), conductor
  • Joseph Haydn[2] (1732-1809), composer
  • Michael Haydn (1737-1806), composer, younger brother of Joseph Haydn
  • Udo Jürgens (1934-2014), singer-songwriter
  • Herbert von Karajan (1908-1989), conductor
  • Bernhard Lang (born 1957), composer
  • Thomas Lang (born 1967), drummer and composer
  • Joseph Lanner (1801-1843), composer
  • Left Boy (born 1988), singer
  • Elisabeth Leonskaja (born 1945), pianist, Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art, First Class, in 2006
  • Gustav Mahler[2] (1860-1911), composer
  • Penny McLean (born 1948), singer with the disco group Silver Convention
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart[2][3] (1756-1791), musician and composer
  • Gerhard Potuznik, electronic musician
  • Franz Schmidt (1874-1939), composer
  • Arnold Schoenberg[2] (1874-1951), composer
  • Franz Schubert[2][3] (1797-1828), composer and musician
  • Parov Stelar (born 1974), electronic musician
  • Eduard Strauss (1835-1916), composer
  • Johann Strauss, Jr. (1825-1899), composer
  • Johann Strauss, Sr. (1804-1849), composer
  • Josef Strauss (1827-1870), composer
  • Franz von Suppé (1819-1895), composer
  • Anton Webern[2] (1883-1945), composer
  • Franz Welser-Möst (born 1960), conductor
  • Hugo Wolf (1860-1903), composer
  • Conchita Wurst (born 1988), pop musician
  • Joe Zawinul (1932-2007), jazz musician, composer
  • Eric Zeisl (1905-1959), composer
  • Alexander von Zemlinsky (1871-1942), composer
Ferdinand James von Rothschild

Entrepreneurs[]

  • Hannes Androsch (born 1938), former minister of finance in the government of Bruno Kreisky
  • Hikmet Ersek, CEO of The Western Union Company, a Fortune 500 company.
  • Ignaz Glaser (1853-1916), entrepreneur
  • Gaston Glock (born 1929), inventor, founder of Glock Ges.m.b.H.
  • Niki Lauda (1949-2019), Formula One race car driver and aviation entrepreneur
  • Richard Lugner (born 1932), entrepreneur and society figure
  • Dietrich Mateschitz (born 1944), businessman behind the Red Bull brand
  • Ludwig (Louis) von Nathaniel (1882-1955), banker
  • Ferdinand Porsche, automotive engineer, designed the Volkswagen (the "people's car"), born in Vratislavice nad Nisou (Austria-Hungary, Bohemia, present-day Czech Republic), (1875–1951)
  • Ferdinand Anton Ernst Porsche, automotive engineer and entrepreneur, he expanded the sports car manufacturer Porsche AG to what it is now (1909-1998)
  • Johann Puch (1862-1914), inventor, mechanic, co-founder of Steyr-Daimler-Puch
  • Albert Salomon von Rothschild (1844-1911), banker
  • Anselm von Rothschild (1803-1874), banker
  • Ferdinand James von Rothschild (1839-1898), investor
  • Nathaniel Mayer Anselm von Rothschild (1836-1905), banker
  • Salomon Mayer von Rothschild (1774-1855), banker
  • Robert Schlumberger (1814-1879), entrepreneur
  • Frank Stronach (born 1932), (born in Austria), entrepreneur
  • Daniel Swarovski (1862-1956), founder of Swarovski AG, world-famous crystals, born in Jiřetín pod Bukovou, (Bohemia, present-day Czech Republic)
Fritz Lang

Filmmakers[]

