|
Advertisements
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Planet in House
Planet in Sign
|
birth charts with Pluto in TaurusYou will find on these pages astrological charts of thousands of celebrities with Pluto in Taurus. Just click on the celebrities of your choice to get their interactive natal chart, planetary dominants and excerpts of astrological portrait. in ![]()
Biography of Betsy van Vloten (excerpt)
Elizabeth “Betsy” van Vloten, born July 12, 1862 in Deventer and died February 21, 1946 in Haarlem, was a Dutch poet and writer. She was the daughter of scholar Johannes van Vloten and sister to translators Martha and Kitty. She was close to the “Tachtigers” literary circle, where she connected with writers like Frederik van Eeden and Frank van der Goes, enjoying both intellectual and social interactions with them.
Biography of Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (excerpt)
Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (21 September 1853 – 21 February 1926) was a Dutch experimental physicist, best known as the first to liquefy helium in 1908, reaching the record temperature of 1.5 kelvin.His groundbreaking work earned him the 1913 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Biography of Otto Güntter (excerpt)
Otto Güntter (born 30 October 1858, died 30 March 1949) was a German philologist and the long-serving director of the Schiller National Museum in Marbach. Influenced by Friedrich Theodor Vischer, he studied philosophy and modern philology in Tübingen, later continuing his education in France and England.
Biography of Louis Rimbault (excerpt)
Louis Rimbault (April 9, 1877 – November 10, 1949) was a French individualist anarchist, revolutionary syndicalist, and advocate of naturism and veganism. Born in Tours, he promoted a lifestyle of simplicity, non-violence, and harmony with nature through the libertarian free communities movement.
Biography of Georgette Leblanc (excerpt)
Marie Blanche Georgette Leblanc, born in Rouen on February 8, 1869, and who died in Le Cannet on October 26, 1941, was a French opera singer and stage actress.Despite having real literary talent, she never managed to establish herself as a writer, living in the shadow of her friend Colette.
Biography of Theodor Bertram (excerpt)
Born on February 12, 1869, in Stuttgart, Theodor Bertram was a renowned German bass-baritone celebrated for his interpretations of Richard Wagner’s operas.The son of singers Heinrich and Marie Bertram, he trained with his father and debuted at age twenty in Der Freischütz.
Biography of Francesco Cilea (excerpt)
Francesco Cilea (July 23, 1866 – November 20, 1950) was an Italian composer best known for his operas L’Arlesiana and Adriana Lecouvreur. Born in Palmi near Reggio Calabria, the son of a lawyer, he showed early musical talent after hearing Bellini’s Norma.
Biography of André Corthis (excerpt)
André Corthis, born Andrée Magdeleine Husson (April 15, 1882 – August 8, 1952), was a 20th-century French writer. She spent part of her youth in Spain, which would become a recurring theme in her work. At age twelve, she began writing poetry.
Biography of Anna Schieber (excerpt)
Anna Schieber (born December 12, 1867, in Esslingen am Neckar – died August 7, 1945, in Tübingen) was a German writer whose work includes more than sixty novels, ballads, short stories, and songs.Coming from a large Swabian artisan family, she worked first as a domestic servant and later at the Kunsthaus Schaller.
Biography of Franco Alfano (excerpt)
Franco Alfano, born March 8, 1875 in Posillipo, Naples, and died October 27, 1954 in San Remo, was an Italian composer and pianist.He is best remembered today for his operas Cyrano de Bergerac (1936) and Risurrezione (1904), and for completing Puccini’s unfinished opera Turandot in 1926.
Biography of Frans de Nerée tot Babberich (excerpt)
Frans Joseph Marie de Nerée tot Babberich, born on 13 February 1882 in Zevenaar and died on 5 June 1929 in The Hague, was a Dutch painter, draftsman, and sculptor. He sometimes used the pseudonym Larec Eeren, an anagram of his brother Carel's name.
Biography of Mariano Benlliure (excerpt)
Mariano Benlliure y Gil (8 September 1862 – 9 November 1947) was a Spanish sculptor and medallist, renowned for his public monuments and religious works in a heroic realist style.Born in Valencia, he began sculpting bullfighting scenes as a teenager and exhibited a wax model at the 1876 Exposición Nacional de Bellas Artes.
