Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Alfred
Alfred A. Taylor
Alfred Alexander Taylor, known as Alf Taylor, was an American politician and lecturer from eastern Tennessee. He served as Governor of Tennessee from 1921 to 1923, one of three Republicans to hold the position from the end of Reconstruction to the latter half of the 20th century. He also served three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, from 1889 to 1895.
Alfred George Montagu Bond
Alfred Woltmann
Alfred Woltmann was a German art historian. He was born at Charlottenburg, studied at Berlin and Munich, and was appointed professor of art history successively at the Karlsruhe Polytechnicum (1868) and at the universities of Prague (1874) and Strasbourg (1878). Conjointly with the author he adapted the fifth volume of Schnaase's Geschichte der bildenden Künste for the second edition (1872), and with Karl Woermann began a Geschichte der Malerei (1878), completed after his death by his collaborator. Besides his principal work, Holbein und seine Zeit, he wrote:
- Die deutsche Kunst und Die Reformation
- Die Baugeschichte Berlins (1872)
- Geschichte der deutschen Kunst in Elsass (1876)
- Die deutsche Kunst in Prag (1877)
- Aus vier Jahrhunderten niederländischdeutscher Kunstgeschichte (1878)
Alfred Rahlfs
Alfred Rahlfs nació en Linden, Hanóver, Alemania. Estudió teología protestante, filosofía y lenguas orientales en Halle y Gotinga, donde obtuvo su doctorado en 1881. Su carrera profesional se profundizó en Gotinga, en donde fue un Inspector, Profesor privado, Extraordinario, y profesor del Antiguo Testamento. Se retiró en 1933 y falleció en Gotinga.
Alfred Mosher Butts
Alfred Mosher Butts was an American architect, famous for inventing the board game Scrabble in 1938.
Alfred Schuler
Alfred Schuler fue un adivino, fundador de una religión, gnóstico, mistagogo y místico alemán. Él se veía a sí mismo como un romano altoimperial renacido. Las creencias de Schuler se pueden caracterizar como un neopaganismo con rasgos gnósticos, que era el centro de los «Cósmicos» de Múnich y fuente de ideas para Stefan George y Ludwig Klages. Sin haber publicado un libro en vida, consiguió una gran influencia.
Alfred Schirokauer
Alfred Schirokauer was a German novelist and screenwriter. He also directed three films during the silent era. Many films were based on his novels including several adaptations of Lucrezia Borgia. After the rise of the Nazi Party to power in 1933 the Jewish Schirokauer emigrated to Amsterdam and then to Austria where he died the following year.
Alfred Schlageter
Alfred Schlageter was a Swiss actor.
Alfred Brauer
Alfred Theodor Brauer was a German-American mathematician who did work in number theory. He was born in Charlottenburg, and studied at the University of Berlin. As he served Germany in World War I, even being injured in the war, he was able to keep his position longer than many other Jewish academics who had been forced out after Hitler's rise to power. In 1935 he lost his position and in 1938 he tried to leave Germany, but was not able to until the following year. He initially worked in the Northeast, but in 1942 he settled into a position at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A good deal of his works, and the Alfred T. Brauer library, would be linked to this university. He occasionally taught at Wake Forest University after he retired from Chapel Hill at 70. He died in North Carolina, aged 91.
Alfred Santell
Alfred Allen Santell, also known as Al Santell (1895–1981), was an American film director and film producer.