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List of people from Frankfurt


List of people from Frankfurt


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
  • Catharina 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 (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
  • Karl Wilhelm (1754–1782), Duke of Saxe-Meiningen
  • 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
  • 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 (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 (1860–1943), chemist and industrialist

1861–1880

  • Franz Joseph von Bülow (1861–1915), German writer
  • 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 (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 Maria Kaufmann (1872-1951), German Biblical archaelogist
  • 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 (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
  • 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 (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
  • Wilhelm Süss (1895–1958), mathematician
  • 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
  • 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 (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 (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 (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 (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 (1925–2024), 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 (1930–2022), 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 (1933–2023), writer, essayist, journalist of influential weekly papers, broadcaster, and poet
  • Mary Bauermeister (1934–2023), 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), trade unionist
  • 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
  • Ursula G.T. Müller (born 1944), sociologist specializing in gender studies
  • Jürgen Roth (1945–2017), publicist and investigative journalist
  • Gerhard Welz (born 1945), former professional footballer
  • Gerd Binnig (born 1947), physicist and Nobel laureate
  • Wolfgang Flür (born 1947), musician
  • Hans-Joachim Klein (1947–2022), terrorist
  • Minka Pradelski (born 1947), sociologist and documentary filmmaker
  • Susan Blakely (born 1948), American film actress
  • Diethelm Sack (born 1948), financial officer
  • Rolf Birkhölzer (born 1949), footballer
  • Horst Dröse (born 1949), former field hockey player
  • Margot Glockshuber (born 1949), former pair skater
  • 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 (1951–2022), guitarist and composer
  • Martin Mosebach (born 1951), writer
  • Peter Ammon (born 1952), diplomat
  • Cornelia Hanisch (born 1952), former fencer
  • Johanna Lindsey (1952–2019), 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 (1953–2022), 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 (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 (born 1958), jurist and former conservative politician
  • Thomas Metzinger (born 1958), philosopher and professor
  • 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 (born 1960), actor
  • Gabriele Lesser (born 1960), historian and journalist
  • Patricia Ott (born 1960), former field hockey player

1961–1970

  • 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
  • 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 (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 (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 (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 (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

  • Giuseppe Gemiti (born 1981), professional footballer
  • 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 (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 (born 1989), professional footballer
  • Marcel Titsch-Rivero (born 1989), professional footballer
  • Timothy Chandler (born 1990), German-American professional soccer player
  • Steffen Fäth (born 1990), professional handball player
  • Jan Kirchhoff (born 1990), professional footballer
  • Romero Osby (born 1990), American professional basketball player for Maccabi Kiryat Gat of the Israeli Basketball Premier League

1991–2000

  • Daniel Döringer (born 1991), professional footballer
  • Daniel Henrich (born 1991), professional footballer
  • Namika (born 1991), German-Moroccan singer and rapper
  • Leon Bunn (born 1992), boxer
  • Max Ehmer (born 1992), professional footballer
  • Markus Hofmeier (born 1993), professional footballer
  • Alice Merton (born 1993), singer
  • Emre Can (born 1994), professional footballer

Notable residents of Frankfurt

8th to 17th centuries

  • 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 (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

  • Johann Philipp Bethmann (1715–1793), merchant and banker
  • Simon Moritz Bethmann (1721–1782), merchant and banker
  • Pinchas Horowitz (1731–1805), rabbi
  • Johann Christian Friedrich Hæffner (1759–1833), composer
  • Sekl Loeb Wormser (1768–1846), rabbi
  • Clemens Brentano (1778–1842), poet, novelist, and major figure of German Romanticism
  • Karoline von Günderrode (1780–1806), Romantic poet
  • 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 (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 (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

  • 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

  • Reinhard Goerdeler (1922–1996), accountant instrumental in founding KPMG, a leading international firm of accountants
  • Arno Lustiger (1924–2012), historian and author
  • Horst 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

See also

  • Frankfurt School
  • List of mayors of Frankfurt
  • List of Eintracht Frankfurt players


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: List of people from Frankfurt by Wikipedia (Historical)