Biography of Montague Rhodes James (excerpt)
Montague Rhodes James (born August 1, 1862, in Goodnestone – died June 12, 1936, in Eton) was an English medieval scholar, author, and academic administrator.He served as Provost of King’s College, Cambridge (1905–1918), Provost of Eton College (1918–1936), and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge (1913–1915).
Biography of William Strang (excerpt)
William Strang, born February 13, 1859 in Dumbarton, Scotland, and died April 12, 1921 in Bournemouth, England, was a Scottish painter and printmaker who also produced book illustrations. He was a member of several prestigious institutions, including the Royal Academy in London.
Biography of Mary Teresa Norton (excerpt)
Mary Teresa Norton, born Hopkins on March 7, 1875, and died August 2, 1959, in Greenwich, Connecticut, was an American Democratic Party politician who represented Jersey City and Bayonne in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1925 to 1951. She was the first woman Democrat elected to Congress and the first woman to represent New Jersey or any state in the Northeast.
Biography of Otto Risch (excerpt)
Otto Risch (December 6, 1871 – date of death unknown) was a German senior civil servant. The son of a publishing bookseller, he studied administrative sciences at the University of Tübingen from 1890 to 1895 and passed his two higher civil service examinations in 1895 and 1897.
Biography of René Cresté (excerpt)
René Auguste Cresté, born on December 5, 1881 in Paris 19th and died on November 30, 1922 in Paris 20th, was a French actor of stage and silent film.First noticed as a romantic leading man on stage, he performed in Claudine à Paris by Colette, Ruy Blas by Victor Hugo and Adrienne Lecouvreur by Eugène Scribe.
Biography of Albert Libertad (excerpt)
Albert Libertad, born Joseph Albert on November 24, 1875, in Bordeaux and died November 12, 1908, in Paris, was a French individualist anarchist, writer, and activist who founded the influential journal L’Anarchie. A central figure in early 20th-century libertarian thought, he combined intellectual radicalism with a passionate defense of personal freedom.
Biography of Antoine Cyvoct (excerpt)
Antoine Cyvoct, born February 28, 1861, in Lyon and died April 5, 1930, in Paris, was a French anarchist activist wrongfully accused of carrying out the October 22, 1882 bombing at the Bellecour Theatre restaurant. Involved in the “Trial of the Sixty-Six,” he became a symbol of political repression in 19th-century France.
Biography of Alice Robertson (excerpt)
Alice Mary Robertson, born on January 2, 1854 and died on July 1, 1931, was an American educator, social worker, Native Americans’ rights activist, government official, and politician.She became the second woman to serve in the United States Congress and the first elected from Oklahoma, remaining the only woman elected from that state until 2006.
Biography of Kate Barnard (excerpt)
Catherine Ann “Kate” Barnard (May 23, 1875 – February 23, 1930) was the first woman elected to a state office in Oklahoma and the eleventh woman in the United States to hold statewide public office. Elected in 1907, she served as Oklahoma’s first Commissioner of Charities and Corrections for two four-year terms, the only position the 1907 state constitution allowed women to hold.
Biography of Melchiade Gabba (excerpt)
Melchiade Gabba (20 August 1874 – 17 November 1952) was an Italian general who held military and political responsibilities during the Fascist period.He played a significant role in Italy’s colonial administration in East Africa. A career officer, he commanded the Royal Corps of Colonial Troops of Eritrea and later served as Chief of Staff of the East Africa High Command during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War.
Biography of Kitty Schmidt (excerpt)
Kitty Schmidt, born June 25, 1882 in Hamburg and died February 23, 1954 at 6:00 AM in Berlin-Charlottenburg, was a German madam whose high-class Berlin brothel, “Salon Kitty,” was used by the Sicherheitsdienst for espionage during World War II. The salon later inspired depictions of Nazi-era brothels in film.
Biography of Édouard Belin (excerpt)
Édouard Belin, born on March 5, 1876, in Vesoul and deceased on March 4, 1963, in Territet, Switzerland, was a French photographer and inventor. In 1907 he created the Bélinographe, a device that allowed the transmission of photographs over telegraph networks and telephone lines.
Biography of Theodor Reuss (excerpt)
Albert Karl Theodor Reuss, born June 28, 1855, in Augsburg and deceased October 28, 1923, was a German occultist, freemason, illuminatus, martinist, rosicrucian, theosophist, journalist, and singer. Best known as the founder of the Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O.), he played a key role in shaping early 20th-century esotericism.
