List of people from Frankfurt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This list contains notable people both born in Frankfurt and residents of the city, ordered chronologically.

Born in Frankfurt[]

9th to 17th centuries[]

  • Charles the Bald (823–877), King of West Francia, King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor
  • William I, Duke of Bavaria (1330–1389), also known as William V, Count of Holland, as William III, Count of Hainaut and as William IV, Count of Zeeland
  • Jakob Heller (c. 1460—1522), patrician, politician, and merchant
  • Johann Dietenberger (c. 1475–1537), Catholic Scholastic theologian
  • Konrad Gobel (c. 1498–1557), craftsman of bells and other metal castings
  • Sebastian von Heusenstamm (1508–1555), Archbishop-Elector of Mainz
  • Elijah Loans (1555–1636), rabbi and Kabbalist
  • Philipp Uffenbach (1566–1636), painter and etcher
  • Adam Elsheimer (1578–1610), artist
  • Hendrik van Steenwijk II (c.1580–1649), Baroque painter
  • Lucas Jennis (1590–1630), engraver
  • Joachim von Sandrart (1606–1688), Baroque art-historian and painter
  • Johannes Lingelbach (1622–1674), Dutch Golden Age painter
  • Jacob von Sandrart (1630–1708), engraver
  • Abraham Mignon (1640–1679), Dutch golden age painter
  • Johann Jacob Schütz (1640–1690), lawyer and hymnwriter
  • Philipp von Hörnigk (1640–1714), civil servant and supporter of the economic theory of mercantilism
  • Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717), naturalist and scientific illustrator
  • Philipp Peter Roos (1655–1706), Baroque painter
  • Jacob Christoph Le Blon (1667–1741), painter and engraver
  • Lorenz Heister (1683–1758), anatomist, surgeon and botanist

18th century[]

  • Alexander Ferdinand (1704–1773), 3rd Prince of Thurn and Taxis, Postmaster General of the Imperial Reichspost, and Head of the Princely House of Thurn and Taxis
  • Princess Marie Auguste of Thurn and Taxis (1706–1756), Regent of Württemberg
  • Johann Christian Senckenberg (1707–1772), physician, naturalist and collector
  • Susanne von Klettenberg (1723–1774), abbess and writer
  • Louis Eugene (1731–1795), Duke of Württemberg
  • Katharina Elisabeth Goethe (1731–1808), mother of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  • Karl Anselm (1733–1805), 4th Prince of Thurn and Taxis, Postmaster General of the Imperial Reichspost, and Head of the Princely House of Thurn and Taxis
  • Johann Zoffany (1733–1810), neoclassical painter
  • Georg Melchior Kraus (1737–1806), painter
  • Nathan Adler (1741–1800), kabbalist and rabbi
  • Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744–1812), banker and founder of the Rothschild banking dynasty
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832), writer and statesman
  • Cornelia Schlosser (1750–1777), sister of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  • Princess Charlotte of Saxe-Meiningen (1751–1827), Princess of Saxe-Meiningen and Duchess consort of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg
  • Princess Louise of Saxe-Meiningen (1752–1805), Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen
  • Abraham Bing (1752–1841), rabbi
  • Friedrich Maximilian Klinger (1752–1831), dramatist and novelist
  • Johann Philipp Gabler (1753–1826), Protestant Christian theologian
Anton Dereser
  • Anton Dereser (1757–1827), Discalced Carmelite professor of hermeneutics and Oriental languages
  • Georg I (1761–1803), Duke of Saxe-Meiningen
  • Moses Sofer (1762–1839), rabbi
  • Philipp Karl Buttmann (1764–1829), philologist of French Huguenot ancestry
  • Margarethe Danzi (1768–1800), composer and soprano
  • Johann Friedrich von Meyer (1772–1849), senator of Frankfurt
  • Amschel Mayer von Rothschild (1773–1855), banker of the Rothschild family financial dynasty
  • Salomon Rothschild (1774–1855), banker in the Austrian Empire and founder of the Austrian branch of the Mayer Amschel Rothschild family
  • Elisabeth von Adlerflycht (1775–1846), painter
  • Nathan Mayer Rothschild (1777–1836), London-based banker and financier and one of five sons of the second generation of the Rothschild banking dynasty
  • Friedrich Carl von Savigny (1779–1861), jurist and historian
  • Johann Friedrich Heinrich Schlosser (1780–1851), jurist, writer and translator
  • Dorothea von Ertmann (1781–1849), pianist
  • Jeanette Wohl (1783–1961), friend and correspondent of Ludwig Börne
  • Christian Brentano (1784–1851), writer and Catholic publicist
  • Bettina von Arnim (1785–1859), writer and novelist
  • Ludwig Börne (1786–1837), political writer and satirist
  • Johann David Passavant (1787–1861), painter, curator and artist
  • Franz Pforr (1788–1812), painter
  • Carl Mayer von Rothschild (1788–1855), banker in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and founder of the Rothschild banking family of Naples
  • Jakob Alt (1789–1872), painter and lithographer
  • James Mayer de Rothschild (1792–1868 ), banker and founder of the French branch of the Rothschild family
  • Carl von Heyden (1793–1866), senator and entomologist
  • Eduard Rüppell (1794–1884), naturalist and explorer
  • August von Bethmann-Hollweg (1795–1877), jurist and politician
  • Johann Friedrich Böhmer (1795–1863), historian
  • Heinrich Christian Macklot (1799–1832), naturalist
  • Ferdinand Fellner (1799–1859), painter
  • Friedrich Wöhler (1800–1882), chemist

19th century[]

1801–1820[]

