List of Sorbs
At about a population of 60,000 (30,000 of which speak Sorbian), the Sorbs are the smallest Slavic-speaking group in Europe.
This is a list of notable Sorbs.
Historical
- Czimislav (839 - 840) - 9th-century King of the Sorbs
- Jakub Bart-Ćišinski (1856–1909) - Poet, writer, playwright, and translator
- Jan Kilian (1811–1884) - Pastor and leader of the Sorbian colony in Texas
- Korla Awgust Kocor (1822–1904) - Composer and conductor
- Ludwig Leichhardt (1813–1848) - Explorer and naturalist
- Jan Arnošt Smoler (1816–1884) - Philologist and writer
- Handrij Zejler (1804–1872) - Writer, pastor, and national activist
- Pavle Jurišić Šturm - Paulus Eugen Sturm (1848–1922) - Serbian general, Sorbian origin
Contemporary
- Jurij Brězan (1916–2006) - Writer, novelist, and author of children's books
- Martha Israel (1905–c. 1967) – member of the Volkskammer[1]
- Jurij Koch (b. 1936) - Writer, editor, and reporter
- John Symank (1935–2002) - Head coach for Northern Arizona University and the University of Texas at Arlington football teams, defensive back in the NFL, and player for the University of Florida
- Mato Kosyk (1853–1940) - Poet and minister
- Baldur von Schirach (1907-1974) - Nazi German politician and convicted war criminal
- Kito Lorenc (1938–2017) - Writer, lyric poet, and translator
- Kurt Krjeńc (1907–1978) – East German politician and Chairman of Domowina
- Marie Simon (1824–1877) – nurse
- Erwin Strittmatter (1912–1994)
- Stanislaw Tillich (b. 1959)
- Mina Witkojc (1893–1975)
- Carolina Eyck (b. 1987)
- Peter Schowtka (1945–2022) – member of the Landtag of Saxony
- Eva Ursula Lange (1928–2020) – painter, illustrator, graphic designer, and ceramist
See also
References
- Elle, Ludwig (2010). Die Domowina in der DDR: Aufbau und Funktionsweise einer Minderheitenorganisation im staalich-administrativen Sozialismus [The Domowina in the GDR: Structure and Functioning of a Minority Organization in State-administrative Socialism] (in German). Domowina-Verlag. p. 37. ISBN 978-3-7420-2176-2.
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