Biography of Joseph Wittig (excerpt)
Joseph Wittig, born January 22, 1879, in Neusorge and died August 22, 1949, was a German Catholic theologian and writer. After earning his doctorate in 1903, he was ordained a priest and later became professor of church history and patrology at the University of Breslau, where he also served as dean.
Biography of Miles Franklin (excerpt)
Miles Franklin, born Stella Maria Sarah Miles Franklin (14 October 1879 – 19 September 1954), was an Australian writer and feminist.She achieved early fame with her novel My Brilliant Career, published in 1901 by Blackwoods of Edinburgh. Although she continued writing throughout her life, her next major literary success, All That Swagger, was not published until 1936.
Biography of Jan Kalf (excerpt)
Jan Kalf (born May 10, 1873, in Amsterdam – died March 6, 1954, in The Hague) was a Dutch art historian and director of the Rijksbureau voor de Monumentenzorg (National Office for Monument Preservation) from 1918 to 1939. The son of editor Martinus Kalf, he studied Dutch literature and art history in Amsterdam and contributed many articles, including theatre reviews, to De Kroniek.
Biography of Andrée Viollis (excerpt)
Andrée Viollis, born Andrée Jacquet on 9 December 1870 in Les Mées and died on 10 August 1950 in Paris, was a French journalist and writer. She was also known as Andrée Téry and later Andrée d’Ardenne de Tizac, adopting the pen name Viollis after her second marriage.
Biography of Gabriel Biessy (excerpt)
Gabriel Biessy, born Marie-Gabriel Biessy on March 25, 1854, in Saint-Pierre-du-Mont (Landes) and died on September 9, 1935, in Bourg-la-Reine, was a French painter best known for his portraits, genre scenes, and views of Paris. After a period in Bordeaux, he studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Lyon under Félix Clément, then entered the Paris studios of Carolus Duran and Luc-Olivier Merson in 1879.
Biography of Charles Malato (excerpt)
Charles Malato, born September 7, 1857, in Foug and died November 7, 1938, in Paris, was a French journalist, writer, and libertarian activist. A key figure in European anarchism, he helped shape and connect the movement’s intellectual networks. During World War I, he joined the Union sacrée and signed the Manifesto of the Sixteen alongside Peter Kropotkin, supporting the Allies.
Biography of Henri Jooris (excerpt)
Henri Jooris, born in Lille on 23 April 1879 and died in Cannes on 29 March 1940, was a French sports figure active during the first half of the 20th century. He held numerous leadership roles within clubs, leagues, and national sports organizations.
Biography of Harold Raeburn (excerpt)
Harold Andrew Raeburn, born on July 21, 1865, and died on December 21, 1926, was a Scottish mountaineer regarded as one of the leading British climbers of his time. He achieved numerous first ascents and played a central role in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century mountaineering.
Biography of Philip Snowden (excerpt)
Philip Snowden, born on July 18, 1864, and died on May 15, 1937, was a British politician and an influential figure in early twentieth-century Labour politics. A forceful speaker, he gained popularity in trade union circles through his denunciation of capitalism as unethical and his advocacy of a socialist ideal.
Biography of Edvarts Virza (excerpt)
Edvarts Virza (born Jēkabs Eduards Liekna on December 27, 1883, died March 1, 1940) was a Latvian writer, poet, and translator. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1935 and 1936, but his works were banned in Soviet Latvia until 1985.
Biography of Emmy Paungarten (excerpt)
Emmy Paungarten, born Emma von Paungarten on 29 July 1874 in Klagenfurt and died on 20 December 1947 in Graz, was an Austrian painter from a noble Carinthian family. She began her artistic training in the 1890s in Graz and Munich, later expanding her education through extensive study trips across Europe.
Biography of André Varennes (excerpt)
André Varennes, born on April 14, 1882, in Châtillon (Hauts-de-Seine), and died on February 29, 1972, in Boulogne-Billancourt (Hauts-de-Seine), was a French stage and film actor. He began his career in the theatre in the early 20th century and gradually established himself as a reliable performer in both classical and modern productions.
Biography of Silvio Gai (excerpt)
Silvio Maria Giuseppe Francesco Gai (August 5, 1873, in Rome – November 1, 1967, in Livorno) was an Italian Fascist politician who served as a deputy and later as a senator of the Kingdom of Italy. He was also Minister of Corporative Economy of the Italian Social Republic from September to December 1943.
