List of Slovenes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of Slovenes and people from Slovenia that are notable.

Artists including performing arts[]

Authors[]

Vladimir Bartol
Alma Karlin
  • Louis Adamic (1898–1951) – author and translator
  • Anton Aškerc (1856–1912) – poet and Roman Catholic priest
  • Frederic Baraga (1797–1868) – bishop, author
  • Vladimir Bartol (1903–1967) – author
  • France Bevk (1890–1970) – author
  • Franjo Bučar – writer of Slovenian descent
  • Ivan Cankar (1876–1918) – author, poet, storyteller, playwright, and essayist
  • Matija Čop (1797–1835) – author
  • Mate Dolenc (born 1945) – author
  • Fran Saleški Finžgar (1871–1963) – author and priest
  • France Forstnerič (1933–2007) – author, poet and journalist
  • Alojz Gradnik (1882–1967) – poet and translator
  • Simon Gregorčič (1844–1906) – poet and Roman Catholic priest
  • Peter Handke (born 1942) – author (Slovenian mother; born and raised in Austria and has never lived in Slovenia)
  • Janez Jalen (1891–1966) – author
  • Drago Jančar (born 1948) – author and dramatist
  • Simon Jenko (1835–1869) – poet, lyricist, writer
  • Jože Javoršek (1920–1990) – author
  • Branka Jurca (1914–1999) – author
  • Josip Jurčič (1844–1881) – author
  • János Kardos (1801–1875) – writer, teacher and priest
  • Alma Karlin (1889–1950) – writer and poet
  • Dragotin Kette (1876–1899) – poet
  • Edvard Kocbek (1904–1981) – poet and writer
  • Srečko Kosovel (1904–1926) – poet
  • József Kossics (1788–1867) – writer, poet, historian, priest
  • Tomo Križnar (born 1954) – world traveller, humanitarian, author
  • Lovro Kuhar (1893–1950) – author
  • Miklós Küzmics (1737–1804) – writer and translator
  • Feri Lainšček (born 1959) – writer, poet
  • Fran Levstik (1831–1887) – author
  • Anton Tomaž Linhart (1756–1795) – playwright and historian
  • Cvetka Lipuš (born 1959) – author
  • Florjan Lipuš (born 1937) – author
  • Franko Luin (1941–2005) – author, editor, typographer
  • Rudolf Maister (1874–1934) – poet, military officer
  • Mira Mihelič (1912–1985) – author
  • Frane Milčinski (1914–1988) – poet, satirist, humorist
  • Miha Mazzini (born 1961) – author
  • Boris Pahor (born 1913) – author
  • Ivan Potrč (1913–1993) – author
  • Sebastijan Pregelj (born 1970) – author
  • France Prešeren (1800–1849) – poet
  • Benka Pulko (born 1967) – author and Guinness World Record setting world traveler
  • Miha Remec (born 1928) – author
  • Anton Martin Slomšek (1800–1862) – bishop, author, poet and national awakener
  • Tomaž Šalamun (1941–2014) – poet
  • Damijan Šinigoj (born 1964) – author and translator
  • Josip Stritar (1836–1923) – poet, author, and editor
  • Ivan Tavčar (1851–1923) – author, lawyer and politician
  • Janez Trdina (1830–1905) – author
  • Primož Trubar (1508–1586) – Protestant reformer and author
  • Josipina Urbančič (1508–1586) – poet, writer
  • Josip Vidmar (1895–1992) – essayist and literary critic
  • Vitomil Zupan (1914–1987) – writer

Inventors[]

Janez Puh
  • Ivo Boscarol (born 1956) – light aircraft designer and manufacturer
  • Joseph Fuisz (born 1970) – filed thirty-five patents relating to drug delivery and computer fields
  • Richard Fuisz (born 1939) – pharmaceutical inventor of controlled release drug beads, quick dissolve tablet systems, thin film drug delivery systems as well as various medical devices, diagnostic devices and electronic mail patents
  • Japec Jakopin (born 1951) – yacht designer
  • Alojz Knafelc (1859–1937) – creator of Slovenian trail blaze
  • Herman Potočnik (a.k.a. Noordung, 1892–1929), one of the founders of astronautics
  • Johann Puch (Slovene: Janez Puh) (1862–1914) – inventor, innovator, industrial designer and manufacturer
  • Johann Pucher (Slovene: Janez Auguštin Puhar) (1814–1864) – priest, photographer, painter and poet – invented a photography on the glass in 1842.
  • Edvard Rusjan (1886–1911) – pilot and aeronautic pioneer

Military personnel[]

Film, radio and television[]

Musicians and composers[]

Philosophers[]