  • Barbara Albert, film director, producer and writer
  • Franz Antel, director, actor and writer
  • Axel Corti, director
  • Elfi von Dassanowsky, film producer, singer, pianist
  • Andrea Maria Dusl, film director and writer
  • Amir Esmann, director, director of photography, writer
  • Max Fleischer, animator
  • Michael Haneke,[4] film director (born in Germany, however lives and works in Austria)
  • Fritz Lang,[5][6] film director
  • Francis Lawrence, Austrian-American film director
  • Otto Preminger, film director
  • Stefan Ruzowitzky, film director and writer
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger, actor and politician
  • Ulrich Seidl, film director and writer
  • Josef von Sternberg, film director
  • Erich von Stroheim,[5][7] film director
  • Wolfgang Suschitzky, director of photography
  • Edgar G. Ulmer, film director
  • Hans Weingartner, film director, producer and writer
  • Virgil Widrich, film director, producer and writer
  • Billy Wilder, film director, born in Austria-Hungary
  • Fred Zinnemann, film director

Mountaineers[]

Peter Aufschnaiter

Military leaders[]

Joseph Radetzky von Radetz
  • Haim Bar-Lev, Israeli general and government minister
  • Leopold Josef Graf Daun, Field marshal
  • Joseph Radetzky von Radetz, military leader
  • Prince Eugene of Savoy, general in the war against the Turks (17th–18th century)
  • Philipp von Stadion und Thannhausen, field marshal
  • Wilhelm von Tegetthoff, admiral
  • Georg von Trapp, navy officer
  • Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz, general
  • Archduke Charles of Austria, fight against Napoleon

Politicians[]

Adolf Hitler
Sebastian Kurz
Karl Renner
  • Kasimir Felix Graf Badeni, statesman and diplomat
  • Leopold Graf Berchtold, foreign minister at the outbreak of the First World War
  • Brigitte Bierlein, Chancellor 2019–2020
  • Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi, politician and writer
  • Engelbert Dollfuß, Chancellor 1932–1934 (First Republic), established Austrofascism
  • Leopold Figl, Chancellor 1945–1953, foreign minister 1953–1959
  • Heinz Fischer, former President
  • Werner Faymann, former Chancellor
  • Jörg Haider, politician, governour of Carinthia until his death in 2008
  • Adolf Hitler, leader of the Third Reich 1933–1945, gained German citizenship in 1932, and became German Chancellor in 1933. In 1938, he annexed Austria with the Anschluß
  • Joseph Hormayr Freiherr zu Hortenburg, statesman and historian
  • Theodor Innitzer, cardinal archbishop of Vienna 1932–1955, minister of social affairs 1929–1930
  • Ernst Kaltenbrunner, NSDAP politician
  • Wenzel Anton Graf Kaunitz, statesman
  • Christian Kern, Chancellor 2016–2017
  • Rudolf Kirchschläger, judge, diplomat and President 1974–1986
  • Thomas Klestil, diplomat, President 1992–2004
  • Teddy Kollek, Israeli Mayor of Jerusalem
  • Bruno Kreisky, Chancellor 1970–1983, foreign minister 1959–1966
  • Sebastian Kurz, Chancellor 2017–2019, 2020–2021
  • Klemens Wenzel von Metternich, diplomat and statesman
  • Julius Raab, Chancellor 1953–1961
  • Karl Renner, Chancellor 1918–1920 and 1945, first President of the Second Republic 1945–1950
  • Adolf Schärf, President 1957–1965
  • Anton von Schmerling, statesman (liberal movement of the 19th century)
  • Kurt Schuschnigg, Chancellor 1934–1938
  • Wolfgang Schüssel, Chancellor 2000–2007
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger, former governor of California
  • Ignaz Seipel, Catholic priest, Chancellor 1922–1924 and 1926–1929
  • Arthur Seyß-Inquart, NSDAP politician, last Chancellor before the Anschluss in 1938
  • Johann Philipp von Stadion, statesman, foreign minister and diplomat 1763–1824
  • Alexander Van der Bellen, former chairman of the Austrian Green Party and President since 2017
  • Kurt Waldheim, diplomat and politician, UN Secretary-General 1972–1982, President of Austria 1986–1992
Ignaz Seipel

Religious leaders[]

  • Theodor Innitzer, cardinal archbishop of Vienna 1932–1955, minister of social affairs 1929–1930
  • Franz König, 1905–2004, Cardinal Archbishop of Vienna (1956–1985)
  • Christoph Schönborn, archbishop and cardinal
  • Ignaz Seipel, Catholic priest, Chancellor 1922–1924 and 1926–1929

