Nuremberg - Famous Residents

Famous Residents

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  • Peter Angermann
  • Chaya Arbel (Israeli composer)
  • Heinz Bernard (British Israeli actor-director)
  • Ernst von Bibra
  • Peter Bucher
  • Albrecht Dürer (painter and engraver)
  • Heinrich Egersdörfer (artist)
  • Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach
  • Kaspar Hauser
  • Johann Kaspar Hechtel (board game designer)
  • Peter Henlein
  • Augustin Hirschvogel
  • Siegfried Jerusalem (operatic tenor)
  • Kabus Kerim (Turkish Musician,Vintage Collector,Humanist and Milestone of the Turkish Rap Music history.)
  • Hermann Kesten (writer)
  • Anton Koberger
  • Eliyahu Koren, graphic designer
  • Adam Kraft (sculptor and architect)
  • Katerina Lemmel (businesswoman, patron of the arts, Birgittine nun)
  • Kunz Lochner
  • Max Morlock
  • Johann Pachelbel (Baroque composer)
  • Conrad Paumann
  • Hans Sachs (Poet)
  • Hartmann Schedel
  • Alexander Schreiner organist, Mormon Tabernacle
  • Veit Stoss (Renaissance sculptor)
  • Peter Vischer the Elder
  • Johann Christoph Volckamer who authored here his Hesperides.
  • Arnold Hans Weiss (US Army investigator who helped find Hitler's will)
  • Michael Wolgemut
  • Johann Philipp von Wurzelbauer
  • Willibald Pirckheimer humanist

Read more about this topic:  Nuremberg

Famous quotes containing the words famous and/or residents:

    London, thou art of townes A per se.
    Soveraign of cities, semeliest in sight,
    Of high renoun, riches, and royaltie;
    Of lordis, barons, and many goodly knyght;
    Of most delectable lusty ladies bright;
    Of famous prelatis in habitis clericall;
    Of merchauntis full of substaunce and myght:
    London, thou art the flour of Cities all
    William Dunbar (c. 1465–c. 1530)

    In most nineteenth-century cities, both large and small, more than 50 percent—and often up to 75 percent—of the residents in any given year were no longer there ten years later. People born in the twentieth century are much more likely to live near their birthplace than were people born in the nineteenth century.
    Stephanie Coontz (20th century)