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Deaths in November 2023


Deaths in November 2023


The following is a list of notable deaths in November 2023.

Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:

  • Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.

November 2023

1

  • Carlo Ambrosini, 69, Italian cartoonist (Ken Parker, Dylan Dog).
  • Ady Barkan, 39, American political activist, complications from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • Norma Berger, 90, American baseball player (Springfield Sallies).
  • Luigi Berlinguer, 91, Italian politician, minister of education (1996–2000).
  • Chen Wei-ling, 48, Taiwanese film director and screenwriter (Autumn's Concerto), cervical cancer.
  • Wesley P. Dahlberg, 106, American car designer.
  • Bob Duckworth, 94, New Zealand motorcycle speedway rider (Belle Vue Aces, St Austell Gulls, Newcastle Diamonds).
  • Pierre Dutour, 91, French trumpeter.
  • Geaux Rocket Ride, 3, American Thoroughbred racehorse, euthanized.
  • Gregor Hammerl, 81, Austrian politician, member (2010–2014, 2015–2018) and president (2012) of the Federal Council.
  • Brian Hebditch, 75, British Olympic sports shooter (1976), traffic collision.
  • Jonathan Hill, 65, English architect and architectural historian, cancer.
  • Jawaher, 45, Kuwaiti actress, cancer.
  • Bob Knight, 83, American Hall of Fame basketball coach (Indiana Hoosiers, Texas Tech Red Raiders, 1984 Olympic team).
  • Grégoire Lassalle, 68, French entertainer, businessman (AlloCiné) and film producer (Crash Test Aglaé, The Extraordinary Journey of the Fakir).
  • Francis Mer, 84, French economist, minister of finance (2002–2004).
  • Claude Michely, 64, Luxembourgish racing cyclist, heart attack.
  • Eddy Monsels, 75, Surinamese Olympic sprinter (1968).
  • Leela Omchery, 94, Indian classical singer and musicologist.
  • Ageeda Paavel, 93, Estonian anti-Soviet activist.
  • Saraswati Pradhan, 98, Indian politician, MP (1972–1978) and Odisha MLA (1961–1971).
  • Jaan Rannap, 92, Estonian children's writer.
  • Ann Schlee, 89, English novelist.
  • Zanele Situ, 52, South African athlete, Paralympic champion (2000, 2004).
  • Cláudio Strassburger, 95, Brazilian politician, federal deputy (1979–1983)
  • Paride Taban, 87, South Sudanese Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Juba (1980–1983) and bishop of Torit (1983–2004).
  • Peter Tarnoff, 86, American politician, under secretary for political affairs (1993–1997), president of the Council on Foreign Relations (1986–1993).
  • Vladimir Urbanovich, 85, Russian baritone.
  • Vic Vergeat, 72, Italian guitarist, singer-songwriter and record producer.
  • Peter White, 86, American actor (The Boys in the Band, All My Children, Mr. Wrong), melanoma.
  • Gerry Wiedel, 90, Canadian Olympic fencer (1968, 1972).
  • Erich Zakowski, 89, German racing team owner (Zakspeed).

2

  • Antonio Aranda Lomeña, 80, Spanish Roman Catholic priest, theologian and academic.
  • Asashio Tarō IV, 67, Japanese sumo wrestler, small intestine cancer.
  • Junior Balaiah, 70, Indian actor (Dhooram Adhighamillai, Saattai, Thani Oruvan), asphyxiated.
  • Jack Bamford, 86, English George Cross recipient.
  • Daisy Lee Bitter, 95, American science educator.
  • Bob Bugden, 87, Australian rugby league player (St. George Dragons, Parramatta Eels, national team).
  • Walter Davis, 69, American basketball player (Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets), Olympic champion (1976).
  • Mortimer L. Downey, 87, American politician, deputy secretary of transportation (1993–2001), pulmonary fibrosis.
  • Dick Drago, 78, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox, Kansas City Royals, California Angels).
  • Freddy Elie, 77, Haitian-born Venezuelan football player (Deportivo Galicia, Portuguesa, Venezuela national team) and manager.
  • Oussama Falouh, 24, Moroccan footballer (FUS Rabat, Angers, Wydad), injuries sustained in a traffic collision.
  • Fung Ying Ki, 43, Hong Kong wheelchair fencer, Paralympic champion (2000, 2004).
  • Salman Habaka, 33, Israeli lieutenant colonel, commander of the 188 Barak Brigade.
  • John Havers, 92, English badminton player (national team).
  • Humaira Himu, 37, Bangladeshi actress (Amar Bondhu Rashed).
  • Natrah Ismail, 73, Malaysian politician, MP (2018–2022).
  • Kaia Iva, 59, Estonian politician, MP (2007–2015), minister of social protection (2016–2019).
  • Henri Korn, 89, French neuroscientist.
  • Henri Lopes, 86, Congolese writer, diplomat and politician, prime minister (1973–1975).
  • Jutta Müller, 94, German Hall of Fame figure skating coach.
  • Michel Pilz, 78, German jazz clarinetist.
  • Shin Gu-beom, 81, South Korean politician, governor of Jeju Province (1993–1995, 1995–1998).
  • R. H. Sikes, 83, American professional golfer.
  • Brenda Snipes, 80, American public official, supervisor of elections for Broward County, Florida (2003–2018).
  • Leroy Stover, 90, American police officer.
  • Yuri Temirkanov, 84, Russian conductor.
  • Howard Wayne, 75, American politician, member of the California State Assembly (1996–2002).
  • Wei Wei, 101, Chinese actress (Night Inn, Spring in a Small Town, The Truth About Jane and Sam).

3

  • Adele Änggård, 90, Swedish-British stage and costume designer.
  • David Berglas, 97, German-born British magician and mentalist.
  • Patrick Brownsey, 75, British-born New Zealand botanist and philatelist.
  • Dame Alexandra Burslem, 83, British academic and public servant.
  • Robert Butler, 95, American film and television director (Batman, Star Trek, Remington Steele).
  • José María Carrascal, 92, Spanish television presenter, journalist (Diario de Barcelona, La Razón) and writer.
  • Gary Colson, 89, American basketball coach (Valdosta State Blazers, Pepperdine Waves, New Mexico Lobos), lymphoma.
  • Bubba Copeland, 49, American politician, mayor of Smiths Station, Alabama (since 2016), suicide by gunshot.
  • Zdeněk Douša, 76, Czech Olympic basketball player (1972, 1976, 1980).
  • Elizângela, 68, Brazilian actress (Locomotivas, O Clone, Just Short of Perfect).
  • Ian Ferrier, 68–69, Canadian poet and musician.
  • Orlando Garibay, 30, Mexican racing cyclist (Cylance, Crisa–SEEI), traffic collision.
  • Goutam Halder, 67, Indian actor and director, heart attack.
  • Dennis Higgins, 84, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, St. Louis Cardinals).
  • Francette Lazard, 86, French teacher and politician.
  • Angela Marinescu, 82, Romanian poet.
  • Gieve Patel, 83, Indian poet, playwright, and painter, cancer.
  • Betty Reardon, 94, American teacher.
  • Matti Reunamäki, 83, Finnish Olympic ice hockey player (1964, 1968).
  • Govardhan Mangilal Sharma, 74, Indian politician, Maharashtra MLA (since 1995), cancer.
  • Martin Shefter, 79, American political scientist and author.
  • Valery Shmukler, 77, Ukrainian engineer.
  • Colin Smith, 87, British-Nepali lepidopterist, gastrointestinal stromal tumor.
  • Ari Tissari, 71, Finnish footballer (KTP, Vasalunds, national team).
  • Béla Turi-Kovács, 87, Hungarian politician, MP (since 1998).
  • Priit Vesilind, 80, Estonian-American photojournalist and author.
  • Zhou Tienong, 84, Chinese politician, vice chairperson of the CPPCC (1998–2008) and the Standing Committee of the NPC (2008–2013).

4

  • Marina Cicogna, 89, Italian film producer (Belle de Jour, Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion), cancer.
  • Karen Davis, 79, American animal rights activist.
  • Robert G. Doumar, 93, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court of Eastern Virginia (since 1981).
  • Akbar Golpayegani, 89, Iranian singer.
  • L. C. Gordon, 86, American basketball player (Oklahoma State Cowboys).
  • Aaron Harper, 42, American basketball player (Chorale Roanne, Levski Sofia, Ferro Carril Oeste), traffic collision.
  • Kosuke Hori, 89, Japanese politician, MP (1979–2014), minister of education (1990) and internal affairs (1999–2000), aspiration pneumonia.
  • Robert Knecht, 97, British historian.
  • Ando Leps, 87, Estonian jurist and politician, MP (1995–2003).
  • Hans Melchers, 85, Dutch businessman.
  • Philip Meyer, 93, American journalist and scholar, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Bill Milbank, 75, New Zealand art curator.
  • Jean Mouton, 94, French politician, deputy (1986–1988).
  • Charles Piaget, 95, French watchmaker and trade unionist.
  • Cristina Quintarelli, 60, Italian Olympic swimmer (1984).
  • Luigi Saidelli, 84, Italian Olympic sailor (1964), emphysema.
  • Gord Smith, 86, Canadian sculptor, medically assisted death.
  • Ken Timms, 85, Australian footballer (Essendon).
  • Ahmad Tousi, 76, Iranian-American football manager (Sanat Naft).
  • Haruo Wakō, 75, Japanese communist militant (Japanese Red Army).
  • Mary Willis Walker, 81, American crime fiction author (Under the Beetle's Cellar), complications from dementia.
  • John Whitney, 92, British writer and producer.
  • Gary Winnick, 76, American businessman, industrialist and billionaire.

