List of personalities of the city of Ulm
The following list deals with the personalities of the city of Ulm .
Personalities born in Ulm
The following people were born in Ulm or in today's urban area of Ulm:
12th to 13th centuries
- Meinloh von Sevelingen (bl. 1160–1170), minstrel, from Söflingen
14th to 17th centuries
- Adelheid von Sulmetingen (1330–1400), founder and philanthropist
- Jakob Engelin (around 1360 - before 1427), physician in Ulm and personal physician in Vienna, among other things the author of a plague and a vascular tract
- Matthäus Ensinger (1390–1463), master builder
- Peter von Ulm the Elder (around 1390 - around 1435), surgeon or surgeon, city doctor in Ulm, from around 1422 personal physician to the Electoral Palatinate in Heidelberg, author of a manual
- Jörg Syrlin (around 1425 - 1491), carpenter and sculptor
- Hans Schüchlin (around 1430 - 1505), painter
- Matthias Scheit (1440–1512), Bishop of Seckau
- Ulrich Krafft (around 1455 - 1516), law professor and city pastor
- Jörg Syrlin (around 1455 - 1521), sculptor
- Gregor Erhart (1470–1540), picture carver
- Ambrosius Jung (1471–1548), Augsburg city doctor and medical writer ennobled by Emperor Charles V.
- Daniel Mauch (around 1477 - 1540), artist
- Konrad Krafft (around 1479/86 - 1519), legal scholar, Württemberg councilor, judge and pastor
- Hans Maler zu Schwaz (around 1480 - 1526/29), portrait painter of the Renaissance
- Christoph Blanck (around 1480 - 1541), legal scholar
- Dionysius Melander (around 1486 - 1561), theologian and reformer
- Heinrich Kobolt (around 1490 - 1520 or 1521), physician and personal physician to the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order in Königsberg
- Martin Frecht (around 1494 - 1556), Protestant theologian and reformer
- Sebastian Neidhart (1496–1554), Augsburg merchant
- Georg Gienger von Rotteneck (1497–1577), Vice Chancellor of the Holy Roman Empire
- Daniel Mauch the Younger (1504–1567), lawyer at the Imperial Court of Justice and Canon of Worms
- Nikolaus Federmann (1506–1542), commercial agent, explorer and field captain
- Sebastian Aitinger (1508–1547), Secretary of the Schmalkaldic League
- Leonhard Fronsperger (around 1520 - 1575), military writer
- Agatha Streicher (1520–1581), doctor and supervisor of Emperor Maximilian II.
- Jonathan Sauter (1549–1612), milliner, typist and arithmetic master, as well as draftsman, painter, engraver and etcher
- Hans Ulrich Krafft (1550–1621), businessman and traveler to the Orient
- Lorenz Scheurl (1558–1613), clergyman, theologian and university professor
- Wolfgang Neidhardt (1575–1632), bronze caster
- Johannes Faulhaber (1580–1635), mathematician, engineer and fortress builder
- Johann Remmelin (1583–1632), doctor and mathematician
- Johannes Scultetus (1595–1645), doctor and non-fiction author
- Wolfgang Bachmeyer (1597–1685), cartographer, geodesist, astronomer, mathematician and theologian
- Johannes Freinsheim (1608–1660), historian and philologist
- Michael Meder (1614–1690), printer and publisher
- Sebastian Anton Scherer (1631–1712), organist and composer
- Johann Heinrich Weyhenmayer (1637–1706), Lutheran clergyman
- Veit Riedlin the Younger (1656–1724), city doctor and member of the " Leopoldina " academy of scholars
- Christoph Frick (1659 - after 1697), barber surgeon, traveler to India and author
- Theodor Schwartzkopff (1659–1732), composer
- Barbara Kluntz (1661–1730), composer and music teacher, collector
- Johann Balthasar Lauterbach (1663–1694), mathematician, architect and ducal-Braunschweig agricultural master builder
- Johann Matthäus von Faulhaber (1670–1742), engineer, officer and historian
- Ulrich Junius (1670–1726), astronomer, geographer and mathematician
- Johann Georg Hocheisen (1677–1712), orientalist
- Gottfried Hecking (1687–1743), scholar, moral professor and school principal
- Georg Litzel (1694–1761), Protestant pastor, hymn researcher and language scholar
- Johann Elias Ridinger (1698–1767), animal painter, engraver, eraser and publisher
