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Tancredo Neves Tancredo Neves 1910 - 1985 President-elect of Brazil
Boris Kidric Boris Kidric 1912 - 1953 Politician
Seema Begum Seema Begum 1947 - 2019 Stage and film actress
Araken Peixoto Araken Peixoto 1930 - 2009 Singer and trumpeter of jazz, samba and bossa nova
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 1881 - 1938 Founder and first president of Turkey
Jacques Offenbach Jacques Offenbach 1819 - 1880 Operetta pioneer
Concepcion Arenal Concepcion Arenal 1820 - 1893 Writer, jurist, thinker, journalist, poet
Major Tufail Muhammad Shaheed Major Tufail Muhammad Shaheed 1914 - 1958 Recipient of Nishan-e-Haider
Ahmed II Ahmed II 1642 - 1695 Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Fiona Stanley Fiona Stanley 1946 - 2020 Epidemiologist and public health researcher
Henrik Anker Bjerregaard Henrik Anker Bjerregaard 1792 - 1842 Poet and judge
Catherine Parr Catherine Parr 1512 - 1548 Queen consort of England and Ireland
Karl Friedrich May Karl Friedrich May 1842 - 1912 Author of travel and adventure stories
Anwar Shaul Anwar Shaul 1904 - 1977 Poet and activist for Iraqi independence
Benjamin Ipavec Benjamin Ipavec 1829 - 1908 Composer, Physician
Sabiha al Shaykh Da ud Sabiha al Shaykh Da ud 1912 - 1975 Poet and activist for Kurdish language and culture
Rudolf Maister Rudolf Maister 1874 - 1934 Military officer, poet
Michael Solomon Gudinski Michael Solomon Gudinski 1952 - 2021 record executive and promoter
Karlheinz Bohm Karlheinz Bohm 1928 - 2014 actor and founder of Menschen für Menschen
Khan Roshan Khan Khan Roshan Khan 1914 - 1988 Civil servant, historian, biographer, author
Kim Hong-do Kim Hong-do 1745 - 1806 Genre painter of the Joseon dynasty
Valentin Logar Valentin Logar 1916 - 2002 historical linguist
Ferreira Gullar Ferreira Gullar 1930 - 2016 Poet and writer
Clive Staples Lewis Clive Staples Lewis 1898 - 1963 Author
Hideto Matsumoto Hideto Matsumoto 1964 - 1998 Lead guitarist of X Japan and solo artist
Emperor Go-Daigo Emperor Go-Daigo 1288 - 1339 Emperor of Japan
Luong Kim Dinh Luong Kim Dinh 1914 - 1997 Philosopher
Damrong Rajanubhab Damrong Rajanubhab 1862 - 1943 Founder of modern education
Abdul Khaliq Hazara Abdul Khaliq Hazara 1916 - 1933 Assassin
Peder A. Aaroe Peder A. Aaroe 1868 - 1927 chairman
Natsume Soseki Natsume Soseki 1867 - 1916 Novelist and scholar of English literature
Jishnu Raghavan Jishnu Raghavan 1979 - 2016 Actor, engineer, social activist
Pin Malakul Pin Malakul 1903 - 1995 Educator, Writer
Dimitrie Cuclin Dimitrie Cuclin 1885 - 1978 Composer
Vincent Eze Ogbulafor Vincent Eze Ogbulafor 1949 - 2022 National Chairman of PDP
Kim Ja-ok Kim Ja-ok 1951 - 2014 actress
Magna Lykseth-Skogman Magna Lykseth-Skogman 1874 - 1949 Operatic soprano
Qaboos bin Said al Said Qaboos bin Said al Said 1940 - 2020 Sultan of Oman
Ho Xuan Huong Ho Xuan Huong 1772 - 1822 poet
Joseph-Armand Bombardier Joseph-Armand Bombardier 1907 - 1964 Snowmobile and Ski-Doo
Haruma Miura Haruma Miura 1990 - 2020 Actor and singer
Adam Kozlowiecki Adam Kozlowiecki 1911 - 2007 Archbishop of Lusaka
Ion Dragalina Ion Dragalina 1860 - 1916 Military General
Sadao Araki Sadao Araki 1877 - 1966 General in the Imperial Japanese Army and Minister
Peter Christen Asbjornsen Peter Christen Asbjornsen 1812 - 1885 Folklore collector and writer
Dimitri Mitropoulos Dimitri Mitropoulos 1896 - 1960 Conductor, pianist, composer
Bikash Bhattacharjee Bikash Bhattacharjee 1940 - 2006 Realist and surrealist painter
Adrian Paunescu Adrian Paunescu 1943 - 2010 Poet, politician
Chico Xavier Chico Xavier 1910 - 2002 Spiritist writer and psychographer
Alexander Sizonenko Alexander Sizonenko 1959 - 2012 Basketball player
