Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1937
Tekla Nordström
Tekla Wilhelmina Nordström, née Lindeström was a Swedish xylographer.
Alfred Rudolph Zimmermann
Billy Hunter
William Hunter was a Scottish professional football player and manager. He managed the Dutch national side, Austrian club side Hakoah Vienna, Swiss club side Lausanne Sports, the Turkish national side and Galatasaray.
Ahmed Izzet Pasha
Ahmed İzzet Bajá, llamado Ahmet İzzet Furgaç tras la instauración del apellido hereditario en Turquía en 1934, fue un militar otomano y turco de origen albanés que se distinguió durante la Primera Guerra Mundial. Desempeñó asimismo brevemente el cargo de gran visir del Imperio otomano y fue el último ministro de Asuntos Exteriores del imperio.
Florence Dugdale
Florence Emily Dugdale was a writer of children's stories and the second wife of Thomas Hardy. She was credited as the author of Hardy's posthumously published biography, The Life of Thomas Hardy, although it was written by Thomas Hardy himself in his old age.
Walter Norden
Aliaksandar Ćvikievič
Alaksandar Ćvikievič was a Belarusian politician, historian, jurist, philosopher and a victim of Stalin's purges. He served as a Prime Minister of Belarus in exile for two years from 23 August 1923 until October 1925. His interest featured philosophy and history. He worked as a jurist and lawyer. He was also a professor in National Academy of Sciences of Belarus.
Ahmed Javad
Ahmad Yavad fue un poeta de Azerbaiyán, ejecutado el 13 de octubre de 1937 por ser considerado un "contrarrevolucionario". Es conocido por ser el compositor del Himno nacional de la República de Azerbaiyán.
Eero Haapalainen
Eero Haapalainen was a Finnish politician, trade unionist and journalist, who was one of the most prominent figures of the Finnish socialist movement in the first two decades of the 1900s. In the 1918 Finnish Civil War he served as the commander-in-chief of the Red Guards. After the war, Haapalainen fled to Soviet Russia where he joined the exile Communist Party of Finland and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. He was executed during the Great Purge in 1937.
Mírzá Muhammad `Alí
Mírzá Muhammad ʻAlí was one of the sons of Baháʼu'lláh, the founder of the Baháʼí Faith. He was the eldest son of his father's second wife, Fatimih Khanum, later known as Mahd-i-'Ulya, whom Baháʼu'lláh married in Tehran in 1849. Muhammad ʻAlí received the title from his father of G͟husn-i-Akbar.