Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1928
Léon De Coster
Martin van der Hagen
Madeleine Lemaire
Madeleine Lemaire fue una pintora y acuarelista francesa especializada en obras de género académico y en flores. Robert de Montesquiou solía decir de ella que era la «emperatriz de las rosas». Introdujo a Marcel Proust y Reynaldo Hahn en los salones de la aristocracia parisina.
Maurice Bernhardt
Montagu Bertie, 7th Earl of Abingdon
Montagu Arthur Bertie, 7th Earl of Abingdon, DL was an English peer.
Sir George Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet
Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, was a British statesman and author. In a ministerial career stretching almost 30 years, he was most notably twice Secretary for Scotland under William Ewart Gladstone and the Earl of Rosebery. He broke with Gladstone over the 1886 Irish Home Rule Bill, but after modifications were made to the bill he re-joined the Liberal Party shortly afterwards. Also a writer and historian, Trevelyan published The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, his maternal uncle, in 1876.
Jean de Gourmont
Luigi Cadorna
Luigi Cadorna fue un militar italiano con rango de mariscal de campo, de actuación destacada en la Primera Guerra Mundial, designado comandante en jefe de las tropas italianas en campaña entre los años 1915 y 1917; fue destituido del mando tras la grave derrota sufrida por sus fuerzas en la batalla de Caporetto.
Charles Gordon-Lennox, 7th Duke of Richmond
Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 7th Duke of Richmond and Lennox, 2nd Duke of Gordon,, 7th Duke of Aubigny, styled Lord Settrington until 1860 and Earl of March between 1860 and 1903, was a British politician and peer.
Richard Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane
Richard Burdon Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane, was an influential British Liberal and later Labour politician, lawyer and philosopher. He was Secretary of State for War between 1905 and 1912 during which time the "Haldane Reforms" of the British Army were implemented. Raised to the peerage as Viscount Haldane in 1911, he was Lord Chancellor between 1912 and 1915, when he was forced to resign because of false allegations of German sympathies. He later joined the Labour Party and once again served as Lord Chancellor in 1924 in the first Labour administration. Apart from his legal and political careers, Haldane was also an influential writer on philosophy, in recognition of which he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1914.