Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1947
Mariano Benlliure Gil
Mariano Benlliure Gil fue un escultor español, considerado como el último gran maestro del realismo decimonónico.
Marmaduke Francis Ramsay
Marmaduke Francis Ramsay was an English first-class cricketer and a pastoralist in Queensland.
María Inmaculada de Borbón-Dos Sicilias
María Inmaculada de Borbón-Dos Sicilias(Cannes, 30 de octubre de 1874 - Muri, 28 de noviembre de 1947) fue una princesa de las Dos Sicilias y princesa de Sajonia, por matrimonio.
Vladimir Picheta
Vladimir Ivanovich Picheta was a Russian and Soviet historian, first rector of the Belarusian State University, academician of the Academy of Sciences of the BSSR since 1928, Honorary Professor of the BSSR (1926), Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences and Arts since 1939, Academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences since 1946.
Stepan Malkhasyants
Stepanos Sargsi Malkhasyants fue un académico, filólogo, lingüista, y lexicográfo armenio. Como experto en literatura clásica armenia, Malkhasyants redactó las ediciones críticas y tradujo las obras de muchos historiadores armenios al idioma armenio actual, y contribuyó 70 años de su vida en el estudio de la lengua armenia.
Auguste Stephane
Auguste Stéphane fue un ciclista francés de finales del siglo XIX. Su victoria más destacada fue la Burdeos-París de 1892.
Blanche Hoschedé Monet
Blanche Hoschedé Monet fue una pintora francesa hijastra y nuera de Claude Monet.
Julius Mathison Turing
Thomas Inskip, 1st Viscount Caldecote
Thomas Walker Hobart Inskip, 1st Viscount Caldecote, was a British politician who served in many legal posts, culminating in serving as Lord Chancellor from 1939 until 1940. Despite legal posts dominating his career for all but four years, he is most prominently remembered for serving as Minister for Coordination of Defence from 1936 until 1939.
Lucien Coëdel
Lucien Coëdel (1899–1947) was a French film actor. He appeared in the title role in the historical film Roger la Honte and its sequel The Revenge of Roger. Coëdel made his screen debut in an uncredited role in Abel Gance's Lucrezia Borgia (1935), and gradually appeared in larger roles over the following years. His career really took off in the mid-1940s with several starring roles, but was cut short by his early death at the age of forty eight.