Fernando del Paso Fernando del Paso 1935 - 2018 Novelist, essayist, poet, diplomat
Radhi Hamza al Radhi Radhi Hamza al Radhi 1955 - 2018 Head of the Commission on Public Integrity
Ahmed Rushdi Ahmed Rushdi 1934 - 1983 Folk singer and musician
Rifat Chadirji Rifat Chadirji 1926 - 2020 Father of modern Iraqi architecture
Gheorghe G. Mironescu Gheorghe G. Mironescu 1874 - 1949 Politician
Pavel Korin Pavel Korin 1892 - 1967 Painter and art restorer
Vassilis Alexakis Vassilis Alexakis 1943 - 2021 Writer and self-translator
Sarfraz Rafiqui Sarfraz Rafiqui 1935 - 1965 Flying ace and war hero
Eduardo Campos Eduardo Campos 1965 - 2014 Governor of Pernambuco
Princess Katherine of Greece and Denmark Princess Katherine of Greece and Denmark 1913 - 2007 Painter
Konrad Zuse Konrad Zuse 1910 - 1995 Computer scientist and engineer
Louis Joseph Papineau Louis Joseph Papineau 1786 - 1871 Politician, Lawyer
Joze Toporisic Joze Toporisic 1926 - 2014 Linguist
Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah 1926 - 2001 Sultan of Selangor and 11th Yang di-Pertuan Agong
Shantaram Rajaram Vankudre Shantaram Rajaram Vankudre 1901 - 1990 Film director, producer, actor, and screenwriter
Abdul Karim Qasim Abdul Karim Qasim 1914 - 1963 Overthrowing the Iraqi monarchy
John Gilbert Layton John Gilbert Layton 1950 - 2011 Leader of the NDP
Kalipada Ghoshal Kalipada Ghoshal 1906 - 1995 Painter
Keith John Moon Keith John Moon 1946 - 1978 Drummer for the rock band
Anders Hovden Anders Hovden 1860 - 1943 Lutheran minister and author
Alois Alzheimer Alois Alzheimer 1864 - 1915 Identifying Alzheimer's disease
Catherine of Aragon Catherine of Aragon 1485 - 1536 First wife of Henry VIII and Queen of England
Fua Haripitak Fua Haripitak 1910 - 1993 Artist, Muralist
Gheorghe Titeica Gheorghe Titeica 1873 - 1939 Mathematician
Sigismund of Luxembourg Sigismund of Luxembourg 1368 - 1437 Holy Roman Emperor and King of Hungary, Germany
Angelines Fernandez Angelines Fernandez 1924 - 1994 Actress and comedian
Nourhane Nourhane 1922 - 2022 Singer and actress
Josip Vosnjak Josip Vosnjak 1834 - 1911 Politician
Janez Maticic Janez Maticic 1926 - 2022 Composer
Constantin Brancusi Constantin Brancusi 1876 - 1957 Sculptor
Octav Mayer Octav Mayer 1895 - 1966 Mathematician
Pietro Kobke Krohn Pietro Kobke Krohn 1840 - 1905 Portrait painter
Salvador Dali Salvador Dali 1904 - 1989 Painter and pioneer of Surrealism
Sulli Sulli 1994 - 2019 Singer and actress
Sabat Islambouli Sabat Islambouli 1867 - 1941 Physician
Mahmud II Mahmud II 1785 - 1839 Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Atila Icrio Atila Icrio 1921 - 2002 acting in O Cangaceiro and other films
Adolf Hitler Adolf Hitler 1889 - 1945
Amir Sjarifuddin Amir Sjarifuddin 1907 - 1948 Prime Minister of Indonesia
Babatunde Olatunji Babatunde Olatunji 1927 - 2003 Drummer, social activist, recording artist
Risto Savin Risto Savin 1859 - 1948 Composer
Antonio Cornejo Polar Antonio Cornejo Polar 1936 - 1997 Academic
Juan de Dios Guevara Juan de Dios Guevara 1910 - 2000 Chemist
Chishu Ryu Chishu Ryu 1904 - 1993 Film actor
Leonid Pitamic Leonid Pitamic 1885 - 1971 Lawyer, Diplomat
Riad al-Turk Riad al-Turk 1930 - 2024 Syrian opposition leader
Matthaus Daniel Poppelmann Matthaus Daniel Poppelmann 1662 - 1736 Architect of the Zwinger Palace
Orest Kiprensky Orest Kiprensky 1782 - 1836 Painter of still lifes and portraits
Hugh Le Caine Hugh Le Caine 1914 - 1977 Electronic music and instruments
Mikhail Chapiro Mikhail Chapiro 1938 - 2019 Painting portraits
Psamtik II Psamtik II -652 - -589 King of the 26th dynasty of Egypt
Roberto Farias Roberto Farias 1932 - 2018 Film director, producer and screenwriter