5

  • Michael J. Alexander, 82, British translator (Beowulf), poet and broadcaster.
  • Malam Yusuf Ali, 73, Nigerian Islamic cleric.
  • Imre Bíró, 65, Romanian footballer (ASA Târgu Mureș, Universitatea Cluj, national team).
  • Russell Camilleri, 86, American Olympic wrestler (1960, 1964).
  • John Contoulis, 84, American football player (New York Giants).
  • Ryland Davies, 80, Welsh operatic tenor and voice teacher (Royal College of Music), mesothelioma.
  • Enrique Dussel, 88, Argentine-Mexican philosopher, historian and theologian, interim rector of UACM (2013–2014).
  • Olaf Eliassen, 74, Norwegian farmer and politician, Sámi MP (2001–2013).
  • Evan Ellingson, 35, American actor (CSI: Miami, 24, My Sister's Keeper), accidental fentanyl overdose.
  • Susi Eppenberger, 92, Swiss politician, MP (1979–1991).
  • David Ferry, 99, American poet, translator and educator.
  • Willard F. Goodwin, 81, American politician, member of the Georgia House of Representatives (1983–1997).
  • Anne Hart, 90, English actress (Z-Cars, Play of the Week).
  • Harald Heckmann, 98, German musicologist (International Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres, Répertoire International des Sources Musicales).
  • John L. Heilbron, 89, American academic and science historian.
  • David Hilditch, 60, Northern Irish politician, MLA (1998–2023), cancer.
  • Ole N. Hoemsnes, 95, Norwegian journalist (Morgenbladet, Morgenposten, Aftenposten), chairman of the Norwegian Union of Journalists (1966–1970).
  • Donald Hunsberger, 91, American conductor (Eastman Wind Ensemble, 1965–2002), professor of conducting (Eastman School of Music) and arranger.
  • Pat E. Johnson, 84, American martial artist, stuntman and actor (Enter the Dragon, The Karate Kid, Mortal Kombat).
  • Juan Jumalon, 57, Filipino journalist and radio broadcaster, shot.
  • Theodoros Kotsonis, 78, Greek physician and politician, MP (1989–2004).
  • Malo Louarn, 74, French comic book author.
  • Paolo Magnani, 96, Italian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Lodi (1977–1988) and Treviso (1988–2003).
  • Philippe-Armand Martin, 74, French politician, deputy (1993–2017) and MEP (1994–1999).
  • Ross McDonnell, 44, Irish photographer, film director and cinematographer (Colony, Elián, The First Wave).
  • Jim Morrissey, 93, American politician, member of the California State Assembly (1994–1998).
  • Bongi Ntuli, 32, South African footballer (Golden Arrows, Platinum Stars, AmaZulu), cancer.
  • Cēzars Ozers, 86, Latvian basketball player, Olympic silver medalist (1960).
  • Vladimir Prifti, 81, Albanian film director and screenwriter.
  • Lolita Rodrigues, 94, Brazilian singer and actress (Rainha da Sucata, Despedida de Solteiro, Kubanacan), pneumonia.
  • Samuel Sanford Shapiro, 93, American statistician (Shapiro–Wilk test, Shapiro–Francia test).
  • Donald Shebib, 85, Canadian film director, screenwriter and editor (Goin' Down the Road, Running Brave, The Climb).
  • Ato Tolentino, 75, Filipino basketball player (Great Taste Coffee Makers) and coach (PCU Dolphins).
  • Carl Torbush, 72, American college football (Ole Miss Rebels, North Carolina Tar Heels) and baseball (Southeastern Louisiana Lions) coach.
  • Matt Ulrich, 41, American football player (Indianapolis Colts).
  • Mitar Vasiljević, 69, Bosnian Serb convicted war criminal and paramilitary group member (White Eagles).
  • William Yule, 83, British psychologist.
  • Stanisław Zahradnik, 91, Polish-Czech historian.
  • Xabier Zumalde, 85, Spanish Basque nationalist militant, military chief of ETA (1965–1976).

6

  • Matevos Asatryan, 37, Armenian politician, MP (since 2019).
  • Nadira Begum, Bangladeshi folk singer.
  • Bill Dellastatious, 101, American football player (Missouri Tigers) and coach (Missouri State Bears).
  • Conrado de Quiros, 72, Filipino journalist, columnist and writer.
  • Ivaylo Ditchev, 68, Bulgarian anthropologist.
  • John Fahy, 80, Scottish footballer (Germiston Callies, Oxford United).
  • Manu Korovulavula, 89, Fijian politician.
  • Bronius Kuzmickas, 87, Lithuanian politician and philosopher, signatory of the Act of the Re-Establishment.
  • Janet Landgard, 75, American actress (The Swimmer, The Donna Reed Show, Land Raider), brain cancer.
  • Janko Lukovski, 77, Yugoslav and Macedonian basketball player (Rabotnički, MZT Skopje) and coach (Spartak Subotica).
  • Roel Luynenburg, 78, Dutch rower, Olympic bronze medalist (1972).
  • Vincent Marks, 93, British clinical pathologist and biochemist.
  • Antoni Martí, 60, Andorran architect and politician, twice prime minister, mayor of Escaldes-Engordany (2003–2011) and general councillor (1994–2003).
  • Sandy McGregor, 84, Canadian ice hockey player (New York Rangers).
  • Yoshiko Miura, 74, Japanese lyricist ("Cat's Eye", "Mayonaka no Door", "Please"), pneumonia.
  • Norman Munnoch, 94, Scottish rugby union player (Watsonian, Edinburgh District, national team).
  • Dino Piana, 93, Italian jazz musician.
  • Joe Sharkey, 77, American author and columnist.
  • Neil B. Shulman, 78, American doctor and medical writer.
  • Mike Shuster, 76, American journalist and blogger (NPR), complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Lars Svantesson, 90, Swedish Olympic swimmer (1952).
  • Simon Sze, 87, Taiwanese-American electrical engineer (Floating-gate MOSFET).
  • Roger Verplaetse, 92, Belgian racing cyclist (Faema, Flandria).
  • Berend-Jan van Voorst tot Voorst, 79, Dutch politician, Queen's commissioner of Limburg (1993–2005), state secretary for defence (1989–1993) and foreign affairs (1988–1989).
  • Bruno Zanoni, 71, Italian racing cyclist.

7

  • Arputhan, 52, Indian film director (Arputham, Love Today, Manathodu Mazhaikalam), traffic collision.
  • Frank Borman, 95, American astronaut (Gemini 7, Apollo 8) and airline executive (Eastern Air Lines), stroke.
  • Aloisio Butonidualevu, 40, Fijian rugby union player (Auch, FC Grenoble Rugby, national team).
  • Dean Byrne, 39, Irish professional boxer.
  • Werner Carobbio, 86, Swiss politician, member of the National Council (1975–1999).
  • D. B. Chandregowda, 87, Indian politician, MP (1971–1978, 1986–1989, 2009–2014) and three-times Karnataka MLA.
  • Julius Otto Duncan, 97, American politician, member of the Texas House of Representatives (1951–1953).
  • Alain Estève, 77, French rugby union player (AS Béziers, national team).
  • Diethelm Ferner, 82, German football player (Werder Bremen, West Germany national team) and manager (Rot-Weiss Essen).
  • Nikos Gioutsos, 81, Greek footballer (Olympiacos, Ethnikos Piraeus, national team).
  • Stuart Jardine, 90, British Olympic sailor (1968, 1972).
  • Bruce Sterling Jenkins, 96, American jurist and politician, judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah (since 1978) and member of the Utah Senate (1959–1965).
  • Igor Judge, Baron Judge, 82, English judge, lord chief justice (2008–2013).
  • Maso Karipe, Papua New Guinean politician, MP (since 2022), stomach cancer.
  • LaMar Lemmons Jr., 87, American politician, member of the Michigan House of Representatives (2005–2010) and businessman.
  • Garfield McMahon, 91, Canadian Olympic sport shooter (1960, 1964).
  • Maheswar Mohanty, 67, Indian politician, Odisha MLA (1995–2019), stroke.
  • Mário Moinhos, 74, Portuguese footballer (Boavista, Benfica, national team).
  • Betty Rollin, 87, American author and journalist, assisted suicide.
  • Federico Sacchi, 87, Argentinian footballer (Racing, Newell's Old Boys, national team).
  • Ken'ichi Sakemi, 59, Japanese writer (Kōkyū Shōsetsu, Bokkō).
  • Albert Strickler, 68, French poet and author.
  • Dev Virahsawmy, 81, Mauritian political activist, founder of Mauritian Militant Movement.
  • Józef Wybieralski, 77, Polish Olympic field hockey player (1972).
  • Haris Xanthoudakis, 73, Greek composer.

