Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Juraj
Juraj Kucka
Juraj Kucka es un futbolista eslovaco. Juega de centrocampista y su actual equipo es el Parma Calcio 1913 de Italia.
Juraj Herz
Juraj Herz fue un director, actor y guionista checo asociado al movimiento Nueva Ola Checoslovaca de los años 1960. Conocido sobre todo por sus películas de terror, cobró renombre por su film de 1969 El incinerador de cadáveres, película citada como uno de los mejores films de Checoslovaquia.
Juraj Kukura
Juraj Kukura is a Slovak actor.
Juraj Halenár
Juraj Halenár was a Slovak football forward who was most famous for playing for Slovan Bratislava.
Juraj V Zrinski
Juraj V Zrinski guerrero y ban crota, miembro de la insigne familia Zrinski, era nieto de Nikola Šubić Zrinski, muerto en el sitio de Szigetvár y padre de Nikola Zrinski y Petar Zrinski, ejecutado durante la Conjura de los Magnates.
Juraj Sagan
Juraj Sagan es un ciclista profesional eslovaco. Actualmente corre para el equipo Bora-Hansgrohe.
Juraj Drašković
Juraj II Drašković was a Croatian nobleman, statesman and Catholic bishop and cardinal, very powerful and influential in the Croatian Kingdom. He was a member of the Drašković noble family and elected by Sabor – the Parliament of Croatia – as Ban (viceroy) of Croatia to oversee the country between 1567 and 1578.
Juraj IV Zrinski
Juraj IV Zrinski was a Croatian count, a member of the Zrinski noble family, and royal Master of the treasury from 1567 until his death in 1603.
Juraj Haulik
Juraj Haulik de Váralya was a Croatian cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church of Slovak ethnicity and the first archbishop of Zagreb. He was also acting ban of Croatia for two separate terms.
Juraj Križanić
Juraj Križanić, also known as Jurij Križanič or Yuriy Krizhanich, was a Croatian Catholic missionary who is often regarded as the earliest recorded pan-Slavist. His ideal, often misunderstood - even today - was to bring about a union of the churches, which Rome and Constantinople had tried to do without success for centuries. He believed that this might come about through closer relations between Slav Catholicism and the Russian Orthodox Church, and supported the idea that all Slavs had a common language and ethnic origin.