List of people from Chernivtsi
Appearance
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The Ukrainian city of Chernivtsi (Template:Lang-uk) 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
- Rudolf Gerlach-Rusnak (1895–1960), German operatic and concert lyrical tenor[1]
- 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[2][3][4]
- 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
References
- ^ Kutsch, K. J.; Riemens, Leo (2012). Gerlach-Rusnak, Rudolf (in German) (4th ed.). Walter de Gruyter. p. 1700. ISBN 978-3-59-844088-5.
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ignored (help) - ^ 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