8

  • Hannelore Auer, 81, Austrian singer and film actress (I'm Marrying the Director, The Merry Wives of Tyrol, ...denn die Musik und die Liebe in Tirol).
  • Ziyad al-Din al-Ayyubi, 76–77, Syrian preacher and politician, minister of endowments (2004–2007).
  • Marcus Besen, 99, Romanian-born Australian businessman, philanthropist and Holocaust survivor.
  • Sandra Elkin, 85, American television talk show host and women's rights advocate.
  • Peter Elzinga, 79, Canadian politician, MP (1974–1986) and Alberta MLA (1986–1993).
  • Rainer Erler, 90, German film director and screenwriter (Fleisch, Das Blaue Palais).
  • Alcides Franciscato, 94, Brazilian engineer and politician, mayor of Bauru (1969–1973), three-time deputy.
  • Laurent Greilsamer, 70, French journalist and essayist, deputy director of Le Monde (2007–2011).
  • Frank Houben, 84, Dutch politician, Queen's commissioner of North Brabant (1987–2003).
  • Aderonke Kale, 84, Nigerian army psychiatrist (Nigerian Army Medical Corps).
  • Roger Kastel, 92, American film poster artist (Jaws, The Empire Strikes Back, Doc Savage: The Man of Bronze), kidney and heart failure.
  • Sawar Khan, 98, Pakistani general, vice chief of the army staff (1980–1984) and governor of Punjab (1978–1980).
  • Søren Krarup, 85, Danish Lutheran pastor, author, and member of the Danish Parliament (2001–2011).
  • Bernard Lemaire, 87, Canadian papermaking executive, co-founder and CEO of Cascades.
  • Louis Oster, 95, French lawyer and musicologist.
  • Valentina Ponomaryova, 90, Russian cosmonaut, pilot, and scientist.
  • Dale Reid, 64, Scottish golfer, cancer.
  • Georges Salmon, 90, Belgian long jumper and hurdler.
  • Tony Thirlwall, 82, British economist.
  • Giorgio Veneri, 84, Italian footballer and manager (Atalanta, AC Prato, Italy U-20).
  • Jean-Pierre Verheggen, 81, Belgian writer.
  • Adrian Webster, 72, English football player (Seattle Sounders, Colchester United) and manager (Phoenix Inferno).
  • Bob White, 87, English cricketer (Middlesex, Nottinghamshire).

9

  • Albert Alföldi, 83, Hungarian folk writer and politician, MP (1994–1998, 2004–2010).
  • François Bacqué, 87, French Roman Catholic prelate, apostolic nuncio to the Netherlands (2001–2011).
  • R. L. Boyce, 68, American blues musician.
  • Fred van Dorp, 85, Dutch Olympic water polo player (1960, 1964, 1968).
  • K. A. Francis, 75, Indian painter.
  • David Gauthier, 91, Canadian-American philosopher.
  • Manuel Gusmão, 77, Portuguese academic, poet and politician, member of the constituent assembly (1975–1976) and of the assembly of the republic (1975–1980).
  • Kalabhavan Haneef, 63, Indian actor (Sandesam, Thenkasipattanam, Amar Akbar Anthony) and impressionist.
  • Albert Heinemann, 84, German jurist and politician, member of the Landtag of Lower Saxony (1990–2003).
  • Alan Hevesi, 83, American politician, comptroller of New York City (1994–2001) and New York State (2003–2006), complications from Lewy body dementia.
  • Juha Leiviskä, 87, Finnish architect and designer.
  • Luis Guillermo Lumbreras, 87, Peruvian archaeologist, anthropologist and academic, director of the MNAAHP (1973–1978) and president of the Museo de la Nación (1990).
  • Ali Niakani, 72, Iranian footballer (Malavan, national team).
  • John Nuttall, 56, British Olympic long-distance runner (1996), heart attack.
  • Junko Ohashi, 73, Japanese singer, esophageal cancer.
  • Kurt Olson, 75, American politician, member of the Alaska House of Representatives (2005–2017), pancreatic cancer
  • Timothy O'Neill, 80, American Army officer, camouflage expert, and author (The Individuated Hobbit).
  • Jørgen Reenberg, 96, Danish actor (Europa, The Wolf at the Door, I Am Dina).
  • James Robertson, 95, British political activist, economist, and writer.
  • John Sayre, 87, American rower, Olympic champion (1960).
  • Hugh Seidman, 82-83, American poet.
  • William Stoddart, 98, Scottish-Canadian physician, author and philosopher.
  • Ashutosh Tandon, 63, Indian politician, Uttar Pradesh MLA (since 2014), heart failure.
  • Joe Tilson, 95, British visual artist.
  • John Tooby, 71, American anthropologist.
  • Jim Vienneau, 97, American record producer ("It's Only Make Believe").
  • Tim Woodward, 70, English actor (Wings, Piece of Cake, Families), cancer.

10

  • Padmanabha Acharya, 92, Indian politician, governor of Nagaland (2014–2019), Tripura (2014–2015) and Assam (2014–2016).
  • Danilo Astori, 83, Uruguayan economist and politician, vice president (2010–2015), minister of economy (2005–2008, 2015–2020) and twice senator, respiratory failure.
  • John Bailey, 81, American cinematographer (Ordinary People, The Big Chill, Groundhog Day), president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (2017–2019).
  • David G. Compton, 93, British author (Synthajoy, The Unsleeping Eye).
  • Lorraine Day, 86, American author and orthopedic trauma surgeon.
  • Miah Dennehy, 73, Irish footballer (Walsall, Bristol Rovers, national team).
  • Henry Dunay, 88, American goldsmith and jewelry designer.
  • Spiros Focás, 86, Greek actor (Rocco and His Brothers, The Jewel of the Nile, A Man for Burning).
  • Ewan Fordyce, 70, New Zealand palaeontologist, fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand (since 2014).
  • Gordon Gibson Jr, 86, Canadian politician, British Columbia MLA (1974–1979).
  • Rahman Gumbo, 59, Zimbabwean football player (Highlanders, national team) and manager (Gaborone United), heart attack.
  • Mike Hamilton, 60, American athletic director (University of Tennessee), cancer.
  • Hiroyuki Hosoda, 79, Japanese politician, member (since 1990) and speaker (2021–2023) of the House of Representatives and chief cabinet secretary (2004–2005).
  • Charles Jordan, 69, American basketball player (Indiana Pacers, ASVEL, Fortitudo Bologna).
  • Pavel Kantorek, 93, Czech Olympic runner (1956, 1960, 1964).
  • Colin MacKay, 79, Scottish journalist (BBC Radio Scotland, Scottish Television).
  • Pierre Michel, 93, French Olympic cyclist (1952).
  • Davide Renne, 46, Italian fashion designer (Moschino), heart attack.
  • Johnny Ruffo, 35, Australian singer ("On Top") and actor (Home and Away), brain cancer.
  • Marcel Schlechter, 95, Luxembourgish politician, minister for transport and public works (1984–1989), MEP (1989–1999).
  • Jean-Philippe Thierry, 75, French businessman.
  • Sir Eric Thomas, 70, British gynaecologist and academic administrator, vice-chancellor of the University of Bristol (2001–2015), lung cancer.
  • Mihai Timofti, 75, Moldovan actor, singer, and professor.
  • Penelope Walton Rogers, 73, British archaeologist.
  • Yaw Shin Leong, 47, Singaporean politician, MP (2011–2012).