Herman of Carinthia
  • Mladen Dolar (born 1951) – philosopher, cofounder of the Ljubljana school of psychoanalysis
  • Herman of Carinthia (1105/1110 – after 1154) – philosopher, astronomer, astrologer, mathematician
  • Tine Hribar (born 1941) – philosopher
  • Milan Komar (1921–2006) – philosopher
  • Josip Križan (1841–1921) – mathematician, physicist, philosopher, astronomer
  • Leonid Pitamic (1885–1971) – philosopher of law
  • Avguštin Stegenšek (1875–1920) – philosopher, theologian, art historian
  • Anton Strle (1915–2003) – theologian
  • Ivo Urbančič (born 1930) – philosopher
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951) – philosopher, in part of Slovenian descent
  • Slavoj Žižek (born 1949) – sociologist, philosopher, and cultural critic
  • Alenka Zupančič (born 1966) – philosopher and cultural critic

Politicians[]

Leon Rupnik
Kurt Schuschnigg
Josip Broz Tito
  • Andrej Bajuk (1943–2011) – third prime minister of independent Slovenia
  • John Blatnik (1911–1991) – U.S. Congressman (Slovenian parents; born and raised in the United States, and never lived in Slovenia)
  • Leonard J. Bodack (1932–2015) – former Pennsylvania State Senator (Slovenian ancestry; born and raised in the United States, and never lived in Slovenia)
  • Jože Brilej (1910–1981) – Yugoslav politician, diplomat and ambassador, President of the United Nations Security Council (1956)
  • Josip Broz Tito (1892–1980) – president of the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia between 1945 and 1980 (son of a Slovenian mother, Marija Javeršek and of a Croat father, Franjo Broz)
  • Leo von Caprivi (1831–1899) – German major general and statesman who served as German Chancellor from March 1890 to October 1894 (His family (complete surname: von Caprivi de Caprera de Montecuccoli) was of Italian and disputed Slovenian origin; born and raised in Germany, and never lived in Slovenia)
  • Janez Drnovšek (1950–2008) – second prime minister of independent Slovenia, third president of Slovenia, 2003–2008
  • Tom Harkin – U.S. Senator (Slovenian mother; born and raised in the United States and never lived in Slovenia)
  • Janez Janša (born 1958) – fifth prime minister of independent Slovenia
  • Edvard Kardelj (1910–1979) – prewar communist, politician, statesman, and journalist
  • Boris Kidrič (1912–1953) – communist, politician, statesman and economist
  • Amy Jean Klobuchar (born 1960) – U.S. Senator from Minnesota (Father's grandparents came from Slovenia; born and raised in United States, has never lived in Slovenia)
  • Anton Korošec (1872–1940) – prominent Yugoslav politician
  • Milan Kučan (born 1941) – first president of independent Slovenia, 1991–2002
  • Frank Lausche (1895–1990) – former U.S. Senator, Governor of Ohio & Mayor of Cleveland (Parents of Slovenian origin; born and raised in the United States and never lived in Slovenia)
  • Vladko Maček (1879–1964) – Croatian politician of Slovene origin from the first half of the 20th century. He led the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS)
  • James Oberstar (1934–2014) – U.S. Representative from Minnesota (Partial Slovenian ancestry; born and raised in the United States and never lived in Slovenia)
  • Lojze Peterle (born 1948) – first prime minister of independent Slovenia
  • Wolfgang Petritsch (born 1947) – Austrian diplomat of Slovene ethnicity (former OHR)
  • Tanya Plibersek – Australian politician – House of Representatives
  • Anton Rop (born 1960) – fourth prime minister of independent Slovenia
  • Gregorij Rožman (1883–1959) – Bishop of Ljubljana (1930–1945), collaborator with Italian and German occupying forces during the Second World War
  • Marjan Šarec (born 1977) – Slovene prime minister
  • Kurt Schuschnigg (1897–1977) – Chancellor of Austria, of Slovenian descent
  • Danilo Türk (born 1952) – President elect of Slovenia
  • Walter Veltroni (born 1955) – Mayor of Rome (Slovenian mother)
  • George Voinovich – U.S. Senator, former Governor of Ohio and Mayor of Cleveland, (Slovenian mother; born and raised in the United States, never lived in Slovenia)
  • Anton Vratuša (1915–2017) – politician and diplomat, who was the Prime Minister of Slovenia from 1978–80 and of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, also its ambassador to the United Nations

Scientists and scholars[]

Athletes[]

Other people[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Rosen, Lisa. "'Downsizing' actor Christoph Waltz thinks the world needs to downsize its hubris to move forward". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Luka Doncic". www.basketball-reference.com. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  3. ^ "Luka Doncic, 19-year-old Slovenian wunderkind is already blowing away the NBA". www.businessinsider.com. Retrieved November 29, 2018.
  4. ^ "Goran Dragic". www.basketball-reference.com. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  5. ^ Otterbourg, Ken (August 27, 2016). "The mystery that is Melania Trump". The State. Retrieved November 30, 2016.

External links[]

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