18th century
- Johann Ulrich von Cramer (1706–1772), lawyer and philosopher
- Johann Christoph Heilbronner (1706–1745), mathematician and mathematician
- Franz Dominikus Häberlin (1720–1787), historian and publicist
- Jakob Friedrich Kleinknecht (1722–1794), composer, flautist, violinist and conductor
- Johann Baptist Enderle (1725–1798), baroque painter
- Johann Franz Wagner (1733–1778), poet, philologist and university professor
- Thomas Abbt (1738–1766), writer and philosopher of the Enlightenment
- Johann Herkules Haid (1738–1788), high school professor and writer
- Johann Michael Afsprung (1748–1808), teacher and publicist
- Johann Martin Miller (1750–1814), theologian and writer
- Johann Jakob Besserer von Thalfingen (1753–1834), Mayor of Augsburg
- Gottlob Dietrich Miller (1753-1822), lawyer
- Thomas Frauenlob (1756–1822), bell founder
- Albrecht Weyermann (1763–1832), clergyman and literary historian
- Albrecht Ludwig Berblinger (1770–1829), tailor, inventor and aviation pioneer
- Friedrich Ludwig Bührlen (1777–1850), writer and office clerk
- Johann Georg Niederegger (1777–1856), company founder of Niederegger Marzipan, Lübeck
- Christoph Leonhard Wolbach (1783–1872), first freely elected mayor, author and publicist
- Daniel Raßmann (1790–1864), organ builder
- Philipp Jakob Wieland (1793–1873), bell founder and founder of Wieland-Werke AG in Ulm
- Johannes Palm (1794-1851), surgeon
- Johann Michael Lindenmayer (1796–1858), senior bailiff in Württemberg
19th century
1801 to 1820
- Johannes Mährlen (1803–1871), economist and historian
- Gustav von Lerchenfeld (1806–1866), royal councilor and landowner of Heinersreuth
- Gustav Ernst Leube (1808–1881), pharmacist
- Jakob Ferdinand Schreiber (1809–1867), founder of the children's book publisher JF Schreiber
- Philipp Wolff (1810–1894), orientalist and religious scholar
- Philipp Ludwig Adam (1813–1893), entrepreneur and politician
- Carl Wilhelm von Heinz (1816–1887), Oberamtmann of Württemberg
- Nonus von Bailer (1820–1892), senior administrator in Württemberg
1821 to 1840
- Ludwig von Golther (1823–1876), Minister of Württemberg
- Conrad Dietrich Magirus (1824–1895), fire service pioneer and entrepreneur
- Marie Kurz (1826–1911), writer
- Wilhelm Speidel (1826–1899), pianist, composer and co-founder of the Stuttgart Music School
- Johann Philipp Gustav Wolbach (1826–1890), lawyer and politician
- Theodor von Haßler (1828–1901), engineer, company manager and industrial interest representative
- Jakob Friedrich Sprandel (1828–1895), surgeon and obstetrician
- Wilhelm von Woelckern (1829–1905), General of the Infantry
- Armand Mieg (1834–1917), Bavarian officer and weapons designer
- Carl von Baur (1836–1911), geologist
- Gustav Leube II (1836–1913), chemist, pharmacist and cement manufacturer
- Max Schott von Schottenstein (1836–1917), General
- Theodor von Sprösser (1836–1907), Württemberg major general
- Karl Wacker (1837–1908), pharmacist and food chemist
- Karl von Linden (1838–1910), namesake of the Linden Museum
1841 to 1860
- Alfred Kinzelbach (1841–1908), Oberamtmann of Württemberg
- Wilhelm von Leube (1842–1922), pathologist, internist and neurologist
- Wilhelm Strauss (1845–1917), painter
- Emil von Rümelin (1846–1899), Lord Mayor of Stuttgart
- Karl Eduard von Lödel (1848–1924), Reich judge
- Paul Knapp (1851–1908), high school teacher, archaeologist and classical philologist
- Carl Schwenk (1852–1942), entrepreneur
- Karl Federlin (1854–1939), sculptor
- Otto von Marchtaler (1854–1920), officer
- Eugen Theodor Nübling (1856–1946), newspaper publisher, economic historian and member of the Württemberg state parliament
- Hermann Wunderlich (1858–1916), librarian, Germanist, university professor and employee of Grimm's German Dictionary
1861 to 1880
- Mathilde Planck (1861–1955), teacher
- Heinrich von Maur (1863–1947), Württemberg general of the artillery
- Philipp Wieland (1863–1949), politician
- Karl Joseph von Urach (1865–1925), Count of Württemberg