  • Joseph Aschbach (1801–1882), historian
  • Ferdinand Lindheimer (1801–1879), German Texan botanist
  • Hermann von Meyer (1801–1869), palaeontologist
Heinrich Hoffmann
  • Frédéric Jules Sichel (1802–1868), French physician and entomologist
  • Anselm von Rothschild (1803–1874), Austrian banker and member of the Vienna branch of the Rothschild family
  • Karl Friedrich Hermann (1804–1855), classical scholar and antiquary
  • Marie d'Agoult (1805–1876), French author
Moritz Abraham Stern
  • Moritz Abraham Stern (1807–1894), mathematician
  • Georg Fresenius (1808–1866), physician and botanist
  • Johann Benedict Listing (1808–1882), mathematician
  • Ernst Ludwig von Leutsch (1808–1887), classical philologist
  • George Engelmann (1809–1884), German-American botanist
  • Jakob Fürchtegott Dielmann (1809–1885), illustrator, genre and landscape painter
  • Heinrich Hoffmann (1809–1894), psychiatrist and author
  • Gustav Koerner (1809–1896), revolutionary, journalist, lawyer, politician, judge, statesman in Illinois and Germany and Colonel of the U.S. Army
  • Abraham Geiger (1810–1874 ), leader of Reform Judaism
  • Johann Georg von Hahn (1811–1869), Austrian diplomat, philologist and specialist in Albanian history, language and culture
  • Moritz von Bethmann (1811–1877), banker
  • Ferdinand Hiller (1811–1885), composer, conductor, writer and music-director
  • Henri Nestlé (1814–1890), Swiss confectioner and founder of Nestlé, the world's largest food and beverage company
  • Joseph Hoch (1815–1874), lawyer and benefactor
  • August Weber (1817–1873), painter
  • Carl Remigius Fresenius (1818–1897), chemist
  • Henri Weil (1818–1909), philologist
  • Heinrich Bernhard Oppenheim (1819–1880), publicist and philosopher
  • Mayer Carl von Rothschild (1820–1886), banker and politician
  • Carl Theodor Reiffenstein (1820–1893), landscape and architecture painter

1821–1840[]

  • Mathilde Marchesi (1821–1913), mezzo-soprano, teacher of singing, and proponent of the bel canto vocal method
  • Heinrich Frey (1822–1890), Swiss entomologist
  • Georg Heinrich Mettenius (1823–1866), botanist
  • Moritz Schiff (1823–1896), physiologist
  • Willibald Beyschlag (1823–1900), theologian
  • Peter Burnitz (1824–1886), lawyer and landscape painter
  • Anton Burger (1824–1905), painter, draftsman and etcher
  • Karl Otto Weber (1827–1867), surgeon and pathologist
  • Adolf Schreyer (1828–1899), painter
  • Wilhelm Carl von Rothschild (1828–1901), banker and financier of the Frankfurt House of Rothschild
  • Lazarus Geiger (1829–1870), philologist and philosopher
  • Victor Müller (1829–1871), painter
  • Heinrich Anton de Bary (1831–1888), surgeon, botanist, microbiologist, and mycologist
  • Frédéric Émile d'Erlanger (1832–1911), banker and Consul
  • Mathilde Hannah von Rothschild (1832–1924), baroness, composer and patron of the Jewish faith
  • Jean Baptista von Schweitzer (1833–1875), politician and dramatic poet
  • Otto Scholderer (1834–1902), painter
  • Wilhelm von Scherff (1834–1911), general and military writer
  • Ernst Georg Ravenstein (1834–1913), geographer cartographer and promoter of physical exercise
  • Giorgio Sommer (1834–1914), photographer
  • August Weismann (1834–1914), biologist
  • Hugo Schiff (1834–1915), chemist
  • Nathaniel Meyer von Rothschild (1836–1905), member of the Rothschild banking family of Austria
  • Joseph Maria von Radowitz, Jr. (1839–1912), diplomat
  • Alexander Riese (1840–1924), classical scholar

1841–1860[]

  • Karl Binding (1841–1920), jurist
  • Carl Gräbe (1841–1927), industrial and academic chemist
  • Karl Lentzner (1842–1905), linguist
  • Maximilian von Goldschmidt-Rothschild (1843–1940), banker and art collector
  • Michael Flürscheim (1844–1912), economist and Georgist
  • Emil Ponfick (1844–1913), pathologist
  • Hans von Zwiedineck-Südenhorst (1845–1906), historian
  • Otto Böhler (1847–1913), silhouette artist
  • Jacob Schiff (1847–1920), American banker, businessman, and philanthropist
  • Alice Charlotte von Rothschild (1847–1922), socialite and member of the Rothschild banking family of Austria
  • William Ralph Merton (1848–1916), entrepreneur, social democrat and philanthropist
  • Otto Bütschli (1848–1920), zoologist
  • Heinrich Bassermann (1849–1909), Lutheran theologian
  • Anton Urspruch (1850–1907), composer and pedagogue
  • Wilhelm Creizenach (1851–1919), historian and librarian
  • Arthur Schuster (1851–1934), British physicist
  • Wilhelm von Bismarck (1852–1901), counselor, civil servant and politician
  • Carl L. Nippert (1852–1904), engineer and politician
  • Carl Chun (1852–1914), marine biologist
  • Goby Eberhardt (1852–1926), violinist and composer
  • Karl Höchberg (1853–1885), social-reformist writer, publisher and economist
  • Karl Sudhoff (1853–1938), historian of medicine
  • Moritz von Leonhardi (1856–1910), anthropologist
  • Hermann Dessau (1856–1931), ancient historian and epigrapher
  • Siegfried Ochs (1858–1929), choir-leader and composer
  • Otto Böckel (1859–1923), populist politician
  • Alfons Mumm von Schwarzenstein (1859–1924), diplomat
  • Philipp Franck (1860–1944), Impressionist painter
Arthur von Weinberg
  • Arthur von Weinberg (1860–1943), chemist and industrialist

