Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Philip
Philip Ivan Pease
Philip Charles Durham
Admiral Sir Philip Charles Henderson Calderwood Durham, GCB was a Royal Navy officer whose service in the American War of Independence, French Revolutionary War and Napoleonic Wars was lengthy, distinguished and at times controversial.
Filips van Hohenlohe-Neuenstein
Felipe de Hohenlohe-Neuenstein, alías Hollock, fue conde de Hohenlohe-Langenburg, comandante al servicio de las Provincias Unidas de los Países Bajos. Era hijo de Luis Casimiro de Hohenlohe-Waldenburg y de Ana de Solms-Lich.
Philip Allen
Philip IV, Count of Nassau-Weilburg
Philip IV of Nassau-Weilburg, also known as Philip III of Nassau-Saarbrücken was Count of Nassau-Weilburg from 1559 until his death and since 1574 also Count of Nassau-Saarbrücken. Both possessions belonged to the Walram line of the House of Nassau. In Weilburg, he was the fourth count named Philip, but only the third in Saarbrücken, because his father, Philip III of Nassau-Weilburg never held Nassau-Saarbrücken.
Philip Sheridan Le Fanu
Philip Henry Gosse
Philip Henry Gosse fue un historiador natural británico, y divulgador científico; hoy día mejor conocido por su intento de reconciliar la literalidad bíblica con el uniformitarismo, pero también conocido por su invención del acuario de agua salada, institucional y sus estudios de biología marina.
Philip Cunliffe-Lister, 1st Earl of Swinton
Philip Cunliffe-Lister, 1st Earl of Swinton,, known as Philip Lloyd-Greame until 1924 and as The Viscount Swinton between 1935 and 1955, was a prominent British Conservative politician from the 1920s until the 1950s.
Philip Edward Bates
Philip Kington
Philip Oliphant Kington was an English businessman and landowner who inherited a Scottish clan chiefdom and also played a single first-class cricket game in Australia. From 1867, when he inherited Ardblair Castle in Scotland from his maternal Oliphant relatives, he took the triple-barrelled name "Kington-Blair-Oliphant". He was born at Clifton, Bristol and died at Datchet, then in Berkshire, now in Buckinghamshire.