- Friedrich List (1869–1940), lawyer and politician
- Eduard Wechssler (1869–1949), Romance scholar, philologist and literary scholar
- Hans Dietrich Leipheimer (1870 - after 1934), painter, graphic artist, architect and garden designer
- Georg Schmidt (1871–1955), electrical engineer and university professor
- Karl Kircher (1874–1939), senior administrator and district administrator in Württemberg
- Hans Schmidt (1877–1948), infantry general
- Fanny Schreck (1877–1951), actress
- Carl Bilfinger (1879–1958), constitutional lawyer
- Albert Einstein (1879–1955), theoretical physicist and Nobel Prize winner
- Anna Essinger (1879–1960), reform pedagogue
- Werner Heyberger (1880–1914), architect
- Karl Höhn (1880–1942), businessman and entrepreneur
- Karl Kimmich (1880–1945), banker
- Wolfgang Muff (1880–1947), General of the Infantry
- Oskar Schmid (1880–1962), lawyer
1881 to 1900
- Otto Barth (1881–1947), senior administrator and district administrator in Württemberg
- Hermann Herrenberger (1881–1953), architect
- Walther Steiger (1881–1943), Swiss designer and automobile manufacturer
- Ernst Sindlinger (1883–1963), administrative officer
- Lothar Zobel (1885 - after 1945), economic manager
- Karl Beer (1886–1965), architect
- Kuno Stierlin (1886–1967), music director, composer and pianist
- Annette Thoma (1886–1974), writer
- Richard Koch (1887–1972), engineer and production planner
- Karl Blessinger (1888–1962), composer, conductor and musicologist
- Ernst Zipperer (1888–1982), drawing teacher, graphic artist and painter
- Ludwig Moos (1890–1967 or 1972), painter
- Ernst Wendler (1890–1986), diplomat and entrepreneur
- Albert Eckstein (1891–1950), pediatrician
- Eugen Wirsching (1891–1983), politician
- Otto Linck (1892–1985), forester, geologist and writer
- Kurt Oppenländer (1892–1947), officer
- Sofie Schieker-Ebe (1892–1970), writer
- Max W. Kimmich (1893–1980), film director and screenwriter
- August Moos (1893–1944), petroleum geologist
- Gustav Kauffmann (1894–1969), politician
- Clemens Betzel (1895–1945), officer, most recently lieutenant general in World War II
- Wilhelm Gilsdorf (1895–1966), judge and ministerial official
- Max Gräter (1896–1944), organist and composer
- Hannes Mayer (1896–1992), architect and construction clerk
- Max Schefold (1896–1997), art historian
- Walter Romberg (1898–1973), painter and etcher
- Luitpold Steidle (1898–1984), officer and politician
- Ludwig Walz (1898–1989), clothing merchant and mayor
- Karl Hahn (1899–1960), mechanical engineer, rector of the TH Dresden
- Josef Knoll (1899–1976), crop scientist
- Robert Lusser (1899–1969), stunt pilot, engineer and aircraft developer
- Erich Haußmann (1900–1984), actor
- Rudolf Rahn (1900–1975), diplomat and secret service agent during the National Socialist era
20th century
1901 to 1910
- Werner von Houwald (1901–1974), painter
- Karl Isenberg (also Carlo Isenberg ; 1901–? 1945), organist, composer and editor
- Karl Kässbohrer (1901–1973), entrepreneur and vehicle manufacturer
- Richard Egenter (1902–1981), Roman Catholic moral philosopher, moral theologian and university professor
- Gerhard Isenberg (1902–1982), economist, spatial planner
- Hellmuth Laegeler (1902–1972), major general in the army of the Wehrmacht
- Ulrich Wieland (1902–1934), mountaineer and alpine pioneer
- Paul Otto (1903–1979), politician
- Otto Kässbohrer (1904–1989), entrepreneur and vehicle designer
- Carl Pflüger (1905–1998), painter, draftsman and graphic artist
- Wilhelm Adam (1906–1989), District Administrator
- Walter Sigel (1906–1944), Air Force officer
- Leo Hepp (1907–1987), intelligence officer in the Wehrmacht and general in the Bundeswehr
- Hugo Roller (1907–1990), politician
- Wilhelm Braun-Feldweg (1908–1998), industrial designer
- Paul Kühmstedt (1908–1996), composer, conductor and musician
- Eugen Brehm (1909–1995), German-British publicist and pacifist
- Werner Drück (1909–1942), District Administrator of the Bergheim district