Royalty[]

Franz Joseph I of Austria
  • Elisabeth, Empress-Consort of Austria, wife of Francis Joseph I
  • Ferdinand I, Emperor of Austria
  • Francis Joseph I, Emperor of Austria
  • Francis II/I, Holy Roman Emperor, first Emperor of Austria
  • Franz Ferdinand, Archduke (assassinated in 1914)
  • Frederick II of Austria, last Babenberger duke of Austria
  • Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, reformer (abolished the death penalty) 1780–1790
  • Karl I, last Emperor of Austria
  • Karl V, Holy Roman Emperor 1500–1558
  • Leopold V, Babenberg duke of Austria, participated in the Third Crusade
  • Maria Leopoldina, Archduchess, became Empress of Brazil
  • Maria Theresia, Archduchess of Austria, Holy Roman Empress-Consort, last male-line Habsburg
  • Marie Antoinette, Archduchess, became Queen of France
  • Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, 1459–1519
  • Maximilian I, Emperor of Mexico, Archduke of Austria
  • Rudolf, Crown Prince of Austria, Archduke of Austria
  • Rudolph I, King of Germany, first Habsburg king
  • Rudolf IV of Austria, Duke of Austria, self-styled archduke 1358–1365 (Privilegium Maius)

Scientists[]

Joseph Schumpeter

Economists[]

  • Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk economist and early member of the Austrian School of Economics
  • Friedrich Hayek, economist and social scientist, Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1974 (became a British citizen in 1938)
  • Leopold Kohr, (1909–1994), economist, jurist and political scientist
  • Fritz Machlup
  • Carl Menger, founder of the Austrian School of economics
  • Ludwig von Mises, free-market economist
  • Oskar Morgenstern, co-founder of game theory
  • Otto Neurath, socialist, economist and philosopher
  • Joseph Schumpeter, economist, born in Triesch, Austria-Hungary
  • Friedrich von Wieser, economist of the Austrian School

Engineers/inventors[]

Thomas Feichtner
  • Thomas Feichtner, industrial designer
  • Anselm Franz, pioneer in jet engine engineering, designed the world's first turbojet
  • Gaston Glock, inventor, founder of firearms company GLOCK GmbH
  • Eduard Haas, inventor of the Pez candy
  • Hedy Lamarr, co-inventor of spread spectrum wireless communications, along with George Antheil
  • Viktor Kaplan, inventor of turbines for river power plants
  • Wilhelm Kress, aviation pioneer, inventor of the stick control for airplanes
  • Ernst Lauda (1859-1932), hydraulic and bridge engineer
  • Josef Madersperger, invented the sewing machine in 1818
  • Siegfried Marcus, automobile pioneer, inventor of the first gasoline powered automobile (vehicles of 1870 and 1889)
  • Alois Negrelli, engineer and railroad pioneer (created the plans for the Suez Canal)
  • Ferdinand Porsche, automotive engineer, designed the Volkswagen (the "people's car"), inventor of the hybrid car, contributed to the design of the Tiger I and Tiger II tanks. Born in Austria-Hungary
  • Josef Ressel, inventor of the marine screw propeller, pneumatic post and ball bearing
  • Alois Senefelder, inventor of the printing technique of lithography
  • Josef Singer (1923-2009), Israeli aeronautical engineer and President of Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
  • Max Valier, rocketry pioneer
  • Auer von Welsbach, inventor of gaslight
  • Theodor Scheimpflug, inventor of Scheimpflug photography
Ludwig Wittgenstein

Philosophers[]