1861–1880[]

  • Ludwig Fulda (1862–1939), playwright and a poet
  • Theodor Ziehen (1862–1950), neurologist and psychiatrist
  • Karl Wilhelm von Meister (1863–1935), politician and diplomat
  • Karl Schaum (1870–1947), chemist
Rahel Hirsch
  • Rahel Hirsch (1870–1953), doctor and professor
  • Fritz Klimsch (1870–1960), sculptor
  • Paul Epstein (1871–1939), mathematician
  • Bernhard Sekles (1872–1934), composer, conductor, pianist and pedagogue
  • Alfred Hertz (1872–1942), American conductor
Karl Schwarzschild
  • Karl Schwarzschild (1873–1916), astronomer and physicist
  • Otto Loewi (1873–1961), pharmacologist
  • Eduard Fresenius (1874–1946), pharmacist and entrepreneur
  • Gerhard Hessenberg (1874–1925), mathematician
  • Marcel Sulzberger (1876–1941), Swiss composer, pianist and music author
  • Otto Blumenthal (1876–1944), mathematician and professor
  • Willy Kaiser-Heyl (1876–1953), film actor
  • Isaac Heinemann (1876–1957), rabbinical scholar and professor of classical literature, Hellenistic literature and philology
  • Hermann Fellner (1877–1936), screenwriter and film producer
  • Arthur Scherbius (1878–1929), electrical engineer
  • Ottilie Metzger-Lattermann (1878–1943), contralto
  • Richard Goldschmidt (1878–1958), geneticist
  • Harry Fuld (1879–1932), entrepreneur whose art collection was looted by Nazis
  • Hugo Merton (1879–1940), zoologist
  • F.W. Schröder-Schrom (1879–1956), actor
Otto Hahn
  • Otto Hahn (1879–1968), chemist and pioneer in the fields of radioactivity and radiochemistry
  • Moritz Geiger (1880–1937), philosopher
  • Karl von Roques (1880–1949), general and war criminal during World War II
  • Paul Maas (1880–1964), classical scholar

1881–1900[]

  • Hermann Zilcher (1881–1948), composer and conductor
  • Wilhelm Dörr (1881–1955), track and field athlete and tug of war competitor
  • Hans Fischer (1881–1945), organic chemist
  • Walter Braunfels (1882–1954), composer, pianist, and music educator
Hans Fischer
  • Georg von Neufville (1883–1941), Wehrmacht general during World War II
  • Else Gentner-Fischer (1883–1943), operatic soprano
  • Hermann Abendroth (1883–1956), conductor
  • Ludwig Schunk (1884–1947), manufacturer and cofounder of the firm of Schunk und Ebe oHG
  • Ida Wüst (1884–1958), stage and film actress
  • Gus Wickie (1885-1947), German-American bass singer and voice actor
  • Erich Schönfelder (1885–1933), screenwriter, actor and film director
  • Walther Davisson (1885–1973), violinist and conductor
  • Ernst May (1886—1970), architect and city planner
  • Walter Ruttmann (1887–1941), film director and early practitioner of experimental film
  • Hans Adalbert Schlettow (1887–1945), film actor
  • Otto Maull (1887–1957), geographer and geopolitician
  • Oscar Kreuzer (1887–1968), tennis and rugby player
  • Wilhelm Lenz (1888–1957), physicist
  • Fritz Becker (1888–1963), football player
  • Gussy Holl (1888–1966), actress and singer
  • Caesar Rudolf Boettger (1888–1976), zoologist
  • Herman Bing (1889–1947), actor
  • Johanna Kirchner (1889–1944), opponent of the Nazi régime
  • Ernst Schwarz (1889–1962), zoologist, mammalogist, and herpetologist
  • Heinrich Jacoby (1889–1964), musician and educator
Siegfried Kracauer
  • Siegfried Kracauer (1889–1966), writer, journalist, sociologist, film theorist, and cultural critic
  • Otto Frank (1889–1980), businessman
  • Martin Weber (1890–1941), architect
  • Otto Schmöle (1890–1968), actor
  • Martha Wertheimer (1890–1942), journalist, writer, and rescuer
  • Leopold Schwarzschild (1891–1950), author
  • Karl Ludwig Schmidt (1891–1956), theologian and professor
  • Felix Schlag (1891–1974), designer of the United States five cent coin in use from 1938 to 2004
  • Erwin Straus (1891–1975), German-American phenomenologist and neurologist
  • Hans Leybold (1892–1914), poet
  • Jakob Weiseborn (1892–1939), SS-Sturmbannführer (major) and commandant of Flossenbürg concentration camp
  • Friedrich Weber (1892–1955), instructor in veterinary medicine
  • Eugen Kaufmann (1892–1984), architect
  • Gus Meins (1893–1940), German-American film director
  • Ilse Friedleben (1893–1963), tennis player
  • Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack (1893–1965), artist
  • Johann Fück (1894–1974), orientalist
  • Karl Reinhardt (1895–1941), mathematician
Ernst Udet
  • Ernst Udet (1896–1941), German flying ace of World War I
  • Theodor Haubach (1896–1945), journalist, SPD politician, and resistance fighter against the Nazi régime
  • Walter Peterhans (1897–1960), photographer
  • Tilly Edinger (1897–1967), paleontologist
  • Karl Freiherr von Lersner (1898–1943), Wehrmacht general during World War II
  • Karl Menninger (1898–1963), mathematician
Willy Messerschmitt
  • Franz Altheim (1898–1976), historian
  • Hans Feibusch (1898–1998), painter and sculptor
  • Willy Messerschmitt (1898–1978), aircraft designer and manufacturer
  • Ferdinand Kramer (1898–1985), architect and functionalist designer
  • Nelly Neppach (née Bamberger; 1898–1933), female tennis player
  • Irnfried Freiherr von Wechmar (1899–1959), Oberst in the Wehrmacht during World War II and an Oberst der Reserve in the Bundeswehr
  • Ilse Bing (1899–1998), avant-garde and commercial photographer
  • Paul Leser (1899–1984), ethnologist
  • Ernst Friedrich Löhndorff (1899–1976), sailor, adventurer, and writer
  • Erich Fromm (1900–1980), social psychologist, psychoanalyst, sociologist, humanistic philosopher, and democratic socialist
  • Otto Kahn-Freund (1900–1979), professor of comparative law and scholar in labour law
  • Erich Klibansky (1900–1942), headmaster and teacher of the first Jewish Gymnasium of Rhineland in Cologne
  • Leo Löwenthal (1900–1993), sociologist

