List of Latvians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of prominent Latvians with Wikipedia articles. It includes:

  • persons who were born in the historical territory of what is now Latvia, regardless of ethnicity, citizenship, or time period; and
  • persons of Latvian descent regardless of their place of birth or citizenship.

A[]

  • Valerians Abakovskis (1895–1921) – inventor of a propeller-powered railcar, the aerowagon
  • Rutanya Alda (Rutanya Alda Skrastiņa, born 1942) – actress (Mommie Dearest, The Deer Hunter)
  • Viktor Alksnis (born 1950) – Soviet military officer and Russian communist politician known as "the Black Colonel"
  • Juris Alunāns (1832–1864) – writer and philologist
  • Ingrīda Andriņa (1944–2015) – actress
  • Iveta Apkalna (born 1976) – organist
  • Fricis Apšenieks (1894–1941) – chess player
  • Vija Artmane (1929–2008) – actress
  • Aspazija, pen-name of Elza Pliekšāne (1865–1943) – poet and playwright
  • Gunārs Astra (1931–1988) – dissident, fighter for human rights
  • Auseklis, pseudonym of Miķelis Krogzemis (1850–1879) – poet, author and translator of German poets

B[]

C[]

  • Frīdrihs Canders (1887–1933) – pioneer of rocketry and spaceflight
  • Valters Caps (1905–2003) – designed first Minox 8 x 11 photo cameras
  • Aleksandrs Cauņa (born 1988) – footballer
  • Gustavs Celmiņš (1899–1968) – fascist politician, leader of Pērkonkrusts movement
  • Vija Celmins (born 1938) – American painter born in Latvia
  • Tanhum Cohen-Mintz (1939–2014) – Latvian-born Israeli basketball player

Č[]

D[]

E[]

  • Mihails Eizenšteins (1867–1921) – architect
  • Sergejs Eizenšteins (1898–1948) – film director
  • Modris Eksteins (born 1943) – Canadian historian and writer
  • Ēriks Ešenvalds (born 1977) – composer
  • Andrievs Ezergailis (born 1930) – historian of the Holocaust

F[]

G[]

Ģ[]

H[]

  • Moriss Halle (1923–2018) – linguist
  • Filips Halsmans (1906–1979) – Latvian-American photographer
  • Juris Hartmanis (born 1928) – computer scientist; Turing Award winner
  • Uvis Helmanis (born 1972) – basketball player

I[]

J[]

K[]

L[]

  • Aleksandrs Laime (1911–1994) – explorer
  • Vilis Lācis (1904–1966) – author and politician
  • Ginta Lapiņa (born 1989) – fashion model
  • Natālija Lašenova (born 1973) – gymnastics Olympic champion (team)
  • Edvards Liedskalniņš (1887–1951) – builder of Coral Castle in Florida; claimed to have discovered the ancient magnetic levitation secrets used to construct the Egyptian pyramids
  • Jēkabs Mihaels Reinholds Lencs (1751–1792) – author
  • Marija Leiko (1887–1937) – actress
  • Māris Liepa (1936–1989) – ballet dancer
  • Peggy Lipton (1946–2019) – Latvian-American actress
  • Nikolajs Loskis (1870–1965) – philosopher
  • Jānis Lūsis (born 1939) – athlete; Olympic champion

Ļ[]

M[]

N[]

O[]

P[]

R[]

  • Rainis, pseudonym of Jānis Pliekšāns (1865–1929) – poet and playwright
  • Dan Rapoport (born 1970) – American financier and philanthropist
  • Lauris Reiniks (born 1979) – singer-songwriter, actor and television personality
  • Einars Repše (born 1961) – politician
  • Lolita Ritmanis (born 1962) – orchestrator, composer
  • Iļja Ripss (born 1948) – inventor of the Bible code
  • Fricis Rokpelnis (1909–1969) – author
  • Markuss Rotkovičs (1903–1970) – abstract expressionist painter
  • Elza Rozenberga (1865–1943) – poet, playwright; married to Jānis Pliekšāns
  • Juris Rubenis (born 1961) – Lutheran pastor
  • Mārtiņš Rubenis (born 1978) – athlete; bronze medalist at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin
  • Brunis Rubess (1926–2009) – businessman
  • Inta Ruka (born 1958) – photographer
  • Wolf Ruvinskis (1921–1999) – versatile actor, a memorable face of the Cinema of Mexico

S[]

Š[]

  • Viktors Ščerbatihs (born 1974) – athlete, weightlifter
  • Pauls Šīmanis (1876–1944) – Baltic German journalist, politician, activist defending and preserving European minority cultures
  • Vestards Šimkus (born 1984) – pianist
  • Aleksejs Širovs (born 1972) – chess player
  • Andris Šķēle (born 1958) – politician; Prime Minister of Latvia
  • Armands Šķēle (born 1983) – basketball player
  • Ernests Štālbergs (1883–1958) – architect, ensemble of the Freedom Monument
  • Īzaks Nahmans Šteinbergs (1888–1957) – politician, lawyer and author
  • Māris Štrombergs (born 1987) – BMX cyclist; gold medal winner at 2008 and 2012 Olympics

T[]

  • Esther Takeuchi (born 1953) – materials scientist and chemical engineer
  • Mihails Tāls (1936–1992) – the 8th World Chess Champion
  • Jānis Roberts Tilbergs (1880–1972) – painter, sculptor

U[]

V[]

Z[]

Ž[]

See also[]

  • Latvian American

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Robert B. Pynsent; Sonia I. Kanikova (1993). The Everyman Companion to East European Literature. Dent. ISBN 978-0-460-87201-0. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
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