11

  • Francis Agbo, 65, French Olympic high jumper (1980).
  • Hammam Alloh, 36, Palestinian nephrologist, airstrike.
  • Wyatt Anderson, 84, American geneticist and evolutionary biologist.
  • Ron Anton, 82, Canadian Hall of Fame curler.
  • Louis Belton, 79, Irish politician, TD (1989–1992, 1997–2002), and senator (1993–1997).
  • Giulia Cecchettin, 22, Italian student, stabbed.
  • Antonio Del Monaco, 67, Italian military officer and politician, deputy (2018–2022).
  • Gema Díaz, 75, Spanish politician, senator (1995–2003) and member of the Parliament of Cantabria (1987–1995, 2003–2007).
  • Raphael Dwamena, 28, Ghanaian footballer (Zürich, Egnatia Rrogozhinë, national team), ventricular arrhythmia.
  • D. J. Hayden, 33, American football player (Oakland Raiders, Detroit Lions, Jacksonville Jaguars), traffic collision.
  • Clarence A. Holland, 94, American politician, member of the Virginia Senate (1984–1996) and mayor of Virginia Beach (1976–1978).
  • Md. Imdadul Hoque, Bangladeshi academic administrator, vice-chancellor of Jagannath University (since 2021), cancer.
  • Muhammad Azam Khan, 89, Pakistani civil servant, caretaker minister of interior (2018), caretaker chief minister (since 2023) and twice chief secretary of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
  • Kyle LeDuc, 42, American racing driver (Lucas Oil Off Road Racing Series, Championship Off-Road, Extreme E), head and neck cancer.
  • Jovan Marić, 82, Serbian psychiatrist, author, and university professor.
  • Chandra Mohan, 82, Indian actor (Rangula Ratnam, Padaharella Vayasu, Siri Siri Muvva), heart attack.
  • Peter J. Moore, 67, Canadian record producer (Cowboy Junkies, Willie P. Bennett).
  • Dimitrie Popescu, 62, Romanian rower, Olympic champion (1992).
  • Kari Rahkamo, 90, Finnish Olympic athlete (1956, 1960) and politician, mayor of Helsinki (1991–1996).
  • Ferario Spasov, 61, Bulgarian football player (Osam Lovech) and manager (CSKA Sofia, Montana), traffic collision.
  • Dave Stenhouse, 90, American baseball player (Washington Senators).
  • Nino Strano, 73, Italian politician, deputy (2001–2006) and senator (2006–2008, 2011–2012).
  • Conny Van Dyke, 78, American singer and actress (Hell's Angels '69, W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings, Framed), complications from vascular dementia.
  • Angelita Vargas, 77, Spanish flamenco singer and dancer, stroke.
  • Masatoshi Wakabayashi, 89, Japanese politician, three-time MP, minister of the environment (2006–2007) and agriculture (2007–2008).
  • Edith D. Warren, 86, American politician and educator, member of the North Carolina General Assembly (1999–2012).
  • Gamini Weerakoon, Sri Lankan journalist and editor (The Sunday Leader, The Sunday Times).
  • Tom Zych, 83, American politician and minister.

12

  • Mohammed al Amin, 80, Sudanese musician.
  • M. Russell Ballard, 95, American Mormon leader, member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (since 1985).
  • Aldo Bet, 74, Italian footballer (Roma, Milan, national team).
  • Peter J. Boylan, 87, American major general.
  • Jacques Bérès, 82, French orthopedic surgeon, co-founder of Médecins Sans Frontières.
  • Roman Čechmánek, 52, Czech ice hockey player (Philadelphia Flyers, Los Angeles Kings), Olympic champion (1998).
  • Hugo Chamberlain, 88, Costa Rican Olympic sports shooter (1968, 1972, 1976).
  • Hanna Gucwińska, 91, Polish zootechnician and politician, MP (2001–2005).
  • Mustafa Hasanagić, 82, Serbian football player (Partizan, Yugoslavia national team) and manager (Ankaragücü).
  • Davoud Hermidas-Bavand, 89, Iranian diplomat and political scientist.
  • Rahim Huseynov, 87, Azerbaijani politician, prime minister (1992–1993).
  • Joan Jara, 96, British-Chilean dancer and human rights activist.
  • Rina Jimenez-David, 68, Filipino journalist (Philippine Daily Inquirer).
  • Akgün Kaçmaz, 88, Turkish footballer (Fenerbahçe, national team).
  • Mehmet Kakil, 56, Turkish football manager (Dynamic Herb Cebu).
  • Kan, 61, Japanese singer-songwriter.
  • Paul Martin Lester, 70, American professor.
  • Tony Mason, 91, British Royal Air Force officer, Air Secretary (1985–1989).
  • Camara Nangala, 68, Ivorian writer and teacher.
  • Elinor Otto, 104, American factory worker, an original Rosie the Riveter.
  • Usman Baba Pategi, 81, Nigerian actor and broadcaster.
  • Helena Pilejczyk, 92, Polish speed skater, Olympic bronze medallist (1960).
  • Kurt Reumann, 89, German journalist (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung).
  • Nina Sadur, 73, Russian writer and playwright.
  • Kraft Schepke, 89, German rower, Olympic champion (1960).
  • Anna Scher, 78, British-Irish drama school founder.
  • Karel Schwarzenberg, 85, Czech politician, aristocrat and diplomat, senator (2004–2010), twice minister of foreign affairs and deputy (2010–2021), heart and kidney disease.
  • Patrick Smith, 71, Australian sportswriter (The Age, The Australian).
  • Kevin Turen, 44, American film and television producer (Euphoria, X, The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent), heart failure.
  • Hans Waldenfels, 92, German Jesuit priest, theologian, and biblist.
  • Don Walsh, 92, American oceanographer, explorer, and marine policy specialist.
  • Kusuma Wardhani, 59, Indonesian archer, Olympic silver medallist (1988).
  • Zhong Wanxie, 89, Chinese engineer, member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

13

  • Basudeb Acharia, 81, Indian politician, MP (1980–2014).
  • Ociel Baena, 38, Mexican magistrate and LGBT rights activist.
  • Maryanne Trump Barry, 86, American jurist and attorney, judge of the U.S. District Court of New Jersey (1983–1999) and Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1999–2019), cancer.
  • Rob Belloir, 75, American baseball player (Atlanta Braves).
  • Héctor Benavides, 82, Mexican news anchor and radio personality.
  • Michael Bishop, 78, American science fiction writer (No Enemy But Time, Who Made Stevie Crye?, Brittle Innings).
  • Akram Hossain Chowdhury, 68, Bangladeshi politician, MP (2008–2014).
  • Michel Ciment, 85, French film critic (Positif) and historian.
  • Abel Ignacio Cuevas Melo, 58, Mexican politician, deputy (2000–2003, 2006–2009).
  • Mohammed Dababish, Palestinian intelligence official (Hamas), airstrike.
  • Masaharu Ikuta, 88, Japanese businessman.
  • Lundy Kiger, 69, American politician, member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives (2018–2020), traffic collision.
  • Tengiz Kitovani, 85, Georgian politician and military commander, minister of defence (1992–1993) and leader of the Military Council (1992), co-leader of the 1991–1992 coup d'état.
  • Ivo Kuusk, 86, Estonian opera singer.
  • Gérard de La Martinière, 80, French businessman.
  • Sjachrani Mataja, 75, Indonesian politician, MP (2014–2019).
  • Ozay Mehmet, 84, Cypriot academic.
  • Robert Philibosian, 83, American politician, Los Angeles County district attorney (1981–1984).
  • Ignacio Poletti, 93, Argentine Olympic basketball player (1952).
  • T. B. Silalahi, 85, Indonesian military officer, minister of public servants (1993–1998).
  • Jim Traue, 91, New Zealand librarian.
  • George Tscherny, 99, Hungarian-born American graphic designer and educator.
  • Judith Tucker, 63, British artist and academic, traffic collision.
  • Gordon Wallace, 74, Scottish footballer (Raith Rovers, Dundee United, Berwick Rangers).
  • Work All Week, 14, American Throughbred racehorse, paddock accident.
  • Devon Wylie, 35, American football player (Kansas City Chiefs, Tennessee Titans).

14

  • Rick Ahearn, 74, American political consultant.
  • Ken Adamson, 85, American football player (Denver Broncos).
  • Sir Tom Arnold, 76, British politician, MP (1974–1997), chair of the Treasury Select Committee (1995–1996).
  • Radcliffe Bailey, 54, American visual artist, brain cancer.
  • Alessandra Bianchi, 59, Italian sports journalist (Corriere dello Sport, L'Équipe, Le Parisien).
  • Angela Maria Bottari, 78, Italian politician, deputy (1978–1987).
  • Buzy, 66, French singer.
  • Ramesh Chander, 88, Malaysian economist and statistician.
  • Brian Cotter, Baron Cotter, 87, British politician, MP (1997–2005) and member of the House of Lords (since 2006), complications from dementia.
  • Shanta Das Manandhar, 89, Nepalese writer.
  • Neville Garrick, 73, Jamaican graphic artist and photographer, cancer.
  • Robert Koenig, 71–72, English-Polish sculptor.
  • John Lachs, 89, Hungarian-born American philosopher.
  • Tapfumaneyi Masaya, 51, Zimbabwean bishop, kidnap victim and political activist.
  • Zbigniew Meres, 71, Polish firefighter and politician, senator (2007–2015).
  • William Neill, 93, Irish Anglican priest, archdeacon of Dromore (1985–1997).
  • Prithvi Raj Singh Oberoi, 94, Indian hotelier, CEO of The Oberoi Group (2002–2013).
  • Arthur Parkin, 71, New Zealand field hockey player (national team), Olympic champion (1976).
  • Abdelkader Retnani, 78, Moroccan editor, writer, and sporting director.
  • Subrata Roy, 75, Indian conglomerate executive, founder of Sahara India Pariwar, complications from cancer, hypertension and diabetes.
  • Colombo Machado Salles, 97, Brazilian engineer and politician, governor of Santa Catarina (1971–1975).
  • Peter Seidler, 63, American baseball executive, chairman of San Diego Padres (since 2020).
  • Arthur Simon, 93, American Lutheran minister, founder of Bread for the World.
  • Terry R. Taylor, 71, American sports editor (Associated Press), cancer.
  • Thelda Williams, 82, American politician, interim mayor of Phoenix (1994, 2011–2012, 2018–2019), cancer.
  • Stanislav Žalud, 91, Czech architect and politician, MP (1990–1992).
  • Palestinians killed in a 2023 Israel–Hamas war airstrike:
    • Ahmed Ghandour, 56, senior militant in the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades of Hamas (death announced on this date)
    • Ibrahim Qusaya, 31, volleyball player
    • Mohammed Shabir, 77, politician and academic administrator, president of the Islamic University of Gaza (1990–2005)