20th century[]

1901–1910[]

  • Georg August Zinn (1901–1976), lawyer and politician
  • Elisabeth Schwarzhaupt (1901–1986), politician
  • Adolf Weidmann (1901–1997), athlete and sports official
  • Otto Bayer (1902–1982), industrial chemist
  • Fritz Bamberger (1902–1984), scholar and editor
  • Hugo Schrader (1902–1993), television and film actor
  • Max Rudolf (1902–1995), conductor
Theodor W. Adorno (right)
  • Theodor W. Adorno (1903–1969), sociologist, philosopher and musicologist
  • Julius Eisenecker (1903–1981), fencer
  • Karl Chmielewski (1903–1991), SS officer and Herzogenbusch concentration camp commandant
  • Otto Mainzer (1903–1995), writer
  • Camilla Horn (1903–1996), dancer and film star
  • Fritz Weitzel (1904–1940), SS soldier
  • Karl Hessenberg (1904–1959), engineer and mathematician
  • Milly Reuter (1904–1976), track and field athlete
  • Richard Ettinghausen (1906–1979), art historian
  • Wolfgang Gentner (1906–1980), experimental nuclear physicist
  • Helmut Landsberg (1906–1985), climatologist
  • Willibald Kreß (1906–1989), footballer
  • Ott-Heinrich Keller (1906–1990), mathematician
  • Karl Holzamer (1906–2007), philosopher, pedagogue and former director general of German television station ZDF
  • Franka Rasmussen (1907–1994), textile artist
  • Herman Geiger-Torel (1907–1976), Canadian opera director
  • Eugen Weidmann (1908–1939), career criminal
Kurt H. Debus
  • Kurt H. Debus (1908–1983), spaceflight scientist
  • Rudolf Gramlich (1908–1988), football player and chairman
  • Arthur Dreifuss (1908–1993), film director and occasional producer and screenwriter
  • Kurt Hessenberg (1908–1994), composer and professor
  • John Slade (1908–2005), American Olympic field hockey player and Wall Street broker
  • Edgar Weil (1908–1941), Germanist, dramaturge, and merchant
Ernst vom Rath
  • Ernst vom Rath (1909–1938), diplomat
  • Andrew Thorndike (1909–1979), documentary film director
  • Georg Konrad Morgen (1909–1982), SS judge and lawyer
  • Friedrich Bopp (1909–1987), theoretical physicist
  • Helm Glöckler (1909–1993), racing driver
  • Kurt Lipstein (1909–2006), legal scholar and professor
  • Walter Löber (1909–?), racing cyclist
  • Tatjana Sais (1910–1981), film actress
  • Barys Kit (1910–2018), Belarusian-American rocket scientist
  • Fritz Tillmann (1910–1986), actor
  • Erwin Walter Palm (1910–1988), scholar, historian, and writer
  • Richard Plant (1910–1998), writer
  • Robert H. Goetz (1910–2000), surgeon
  • Erika Fromm (1910–2003), psychologist

1911–1920[]

  • Karl Heinz Bremer (1911–1942), historian
  • Theodor Schneider (1911–1988), mathematician
  • Bruno Roth (1911–1998), racing cyclist
  • Tilly Fleischer (1911–2005), athlete
  • Bruno Beger (1911–2009), racial anthropologist
  • Hermann Flohn (1912–1997), climatologist
  • Theo Helfrich (1913–1978), racing driver
  • Manfred Kersch (1913–1995), athlete
  • Karl Dröse (1913–1996), field hockey player
  • Bernhard Frank (1913–2011), Nazi leader
  • Emil Carlebach (1914–2001), writer, dissident, and journalist
  • Herbert Cahn (1915–2002), classical archaeologist, numismatist, coin-dealer and antiquities-dealer
  • Werner Grothmann (1915–2002), SS leader
  • Wolf Kaiser (1916–1992), theatre and film actor
  • Karl Wald (1916–2011), football referee
  • Bernd T. Matthias (1918–1980), American physicist
  • Toby E. Rodes (1919–2013), business consultant, design-critic, journalist, and lecturer
Eric Koch
  • Eric Koch (1919–2018), Canadian author, broadcaster and professor
  • Wolfdietrich Schnurre (1920–1989), writer