- Helmut Ensslin (1909–1984), Protestant pastor and the father of Gudrun Ensslin
- Emma Pressmar (1909–2000), prehistorian
1911 to 1920
- Maria Burgi , née Kienzle (1912–2017), trade unionist; Honorary member of IG Metall
- Heinrich Röhm (1912–1999), architect, construction officer and preservationist
- Johannes Straub (1912–1996), ancient historian
- Walter Vollweiler (1912–1991), football player
- Albert Püllenberg (1913–1991), rocket pioneer
- Gebhard Luiz (1913–2013), clergyman
- Karl Keller (1914–1987), doctor and dialect author
- Wilhelm Schuler (1914–2010), chemist, inventor and entrepreneur
- Karl Friedrich Stroheker (1914–1988), ancient historian
- Herbert Wiegandt (1914–2003), philologist and librarian
- Siegfried Ernst (1915–2001), doctor and church politician
- Eberhard Stammler (1915–2004), Protestant theologian and publicist
- Ernst Bauer (1916–1991), resistance fighter against National Socialism and publisher
- Wolfgang Binder (1916–1986), literary scholar and university professor
- Johannes Riede (1916–1997), Catholic theologian and university professor
- Hans-Ulrich Schmückle (1916–1993), stage designer
- Dieter Zimmerle (1916–1989), jazz journalist and journalist
- Fritz Hartnagel (1917–2001), career officer and lawyer, fiancé of Sophie Scholl
- Erika Schmid (1918–2003), resistance fighter against National Socialism
- Heinz-Eugen Schramm (1918–1998), author and editor
- Alfred Schwingenstein (1919–1997), lawyer, graduate economist and publisher
1921 to 1930
- Helmut Friedrich Schäffenacker (1921–2010), painter, sculptor and ceramist
- Otl Aicher (1922–1991), designer
- Alfred Lorenzer (1922–2002), psychoanalyst and sociologist
- Karl Christ (1923–2008), ancient historian
- Richard Beek (1924-2007), actor
- Heinz Brenner (1924–2008), member of the “Ulmer Abiturentengruppe” of the White Rose
- Wolf Englert (1924–1997), painter, production designer and film architect
- Hans Hörmann (1924–1983), psychologist
- Erich Karl (1924–2009), businessman, local politician and coin collector
- Franz J. Müller (1924–2015), member of the “Ulm High School Graduates Group” of the White Rose
- Siegfried Unseld (1924–2002), publisher and head of Suhrkamp Verlag
- Hans Eberle (1925–1998), football player
- Hermann Grees (1925–2009), professor of geography
- Heinrich Guter (1925–2015), architect
- Hildegard Knef (1925–2002), actress, chanson singer and author
- Walther Roggenkamp (1926–1995), graphic artist, painter and set designer
- Wilhelm Bühler (1926–2006), politician
- Rolf Dick (1926–2001), architect and politician
- Erhard Eppler (1926–2019), politician (SPD)
- Ernst Ludwig (1927-2017), lawyer and politician (CDU)
- Robert Scheyhing (1927–1989), lawyer and university lecturer
- Hansjakob Stehle (1927–2015), publicist and historian
- Hubert Deininger (1928–2008), master glassmaker and glass painter
- Alois Halder (1928–2020), philosopher and university professor
- Martina Helga Blickle (* 1929), poet and painter
- Eberhard Eimler (* 1930), retired general D. the Air Force
- Isnard Wilhelm Frank (1930–2010), religious and Catholic theologian
- Hans Gekeler (1930–2010), graphic designer, color theorist and university professor
- Wolfgang Wechsler (1930–2012), neuropathologist, full professor in Düsseldorf
- Fritz Nestle (1930–2015), mathematics didactic and educational researcher
1931 to 1940
- Hans Alois Schieser (* 1931), educational scientist
- Verena von Asten (* 1932), writer
- Karl Suso Frank (1933–2006), Catholic theologian
- Hermann Geyer (1934–2016), painter and glass painter
- Günther-Dietz Sontheimer (1934–1992), Indologist
- Rosemarie Stratmann-Döhler (* 1934), art historian
- Otto Weiß (1934–2017), historian
- Friedrich Hitzer (1935–2007), Slavist, writer, translator, trade unionist and communist
- Hannelore Basler (* 1936), winter sports enthusiast
- Gerhard Maier (* 1937), Protestant theologian
- Günter Wolf (* 1937), elementary particle physicist
- Hans-Heinrich Nolte (* 1938), historian
- Ula Stöckl (* 1938), filmmaker, director, author and actress