15

  • Gus Bogina, 96, American politician, member of the Kansas House of Representatives (1975–1980) and senate (1981–1995).
  • George Chigova, 32, Zimbabwean footballer (Polokwane City, SuperSport United, national team), heart disease.
  • Finis E. Cowan, 94, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for Southern Texas (1977–1979).
  • James Allan Stewart Evans, 92, Canadian historian.
  • Sandy Farina, 68, American singer-songwriter and actress (Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band).
  • Anna Felder, 85, Swiss writer.
  • Michio Fukuoka, 87, Japanese sculptor.
  • Gerry Hand, 81, Australian politician, minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs (1987–1990) and immigration (1990–1993) and MP (1983–1993).
  • Aage Hansen, 88, Norwegian motorcycle speedway rider (Ipswich Witches).
  • Hans Herbjørnsrud, 85, Norwegian author.
  • Daisaku Ikeda, 95, Japanese Buddhist philosopher and nuclear disarmament activist, president of Soka Gakkai (1960–1979) and Soka Gakkai International (since 1975).
  • Hitoshi Kimura, 89, Japanese politician, MP (1998–2010).
  • Gurmeet Singh Kooner, 75, Indian politician, Rajasthan MLA (1998–2003, 2008–2013, since 2018).
  • Žarko Laušević, 63, Serbian-Montenegrin actor (The Dagger, The Black Bomber, The Original of the Forgery).
  • Worta McCaskill-Stevens, American physician-scientist.
  • P. K. Narayanan Nambiar, 96, Indian musician.
  • William R. Richardson, 94, American Army general, complications of Alzheimer's disease.
  • David Rowe-Beddoe, Baron Rowe-Beddoe, 85, Welsh banker and life peer, chairman of the Wales Millennium Centre and member of the House of Lords (since 2006).
  • N. Sankaraiah, 102, Indian politician, Tamil Nadu MLA (1967–1971, 1977–1984).
  • Onaolapo Soleye, 90, Nigerian economist, minister of finance (1984–1985).
  • Ken Squier, 88, American Hall of Fame motorsport sportscaster (NASCAR on CBS), co-founder of Motor Racing Network, complications from intestinal blockage.
  • Volodymyr Stryzhevskyi, 70, Ukrainian football player (Kolos Mezhyrich, Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih) and manager (Podillya Khmelnytskyi).
  • Paul Tandou, 76, Congolese footballer (CSMD Diables Noirs, CARA Brazzaville, national team).
  • Karl Tremblay, 47, Canadian folk singer (Les Cowboys Fringants), prostate cancer.

16

  • Kailash Bhansali, 82, Indian politician, Rajasthan MLA (2008–2018), lung disease.
  • Thomas J. Bliley Jr., 91, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1981–2001) and mayor of Richmond (1970–1977).
  • Albert Burger, 68, German Olympic alpine skier (1976, 1980).
  • Dame A. S. Byatt, 87, British author (Possession, The Virgin in the Garden, The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye).
  • Michael Chapdelaine, 67, American classical and fingerstyle guitarist.
  • James Couchman, 81, British politician, MP (1983–1997).
  • Ryszard Engelking, 88, Polish mathematician.
  • Merle Goldman, 92, American historian and academic scholar, skin cancer.
  • Johnny Green, 89, American basketball player (New York Knicks, Baltimore Bullets, Cincinnati Royals / Kansas City-Omaha Kings).
  • Fernando Jara, 93, Chilean footballer (Universidad Católica, 1952 Olympics).
  • James Paul Johnson, 93, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1973–1981).
  • Meto Jovanovski, 77, Macedonian actor (Happy New Year '49, Dust, When Day Breaks).
  • Sarah Louise Keys, 95, American civil rights activist.
  • Takao Kondo, 75, Japanese biologist, pneumonia.
  • Ivan Korshynskyi, 95, Ukrainian doctor and politician, deputy (1994–1998).
  • Hubert Mono Ndjana, 77, Cameroonian academic and philosopher, traffic collision.
  • Sir Peter Newsam, 95, British educationist.
  • Protectionist, 13, German Thoroughbred racehorse. (death announced on this date)
  • Korney Shperling, 76, Russian football manager (Irtysh Omsk, Ural Yekaterinburg, Baltika Kaliningrad).
  • Peter Solley, 75, English musician (Fox, Procol Harum) and record producer ("What I Like About You").
  • Thành Được, 89, Vietnamese actor and singer.
  • Bobby Ussery, 88, American Hall of Fame jockey, heart failure.
  • Robert Walker, Baron Walker of Gestingthorpe, 85, British jurist, justice of the Supreme Court (2009–2013), lord of appeal in ordinary (2002–2009) and lord justice of appeal (1997–2002).

17

  • Gohar Ayub Khan, 86, Pakistani politician, minister of foreign affairs (1997–1998) and speaker of the National Assembly (1990–1993).
  • Ahmad Bahar, 74, Palestinian politician, deputy speaker of the Legislative Council (since 2006), airstrike.
  • Ana Clara Benevides, 23, Brazilian university student.
  • Christiane Bervoets, 75, Belgian singer ("Eviva España").
  • Seóirse Bodley, 90, Irish composer.
  • Ron Bryant, 76, American baseball player (San Francisco Giants, St. Louis Cardinals).
  • Bob de Groot, 82, Belgian comic books artist (Chlorophylle, Clifton).
  • Charlie Dominici, 72, American singer (Dream Theater, Dominici).
  • Anthony Farquhar, 83, Irish Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Down and Connor (1983–2015).
  • B. N. Goswamy, 90, Indian art critic and historian.
  • H. Roger Grant, 79, American railroad historian and author.
  • Zdeněk Groessl, 82, Czech volleyball player, Olympic bronze medallist (1968).
  • Fikret Güler, 70, Turkish taekwondo grand master.
  • Agustín Ibarrola, 93, Spanish painter and sculptor.
  • Ellen Jens, 83, Dutch television producer (De Fred Haché Show, We zijn weer thuis) and director.
  • Claude Kahn, 88, French pianist.
  • Dennis Kemp, 92, Australian Olympic field hockey player (1956).
  • Luis Larraín, 42, Chilean LGBT rights activist, blood cancer.
  • Henning Munk Jensen, 76, Danish footballer (AaB, PSV Eindhoven, national team).
  • John C. G. Röhl, 85, British historian, prostate cancer.
  • Brian Sampson, 88, Australian racing driver, Bathurst 1000 winner (1975).
  • Suzanne Shepherd, 89, American actress (The Sopranos, Goodfellas, Requiem for a Dream), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and kidney failure.
  • Lou Skizas, 92, American baseball player (Kansas City Athletics, Detroit Tigers, Chicago White Sox).
  • Henri Stambouli, 62, Algerian-born French football player (Monaco, Marseille) and manager (Togo national team).
  • Grzegorz Stellak, 72, Polish rower, Olympic bronze medallist (1980).
  • Nan Witcomb, 95, Australian poet and radio broadcaster (Cruise 1323).
  • Gregory Woolley, 51, Haitian-born Canadian mobster (Hells Angels), shot.

18

  • Akif Asgarov, 83, Azerbaijani sculptor.
  • António Carvalho, 62, Portuguese football player (Vitória, national team) and manager (Caçadores das Taipas).
  • Mario Castaño, 51, Colombian politician and convicted fraudster, representative (2014–2018) and senator (2018–2022), heart attack.
  • David Del Tredici, 86, American composer.
  • Ben Dunne, 74, Irish businessman, director of Dunnes Stores (since 1983) and founder of Ben Dunne Gyms, heart attack.
  • Ruud Geels, 75, Dutch footballer (Ajax, Feyenoord, national team).
  • João Lima, 62, Portuguese Olympic hurdler (1988).
  • Princess Maria Cristina of Savoy-Aosta, 90, Italian princess.
  • Jerome Markson, 94, Canadian architect.
  • Taku Miki, 88, Japanese poet and novelist.
  • Joyce Mpanga, 89, Ugandan politician, member of the Parliament of Uganda (1996–2001) and Lukiiko (since 2009), minister of state for primary education (1989–1992).
  • Fredrik Ohlsson, 92, Swedish actor (Pippi Longstocking, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo).
  • Ekundayo Opaleye, 77, Nigerian general and politician, governor of Ondo State (1986–1987), heart attack.
  • C. L. Porinchukutty, 91, Indian artist and art educator.
  • Shi Wen-long, 95, Taiwanese resin industry executive, founder of Chi Mei Corporation.
  • S. Venkitaramanan, 92, Indian economist, governor of the RBI (1990–1992).
  • Paul Watson, 81, British documentary filmmaker (The Family, Sylvania Waters), complications from dementia.

