List of personalities of the city of Ulm

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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

14th to 17th centuries

18th century

19th century

1801 to 1820

1821 to 1840

1841 to 1860

1861 to 1880

1881 to 1900

20th century

1901 to 1910

1911 to 1920

1921 to 1930

1931 to 1940

1941 to 1950

1951 to 1960

1961 to 1970

1971 to 1980

From 1981

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

  1. 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.
  2. ^ Gundolf Keil: Peter von Ulm d. Ä. In: Encyclopedia of Medical History. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 2005, p. 1129.
  3. 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.