Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Ernst
Ernst Lubitsch
Ernst Lubitsch fue un director de cine judío-alemán, nacido en Alemania, naturalizado ya en 1933 estadounidense, a donde había emigrado. Su versatilidad como cineasta fue notable; dominando la comedia, el drama, la tragedia, la farsa o el espectáculo.
Ernst Barlach
Ernst Barlach fue un escultor, escritor y diseñador expresionista alemán.
Ernst Jacobi
Ernst Gerhard Ludwig Jacobi-Scherbening, es un actor alemán, más conocido por interpretar a Knut Hamsun en la película Adolf Hitler.
Ernst August Wagner
Ernst August Wagner was a German mass murderer who, on 4 September 1913 killed his wife and four children in Degerloch. He subsequently drove to Mühlhausen an der Enz where he set several fires and shot 20 people, of whom at least nine died, before he was beaten unconscious by furious villagers and left for dead.
Ernst Haeckel
Ernst Heinrich Philip August Haeckel, citado como Ernst Haeckel, fue un naturalista y filósofo alemán que popularizó el trabajo de Charles Darwin en Alemania, creando nuevos términos y conceptos como «ecología», «filo», «ontogenia», «filogenia», «monofilético» o «polifilético».
Ernst Königsgarten
Ernst Königsgarten, also known as Arnošt Königsgarten was an Austrian businessman and fencer. He was the youngest member of the Austrian team in the Olympic 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens in four competitions, finishing sixth with the sabre. In 1907, he was one of the co-founders of the Wiener Fechtklub , trained in the fencing academy of Luigi Della Santa and sat on the board of the Austrian Fencing Association and the Wiener AC. He fled Vienna after the Anschluss and returned to his hometown of Brno, but was deported by the Nazis and died in Theresienstadt.
Ernst Werner Techow
Ernst Werner Techow was a German right-wing assassin. In 1922, he took part in the assassination of the Foreign Minister of Germany Walther Rathenau. After his release from prison Techow initially joined the Nazi party, but soon fell out with the movement and dropped into obscurity. Late in World War II he joined the Volkssturm. He was killed after being captured by the Soviet Red Army near Dresden on 9 May 1945. Legend has it that Techow changed his political beliefs after his release from prison, joined the French Foreign Legion under the name of "Tessier" and later embarked on helping Jews escape from occupied France. This completely unfounded narrative can be traced back to hearsay that American journalist George W. Herald had turned into a story for Harper's Magazine in 1943.
Ernst Wiechert
Ernst Wiechert fue un maestro, poeta y escritor alemán. Fue uno de los novelistas más leídos en Alemania durante los años 1930. Incorporó a sus novelas su fe católica e ideales humanistas; entre las más conocidas hoy en día están Das einfache Leben y Die Jeromin-Kinder. Tras la guerra, Wiechert fue un crítico de las tendencias restauradoras en la Alemania de posguerra. Murió en Stäfa, Suiza.
Ernst Sieber
Ernst Sieber was a Swiss pastor and social activist who was one of the most popular and best known personalities associated with the Swiss Reformed Church. He was ordained in the Evangelical Reformed Church of the Canton of Zürich.
Ernst Kirchweger
Ernst Kirchweger was the first person to die as a result of political conflict in Austria's Second Republic.