19

  • Joss Ackland, 95, British actor (White Mischief, Lethal Weapon 2, The Mighty Ducks).
  • Chris Alli, 78, Nigerian military officer, chief of army staff (1993–1994) and governor of Plateau State (1985–1986, 2004).
  • Giuseppe Arzilli, 82, Sammarinese politician, captain regent (1986–1987, 1999–2000, 2004–2005).
  • Gene Beery, 86, American painter and photographer.
  • Rosalynn Carter, 96, American mental health activist, first lady of the United States (1977–1981), and of Georgia (1971–1975), complications from dementia.
  • Roslynn Cobarrubias, 43, American television presenter, producer and speaker.
  • Ninie Doniah, 56, Malagasy singer and composer.
  • Sanjay Gadhvi, 57, Indian film director (Dhoom, Ajab Gazabb Love, Operation Parindey), heart attack.
  • Ernesto Garzón Valdés, 96, Argentine philosopher.
  • Herbert Gold, 99, American novelist.
  • Catherine Christer Hennix, 75, Swedish musician, poet and philosopher.
  • Marisa Jossa, 85, Italian model, Miss Italia winner (1959).
  • Mushtaq Kak, 62, Indian actor (Hijack, Vishwaroopam, Dishoom) and stage director.
  • Anna Kanakis, 61, Italian actress (2019, After the Fall of New York, The New Barbarians), writer and model, Miss Italia winner (1977).
  • Wim van der Leegte, 76, Dutch manufacturing industry executive, president of VDL Groep (1972–2016).
  • Marcel Lessard, 97, Canadian politician, MP (1962–1965, 1968–1980).
  • Eddie Linden, 88, Scottish publisher and poet, complications from dementia.
  • Phyllis Linton, 94, British Olympic swimmer (1952).
  • Colette Maze, 109, French classical pianist.
  • Sitiveni Moceidreke, 86, Fijian Olympic sprinter (1960). (death announced on this date)
  • Carlton Pearson, 70, American minister and gospel singer, subject of Come Sunday, prostate cancer.
  • Vincentius Sensi Potokota, 72, Indonesian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Maumere (2006–2007) and archbishop of Ende (since 2007).
  • Erich Schutt, 92, German photographer.
  • Noma Shepherd, 88, New Zealand community leader.
  • Peter Spellos, 69, American voice actor (Transformers: Robots in Disguise, Digimon Adventure, Eagle Riders), pancreatic cancer.
  • Hannes Strydom, 58, South African rugby union player (Eastern Province Elephants, Transvaal/Golden Lions, national team), world champion (1995), traffic collision.
  • Mizuho Suzuki, 96, Japanese actor (The Sands of Kurobe, Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Final Episode, Never Give Up).
  • Sara Tavares, 45, Portuguese singer, brain tumour.
  • Guy Vattier, 84, French politician, deputy (1988).
  • Wiris, 23, Brazilian footballer (Lokomotiv Plovdiv, Fluminense), traffic collision.

20

  • Background Bob, 15, British artist.
  • Ana Bereciartúa, 87, Spanish politician, member of the Basque parliament (1980–1986, 1989–1990).
  • Bai Bibyaon Ligkayan Bigkay, 90, Filipino Lumad rights activist.
  • Anthony Boam, 91, British army officer, commander of British Forces in Hong Kong (1985–1987).
  • Alberto Pinto Coelho Júnior, 78, Brazilian politician, governor of Minas Gerais (2014–2015).
  • Frankie Connolly, 78, Irish footballer (Cork Hibernians, Cork Alberts).
  • Josephine Cook, 92, British shot putter.
  • Mike Craig, 92, Australian Olympic field hockey player (1960).
  • Ramón Díaz del Río, 82, Spanish naval engineer and politician, MEP (1987–1989).
  • Alice Denney, 101, American art curator, stroke.
  • Filip Robar Dorin, 83, Slovenian film director and screenwriter.
  • James H. Fallon, 76, American neuroscientist.
  • Annabel Giles, 64, British actress (Riders, Firelight) and psychotherapist, glioblastoma.
  • Zdena Hadrbolcová, 86, Czech actress (How the World Is Losing Poets, The Idiot Returns, František je děvkař).
  • Preston Hanna, 69, American baseball player (Atlanta Braves, Oakland Athletics).
  • Willie Hernández, 69, Puerto Rican baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Chicago Cubs), World Series champion (1984).
  • Ted Hopkins, 74, Australian footballer (Carlton), businessman and writer.
  • Nina Katerli, 89, Russian writer, publicist, and human rights activist.
  • Valentin Khokhryakov, 95, Russian biologist.
  • Rob Krier, 85, Luxembourgish sculptor, architect, and urban designer.
  • Martina Lubyová, 56, Slovak politician, minister of education (2017–2020).
  • Ann Rachlin, 90, British musician and author.
  • Norm Storey, 87, Australian rugby union player (national team).
  • Susan Tucker, 79, American politician, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1983–1991) and senate (1999–2011).
  • Aman Tuleyev, 79, Russian politician, governor (1997–2018) and chairman of the council of people's deputies (1994–1996, 2018) of Kemerovo Oblast.
  • John E. Walsh, 65, American political consultant and campaign manager, stomach cancer.
  • Jan Westdorp, 89, Dutch racing cyclist.
  • Mars Williams, 68, American saxophonist (The Waitresses, The Psychedelic Furs, Liquid Soul), ampullary cancer.

21

  • Ron Acks, 79, American football player (Atlanta Falcons, New England Patriots, Green Bay Packers).
  • Chad Allan, 80, Canadian musician (The Guess Who, Brave Belt).
  • Henry E. Allee, 81, American politician, member of the Texas House of Representatives (1977–1983).
  • S. S. Badrinath, 83, Indian ophthalmologist, founder of Sankara Nethralaya.
  • Henri Bangou, 101, Guadeloupean politician, senator (1986–1995) and mayor of Pointe-à-Pitre (1965–2008).
  • Arthur Bethell, 82, Barbadian cricketer (national team).
  • Lothar Buchmann, 87, German football player (Wormatia Worms) and manager (Eintracht Frankfurt, Kickers Offenbach).
  • Benjamin-Gunnar Cohrs, 58, German conductor, scholar, and music publicist, heart attack.
  • Tertius Delport, 84, South African academic, lawyer and politician, MP (1999–2009).
  • Aivars Endziņš, 82, Latvian jurist and politician, MP (1993–1998) and chief justice of the Constitutional Court (2000–2007).
  • Saprang Kalayanamitr, 75, Thai military officer (2006 Thai coup d'état, Council for National Security), lung cancer.
  • Alec Knight, 84, English Anglican priest, dean of Lincoln (1998–2006).
  • Kamal Kumar, Fijian jurist, chief justice (2019–2023).
  • Danutė Kvietkevičiūtė, 84, Lithuanian textile designer.
  • Horacio Malvicino, 94, Argentine jazz and tango guitarist and composer.
  • Anne Michel, 64, Belgian Olympic sprinter (1980).
  • Bettina Moissi, 100, German stage and film (The Original Sin, Long Is the Road, The Orplid Mystery) actress.
  • Francis R. Nicosia, 79, American historian.
  • Paul Tịnh Nguyễn Bình Tĩnh, 93, Vietnamese Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Đà Nẵng (2000–2006).
  • Georges Perroud, 82, Swiss footballer (Sion, Servette, national team).
  • James Philip, 93, American politician, member (1975–2003) and president (1993–2003) of the Illinois Senate.
  • David Pytches, 92, English Anglican clergyman, bishop of Chile, Bolivia and Peru (1972–1976).
  • R. Ramachandran, 71, Indian politician, Kerala MLA (2016–2021), liver disease.
  • Jerónimo Saavedra, 87, Spanish politician, president of the Canary Islands (1982–1987, 1991–1993) and minister of education and science (1995–1996).
  • Dale Spender, 80, Australian feminist scholar, teacher, and writer (Man Made Language, Mothers of the Novel: 100 Good Women Writers Before Jane Austen).
  • Stravinsky, 27, American Thoroughbred racehorse.
  • Patrick Stuart, 8th Earl Castle Stewart, 95, British hereditary peer, member of the House of Lords (1961–1999).
  • P. Vatsala, 84, Indian novelist, heart failure.
  • Hana Vlasáková, 75, Czech Olympic volleyball player (1968, 1972).
  • Irene N. Watts, 92, German-born Canadian writer and educator.
  • Dave Young, 64, American football player (New York Giants, Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts).