- Eduard Hartmann (* 1940), tax advisor, politician, member of the Bavarian State Parliament
- Henky Hentschel (1940–2012), writer and author
- Walter Klaiber (* 1940), ev. Theologian, bishop i. R. the United Methodist Church in Germany
- Jörg Maier (* 1940), geographer and economist
- Hans Mayer (* 1940), gallery owner
1941 to 1950
- Gerhard Glück (1941–2015), educational scientist
- Günter Ogger (* 1941), business journalist
- Eberhard Storz (* 1941), actor, singer and university professor
- Klaus Vondung (* 1941), Germanist, university professor
- Udo Andriof (* 1942), political official
- Dieter Braun (* 1943), businessman and motorcycle racing driver
- Hans-Peter Greiner (* 1943), lawyer
- Kay Hailbronner (* 1943), legal scholar
- Thomas Handgrätinger (* 1943), Abbot General of the Order of the Premonstratensian Canons
- Annemarie Huste (1943–2016), American television chef and cookbook author
- Hans Dieter Schaal (* 1943), architect, set designer and artist
- Frank Steiner (* 1943), professor of theoretical physics
- Eberhard Isenmann (* 1944), historian
- Gerhard Rembold (* 1944), politician and university professor
- Thomas Broch (* 1947), theologian
- Lea Fleischmann (* 1947), German-Israeli author
- Roland Michael Wegener (* 1947), diplomat
- Isaac Meyer Held (* 1948), American meteorologist and climate researcher
- Tina Stroheker (* 1948), writer and poet
- Werner Mang (* 1949), doctor
- Hans-Joachim Pflüger (* 1949), neurobiologist
- Wolfgang Schuster (* 1949), Lord Mayor of Stuttgart
- Peter Wolbrandt (* 1949), guitarist
- Hans Gebhardt (* 1950), human geographer and university professor
- Berthold Huber (* 1950), trade unionist
- Michael Worbs (* 1950), diplomat
1951 to 1960
- Manfred Eichhorn (* 1951), author, poet and Swabian dialect poet
- Mike Krüger (* 1951), comedian, cabaret artist and singer
- Barbara Scheck (* 1951), actress, speaker and cabaret artist
- Klaus-Peter Schweizer (* 1951), singer and musician
- Christof Wackernagel (* 1951), actor and writer
- Hellmut Hattler (* 1952), jazz and rock bassist
- Uli Hoeneß (* 1952), soccer player and President of FC Bayern Munich
- Walter Kubanczyk (1952–2020), football player and coach
- Monika Schnaitmann (* 1952), politician
- Meinrad Braun (* 1953), writer
- Peter M. Endres (* 1953), CEO of today's Ergo Direkt Insurance
- Dieter Hoeneß (* 1953), soccer player and manager
- Karl-Gerhard Eick (* 1954), manager
- Wolfgang Leidig (* 1954), politician, former Lord Mayor of Schwäbisch Gmünd and Ministerial Director
- Thomas Oelmayer (* 1954), politician
- Claudia Roth (* 1955), politician
- Uwe Schöning (* 1955), Professor of Theoretical Computer Science at Ulm University
- Axel Bartelt (* 1956), District President of the Upper Palatinate
- Michael Guggemos (* 1956), politician and trade unionist
- Manfred Hettling (* 1956), historian
- Ulrich Gröner (* 1957), violinist and university professor
- Raimund Hörmann (* 1957), rower
- Michael Riessler (* 1957), jazz clarinetist and composer
- Dirk Salomon (* 1957), actor and screenwriter
- Johanna Walser (* 1957), writer and literary translator
- Dieter Wiedenmann (1957–1994), rower
- Amelie Fried (* 1958), presenter and writer
- Thomas Reinhardt (1958–2019), District Administrator of the Heidenheim district
- Siegfried Schneider (1958–2010), football player
- Thomas Anzenhofer (* 1959), actor
- Andreas Eschbach (* 1959), writer
- Astrid Stadler (* 1959), legal scholar
- Leni Breymaier (* 1960), trade unionist and politician
- Christian Griesinger (* 1960), chemist
- Martin Rivoir (* 1960), politician
- Eva Christina Zeller (* 1960), poet, freelance writer and radio journalist
1961 to 1970
- Klaus Bischoff (* 1961), chess player
- Henriette Müller (* 1961), saxophonist and composer
- Jörg Sieber (* 1961), singer in the band Dominoe , composer and sound engineer
- Michael Nushöhr (* 1962), soccer player
- Georg Wacker (* 1962), politician
- Johannes Ebert (* 1963), Secretary General of the Goethe Institute