  • Franz Brentano, philosopher and psychologist
  • Martin Buber, philosopher
  • Christian von Ehrenfels, philosopher
  • Herbert Feigl, philosopher (member of the Vienna Circle)
  • Paul Feyerabend, philosopher (died 1994)
  • Philipp Frank, philosopher and physicist (member of the Vienna Circle)
  • Edmund Husserl, philosopher (born in Prossnitz, Austria-Hungary)
  • Wilhelm Jerusalem, philosopher, born 1854 in Drenitz, died in 1923 in Vienna
  • Hans Köchler, philosopher (born in Schwaz, 1948)
  • Georg Kreisel, philosopher and mathematician
  • Alexius Meinong, philosopher (theory of objects) 1853–1920
  • Otto Neurath, socialist, economist and philosopher
  • Karl Popper, philosopher (born in Austria, became British)
  • Friedrich Waismann, mathematician, philosopher and physicist (member of the Vienna Circle)
  • Otto Weininger, philosopher
  • Felix Weltsch, journalist, philosopher, student of Christian von Ehrenfels
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein, philosopher, born 1889 in Vienna

Physicists, mathematicians and chemists[]

Walter Kohn
Emil Artin
  • Emil Artin, mathematician (Artin's conjecture)
  • Ludwig Boltzmann, physicist, 1844–1906, born in Vienna
  • , physicist, person of the year.
  • Fritjof Capra
  • Carl Cori, born in Prague, Austria-Hungary, biochemist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1947
  • Christian Doppler, physicist, 1803–1853, born in Salzburg (See Doppler effect)
  • Paul Ehrenfest, physicist & mathematician
  • Felix Ehrenhaft, maverick physicist, 1879–1952
  • Josef Finger, physicist and mathematician
  • Heinz von Foerster, cyberneticist, 1911–2002
  • Kurt Gödel, mathematician (born in Austria-Hungary, became naturalized U.S. citizen)
  • Hans Hahn, mathematician (member of the Vienna Circle)
  • Friedrich Hasenöhrl, physicist
  • Victor Franz Hess, physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin, chemist
  • Walter Kohn, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1998
  • Georg Kreisel, philosopher and mathematician
  • Richard Kuhn, chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1938
  • Johann Josef Loschmidt, physicist and chemist
  • Ernst Mach, physicist and philosopher (Mach number)
  • Lise Meitner, physicist
  • Richard von Mises, physicist (younger brother of Ludwig von Mises)
  • John von Neumann, mathematician (Hungarian, Budapest-born)
  • Wolfgang Pauli, physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics 1945
  • Max Ferdinand Perutz, chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1962
  • Johanna Piesch (1898–1992), physicist, mathematician, pioneer in switching algebra
  • Fritz Pregl, chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1923
  • Erwin Schrödinger, physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Heinrich Franz Friedrich Tietze, mathematician
  • Carl Auer von Welsbach, chemist
  • Gernot Zippe, physicist (developed Zippe-type centrifuge to extract uranium-235 for nuclear weapons)
  • Richard Adolf Zsigmondy, chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1925 (Hungarian origin)

Physicians[]

Josef Breuer
  • Alfred Adler, psychiatrist, father of Individual Psychology
  • Hans Asperger, pediatrician who studied autism, person for whom Asperger syndrome is named
  • Leopold Auenbrugger, physician 1722–1809 (method of percussion)
  • Robert Bárány, physician, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Josef Breuer, physician (forerunner in psychoanalysis)
  • Ernst von Fleischl-Marxow, physician and physiologist (studies of nerves and the brain)
  • Viktor Frankl, psychiatrist, father of logotherapy
  • Sigmund Freud, psychiatrist, father of psychoanalysis
  • Karl von Frisch, physician, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Leo Kanner, child psychiatrist
  • Karl Landsteiner, physician, serologist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1886–1943
  • Otto Loewi, pharmacologist (born in Germany, but spent 40 years (age 25–65) of his life in Austria) Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Karol Ignacy Lorinser, physician
  • Franz Mesmer, physician, developed an early form of hypnotism 1734–1815
  • Paracelsus, (real name: Theophrast von Hohenheim), alchemist and physician
  • Clemens von Pirquet, pediatrician and scientist in bacteriology and immunology
  • Wilhelm Reich, psychiatrist, (1897–1957)
  • Erwin Ringel, Austrian psychiatrist (presuicidal syndrome)
  • Ignaz Semmelweis, physician (born in Hungary, Austria-Hungary)
  • Julius Wagner-Jauregg, physician, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1927
Sigmund Freud