22

  • Mike Bickle, 79, English footballer (Plymouth Argyle, Gillingham).
  • Poseci Bune, 77, Fijian civil servant and politician, MP (1991–2006), prostate cancer.
  • Mike D'Amato, 82, American football player (New York Jets).
  • Tony Genato, 94, Filipino Olympic basketball player (1952, 1956).
  • Santi Gutiérrez Calle, 78, Spanish footballer (Racing de Santander).
  • Barbara Haščáková, 43, Slovak singer, stroke.
  • Per Hedenberg, 87, Swedish Olympic rower (1960).
  • Sead Jesenković, 80, Bosnian football player (Sarajevo, Famos Hrasnica, Jedinstvo Brčko) and manager.
  • Jean Knight, 80, American singer ("Mr. Big Stuff").
  • Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, 94, French historian.
  • Tom Larson, 84, American sportscaster (WSBK-TV, NESN), cancer.
  • Émile Martel, 82, Canadian diplomat and writer.
  • François Musy, 68, Swiss-born French sound engineer (First Name: Carmen, Marguerite, Lost Illusions).
  • Nguyen Qui Duc, 64–65, Vietnamese-American radio broadcaster, writer and translator, cancer.
  • Sture Ohlin, 88, Swedish Olympic biathlete (1964).
  • Steve Pool, 70, American television meteorologist (KOMO-TV), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Phil Quartararo, 67, American music industry executive.
  • Christiane Rimbaud, 79, French historian.
  • Jim Salestrom, 67, American singer-songwriter.
  • Linda Salzman Sagan, 83, American artist and writer.
  • Rutger Stuffken, 76, Dutch Olympic rower (1972).
  • Óscar Felipe Ventura, 80, Peruvian academic and politician, deputy (1985–1990).
  • Herbert Weiz, 99, German politician, minister of science and technology (1962–1966, 1974–?) and deputy chairman of the Council of Ministers (1967–1989).

23

  • Absolute Andy, 40, German professional wrestler (wXw).
  • Fathima Beevi, 96, Indian jurist, judge of the Supreme Court (1989–1992) and governor of Tamil Nadu (1997–2001).
  • Jim Carter, 75, American football player (Green Bay Packers).
  • Anan Chaisaeng, 96, Thai politician, MP (1969–1976, 1983–1986, 2001–2005).
  • Ánchel Conte, 81, Spanish writer and poet.
  • Rona Hartner, 50, Romanian actress (The Crazy Stranger, Time of the Wolf, Le Divorce), singer and painter, lung and brain cancer.
  • Harald Hasselbach, 56, Dutch football player (Calgary Stampeders, Denver Broncos), Super Bowl champion (1997, 1998), mucinous adenocarcinoma.
  • Steve Jurczyk, 61, American engineer, acting administrator of NASA (2021), pancreatic cancer.
  • Mark Kellar, 71, American football player (Minnesota Vikings, San Antonio Wings, Chicago Fire).
  • Francisco Luna Kan, 97, Mexican politician, governor of Yucatán (1976–1982) and deputy (1964–1967).
  • Antoni Marí Calbet, 91, Spanish doctor and politician, member of the Parliament of the Balearic Islands (1983–2003).
  • Rubens Minelli, 94, Brazilian football manager (Internacional, São Paulo, Saudi Arabia national team), infection.
  • Russell Norman, 57, English cook, restaurateur and author (Saturday Kitchen).
  • Tom Pauling, 76, Australian lawyer, administrator of the Northern Territory (2007–2011).
  • Charles Peters, 96, American journalist (Washington Monthly).
  • Guy Armand Romano, 86, French Roman Catholic prelate, apostolic administrator of Niamey (1984–1997) and bishop of Niamey (1997–2003).
  • Paul Sait, 76, Australian rugby league player (South Sydney, national team) and coach.
  • Greg "Fingers" Taylor, 71, American harmonica player, complications from Alzheimer's disease.

24

  • Alfredo Adum, 71, Ecuadorian lawyer and politician, deputy (1988–1990), minister of energy (1996–1997).
  • Douglas Ahlstedt, 78, American operatic tenor (Metropolitan Opera).
  • Keith Beckwith, 84, Australian footballer (Collingwood).
  • Derek John Blundell, 90, British geologist.
  • Camilo Cascolan, 59, Filipino police officer, chief of the national police (2020).
  • George Cohon, 86, American-born Canadian fast food executive, founder of McDonald's Canada and McDonald's Russia.
  • Bruno Fagnoul, 87, Belgian politician, minister-president of the German-speaking community (1984–1986).
  • Rod Fletcher, 78, English footballer (Scunthorpe United, Lincoln City, Grimsby Town).
  • Jukka Haavisto, 93, Finnish musician.
  • František X. Halas, 86, Czech historian of Christianity, academic and diplomat.
  • Ron Hodges, 74, American baseball player (New York Mets).
  • Shizuka Ijūin, 73, Japanese writer and lyricist.
  • Herb Klein, 93, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1993–1995).
  • Rajkumar Kohli, 93, Indian film director (Nagin, Jaani Dushman, Raaj Tilak), heart attack.
  • Avraham Menchel, 87, Israeli footballer (Maccabi Haifa, national team).
  • Chris Parr, 80, British theatre director, television producer (Takin' Over the Asylum) and executive (BBC Birmingham), pneumonia.
  • Elliot Silverstein, 96, American film and television director (Cat Ballou, A Man Called Horse, The Car).
  • Chris Stone, 64, Australian footballer (St Kilda), brain cancer.
  • Henry Tilly, 91, English cricketer (Middlesex, MCC, Hertfordshire).
  • Heidelinde Weis, 83, Austrian actress (I'm Marrying the Director, Don't Tell Me Any Stories, Aunt Frieda).
  • Derek Wilford, 90, British military officer, complications from Parkinson's disease.

25

  • Douglas D. Alder, 91, American historian and academic administrator, president of Utah Tech University (1986–1993), complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Whitney Anderson, 91, American politician and businessman.
  • Robert Hart Baker, 69, American classical conductor and music director.
  • Jean-Marc Brûlé, 58, French politician, member of the Regional Council of Île-de-France (2004–2015).
  • Gérard Collomb, 76, French politician, senator (1999–2017, 2018), minister of the interior (2017–2018), and twice mayor of Lyon, stomach cancer.
  • Jean-Claude Cornu, 85, French Olympic sailor (1960).
  • Maurizio Creuso, 80, Italian politician, senator (1992–1994).
  • Bita Farrahi, 65, Iranian actress (Hamoun, A House Built on Water, Island), heart and lung disease.
  • Larry Fink, 82, American photographer.
  • Ivan Havlíček, 78, Czech physicist, academic and senator (1996–2000).
  • Tras Honan, 93, Irish politician, senator (1977–1992) and cathaoirleach (1982–1983, 1987–1989).
  • Clarke Ingram, 66, American radio personality (WPXY, WZUM, WKHB).
  • Daryl Johnson, 77, American football player (Boston Patriots).
  • Papi Khomane, 48, South African footballer (Jomo Cosmos, Orlando Pirates, national team), traffic collision.
  • Marty Krofft, 86, Canadian puppeteer (H.R. Pufnstuf, Land of the Lost, Sigmund and the Sea Monsters), kidney failure.
  • Aldo Lado, 88, Italian film director (Short Night of Glass Dolls, Who Saw Her Die?, The Humanoid), screenwriter and author.
  • Luwellyn Landers, South African politician. (death announced on this date)
  • Martin Lockley, 73, Welsh palaeontologist, cancer.
  • Les Maguire, 81, English musician (Gerry and the Pacemakers).
  • Jorge Martín Montenegro, 40, Argentine-Spanish racing cyclist.
  • Fabio Martínez Castilla, 73, Mexican Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Ciudad Lázaro Cárdenas (2007–2013) and archbishop of Tuxtla (since 2013), ischemic crisis and neoplasm.
  • Leila Mustafa, 35, Syrian politician, co-chair of the civil council of Raqqa (2017–2022), complications during surgery.
  • Leo Narducci, 91, American fashion designer.
  • Yngvar Numme, 79, Norwegian singer (Dizzie Tunes) and actor.
  • Alfredo Prieto Valiente, 89, Spanish businessman and politician, deputy (1977–1982).
  • B. Sasikumar, 74, Indian violinist.
  • Volodymyr Shapoval, 89, Ukrainian politician, deputy (1990–1994).
  • Terry Venables, 80, English football player (Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur) and manager (national team).
  • Alex J. Walling, 75, Canadian sports analyst and broadcaster.
  • Ursula Bethell, Baroness Westbury, 99, British noblewoman and philanthropist.
  • Layachi Yaker, 93, Algerian diplomat and politician, secretary-general of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (1992–1995).