- Nina Degele (* 1963), Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies
- Jürgen Grözinger (* 1963), percussionist and composer
- Markus Kerber (* 1963), economist, association official and political official
- Ralf B. Korte (* 1963), writer
- Martin Burgi (* 1964), law scholar and constitutional law teacher
- Martin Jäger (* 1964), diplomat, political official
- Ursula Karven (* 1964), actress
- Thomas Reck (* 1964), field hockey player
- Ulrich Schaal (* 1964), manager and writer
- Nikolaus Bosch (* 1965), lawyer and university professor
- Markus Höhner (* 1965), football commentator
- Joachim Frank (* 1965), journalist, author and correspondent with a focus on church politics and theology
- Marcus Sorg (* 1965), soccer player and coach
- Joo Kraus (* 1966), jazz trumpeter and composer
- Christine Langer (* 1966), writer
- Martin Kälberer (* 1967), musician
- İmran Ayata (* 1969), author and DJ
- Heike Dederer (* 1969), politician
- Sabine Hack (* 1969), tennis player
- Gerhard Schneider (* 1969), Catholic clergyman, auxiliary bishop in the Rottenburg-Stuttgart diocese
- Gregor Simon (* 1969), church musician
- Pascal Bader (* 1970), Lord Mayor of the City of Kirchheim unter Teck
1971 to 1980
- Christian Conrad (1971–2019), sound designer and composer
- Timo Dentler (* 1971), stage and costume designer
- Sebastian Seidel (* 1971), playwright, director and theater director
- Elmar Stegmann (* 1971), politician
- Anke Stelling (* 1971), writer
- Udo Glanz (* 1972), educator, author and publisher of training materials, especially MOOCs
- Kathrin Hartmann (* 1972), journalist and author
- Norbert Keil (* 1972), film director, screenwriter and film producer
- Dieter Kraus (* 1972), saxophonist
- Paul Plamper (* 1972), director and author
- Berthold Bocsanyi (* 1973), basketball player
- Christina Griebel (* 1973), writer and visual artist
- Oliver Unsöld (* 1973), football player
- Brigitte Bertele (* 1974), director and actress
- Tessa Mittelstaedt (* 1974), actress
- Chris Montana (* 1974), author and DJ
- Michael Bochtler (* 1975), soccer player
- Saša Janić (* 1975), German-Croatian soccer player
- Carolin Conrad (* 1976), stage actress
- Florian Weiss (* 1976), journalist, radio and television presenter
- Erwin Aljukic (* 1977), actor
- Michael Gerngroß (* 1977), artist
- Rebecca Siemoneit-Barum (* 1977), actress and entrepreneur
- Christian Birkenfeld (* 1978), basketball player
- Nico Frommer (* 1978), soccer player
- Iva Mihanovic (* 1978), opera, operetta, musical and concert singer
- Jens Semjan (* 1979), conceptual artist, communication and media theorist
- Balian Buschbaum (* 1980), former pole vault athlete
- Isaak Dentler (* 1980), actor and voice actor
From 1981
- Christopher Oravec (born 1981), ice hockey player
- Martin Klarer (* 1982), soccer player
- Luzie Buck (born 1983), actress
- Matthias Lehmann (* 1983), soccer player
- Michael Rundio (* 1983), football player
- Florian Zimmer (* 1983), magician and illusionist
- Alper Bagceci (* 1984), football player
- Mariangela Scelsi (* 1984), actress, singer and editor
- Andreas Spann (* 1984), soccer player
- Mesale Tolu (* 1984), journalist and translator
- Kerstin Hartmann (* 1988), rower
- Maximilian Reinelt (1988-2019), rower
- Sandro Sirigu (* 1988), football player
- Sebastian Enderle (* 1989), soccer player
- Larissa Hummel (* 1989), soccer player
- Tatjana Hummel (* 1990), soccer player
- Antonio Pangallo (* 1990), football player
- Julian Autenrieth (* 1992), sailor
- Manuel Hegen (* 1992), soccer player
- Anja Maike Hegenauer (* 1992), soccer player
- Yasi Hofer (* 1992), guitarist and singer
- Erik Thommy (* 1994), football player
- Jackie Baumann (* 1995), athlete
- Felix Schröter (* 1996), soccer player
- Romario Rösch (* 1999), soccer player
Known residents not born in Ulm
- Heinrich Seuse (1295–1366), mystic and Dominican
- Master Hartmann (born around 1400 and documented as alive until 1430) was an early sculptor at Ulm Minster and a representative of the "soft style".