Etienne Gaboury Etienne Gaboury 1930 - 2022 Architect and urbanist
Abhas Kumar Ganguly Abhas Kumar Ganguly 1929 - 1987 Playback singer, actor, music director
Josip Vidmar Josip Vidmar 1895 - 1992 Literary Critic
Nectanebo I Nectanebo I 300 - 361 Founder of the 30th dynasty of Egypt
Anton Janezic Anton Janezic 1828 - 1869 Linguist
Boontham Huadkrathok Boontham Huadkrathok 1954 - 2015 Actor, Comedian
Vilhelm Theodor Walther Vilhelm Theodor Walther 1819 - 1892 Architect and royal building inspector
Anton Melik Anton Melik 1890 - 1966 Geographer
Francis I of France Francis I of France 1494 - 1547 king of France and patron of the arts
Miha Remec Miha Remec 1928 - 2020 author
Ma Xianda Ma Xianda 1932 - 2013 Wushu professor and master
Achmad Nungcik Alcaff Achmad Nungcik Alcaff 1925 - 1987 Actor, director, activist
Suleiman the Magnificent Suleiman the Magnificent 1494 - 1566 Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
Vilhelm Groth Vilhelm Groth 1860 - 1935 Painter,landscape artist, member of Den Frie
Jack Absalom Jack Absalom 1927 - 2019 Painter, author, adventurer
Charles Fenerty Charles Fenerty 1821 - 1892 Wood pulp paper
Chaudhry Aslam Khan Chaudhry Aslam Khan 1967 - 2014 Police officer and head of the Anti-Extremist
Charles Babbage Charles Babbage 1791 - 1871 Originator of the concept a programmable computer
Vinod Behari Johri Vinod Behari Johri 1935 - 2014 Astrophysics and cosmology professor
Adriano Correia de Oliveira Adriano Correia de Oliveira 1942 - 1982 Fado singer, protest singer
Tamara Miansarova Tamara Miansarova 1931 - 2017 Soviet pop and soprano singer
Christian Frederik Hansen Christian Frederik Hansen 1756 - 1845 Architect of many buildings in Copenhagen
Mohammed Taki Mehdi Mohammed Taki Mehdi 1928 - 1998 Activist, writer, pro-Palestinian leader
Paulo Evaristo Arns Paulo Evaristo Arns 1921 - 2016 Archbishop of São Paulo
Irina Gribulina Irina Gribulina 1953 - 2008 Folk singer-songwriter
Le Quyen Ngo Dinh Le Quyen Ngo Dinh 1959 - 2012 Commissioner of Immigration
Carl Frederik Tietgen Carl Frederik Tietgen 1829 - 1901 Founder of numerous prominent Danish companies
Witold Lutoslawski Witold Lutoslawski 1913 - 1994 Composer and conductor
Konstantin Korovin Konstantin Korovin 1861 - 1939 Painter of landscapes, portraits
Maria Tanase Maria Tanase 1913 - 1963 Singer, Actress
Roy Brown Roy Brown 1893 - 1944 Pilot and war hero
Masanobu Tsuji Masanobu Tsuji 1901 - 1961 Army officer and tactical planner
Naum Gabo Naum Gabo 1890 - 1977 Sculptor, theorist, and key figure
Basil II Basil II 958 - 1025 Byzantine emperor and military strategist
muhammad rasool allah prophet muhammad rasool allah prophet 570 - 632 Muhammad the last Messenger of God
Johannes Tauler Johannes Tauler 1300 - 1361 Dominican friar and theologian
Nick Cave Nick Cave 1957 - 2021 musician, writer, and actor
Zoroaster Zoroaster -1000 - -551 Prophet and founder of Zoroastrianism
Mikhail Larionov Mikhail Larionov 1881 - 1964 Painter and stage designer
Berenice IV Berenice IV -77 - -55 Queen of the Ptolemaic dynasty
Bigas Luna Bigas Luna 1946 - 2013 Film director, designer and artist
Laura Gundersen Laura Gundersen 1832 - 1898 Actress
Helmut Newton Helmut Newton 1920 - 2004 Fashion photographer
Konstanty Antoni Gorski Konstanty Antoni Gorski 1859 - 1924 Composer, violinist, organist, music teacher
Hector Bonilla Hector Bonilla 1939 - 2022 Actor and director
Vintila Ion Constantin Bratianu Vintila Ion Constantin Bratianu 1867 - 1930 Politician
Pope Innocent VI Pope Innocent VI 1282 - 1362 Head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal
Sanguan Tularaksa Sanguan Tularaksa 1902 - 1995 Politician
Creat A Memorial Profile