Psychologists[]

  • Paul Watzlawick, communication theory
  • Sigmund Freud, psychoanalysis

Other scientists[]

  • Othenio Abel, paleontologist
  • Karl von Czyhlarz, Czech-Austrian jurist
  • Martin Gerzabek, ecologist and soil scientist
  • Hans Hass, biologist and diving pioneer
  • Max Hecker (born 1879), Austrian-born Israeli President of the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
  • Hans Kelsen, jurist (father of the Austrian constitution)
  • Konrad Lorenz zoologist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Gregor Mendel, pioneer of genetics
  • Julius Pokorny, linguist
  • Rupert Riedl, zoologist
  • Eric Kandel, neuroscientist
Niki Lauda
Dominic Thiem

Sports[]

  • Margarete Adler, Olympic bronze swimmer (4x100-meter (m) freestyle relay)[8]
  • David Alaba, footballer, winner of 2012–13 UEFA Champions League with FC Bayern Munich
  • Felix Baumgartner, world record setting skydiver
  • Gerhard Berger, racing driver
  • Richard Bergmann, 7-time world table tennis champion, ITTF Hall of Fame
  • Albert Bogen (Albert Bógathy), saber fencer, Olympic silver
  • Fritzi Burger, figure skater, Olympic 2-time silver, World Championship 2-time silver
  • Hans Dobida, inductee into the IIHF Hall of Fame
  • Michaela Dorfmeister, alpine skier
  • Erich Eliskases, chess grandmaster
  • Otto Fischer (1901–1941), footballer and coach
  • Siegfried Flesch, sabre fencer, Olympic bronze
  • Marcel Sabitzer, footballer
  • Toni Fritsch, soccer and football player who won the Super Bowl in 1972
  • Michael Grabner, NHL player
  • Ernst Grünfeld, chess grandmaster
  • Hans Haas, Olympic champion weightlifter (lightweight), silver
  • Tunc Hamarat, correspondence chess world champion (2004)
  • Ernst Happel, football player and coach
  • Judith Haspel (born "Judith Deutsch"), held every Austrian women's middle and long distance freestyle record in 1935[9]
  • Dr. Otto Herschmann, Olympic 2-silver (in saber fencing/team sabre and 100-m freestyle)
  • Hansi Hinterseer, skier, singer, actor, entertainer
  • Nickolaus Hirschl, 2-time Olympic bronze wrestler (heavyweight freestyle and Greco-Roman), shot put and discus junior champion, weightlifting junior champion, and pentathlon champion
  • Felix Kasper, figure skater, Olympic bronze
  • Franz Klammer, Olympic alpine ski champion
  • Hans Krankl, football player and coach
  • Niki Lauda, Formula One race car driver and aviation entrepreneur
  • Hermann Maier, Olympic alpine ski champion
  • Alex Manninger, professional footballer for Arsenal F.C., winner of 1997-98 FA Premier League title
  • Klara Milch, Olympic bronze swimmer (4x100-m freestyle relay)
  • Uberto De Morpurgo (1896–1961), Austrian-born Italian tennis player
  • Annemarie Moser-Pröll, alpine skier
  • Thomas Muster, tennis champion
  • Paul Neumann, Olympic champion swimmer (500 m freestyle)
  • Fred Oberlander, wrestler; world champion (freestyle heavyweight); Maccabiah champion
  • Eva Pawlik, European figure skating Champion
  • Felix Pipes, Olympic silver tennis player (doubles)
  • Maxim Podoprigora, Olympic swimmer
  • Jakob Pöltl, basketball player; played two seasons of U.S. college basketball at Utah before declaring for the 2016 NBA draft
  • Ellen Preis, foil fencer, 3-time world champion (1947, 1949, and 1950), Olympic champion, 17-time Austrian champion
  • Herbert Prohaska, football player and coach
  • Roland Ratzenberger, race car driver, Formula One driver
  • Jochen Rindt, race car driver, Formula One World Champion of 1970
  • Toni Sailer, 1956 Olympic Games – won all three gold medals earning himself the Triple Crown of Alpine Skiing; born 1935
  • Otto Scheff (born "Otto Sochaczewsky"), Olympic champion swimmer (400 m freestyle) and 2-time bronze (400 m freestyle, 1,500-m freestyle)
  • Max Scheuer, footballer; national team
  • Werner Schlager, 2003 Table Tennis World Champion
  • Carl Schlechter, chess grandmaster
  • Gregor Schlierenzauer, Olympic bronze medalist, world and 4 Hills Tournament champion ski jumper
  • Heinrich Schönfeld (born 1900), football player
  • Matthias Sindelar, footballer
  • Wilhelm Steinitz, winner of first-ever world chess championship in 1886
  • Josephine Sticker, Olympic bronze swimmer (4x100-m freestyle relay)
  • Rudolf Spielmann, chess grandmaster
  • Herma Szabo, Olympic and five-time World figure skating champion
  • Dominic Thiem, top-20 tennis player and Grand Slam Champion (Men’s Singles, US Open 2020)
  • Nicole Trimmel, kickboxing champion
  • Thomas Vanek, NHL hockey player for the Montreal Canadiens
  • Anita Wachter, Olympic alpine ski champion, born 1967 in Schruns
  • Otto Wahle, 2-time Olympic silver swimmer (1,000 m freestyle, 200-m obstacle race) and bronze (400 m freestyle); International Swimming Hall of Fame
  • Walter Wasservogel, inductee into the IIHF Hall of Fame
Joseph Roth
Hugo von Hofmannsthal

