Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1993
Henry Abel Smith
Sir Henry Abel Smith, was a British Army officer who served as Governor of Queensland, Australia. He married Lady May Cambridge, a niece of King George V and Queen Mary.
Jennifer Howard
Jennifer Howard was an American stage and film actress active between the mid-1940s and early 1960s. Howard appeared in a number of classic television shows during the American Golden Age of Television and was also an accomplished watercolor and acrylic artist. She was the daughter of the playwright and screenwriter Sidney Howard and first wife of Hollywood producer Samuel Goldwyn, Jr.
Geoffrey Yarde-Buller
Sylvia Bataille
Sylvie Maklès conocida artísticamente como Sylvia Bataille. , actriz teatral y cinematográfica francesa.
Angus Maude
Angus Edmund Upton Maude, Baron Maude of Stratford-upon-Avon, was a British Conservative Party politician and cabinet minister from 1979 to 1981. He was the father of former Conservative MP Francis Maude.
Nicholas Ridley, Baron Ridley of Liddesdale
Nicholas Ridley, Baron Ridley of Liddesdale, was a British Conservative politician and government minister. As President of the Selsdon Group, a free-market lobby within the Conservative Party, he was closely aligned with Margaret Thatcher, and became one of her Ministers of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in 1979. Responsible for the Falkland Islands, he tried to resolve the long-running sovereignty issue with Argentina, which detected Britain's reluctance to defend the territory, and later invaded it.
David Fane, 15th Earl of Westmorland
David Anthony Thomas Fane, 15th Earl of Westmorland,, styled Lord Burghersh until 1948, was a British courtier, landowner and member of the House of Lords.
Sir James Walter Scott, 2nd Bt.
Taikichiro Mori
Taikichiro Mori was the founder of Mori Building Company.
Svetoslav Roerich
Svetoslav Nikolaevich Roerich, Russian and Indian painter, son of Helena and Nicholas Roerich, studied from a young age under his father's tutelage. He studied architecture in England in 1919 and entered Columbia University's school of architecture in 1920. He won the Grand Prix of the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1926.