Top 10 Died Influential People

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  • 1. Juan Martin Diez

    Died: 1825 A.D
    Slogan: I will die as I have lived: defending my country and my ideas.

    Juan Martín Díez was born in a peasant family in Castrillo de Duero, Valladolid, Spain on September 5, 1775. He had a passion for military affairs since his childhood and participated in the War of the Pyrenees against France when he was 18. He married María Antonia Santos Platero in 1796 and settled in Fuentecén, Burgos, where he worked as a farmer until the French invasion of Spain in 1808. He then organized a group of guerrillas composed of his friends and relatives to fight against the invaders. He earned the nickname El Empecinado (the Undaunted) for his courage and persistence. He fought in many battles and skirmishes along the Duero river basin and other provinces, harassing and defeating the French troops with his superior knowledge of the terrain and his unconventional tactics. He was promoted to the rank of captain in 1809 and later to brigadier general in 1812. He also collaborated with the regular Spanish army and the British allies led by Wellington. He was a supporter of the liberal Constitution of 1812 and opposed the absolutist monarchy of Ferdinand VII, who abolished the constitution after his restoration in 1814. He joined the liberal uprising of 1820 and defended the constitutional regime against the royalist forces. He was captured by the royalists in 1823 and imprisoned in Pamplona. He was later transferred to Roa de Duero, where he was sentenced to death by hanging on August 20, 1825. He died with dignity and courage, refusing to ask for pardon or mercy. His body was buried in Burgos cemetery. He is regarded as one of the most prominent figures of the Spanish War of Independence and a hero of liberalism. His life inspired many writers, artists, and historians. His name is honored in many streets, squares, monuments, and institutions throughout Spain. His legacy lives on in the Spanish people's struggle for freedom and democracy.

  • 2. Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

    Died: 1948 A.D
    Slogan: Be the change that you wish to see in the world.

