Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Eduard
Eduard Sagalaev
Eduard Mikhailovich Sagalaev is a Russian television journalist and media manager.
Eduard Fernández
Eduard Fernández Serrano es un actor español.
Eduard Bello
Eduard Alexander Bello Gil es un futbolista venezolano. Juega de extremo y su equipo actual es Deportes Antofagasta de la Primera División de Chile.
Eduard Shevardnadze
Eduard Amvrósiyevich Shevardnadze fue un político georgiano, presidente de su país entre 1995 y 2003.
Eduard Einstein
Eduard Einstein fue el segundo hijo del físico Albert Einstein y de su primera esposa, Mileva Marić. Einstein y su familia se mudaron a Berlín en 1914, pero al poco tiempo Marić retornó a Zürich, llevando con ella a Eduard y su hermano. Eduard fue un buen estudiante y con talento musical. Estudió medicina pero a los 20 años comenzó a manifestar síntomas de esquizofrenia y fue internado por primera vez por cerca de 2 años. De acuerdo a su hermano Hans Albert Einstein, el motivo del agravamiento de su enfermedad fueron los tratamientos de electrochoque que le aplicaron.
Eduard Zenovka
Eduard Grigoryevich Zenovka is a former Olympic modern pentathlete. He won two silver medals and one bronze medal at the Olympics.
Eduard Spertsyan
Eduard Mkrtychevich Spertsyan is an Armenian football player who plays as an attacking midfielder for FC Krasnodar and the Armenia national team.
Eduard von Falz-Fein
Baron Eduard Oleg Alexandrowitsch von Falz-Fein was a Russian-born Liechtensteiner businessman, journalist, and sportsman. He served as a "sports diplomat" who initiated the Olympic movement in Liechtenstein was vice president of the Liechtenstein Olympic Committee in the mid-1930s. His Father Alexander Eduardovich is an agronomist, brother of the founder of the Askania-Nova biosphere reserve, Friedrich von Falz-Fein, mother Vera Nikolaevna is from a family of generals and admirals of the Russian fleet Yepanchins.
Eduard Izotov
Eduard Konstantinovich Izotov was a Soviet film actor.
Eduard Pernkopf
Eduard Pernkopf was an Austrian professor of anatomy who later served as rector of the University of Vienna, his alma mater. He is best known for his seven-volume anatomical atlas, Topographische Anatomie des Menschen, prepared by Pernkopf and four artists over a 20-year period. While it is considered a scientific and artistic masterpiece, with many of its color plates reprinted in other publications and textbooks, it has been in recent years found that Pernkopf and the artists working for him, all of them ardent Nazis, used executed political prisoners as their subjects.