- Hans Multscher (around 1400 - 1467), sculptor, co-founder of the Ulm School, died in Ulm
- Heinrich Steinhöwel (1412–1482 / 83), early humanist translator and writer, from 1450 city doctor in Ulm (as such predecessor of Johannes Stocker , who from 1483 exercised the office of the imperial city doctor )
- Johann Reger († around 1499), printer and publisher, worked in Ulm from 1486 to 1499
- Felix Fabri (1438 / 39–1502), Dominican, historian and writer who worked in Ulm from around 1468
- Bartholomäus Zeitblom (1455–1518), painter of the Ulm School; from 1482 in Ulm
- Johann Zainer († around 1523), one of the first printers in Ulm; occupied there from 1473
- Johann Eberlin von Günzburg (around 1470 - 1533), Reformed theologian and reformer, preacher in Ulm (1521)
- Martin Schaffner (around 1478 - after 1546), painter of the Ulm School; worked in Ulm from around 1499
- Konrad Sam (around 1483-1533), Reformed theologian and reformer in Ulm; School days and from 1524 until the end of his life preacher in Ulm
- Kaspar Schwenckfeld von Ossig (1490–1561), Silesian reformer, spiritual theologian; died in Ulm
- Ambrosius Blarer (1492–1564), Protestant pastor and hymn poet; 1529–31 as a reformer in Ulm
- Benedictus Ducis (around 1492 - 1544), composer; Pastor in Ulm during the Reformation period
- Ludwig Rabus (1523–1592), Lutheran theologian and confessionalist; died in Ulm
- Philipp Renlin (around 1545 - 1598), painter and cartographer; from 1578 to 1598 city painter in Ulm
- Johannes Kepler (1571-1630), astronomer; Printing of the Rudolfinische Tafeln in Ulm, invention of the Ulm measuring kettle to standardize the measurements and weights used in Ulm (1627)
- Joseph Furttenbach (1591–1667), Ulm city architect and architectural theorist
- Samuel Edel (1593–1652), pastor and theologian of Lutheran Orthodoxy; died in Ulm
- Johann Christoph Lauterbach (1675–1744), German cartographer and engineer officer, worked in Ulm all his life
- Georg Friedrich Schmahl the Elder (1700–1773), Baroque organ builder from southern Germany; died in Ulm
- Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart (1739–1791), poet and journalist, editor of the "Deutsche Chronik" in Ulm (1775–1777)
- Johann Friedrich Schlotterbeck (1765–1840), poet; was the office director in Ulm from 1817 to 1828
- Johann August Bruckmann (1776–1835), architect, geologist, master builder, hydraulic engineer, non-fiction author and inventor
- Konrad Dietrich Haßler (1803–1873), member of parliament, philologist and monument conservator; from 1826 until the end of his life in Ulm
- Max Eyth (1836–1906), engineer and writer; from 1896 in Ulm
- Heinrich von Wagner (1857–1925), Lord Mayor of Ulm from 1891 to 1919
- Jakob Weber, called Krattenweber (1858–1920), Ulm city original
- Max Arthur Stremel (1859–1928), painter
- Hermann Bäuerle (1869–1936), Catholic theologian and church musician, founder and until 1936 director of the Ulm Conservatory
- Konrad Albert Koch (1869–1945), painter and castle researcher
- Martin Scheible (1873–1954), sculptor, wood sculptor, church decorator, member of the Munich Secession; from 1909 with his own studio until the end of his life in Ulm
- Theodor Veil (1879–1965), professor of architecture, builder of Expressionism in Ulm; from 1944 until the end of his life in retirement in Ulm
- Otto Geigenberger (1881–1946), painter
- Hans Reyhing (1882–1961), teacher, head of the adult education center and Württemberg local poet; died in Ulm
- Erwin Nestle (1883–1972), Protestant theologian and classical philologist in Ulm's teaching post
- Erwin Rommel (1891–1944), Field Marshal General, stationed in Ulm (1914) and laid out (1944)
- Robert Scholl (1891–1973), lawyer and politician, 1932–1951 in Ulm, 1945–1948 mayor
- Prince Alexander Douala-Bell (1897–1966) was an officer in the Ulm house regiment, the 19 Uhlans
- Max-Josef Pemsel (1897–1985), General of the Wehrmacht and the Bundeswehr; stationed in Ulm and died
- Eberhard Finckh (1899–1944), Colonel and resistance fighter July 20, 1944; stationed in Ulm (1923 to 1927)
- Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart (1899–1962), graphic artist, painter, sculptor and writer; died in Ulm
- Wilhelm Geyer (1900–1968) painter, graphic artist and glass artist, outfitter for Ulm Minster; from 1927 until the end of his life in Ulm
- Erich Eichele (1904–1985), prelate in Ulm and then regional bishop of the Evangelical Church in Württemberg
- Werner Nestel (1904–1974) high frequency technician; died in Ulm
- Gerhard Klopfer (1905–1987), lawyer in the party chancellery of the NSDAP, participant of the Wannsee Conference; died in Ulm
- Kurt Fried (1906–1981), journalist, publisher, art and theater critic and art patron; from 1912 until the end of his life in Ulm
- Oskar Herterich (1906–1978), engineer; trend-setting developments in fire fighting equipment technology; from 1953 director of Magirus, in Ulm since 1936