    Bapu, also known as Mahatma Gandhi, was one of the most influential figures in the history of India and the world. He was born on 2 October 1869 in Porbandar, a coastal town in Gujarat. His father was the chief minister of Porbandar state and his mother was a devout Hindu. He was married to Kasturba Gandhi at the age of 13 and had four sons with her. Bapu studied law in London and became a barrister in 1891. He then moved to South Africa to work as a lawyer for the Indian community there. He faced racial discrimination and injustice in South Africa and began to protest against them using nonviolent methods. He founded the Natal Indian Congress and led campaigns for civil rights and political representation for Indians. He also developed his concept of Satyagraha, or truth force, which was based on non-cooperation, civil disobedience, and peaceful resistance. Bapu returned to India in 1915 and joined the Indian National Congress, a political party that sought to end British colonial rule in India. He became the leader of the Congress in 1921 and launched several mass movements to challenge the British authority. Some of his famous campaigns were the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920-1922), the Civil Disobedience Movement (1930-1934), and the Quit India Movement (1942-1945). He also led the historic Dandi Salt March in 1930, where he and thousands of his followers defied the British salt tax by making their own salt from seawater. Bapu was not only a political leader but also a social reformer and a spiritual guide. He advocated for the upliftment of the poor, the oppressed, and the untouchables. He promoted swadeshi or self-reliance by encouraging Indians to spin their own cloth from khadi or hand-spun cotton. He also preached ahimsa or non-violence as a way of life and a means of achieving harmony among different religions and communities. Bapu played a crucial role in securing India's independence from British rule in 1947. However, he was deeply saddened by the partition of India and Pakistan along religious lines and the violence that followed. He tried to stop the communal riots and appealed for peace and brotherhood. He was assassinated on 30 January 1948 by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu extremist who blamed him for appeasing Muslims. Bapu's last words were Hey Ram or Oh God. Bapu is widely regarded as the Father of the Nation in India and is revered as a symbol of peace, truth, and non-violence across the world. His birthday, 2 October, is celebrated as Gandhi Jayanti in India and as the International Day of Non-Violence by the United Nations. His life and teachings have inspired many leaders and movements for freedom, justice, and human rights around the globe.

  • 3. Albert Einstein

    Died: 1955 A.D
    Slogan: The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible.

    Albert Einstein was one of the most influential and renowned physicists of the 20th century. He was born in Ulm, Germany, on March 14, 1879, to a Jewish family. He showed an early interest in mathematics and physics, but had difficulty with the rigid schooling system. He moved to Switzerland in 1895 and enrolled in the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich, where he met his first wife, Mileva Marić, a fellow physics student. He graduated in 1900 with a diploma in physics, but had trouble finding an academic position. He worked as a patent clerk in Bern from 1902 to 1909, while pursuing his own research in his spare time. In 1905, he published four groundbreaking papers on the photoelectric effect, Brownian motion, special relativity, and mass-energy equivalence, which earned him the reputation of a scientific genius. He received his PhD from the University of Zurich in 1905, and became a lecturer at the University of Bern in 1908. He moved to Prague in 1911 as a full professor, and then returned to Zurich in 1912 as a professor of theoretical physics. In 1914, he accepted a prestigious position at the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin, where he worked until 1933. He also became a German citizen in 1914, but renounced it in 1933 when Adolf Hitler came to power. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1921 for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect, and his contributions to theoretical physics. He developed the general theory of relativity, a more comprehensive theory of gravity, between 1907 and 1915, which was confirmed by the observation of the bending of light by the Sun during a solar eclipse in 1919. He also made significant contributions to quantum mechanics, cosmology, statistical mechanics, and the unified field theory. He was a pacifist and a humanitarian, who advocated for social justice, civil rights, and nuclear disarmament. He was a supporter of the Zionist movement, and was offered the presidency of Israel in 1952, which he politely declined. He moved to the United States in 1933, where he joined the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. He became an American citizen in 1940, and remained at Princeton until his death. He was involved in the Manhattan Project, which developed the atomic bomb, but later regretted his role and warned of the dangers of nuclear weapons. He died of an abdominal aortic aneurysm on April 18, 1955, at the age of 76, in Princeton Hospital. He left behind a legacy of scientific discoveries and insights that have shaped our understanding of the universe and inspired generations of scientists and thinkers.

  • 4. Nizar Qabbani

    Died: 1998 A.D
    Slogan: What is the difference between me and the sky?it is that when you laugh, I forget about the sky.