1921–1930[]

  • Wilhelm Ringelband (1921–1981), theater critic
  • Frederick Mayer (1921–2006), educational scientist, philosopher, and creativity expert
  • Hans Herrman Strupp (1921–2006), American expert in psychotherapy research
  • Ernest Mandel (1923–1995), revolutionary Marxist theorist
  • Samson François (1924–1970), French pianist and composer
  • Ernst B. Haas (1924–2003), political scientist
  • Marianne Beuchert (1924–2007), florist, gardener, and writer
  • Jürgen Jürgens (1925–1994), choral conductor and academic teacher
  • Carlrichard Brühl (1925–1997), historian of medieval history and philatelist
Alfred Grosser
Anne Frank
  • Alfred Grosser (born 1925), German-French writer, sociologist, and political scientist
  • Emil Mangelsdorff (1925–2022), jazz musician
  • Margot Frank (1926–1945), sister of Anne Frank
  • Herbert Freudenberger (1926–1999), psychologist
  • Liselott Linsenhoff (1927–1999), equestrian and Olympic champion
  • Hans Heinz Holz (1927–2011), Marxist philosopher
  • Charlotte Kerr (1927–2011), director, film producer, actress, writer, and journalist
  • Marcel Ophüls (born 1927), documentary film maker and former actor
  • Albert Mangelsdorff (1928–2005), jazz trombonist
  • Anne Frank (1929–1945), diarist and writer
  • Erich Böhme (1930–2009), journalist and television host
  • Robert Aumann (born 1930), Israeli-American mathematician
  • Ursula Lehr (born 1930), academic, age researcher, and politician
  • Michael Rossmann (1930–2019), German-American physicist, microbiologist, and professor

1931–1940[]

  • Imanuel Geiss (1931–2012), historian
  • August Hobl (born 1931), former motorcycle road racer
  • Lis Verhoeven (1931–2019), actress and theatre director
  • Rainer K. Sachs (born 1932), German-American computational radiation biologist and astronomer
  • Hans Krieger (born 1933), writer, essayist, journalist of influential weekly papers, broadcaster, and poet
  • Mary Bauermeister (born 1934), artist
  • Erwin Conradi (born 1935), manager in trade business
  • Michael Horovitz (1935–2021), German-born British poet, editor, visual artist, and translator
  • Gisela Kessler (1935–2014),[1] trade unionist
Heinz Riesenhuber
  • Heinz Riesenhuber (born 1935), politician
  • Ulrich Schindel (born 1935), classical philologist
  • Susanne Cramer (1936–1969), film and television actress
  • Klaus Heymann (born 1936), entrepreneur
  • Franz Ningel (born 1936), pair skater and roller skater
  • Klaus Rajewsky (born 1936), immunologist
  • Dieter Schenk (born 1937), author, former high police officer, and activist
  • Wolfgang Zapf (1937–2018), sociologist
  • Günter Lenz (born 1938), jazz bassist and composer
  • Fritz-Albert Popp (1938–2018), biophysicist
  • Gerhard Waibel (born 1938), engineer
  • Gerhard Amendt (born 1939), sociologist and former professor
  • Gerd Kehrer (born 1939), painter
  • Wolfram Saenger (born 1939), biochemist and protein crystallographer
  • Bernhard Sinkel (born 1940), film director and screenwriter
  • Wolfgang Solz (1940–2017), former professional football winger
  • Klaus Zehelein (born 1940), dramaturge and professor

1941–1950[]

  • Brigitte Heinrich (1941–1987), journalist and politician
  • Ernst-Ludwig Winnacker (born 1941), geneticist, biochemist, and research manager
  • Ernst Klee (1942–2013), journalist and author
  • Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul (born 1942), politician
  • Marika Kilius (born 1943), pair skater
  • Jürgen Roth (1945–2017), publicist and investigative journalist
  • Gerhard Welz (born 1945), former professional footballer
Gerd Binnig
  • Gerd Binnig (born 1947), physicist and Nobel laureate
  • Horst Ludwig Störmer (born 1949), physicist and Nobel laureate
  • Gert Trinklein (1949–2017), former professional football player
  • P. J. Soles (born 1950), American film and television actress

1951–1960[]

  • Hubert Buchberger (born 1951), violinist, conductor, and music university teacher
  • Roman Bunka (born 1951), guitarist and composer
  • Martin Mosebach (born 1951), writer
  • Peter Ammon (born 1952), diplomat
  • Cornelia Hanisch (born 1952), former fencer
  • Johanna Lindsey (born 1952), American writer of historical romance novels
  • Susanne Porsche (born 1952), film producer
  • Horst Stöcker (born 1952), theoretical physicist
  • Lutz Kirchhof (born 1953), lutenist
  • Stephan W. Koch (born 1953), theoretical physicist
  • Wolfgang Kraus (born 1953), former professional football player
  • Dagmar Roth-Behrendt (born 1953), lawyer and politician
  • Jan Zweyer (born 1953), writer
Dietrich Thurau
  • Dietrich Thurau (born 1954), retired professional road bicycle racer
  • Ellen von Unwerth (born 1954), photographer
  • Uwe Benter (born 1955), rower
  • Uli Lenz (born 1955), composer, pianist, and producer creating music in the modern jazz genre
  • Michael Obst (born 1955), composer and pianist
  • Ulrike Meyfarth (born 1956), former high jumper
  • Ronny Borchers (born 1957), former footballer
  • Juliane Kokott (born 1957), Advocate General and professor
  • Gerhard Weikum (born 1957), database researcher
  • Hans Zimmer (born 1957), film composer and music producer
  • Rainer Zitelmann (born 1957), historian, journalist, and management consultant
  • Peter Becker (born 1958), molecular biologist
  • Thomas Duis (born 1958), pianist
  • Peter Kloeppel (born 1958), journalist and news anchor
Roland Koch
  • Roland Koch (born 1958), jurist and former conservative politician
  • Thomas Metzinger (born 1958), philosopher and professor
Thomas Reiter
  • Thomas Reiter (born 1958), retired astronaut and test pilot
  • Michael Scheffel (born 1958), Germanist
  • Nicole Brown Simpson (1959–1994), ex-wife of professional football player O. J. Simpson
  • Martina Hallmen (born 1959), former field hockey player
  • Michael Sagmeister (born 1959), Jazz guitarist
  • Pete Namlook (1960–2012), ambient and electronic-music producer and composer
  • Christoph Franz (born 1960), former Chief Executive Officer of Lufthansa
  • Michael Gahler (born 1960), politician and Member of the European Parliament
Hannes Jaenicke
  • Hannes Jaenicke (born 1960), actor
  • Gabriele Lesser (born 1960), historian and journalist
  • Patricia Ott (born 1960), former field hockey player

