Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1918
Charlie Soong
Charles Jones Soong, más conocido como Charlie Soong, fue un chino hakka o kèjiā que alcanzó gran prominencia como misionero metodista y como hombre de negocios. Sus hijos se convirtieron en algunas de las más importantes personalidades de la naciente República de China.
George Whitefield Davis
George Whitefield Davis was an engineer and Major General in the United States Army. He also served as a military Governor of Puerto Rico and as the first military Governor of the Panama Canal Zone.
Mary Benson
Mary Benson was an English hostess of the Victorian era. She was the wife of Revd. Edward Benson, who during their marriage became Archbishop of Canterbury. Their children included several prolific authors and contributors to cultural life. During her marriage, she was involved with Lucy Tait, daughter of the previous Archbishop of Canterbury. She was described by Gladstone, the British Prime Minister, as the 'cleverest woman in Europe'.
Paul Laband
Paul Laband was a German jurist and the German Empire's leading scholar of constitutional law.
Prince Konrad of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst
Konrad Maria Eusebius Prinz zu Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst fue un aristócrata y estadista austriaco. Brevemente sirvió como Primer Ministro de Austria (Cisleitania) en Austria-Hungría en 1906.
Georg Theodor August Gaffky
Georg Theodor August Gaffky was a Hanover-born bacteriologist best known for identifying bacillus salmonella typhi as the cause of typhoid disease in 1884.
Lionel William Pellew East
Ivan Pulyui
Ivan Pului was a Ukrainian physicist and inventor, who has been championed as an early developer of the use of X-rays for medical imaging. His contributions were largely neglected until the end of the 20th century.
Vladímir Paléi
Vladímir Pávlovich Paléi fue un poeta ruso, primo del zar Nicolás II.
Konstantin Josef Jireček
Konstantin Josef Jireček, fue un ministro búlgaro, diplomático, historiador y eslavista de origen checo. Fue el fundador de estudios balcánicos y bizantinos en Bohemia, y de 1907 a 1918 fue el primer director del Instituto de Historia de Europa del Este en la Universidad de Viena.