    Nizar Qabbani was a Syrian poet, writer, and publisher who is considered to be one of the most influential and popular poets in the Arab world. He was born in Damascus in 1923 to a middle-class merchant family and was the grandnephew of the pioneering Arab playwright Abu Khalil Qabbani. He studied law at the University of Damascus and graduated in 1945. He then joined the Syrian Foreign Ministry and served as a diplomat in several countries, including Egypt, Turkey, Lebanon, Britain, China, and Spain. He resigned from his diplomatic career in 1966 and moved to Beirut, Lebanon, where he founded his own publishing company. He later lived in Geneva, Switzerland, and London, England, where he died in 1998. Qabbani's poetic style combines simplicity and elegance in exploring themes of love, eroticism, feminism, religion, and Arab nationalism. He wrote more than 20 collections of poetry, some of which were set to music and sung by famous Arab singers. He also wrote prose, essays, and letters. He is known for his innovative use of free verse and his expression of the Arab woman's voice and perspective. He was influenced by the tragic death of his sister, who committed suicide rather than marry a man she did not love, and by the political and social upheavals in the Arab world, especially the Arab-Israeli conflict and the Arab defeat in the 1967 war. He was a staunch critic of Arab regimes and leaders, and a supporter of democracy and human rights. He was also a lover of Arabic culture and language, and a defender of Arab identity and dignity. He received many awards and honors for his literary contributions, and is widely regarded as Syria's national poet.

  • 5. Nicolaus Copernicus

    Died: 1543 A.D
    Slogan: Mathematics is written for mathematicians.

    Nicolaus Copernicus was a Renaissance polymath who revolutionized astronomy by proposing that the Sun, not the Earth, was the center of the solar system. He also made contributions to mathematics, economics, medicine, and canon law. He studied at various universities in Poland and Italy, where he learned classical languages, mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy. He became a canon of the Warmian Cathedral chapter and a doctor of canon law. He also served as a diplomat, governor, and administrator for the church and the Polish king. He spent most of his life in Royal Prussia, a semi-autonomous region of the Kingdom of Poland. He wrote his magnum opus, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), in which he presented his heliocentric theory, over several decades. He delayed publishing it until 1543, the year of his death, fearing the criticism and controversy it would provoke. His book was banned by the Catholic Church and condemned by Protestant theologians, but it also inspired many later astronomers and scientists, such as Galileo, Kepler, Descartes, and Newton, who built on his ideas and developed the modern scientific worldview. Copernicus is widely regarded as one of the greatest astronomers and one of the fathers of modern science.

  • 6. France Preseren

    Died: 1849 A.D
    Slogan: Love and wine I do not scorn, nor sweet company of the fair; but freedom's all I wish to share.

    France Prešeren was a 19th-century Romantic Slovene poet, considered the greatest Slovene classical poet and has inspired later Slovene literature. He wrote the first Slovene ballad and the first Slovene epic. After his death, he became the leading name of the Slovene literary canon.

  • 7. Faisal I of Iraq

    Died: 1933 A.D
    Slogan: We are the sons of the Arab nation and its sacred mission.

    Faisal I of Iraq was the King of Iraq from 1921 to 1933 and the King of Syria in 1920. He was the son of Hussein bin Ali, the Sharif of Mecca, and a leader of the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire during World War I. He was proclaimed king of Syria by the Syrian National Congress in 1920, but was expelled by the French shortly after. He then became the king of Iraq under the British mandate, and negotiated the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1930, which granted Iraq independence while maintaining British influence. He was a proponent of pan-Arabism and supported the Hashemite dynasty in Iraq and Jordan. He died of a heart attack in Bern, Switzerland, in 1933, and was succeeded by his son Ghazi. He is considered one of the most influential figures in modern Iraqi history and a symbol of Iraqi nationalism.

  • 8. Lars Kruse

    Died: 1894 A.D
    Slogan: Humble in speech, proud in deed, Christian in action, man in his boat.

