Robert Davidson

Robert Davidson may refer to:

  • Robert Davidson (photographer), British rock photographer
  • Robert Davidson (educator) (1750–1812), United States educator, clergyman and composer
  • Robert Davidson (poet) (1778–1855), Scottish poet and labourer
  • Robert Davidson (inventor) (1804–1894), Scottish inventor who built the first known electric locomotive in 1837
  • Robert Davidson (artist) (born 1946), Alaska-born Canadian artist
  • Robert Davidson (footballer) (born 1986), football player from Scotland
  • Robert Lee Davidson, rock musician from the band Scream
  • Robert Davidson (theologian) (1927–2012), Professor Emeritus in the University of Glasgow
  • Robert H. M. Davidson (1832–1908), U.S. Representative from Florida
  • Robert Davidson (composer) (born 1965), Australian composer and double bassist
  • Robert Davidson (politician) (1875–1948), Canadian member of Parliament
  • Robert Davidson (fencer) (born 1958), Australian Olympic fencer
  • Robert Harold Davidson (1919–1982), United States Marine officer
  • Robert William Davidson (1904–1982), American sculptor
  • Robert Davidson, a pseudonym used by writer/director Riccardo Freda for the 1963 film The Ghost
  • Rob Davidson, co-founder of the advertising agency Davidson & Belluso
  • Bob Davidson (ice hockey) (1912–1996), Toronto Maple Leafs
  • Bob Davidson (umpire) (born 1952), baseball umpire
  • Bobby Davidson (1928–1993), Scottish soccer referee
  • Bob Davidson (pitcher) (born 1963), baseball pitcher
  • Bob Davidson (rugby union) (1926–1992), Australian rugby union footballer of the 1940s and 50s

Read more about Robert Davidson:  See Also

Famous quotes containing the words robert and/or davidson:

    And the member for the constituency
    Feeds the five thousand, and has plenty back.
    —William Robert Rodgers (1909–1969)

    There is no such thing as a language, not if a language is anything like what many philosophers and linguists have supposed. There is therefore no such thing to be learned, mastered, or born with. We must give up the idea of a clearly defined shared structure which language-users acquire and then apply to cases.
    —Donald Davidson (b. 1917)