Biography of Eduard Miglitz (excerpt)
Eduard Miglitz II., born on 21 October 1866 in Klagenfurt and died on 5 January 1929 in Graz, was an Austrian physician specializing in neurology. He served as chief physician for nervous diseases, internal medicine, and dermatology at the Hospital of the Brothers of Mercy in Graz, and became the first medical director of the Laßnitzhöhe spa near Graz.
Biography of Alice Sollier (excerpt)
Alice Sollier (née Maille, later Alice Mathieu-Dubois) (3 April 1861 – 29 January 1942) was a French physician.She was the first Black woman to earn the French baccalaureate and the first Black French woman to obtain a medical doctorate, in 1887.
Biography of Jeannie Gunn (excerpt)
Jeannie Gunn OBE, born on 5 June 1870 and died on 9 June 1961, was an Australian novelist, teacher, and volunteer for the Returned and Services League of Australia.She wrote under the pen name Mrs Aeneas Gunn. Born in Carlton, Melbourne, she was educated at home and ran a school with her sisters before working as a visiting teacher.
Biography of Pauline Ramart (excerpt)
Pauline Ramart-Lucas, born November 22, 1880, in the 14th arrondissement of Paris and died March 17, 1953, in the 15th arrondissement of the same city, was a French chemist, academic, and politician. Born into a modest family, she earned her early qualifications through evening classes, worked as a florist, and became a mother at eighteen to René Lucas, who later became a physicist.
Biography of Charles Lalo (excerpt)
Charles Lalo, born February 24, 1877 in Périgueux and died April 1, 1953 in Paris, was a French philosopher specializing in aesthetics.He belonged to the socio-positivist school and was strongly influenced by the sociology of Émile Durkheim and earlier by the philosophy of Auguste Comte.
Biography of Anton Ghon (excerpt)
Anton Ghon (1 January 1866 – 23 April 1936) was an Austrian pathologist and bacteriologist best known for his research on tuberculosis, which led to the description of the “Ghon complex.” Born in Villach, he studied medicine at the University of Graz from 1884 to 1890 and later trained in Vienna in dermatology and pathological anatomy.
Biography of Henriette Delamarre de Monchaux (excerpt)
Henriette Delamarre de Monchaux (born Valentine Henriette Huberte Delamarre de Monchaux on October 11, 1854, in Paris; died May 12, 1911, in Paris) was a French naturalist, geologist, and paleontologist. A pioneer in the latter two fields, she became a specialist in faluns.
Biography of Hans Junkermann (actor) (excerpt)
Hans Ferdinand Junkermann, born February 24, 1872 in Stuttgart and died June 12, 1943 in Berlin, was a German stage and silent film actor.The son of actors, he began his career on stage with his father’s touring company and later performed in major theaters across Germany.
Biography of Percival Lancaster (excerpt)
Percival Lancaster (William Arthur Percy Lancaster, February 24, 1880 – October 25, 1937) was a British civil engineer and writer of boys’ adventure fiction. The son of novelist Harry Collingwood, he initially pursued an engineering career before turning to writing, especially after returning from South Africa due to health issues around 1905.
Biography of Jan Simon van der Aa (excerpt)
Jan Simon van der Aa (born July 25, 1865, in Hornhuizen, died February 24, 1944, in Lausanne) was a Dutch jurist, law professor, and senior civil servant at the Ministry of Justice. He contributed significantly to major legal reforms in the Netherlands, including the child protection laws enacted in 1901.
Biography of Wilhelm Kolle (excerpt)
Wilhelm Kolle, born November 2, 1868 in Lerbach near Osterode am Harz and died May 10, 1935, was a German bacteriologist and hygienist.He succeeded Paul Ehrlich as director of the Royal Institute for Experimental Therapy and became one of the leading microbiologists of his time.
Biography of Martin Wutte (excerpt)
Martin Wutte, born December 15, 1876 in Obermühlbach and died January 30, 1948 in Klagenfurt, was an Austrian historian specializing in the history of Carinthia.Initially associated with German nationalist circles, he later aligned himself with National Socialist ideology. In 1896 he graduated with distinction from the State Gymnasium in Villach. |
House in Sign
Advanced Search
Other Search Tools
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
To add this celebrity to your favourites, please create an account.
To get your compatibility ratings with this celebrity, please create an account.







in 