Writers[]

  • Ingeborg Bachmann,[10] poet, 1926–1973
  • Hermann Bahr, playwright, novelist 1863–1934
  • Ludwig Bemelmans, author of the Madeline books, 1898–1962
  • Thomas Bernhard,[10] dramatist, novelist, poet, 1931–1989, born in Cloister Heerlen, Netherlands
  • Hermann Broch,[10] novelist
  • Max Brod, writer, born in Prague, Austria-Hungary, (Bohemia, present-day Czech Republic) 1884–1968, wrote in German
  • Heimito von Doderer, writer, 1896–1966, born in Hadersdorf-Weidlingau near Vienna
  • Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach, writer (style: psychological novelist)
  • Franz Grillparzer, poet, 1791–1872, Vienna
  • Robert Hamerling, poet 1830–1889
  • Peter Handke,[10] author, born in 1942 in Griffen (Carinthia)
  • Hugo von Hofmannsthal,[10] dramatist, writer
  • Martin Horváth, writer
  • Marie-Thérèse Kerschbaumer, born 1936, novelist, poet
  • Werner Kofler, novelist and dramatist
  • Karl Gottfried Ritter von Leitner, poet, writer, 1800–1890, born in Graz
  • Alexander Lernet-Holenia, novelist, poet, dramatist, critic, 1897–1976
  • Robert Musil,[10][11] writer
  • Johann Nestroy, famous playwright
  • Christine Nöstlinger, writer (especially literature for children)
  • Ferdinand Raimund, writer and dramatist
  • Christoph Ransmayr, writer
  • Rainer Maria Rilke,[10] poet and novelist, born in Prague, (Bohemia, present-day Czech Republic) 1875–1926
  • Peter Rosegger, writer, teacher & Styrian hero and visionary 1843–1918
  • Joseph Roth,[10] novelist
  • Arthur Schnitzler,[10] novelist and playwright
  • Adalbert Stifter,[12] poet and artist (died 1869)
  • Bertha von Suttner, writer and pacifist Nobel Peace Prize winner, born in Prague, (Bohemia, present-day Czech Republic) 1843–1914
  • Georg Trakl,[10] poet
  • Josef Weinheber, poet and essayist

People of the Nazi Party and regime[]

  • Amon Göth, commandant of the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp and executed Nazi war criminal
  • Aribert Heim, physician ("Dr. Death") in the Mauthausen concentration camp
  • Adolf Hitler, leader of the Nazi Party and Nazi Germany
  • Ernst Kaltenbrunner, high ranking SS officer and Nazi war criminal
  • Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Reich Commissioner of the Netherlands
Otto von Hapsburg