    Lars Kruse was born in Skagen, Denmark, on 5 June 1828. He was the son of Johan Hinrich Jes Kruse, a Danish school founder, and his wife Anna Magdalene Christine Becker. He started fishing at an early age and participated in many rescue attempts off the dangerous shores of Skagen. One of his most famous rescues was on 27 December 1862, when he saved the crew of the Swedish brig Daphne, after the lifeboat had capsized and killed eight of its crew. He was appointed as the head of lifesaving in Skagen and received several medals and honors from Denmark and other countries for his bravery and service. He also inspired the painter Michael Ancher, who portrayed him in several works. He married twice and had three children. He drowned on 9 March 1894, while trying to land his boat in a snowstorm. He was buried at Skagen Cemetery with a memorial stone bearing the words of Holger Drachmann: Here lies under the sand of the dune A brave sailor's bones But Skagen's reef and shoals Recognize their duty And sing of Lars Kruse's life A loud heroic poem.

  • 9. Stephen the Great

    Died: 1504 A.D
    Slogan: Faithful to God and my people

    Stephen III, known as Stephen the Great, was the Voivode of Moldavia from 1457 to 1504. He is celebrated for strengthening Moldavia's statehood and maintaining its independence against the ambitions of Hungary, Poland, and the Ottoman Empire. He was victorious in thirty-four of his thirty-six battles and was one of the first to win a decisive victory over the Ottomans at the Battle of Vaslui. His reign is marked by numerous military campaigns and the construction of many churches, earning him the title 'Athleta Christi' by Pope Sixtus IV.

  • 10. Miyamoto Musashi

    Died: 1645 A.D
    Slogan: The way is in training.

    Miyamoto Musashi was a legendary Japanese swordsman, philosopher, strategist, writer, and rōnin. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest swordsmen in history, as well as a master of various arts and crafts. He lived during the late Sengoku and early Edo periods, a time of social and political turmoil in Japan. He spent most of his life wandering across the country, challenging and defeating numerous opponents in duels, honing his skills and developing his own style of swordsmanship. He also participated in several wars and battles, serving different lords and factions. He was never defeated in any of his 61 recorded duels, some of which were against multiple adversaries or renowned masters. Musashi's most famous duel was against Sasaki Kojirō, another prominent swordsman, in 1612. The duel took place on the island of Funajima, near Kokura. Musashi arrived late, and used a wooden sword that he carved from an oar on his way to the island. He struck Kojirō on the head with a single blow, killing him instantly. Musashi then swiftly left the island, without waiting for the formalities. This duel has been dramatized and fictionalized in many works of literature, art, and film. Musashi was also a prolific writer and a keen observer of nature and human behavior. He wrote several works on martial arts, strategy, and philosophy, most notably The Book of Five Rings (Go Rin No Sho), a treatise on the principles and practice of his Niten Ichi-ryū (Two Heavens as One) style of swordsmanship, which employs both the long and the short sword simultaneously. The book is divided into five chapters, each corresponding to one of the five elements: Earth, Water, Fire, Wind, and Void. It contains practical advice on tactics, techniques, and training, as well as metaphysical and ethical insights on the way of the warrior and the nature of reality. The book is considered a classic of military strategy and has influenced various fields and disciplines, such as business, politics, sports, and psychology. Musashi was also a talented artist and a versatile craftsman. He created many paintings, calligraphies, sculptures, and metalworks, often incorporating Zen and Buddhist motifs. He was especially skilled in painting birds and animals, using a minimalist and dynamic style. Some of his artworks are designated as national treasures or important cultural properties in Japan. He also designed and supervised the construction of the Akashi Castle in 1617, and the reconstruction of the Kumamoto Castle in 1637. Musashi spent his last years as a hermit in a cave called Reigandō, near Kumamoto. He continued to practice and refine his art, as well as to meditate and write. He died in 1645, at the age of 60 or 61, of what is believed to be thoracic cancer. He died peacefully, after completing his final work, The Path of Aloneness (Dokkōdō), a collection of 21 precepts on self-discipline and personal conduct. He was buried at the Musashizuka Park, where a memorial and a statue were erected in his honor. He is revered as a national hero and a cultural icon in Japan, and his legacy lives on in many forms of popular culture around the world.

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