1961–1970[]

Jakob Arjouni
  • Jens Geier (born 1961), politician
  • Esther Schapira (born 1961), journalist and filmmaker
  • Peter Blank (born 1962), javelin thrower
  • Matthias Röhr (born 1962), guitarist
  • Inaara Aga Khan (born 1963), second wife of the Aga Khan IV
  • Ralf Falkenmayer (born 1963), former footballer
  • Thor Kunkel (born 1963), author
  • Charlotte Link (born 1963), writer
  • Marcus Nispel (born 1963), film director and producer
  • Valentin Schiedermair (born 1963), concert pianist
  • Jakob Arjouni (1964–2013), author
  • Beate Deininger (born 1964), former field hockey player
  • Michael Gross (born 1964), swimmer
  • Manfred Binz (born 1965), footballer
  • Christoph Korn (born 1965), audio and media artist
  • Armin Kraaz (born 1965), football manager and former player
  • Martin Lawrence (born 1965), American actor, comedian, and filmmaker
  • Oliver Reck (born 1965), former footballer
  • Christine Schäfer (born 1965), soprano
  • Torsten de Winkel (born 1965), musician, composer, and philosopher
  • Markus Löffel (1966–2006), disc jockey, musician, and record producer
  • Eckhart Nickel (born 1966), journalist and author
  • Stefan Quandt (born 1966), engineer and industrialist
  • Sven Rothenberger (born 1966), equestrian
  • Klaus Badelt (born 1967), composer
  • Jens Beckert (born 1967), sociologist
  • Antje Boetius (born 1967), marine biologist and professor of geomicrobiology
  • Johannes Brandrup (born 1967), actor
  • Katharina Hacker (born 1967), novelist
Eckart von Hirschhausen
  • Eckart von Hirschhausen (born 1967), physician and comedian
  • Annette Huber-Klawitter (born 1967), mathematician
  • Peter Oliver Loew (born 1967), historian, translator, and scholar
  • Stefan Mohr (born 1967), chess grandmaster
  • Andreas Möller (born 1967), former internationalist association footballer
  • Inka Parei (born 1967), writer
Peter Thiel
  • Peter Thiel (born 1967), American entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and hedge fund manager
  • Andreas Paulus (born 1968), jurist
  • Uwe Schmidt (born 1968), composer, musician, and producer of electronic music
Shantel
  • Shantel (born 1968), DJ and producer
  • Carsten Arriens (born 1969), former professional tennis player
  • Giorgos Donis (born 1969), former professional football player
  • Oliver Lieb (born 1969), electronic music producer and DJ
  • Sarah Sorge (born 1969), politician
  • Marc Trauner (born 1969), DJ and producer
  • Thomas Zampach (born 1969), former professional footballer
  • Jo Jo English (born 1970), American NBA basketball player, top scorer in the 1999–2000 Israel Basketball League
  • Ronald Reng (born 1970), sports journalist and author
  • Markus Rill (born 1970), singer-songwriter
  • J. Peter Schwalm (born 1970), composer and music producer
  • Simone Thomaschinski (born 1970), former professional field hockey defender

1971–1980[]