Other notables[]

Julius von Payer
  • Maria Altmann, niece of Adele Bloch-Bauer
  • Walter Wolf, business person
  • Oscar Baumann, explored the interior of German East Africa (present-day Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi)
  • Robert Bernardis, resistance fighter during WW2 (July 20 Plot)
  • Edward Bernays, Austrian-American pioneer in public relations, referred to in his obituary as "the father of public relations".
  • Adele Bloch-Bauer, subject of famous painting by Gustav Klimt
  • Josef Fritzl, notorious rapist
  • Otto von Habsburg, politician, writer, heir to the thrones of Austria-Hungary
  • Theodor Herzl, "father of Zionism," lived most of his life in Austria
  • Alois Hitler, father of Adolf Hitler
  • Klara Hitler, mother of Adolf Hitler
  • Andreas Hofer, Tyrolian freedom fighter (against Napoleon)
  • Heinrich Kanner, journalist and editor of the newspaper "Die Zeit" in the k.u.k. Monarchy
  • Alma Mahler, wife and muse to Mahler, Gropius, Werfel
  • Andreas Maislinger, founder of the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service
  • Erna Patak (1871–1955), Zionist, social worker
  • Julius von Payer, polar explorer
  • Wolfgang Puck, celebrity chef and restaurateur
  • Max Reinhardt, renowned theatre director
  • Sister Maria Restituta, nun and nurse murdered by the Nazis
  • Günther Schifter, radio personality
  • Oskar Schindler, industrialist and famous WWII hero (saved his Jewish factory workers from Auschwitz), born in Svitavy, Moravia, 1908–1974
  • Otto Skorzeny, Nazi commando (rescuer of Benito Mussolini)
  • Carl Szokoll, resistance fighter ("saviour of Vienna"), author and film producer
  • Georg Ludwig von Trapp, head of The Sound of Music family
  • Franz Viehböck, cosmonaut
  • Karl Weyprecht, polar explorer
  • Simon Wiesenthal, 1908–2005, pre-eminent Nazi hunter
  • Hede von Trapp, painter artist

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Gombrich, E. H. (2006). The Story of Art (16th ed.). Phaidon. pp. 439–440. ISBN 978-0714847030.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "The 50 Greatest Composers of All Time". BBC Music Magazine. 30 January 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  3. ^ a b Tommasini, Anthony (21 January 2011). "The Greatest". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  4. ^ "The 21st Century's 100 Greatest Films". BBC. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b "The 100 Greatest Films of All Time". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  6. ^ Hillier, Jim, ed. (1985). "Cahiers du Cinema Annual Best Films Listings 1955-9". Cahiers du Cinéma: The 1950s: Neo-Realism, Hollywood, New Wave. Cambridge, MA, USA: Harvard University Press. pp. 286–287. ISBN 0-674--09060-8.
  7. ^ Hillier, Jim, ed. (1985). "Cahiers du Cinema Annual Best Films Listings 1955-9". Cahiers du Cinéma: The 1950s: Neo-Realism, Hollywood, New Wave. Cambridge, MA, USA: Harvard University Press. p. 288. ISBN 0-674--09060-8.
  8. ^ Horvitz, Peter S. (April 2007). The Big Book of Jewish Sports Heroes: An Illustrated Compendium of Sports History and The 150 Greatest Jewish Sports Stars. ISBN 9781561719075. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
  9. ^ "Diving into troubled waters", Paul Kalina, The Age, November 24, 2005. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bloom, Harold (1994). The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages. NY/San Diego/London: Harcourt Brace & Company. pp. 555–556. ISBN 978-1-57322-514-4.
  11. ^ "The Top 100 Books of All Time". The Guardian. 8 May 2002. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  12. ^ Bloom, Harold (1994). The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages. NY/San Diego/London: Harcourt Brace & Company. p. 544. ISBN 978-1-57322-514-4.
Retrieved from ""