- Max Bill (1908–1994), Swiss painter, sculptor, architect and designer; 1951–1957 co-founder, architect, rector and lecturer at the Ulm School of Design (hfg)
- Herbert von Karajan (1908–1989), conductor, first conductor at the Ulm City Theater (1929–1934)
- Hellmuth von Ulmann (1913–1987) writer, journalist, composer and conductor; died in Ulm
- Peter Wackernagel (1913–1958) director of the Ulm Theater; died in Ulm
- Anni Peterka (1913–2002), first ballet director at the Ulm Theater; was arrested in 1942 as a so-called "eighth Jew" in the ballet hall of the Ulm Theater
- Anneliese Bilger-Geigenberger (1914–2000), painter and sculptor, daughter of Otto Geigenberger, died in Ulm
- Kurt Hübner (1916–2007), director of the Ulm Theater from 1959 to 1962
- Inge Aicher-Scholl (1917–1998), founder and first director of the Ulm Adult Education Center and the Ulm School of Design (hfg), older sister of Hans and Sophie Scholl, 1932–1972 in Ulm
- Walter Zeischegg (1917–1983), designer, from 1951 employee and lecturer at the Ulm School of Design (hfg)
- Hans Scholl (1918–1943), member of the White Rose resistance group , 1932–1943 in Ulm
- Sophie Scholl (1921–1943), member of the White Rose resistance group , 1932–1943 in Ulm
- Adolf Silberberger (1922–2005), painter and graphic artist, freelance painter in Ulm since 1970, also died there
- Esther Bejarano (* 1924), survivor of the Auschwitz extermination camp; lived in Ulm 1936–1939
- Rudolf Dentler (1924–2006), goldsmith and artist, city original (King of Ulm), died in Ulm
- Hans von Keler (1925–2016), former prelate of Ulm and then regional bishop of the Evangelical Church in Württemberg
- Hermann Eiselen (1926–2009), Ulm entrepreneur and patron
- Jaime Padrós (1926–2007), Catalan pianist and composer, in Ulm from 1956; composed u. a. the music for the opening of the town hall in Ulm in 1993
- Peter Zadek (1926–2009), was a director at the Ulmer Theater from 1959 to 1962 and caused a theater scandal and a "performance of the year" ("Theater heute")
- Edgar Rabsch (1928–1990), organist, choir director and composer; worked at Ulm Minster, from 1972 until the end of his life in Ulm
- Manfred Börner (1929–1996), managing director of the research institute of AEG-Telefunken Nachrichten- und Verkehrstechnik AG in Ulm, professor for electrical engineering at the Technical University of Munich and inventor of fiber optic data transmission
- Theodor M. Fliedner (1929–2015), hematologist and university professor, founding member and rector of Ulm University
- Albrecht Haupt (* 1929), Ulm church music director and university music director
- Elisabeth von Ulmann (1929–2005), writer and poet; lived in Ulm 1984–1987 and was a founding member of the CLUB ULM / NEU-ULM of Soroptimisten International
- Rolf Scheffbuch (1931–2012), Protestant theologian, prelate in Ulm
- Alexander Kluge (* 1932), film and television maker, 1963–1968 together with
- Edgar Reitz (* 1932), director, head of the Institute for Film Design at the Ulm School of Design (hfg)
- Helmut Lachenmann (* 1935), composer and lecturer at the Ulm School of Design (hfg)
- Anton Pointecker (1938–2008), Austrian actor; died in Ulm
- Herbert Werner (* 1941), Member of the Bundestag for Ulm 1972–1994
- Pavel Fieber (1941–2020), director of the Ulm Theater from 1985 to 1991
- Friedrich Fröschle (* 1944), church music director, cathedral organist and choir director
- Franz Josef Radermacher (* 1950), professor of mathematics and economics, supporter of the Global Marshall Plan Initiative, head of the FAW Institute Ulm
- Urs M. Fiechtner (* 1955), writer and human rights activist
- Gabriele Wulz (* 1959), theologian, prelate, early preacher at Ulm Minster
- Siyou Isabelle Ngnoubamdjum (* 1968), gospel singer and choir director
- Hannes Lambert (* 1980), singer, actor and speaker
- Kevin Kuhn (* 1981), author
- Rola El-Halabi (* 1985), boxer
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Heinz Jürgen Bergmann: "So that one man has won". The plague tract of Jakob Engelins von Ulm. (= Studies on medieval plague literature. Volume 2). Medical dissertation Bonn 1972. Commissioned by the publishing house Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg. See also Heinz Jürgen Bergmann: New finds on Jakob Engelin's plague tract of Ulm. In: Sudhoff's archive. Volume 62, 1978, pp. 282-293.
- ^ Gundolf Keil: Peter von Ulm d. Ä. In: Encyclopedia of Medical History. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 2005, p. 1129.
- ↑ Jürgen Martin: The 'Ulmer Wundarznei'. Introduction - Text - Glossary on a monument to German specialist prose from the 15th century. Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 1991 (= Würzburg medical-historical research. Volume 52), ISBN 3-88479-801-4 (also medical dissertation Würzburg 1990), p. 13.