  • Jochen Hippel (born 1971), musician
  • Holger Kleinbub (born 1971), former professional volleyball player
  • Slobodan Komljenović (born 1971), former Serbian footballer
  • Moses Pelham (born 1971), rapper and musician
  • Tony Richardson (born 1971), former American football fullback
  • Alexander Schur (born 1971), former professional footballer
  • Tré Cool (born 1972), American drummer
  • Wilhelm Fischer (born 1972), boxer
  • Steffi Jones (born 1972), former professional football defender
  • Anthony Rother (born 1972), electronic music composer, producer, and label owner
  • Kai Tracid (born 1972), trance DJ and producer
  • Tilo Wolff (born 1972), musician
  • Anna Carlsson (born 1973), actress and voice actress
  • Klark Kent (born 1973), graffiti artist and music producer
  • Sonya Kraus (born 1973), television presenter and former model
  • Christopher Reitz (born 1973), professional field hockey goalkeeper
  • Kaya Yanar (born 1973), comedian
  • Michael Aničić (born 1974), former professional football player
  • Matthias Becker (born 1974), former professional football player
  • Magnus Gäfgen (born 1974), child murderer
  • Sinan Şamil Sam (born 1974), Turkish heavyweight professional boxer
  • Sabrina Setlur (born 1974), singer, rapper, songwriter and occasional actress
  • Julia Voss (born 1974), journalist and scientific historian
  • Mandala Tayde (born 1975), award-winning actress and model
  • Alexander Waske (born 1975), former professional tennis player
  • Daniel Dölschner (born 1976), poet and Haiku-writer
  • Tamara Milosevic (born 1976), documentary filmer
  • Michael Thurk (born 1976), professional football player
  • Sascha Amstätter (born 1977), professional football player
  • Birgit Prinz (born 1977), former female professional association football player
  • Sandra Smisek (born 1977), former female professional football player
  • Edwin Thomas (born 1977), English historical novelist
  • Jo Weil (born 1977), actor
  • Daniel Hartwich (born 1978), actor
  • Hartmut Honka (born 1978), conservative politician
  • Susanne Keil (born 1978), female hammer thrower
Mark Medlock
  • Mark Medlock (born 1978), singer
  • Souad Mekhennet (born 1978), journalist
  • Heinz Müller (born 1978), professional footballer
  • Silke Müller (born 1978), award-winning field hockey midfielder
  • Ruben Studdard (born 1978), American R&B, pop, and gospel singer
  • Meike Freitag (born 1979), former female swimmer
  • Senna Gammour (born 1979), singer-songwriter and entertainer
  • Jonesmann (born 1979), rapper
  • Cha Du-ri (born 1980), South Korean professional footballer
  • Bakary Diakité (born 1980), German-Malian professional footballer
  • Patrick Falk (born 1980), professional footballer
  • Daniel Gunkel (born 1980), professional footballer
  • Giorgos Theodoridis (born 1980), Greek international footballer
  • Zaytoven (born 1980), American hip hop DJ and producer

1981–1990[]

  • Jermaine Jones (born 1981), German-American professional soccer player
  • Saskia Bartusiak (born 1982), professional footballer
  • Nadja Benaissa (born 1982), recording artist, television personality, and occasional actress
  • Marijana Marković (born 1982), épée fencer
  • Carlos Nevado (born 1982), professional field hockey player
  • Patric Klandt (born 1983), professional footballer
  • Madeleine Sandig (born 1983), professional road and track racing cyclist
  • Pia Eidmann (born 1984), professional field hockey player
Patrick Ochs
  • Patrick Ochs (born 1984), professional footballer
  • Fouad Brighache (born 1985), German-Moroccan professional footballer
  • J. Cole (born 1985), American hip hop recording artist, songwriter, and record producer
  • Fikri El Haj Ali (born 1985), professional footballer
  • Christian Kum (born 1985), German-Dutch professional footballer
  • Mounir Chaftar (born 1986), professional football defender
  • Tim Kister (born 1986), professional footballer
  • Moritz Müller (born 1986), professional ice hockey defenceman
  • Jan-André Sievers (born 1987), professional football player
  • Uğur Albayrak (born 1988), Turkish professional footballer
  • Niklas Andersen (born 1988), professional football defender
  • Lisa Bund (born 1988), pop singer, songwriter, radio host, actor, and reality television star
  • Stefan Hickl (born 1988), professional footballer
  • Timm Klose (born 1988), German-Swiss professional footballer
  • Björn Thurau (born 1988), professional cyclist
  • Richard Weil (born 1988), professional footballer
  • Semih Aydilek (born 1989), German-Turkish professional footballer
Kevin Pezzoni

1991–2000[]

Notable residents of Frankfurt[]

8th to 17th centuries[]

Charlemagne
  • Charlemagne (born between 742 and 748; died 814), King of the Franks who united most of Western Europe during the Middle Ages and laid the foundations for modern France and Germany
  • Fastrada (765–794), East Frankish noblewoman
Louis the German
  • Louis the German (c. 810–876), grandson of Charlemagne and third son of the succeeding Frankish Emperor Louis the Pious and his first wife, Ermengarde of Hesbaye
  • Louis the Younger (born between 830 and 835; died 882), second eldest son of Louis the German and Emma who succeeded his father as King of Saxony and his elder brother Carloman as King of Bavaria
  • Johannes von Soest (1448–1506), composer, theorist, and poet
  • Conrad Faber von Kreuznach (born c. 1500; died between 1552 and 1553), painter and woodcuts designer
  • Jacob Micyllus (1503–1558), Renaissance humanist and teacher
  • Adam Lonicer (1528–1586), botanist
  • Giordano Bruno (1548–1600), Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, mathematician, poet, and astrologer
  • Matthäus Merian (1593–1650), Swiss-born engraver and publisher
  • Johann Schröder (1600–1664), physician and pharmacologist
  • Jacob Joshua Falk (1680–1756), Talmudist, served as chief rabbi of Frankfurt
  • Georg Philipp Telemann (1681–1767), Baroque composer and multi-instrumentalist

18th century[]

Arthur Schopenhauer
  • Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860), philosopher

19th century[]