26

  • Papa Arko, Ghanaian footballer (Asante Kotoko, national team).
  • Maurie Considine, 91, Australian footballer (Hawthorn).
  • Alberto da Costa e Silva, 92, Brazilian historian, poet, and diplomat.
  • Theodore J. Cusson, 87, American politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (1986–1988).
  • Tim Dorsey, 62, American novelist (Florida Roadkill, Hammerhead Ranch Motel, Orange Crush).
  • Enzo Erminero, 92, Italian businessman and politician, deputy (1968–1983), mayor of Verona (1993).
  • Brian Godding, 78, Welsh jazz rock guitarist (Blossom Toes, Centipede).
  • Pablo Guzmán, 73, American television journalist (WCBS-TV).
  • Magda Hollander-Lafon, 96, Hungarian-born French Holocaust survivor and psychologist.
  • Rudy Insanally, 87, Guyanese diplomat, minister of foreign affairs (2001–2008) and president of the United Nations General Assembly (1993–1994).
  • Norman Irons, 82, Scottish councillor and honorary consul, lord provost of Edinburgh (1992–1996).
  • Norris McDonald, 81, Canadian journalist (Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail).
  • Robert Precht, 93, American film and television (The Ed Sullivan Show) producer.
  • Michel Roumégoux, 75, French veterinarian and politician, deputy (2002–2007).
  • Rodolfo Stange, 98, Chilean police officer and politician, senator (1998–2005) and member of the government junta (1985–1990).
  • Don Tannas, 85, Canadian politician, Alberta MLA (1989–2004).
  • Geordie Walker, 64, English guitarist (Killing Joke) and songwriter ("Love Like Blood", "Eighties"), complications from a stroke.

27

  • Bob Albright, 87, American politician, member of the Alabama House of Representatives (1974–1986).
  • William Anastasi, 90, American conceptual artist.
  • Maria Barmich, 89, Russian linguist, stroke.
  • Henk Buck, 93, Dutch organic chemist.
  • Susan Catania, 81, American politician, member of the Illinois House of Representatives (1973–1983).
  • Roger Chaussabel, 91, French racing cyclist.
  • Mary L. Cleave, 76, American astronaut (STS-61-B, STS-30).
  • Mike Corkins, 77, American baseball player (San Diego Padres).
  • Heinz Dürr, 90, German businessman, chairman of AEG (1980–1990) and Deutsche Bahn (1994–1997).
  • Alessandro Figà Talamanca, 85, Italian mathematician.
  • Paweł Huelle, 66, Polish writer.
  • Pim Jungerius, 90, Dutch physical geographer.
  • Victor J. Kemper, 96, American cinematographer (Dog Day Afternoon, National Lampoon's Vacation, The Last Tycoon).
  • Helen Lucas, 92, Canadian artist.
  • Parvaneh Massoumi, 78, Iranian actress (Reverse, Downpour, Prophet Joseph).
  • Zaverilal Mehta, 96, Indian photographer.
  • John Nichols, 83, American novelist (The Sterile Cuckoo, The Wizard of Loneliness, The Milagro Beanfield War).
  • Ibrahim Oweiss, 92, Egyptian-born American economist.
  • Wanderley Paiva, 77, Brazilian football player (Atlético Mineiro, national team) and manager (Ponte Preta, CRAC), prostate cancer.
  • Mohy Quandour, 85, Jordanian author and film producer (A Facebook Romance).
  • Edward G. Smith, 62, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for Eastern Pennsylvania (since 2014).
  • William Michael Stankewicz, 78, American teacher and convicted attempted murderer.
  • Frances Sternhagen, 93, American actress (Equus, ER, Misery), Tony winner (1974, 1995).
  • Dalia Teišerskytė, 79, Lithuanian politician, journalist and poet, MP (2000–2016).
  • Mihály András Vajda, 88, Hungarian philosopher.

28

  • Julius W. Becton Jr., 97, American military officer, director of FEMA (1985–1989).
  • Mark Candon, 71, American politician, member of the Vermont House of Representatives, traffic collision.
  • Queenzy Cheng, 37, Malaysian actress and singer.
  • George Chin, 94, Canadian ice hockey player (Michigan Wolverines, Chatham Maroons, Nottingham Panthers).
  • John Colianni, 61, American jazz pianist.
  • Josip Čorak, 80, Croatian wrestler, Olympic silver medallist (1972).
  • Agyemang Diawusie, 25, German footballer (Dynamo Dresden, Wehen Wiesbaden, Jahn Regensburg).
  • Dan Dobbek, 88, American baseball player (Washington Senators/Minnesota Twins), heart failure.
  • James Douglas-Hamilton, Baron Selkirk of Douglas, 81, Scottish politician, MP (1974–1997), MSP (1999–2007) and member of the House of Lords (1997–2023), pneumonia.
  • Lanny Gordin, 72, Brazilian guitarist and composer.
  • Mali, Sri Lankan-born Asian elephant (Manila Zoo).
  • Martin Mate, 94, Canadian Anglican priest, bishop of Eastern Newfoundland and Labrador (1980–1992).
  • Charlie Munger, 99, American investor, vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway (since 1978) and chairman of Wesco Financial (1984–2011).
  • Antonis Parayios, 94, Greek footballer (AEK Athens, national team).
  • Eugenijus Petrovas, 87, Lithuanian politician, signatory of the act of re-establishment.
  • Allan Rogers, 91, British politician, MP (1983–2001) and MEP (1979–1984).
  • Richard Rydze, 73, American diver, Olympic silver medalist (1972).
  • Cecil Sandford, 95, British motorcycle road racer, Grand Prix World Riders' Champion (1952, 1957).

29

  • Charles Gilchrist Adams, 86, American Baptist minister, pneumonia.
  • Luis Bates, 89, Chilean lawyer and politician, minister of justice (2003–2006).
  • Richard L. Berkley, 92, American politician, mayor of Kansas City, Missouri (1979–1991).
  • Elliott Erwitt, 95, French-born American photographer.
  • Rolf Geiger, 89, German footballer (Stuttgarter Kickers, VfB Stuttgart, national team).
  • Roman Hodovanyi, 33, Ukrainian footballer (Nyva Ternopil, Volyn Lutsk, Slavia Mozyr).
  • Scott Kempner, 69, American guitarist (The Dictators, The Del-Lords, The Brandos), complications from dementia.
  • Henry Kissinger, 100, German-born American diplomat and politician, national security advisor (1969–1975), secretary of state (1973–1977) and Nobel Prize laureate (1973), heart failure.
  • Péter Kozma, 62, Hungarian Olympic skier (1984). (death announced on this date)
  • Darcy McKeough, 90, Canadian politician, Ontario MPP (1963–1978), treasurer of Ontario (1971–1972, 1975–1978), pneumonia.
  • Mildred Miller, 98, American mezzo-soprano.
  • Yasuhiro Noguchi, 77, Japanese volleyball player, Olympic champion (1972), kidney failure.
  • Michael Oleksa, 76, American Russian Orthodox priest, linguist, and writer, stroke.
  • Michèle Rivasi, 70, French politician, MEP (since 2009), heart attack.
  • Dean Sullivan, 68, English actor (Brookside), prostate cancer.
  • John A. Talbott, 88, American psychiatrist.
  • Sticky Vicky, 80, Spanish dancer and illusionist (Benidorm).
  • Ulla-Britt Wieslander, 81, Swedish Olympic sprinter (1960, 1964, 1968).
  • Taichi Yamada, 89, Japanese screenwriter (Childhood Days) and novelist (Strangers, In Search of a Distant Voice).

30

  • Sophie Anderson, 36, English pornographic actress and internet personality (Slag Wars: The Next Destroyer).
  • Joan Botam, 97, Spanish Roman Catholic priest and political dissident.
  • Rolf Wilhelm Brednich, 88, German Europeanist ethnologist, ethnographer and folklorist.
  • John Byrne, 83, Scottish playwright (The Slab Boys Trilogy, Tutti Frutti, Your Cheatin' Heart) and designer.
  • José Catieau, 77, French road bicycle racer (Pelforth–Sauvage–Lejeune, Bic, Peugeot).
  • Alistair Darling, Baron Darling of Roulanish, 70, British politician, chancellor of the Exchequer (2007–2010), MP (1987–2015) and member of the House of Lords (2015–2020), cancer.
  • Bolesław Fleszar, 89, Polish chemist and politician, senator (1989–1991).
  • Sante Gaiardoni, 84, Italian cyclist, double Olympic champion (1960).
  • Vladimir Lebedev, 61, Russian politician, senator (since 2014), stroke.
  • Shane MacGowan, 65, English-born Irish singer (The Pogues, Shane MacGowan and the Popes) and songwriter ("Fairytale of New York"), pneumonia and encephalitis.
  • Mikhail Marov, 90, Russian astronomer.
  • Viktor Mikhailov, 87, Russian politician, governor of Magadan Oblast (1991–1996).
  • William P. Murphy Jr., 100, American physician and inventor.
  • Jan Plamper, 53, German professor of history (University of Limerick).
  • Luis Antonio Rivera, 93, Puerto Rican comedian, heart disease.
  • Mamdouh bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, 83, Saudi royal and politician, governor of Tabuk Province (1986–1987).
  • Paul Snyder, 88, American baseball executive (Atlanta Braves).
  • Subbalakshmi, 87, Indian actress (Kalyanaraman, Pandippada, Nandanam), composer and singer.
  • Vassilis Vassilikos, 89, Greek writer (Z) and diplomat, MP (2019–2023).
  • Edwin Yoder, 89, American journalist.

References


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Deaths in November 2023 by Wikipedia (Historical)


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