Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Gustav
Gustav Botz
Gustav Botz was a German actor.
Gustav Roch
Gustav Adolph Roch was a German mathematician who made significant contributions to the theory of Riemann surfaces. His promising career was cut short by untimely death at the age of 26.
Gustav Däniker
Gustav Frenssen
Gustav Frenssen was a German novelist. He wrote patriotically about his native country and promoted Heimatkunst (regionalism) in literature.
Gustav von Seyffertitz
Gustav von Seyffertitz fue un actor y director teatral y cinematográfico de origen alemán, cuya carrera artística se desarrolló en Estados Unidos.
Gustav Strube
Gustav Strube fue un compositor y director de orquesta alemán.
Gustav Adolf Deissmann
Gustav Adolf Deissmann was a German Protestant theologian, best known for his leading work on the Greek language used in the New Testament, which he showed was the koine, or commonly used tongue of the Hellenistic world of that time.
Gustav Wilhelm Wolff
Gustav Wilhelm Wolff was a German-born British shipbuilder and politician. Born in Hamburg, he moved to Liverpool in 1849 to live with his uncle, Gustav Christian Schwabe. After serving his apprenticeship in Manchester, Wolff was employed as a draughtsman in Hyde, Greater Manchester, before being employed by the shipbuilder Edward Harland in Belfast as his personal assistant. In 1861, Wolff became a partner at Harland's firm, forming Harland and Wolff. Outside shipbuilding, Wolff served as a Belfast Harbour Commissioner. He also founded the Belfast Ropeworks, served as Member of Parliament for Belfast East for 18 years and as a member of the Conservative and Unionist Party and Irish and Ulster Unionist parties.
Gustav Hegi
Gustav Hegi fue un botánico suizo.
Gustav Weigand
Gustav Weigand fue un lingüista alemán, especialista en lenguas balcánicas, especialmente en el idioma rumano y el idioma aromuniano. Es conocido por sus contribuciones fundamentales a la dialectología de la lengua rumana y por estudiar las relaciones entre las lenguas de la península balcánica (Balkansprachbund).