  • Rudolf Christian Böttger (1806–1881), inorganic chemist
  • Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808–1888), rabbi
  • Johann von Miquel (1828–1901), statesman
  • Leopold Sonnemann (1831–1909), journalist, newspaper publisher, and political party leader
  • Charles Hallgarten (1838–1908), banker and philanthropist
Paul Ehrlich
  • Paul Ehrlich (1854–1915), physician and scientist who worked in the fields of hematology, immunology, and chemotherapy
  • Engelbert Humperdinck (1854–1921), composer
  • Bertha Pappenheim (1859–1936), Austrian-Jewish feminist, social pioneer, and founder of the Jüdischer Frauenbund (League of Jewish Women)
  • Adolf Bartels (1862–1945), journalist and poet
  • Alois Alzheimer (1864–1915), Bavarian-born psychiatrist and neuropathologist credited with identifying the first published case of "presenile dementia", later identified as Alzheimer's disease
  • Georg Voigt (1866–1927), politician
  • Ludwig Landmann (1868–1945), liberal politician
  • Oskar Ursinus (1877–1952), aerospace engineer
  • Max Beckmann (1884–1950), painter, draftsman, printmaker, sculptor, and writer
  • Magda Spiegel (1887–1944), contralto
  • Oswald von Nell-Breuning (1890–1991), Roman Catholic theologian and sociologist
  • Franz Bronstert (1895–1967), engineer and painter
  • Max Horkheimer (1895–1973), philosopher and sociologist
Paul Hindemith
  • Paul Hindemith (1895–1963), composer, violist, violinist, teacher, and conductor
  • Ludwig Erhard (1897–1977), politician affiliated with the CDU and Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) from 1963 until 1966
  • Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky (1897–2000), first female Austrian architect and an activist in the Nazi resistance movement

20th century[]

1901–1910[]

Oskar Schindler
  • Kurt Thomas (1904–1973), composer, conductor, and music educator
  • Hans Bethe (1906–2005), German–American nuclear physicist
  • Oskar Schindler (1908–1974), industrialist, spy, and member of the Nazi Party who is credited with saving the lives of 1,200 Jews during the Holocaust
  • Alexander Mitscherlich (1908–1982), psychologist
  • Bernhard Grzimek (1909–1987), Silesian-German zoo director, zoologist, book author, editor, and animal conservationist

1911–1920[]

  • Josef Neckermann (1912–1992), equestrian and Olympic champion
  • Margarete Mitscherlich-Nielsen (1917–2012), psychoanalyst
  • Horst Krüger (1919–1999), novelist
  • Marcel Reich-Ranicki (1920–2013), Polish-born literary critic and member of the literary group Gruppe 47

1921–1930[]

Dr. Ruth Westheimer
  • Reinhard Goerdeler (1922–1996), accountant instrumental in founding KPMG, a leading international firm of accountants
  • Arno Lustiger (1924–2012), historian and author
  • Horst Heinrich Streckenbach (1925–2001), tattoo artist and historian of the medium
  • Hilmar Hoffmann (1925–2018), cultural functionary and director
  • Ignatz Bubis (1927–1999), chairman (and later president) of the Central Council of Jews in Germany (Zentralrat der Juden in Deutschland)
  • Ruth Westheimer (born Karola Siegel, 1928), German-American sex therapist, talk show host, author, Doctor of Education, Holocaust survivor, and former Haganah sniper.
  • Karl-Hermann Flach (1929–1973), journalist of the Frankfurter Rundschau, and a politician of the liberal Free Democrats (FDP)
  • Jürgen Habermas (born 1929), sociologist and philosopher in the tradition of critical theory and pragmatism
  • Helmut Kohl (1930–2017), conservative politician and statesman

1931–1940[]

Pope Francis
  • Alfred Schmidt (1931–2012), philosopher
  • Walter Wallmann (1932–2013), politician
  • Rosemarie Nitribitt (1933–1957), luxury call girl whose violent death caused a scandal in the Wirtschaftswunder years
  • Michael Grzimek (1934–1959), zoologist, conservationist, and filmmaker
  • Albert Speer Jr. (1934–2017), architect and urban planner
  • Pope Francis (born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 1936), pope of the Catholic Church, spent several months at the Sankt Georgen Graduate School of Philosophy and Theology in Frankfurt
  • F. K. Waechter (1937–2005), cartoonist, author, and playwright
  • Robert Gernhardt (1937–2006), writer, painter, caricaturist, and poet
  • Barbara Klemm (born 1939), photographer, worked for Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung for 45 years

1941–1950[]

Joschka Fischer
  • Jürgen Grabowski (born 1944), former football player
  • Petra Roth (born 1944), mayor of Frankfurt from 1995 to 2012
  • Daniel Cohn-Bendit (born 1945), politician
  • Bernd Hölzenbein (born 1946), former football player
  • Johannes Weinrich (born 1947), left-wing political militant and terrorist
  • Josef Ackermann (born 1948), Swiss banker and former chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank
  • Joschka Fischer (born 1948), politician
  • Alfred 23 Harth (born 1949), multimedia artist, band leader, multi-instrumentalist musician, and composer

1951–2000[]

Michel Friedman
  • Armin S., independent securities trader
  • Ahron Daum (born 1951), rabbi, professor, author, and educator
  • Cha Bum-kun (born 1953), South Korean football manager and former player
  • Michel Friedman (born 1956), lawyer, former CDU politician, and talk show host
  • Wolfgang Herold (born 1961), film producer and sound supervisor
  • Luca Anzilotti (born 1963), Italian DJ/producer of electronic music
  • Stephan Weidner (born 1963), musician and music producer
  • Heike Matthiesen (born 1964), classical guitarist
  • Sven Väth (born 1964), DJ/producer in electronic music
  • Dave McClain (born 1965), drummer
  • D-Flame (born 1971), hip hop and reggae musician
  • Azad (born 1974), rapper
  • Renate Lingor (born 1975), female former international football player
  • Pia Wunderlich (born 1975), football midfielder
  • Aslı Bayram (born 1981), actress and writer

References[]

  1. ^ "Abschied von einer kämpferischen Gewerkschafterin". Kommunisten.de. 15 May 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2017.

See also[]

Retrieved from ""