49.0169° N, 12.0836° E
REGENSBURG
Most Famous People Born in Regensburg, Germany
- Notable people
- 618
- Peak decade
- 1960s
- Median birth year
- 1924
- Most distinctive
- Prince 20.9×
A Danube river-crossing that spent centuries hosting the Holy Roman Diet and then, when the Diet moved on, became the private seat of the Thurn und Taxis — which is why the Prince bench runs at better than twenty times the global rate despite a town population nowhere near imperial scale. The thick Academic and Composer presences behind it still carry a court-patronage flavor that more industrial German cities shed a century ago, and the Sculptor and Author benches trace the same ecclesiastical-to-scholarly arc down through the Regensburg academy.
One face per century — the most globally famous figure born in Regensburg during each.
Notable Births by Decade
Click a decade to filter the list below. Peak: 1960s with 58 notable births.
What Regensburg Is Known For
Click any row to filter the list of people below.
Politician is Regensburg's biggest profession — 11% of all notables (68).
Regensburg over-indexes on prince — 20.9× the global rate.
Regensburg under-produces football — only 0.3× the global rate.
Profession Mix Over Time
Each band shows a profession family's share of Regensburg's notable births by decade. Hover the chart for the breakdown at any decade.
- Writing
- Science
- Politics & Law
- Art & Design
- Music
- Sports
- Other
- Field: Prince Clear ×
Albert, 8th Prince of Thurn and Taxis
1867 - 1952
Maximilian Karl, 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis
1802 - 1871
Franz Joseph, 9th Prince of Thurn and Taxis
1893 - 1971
Karl Alexander, 5th Prince of Thurn and Taxis
1770 - 1827
Maximilian Anton, Hereditary Prince of Thurn and Taxis
1831 - 1867
Princess Maria Theresia of Thurn and Taxis (b. 1980)
Born 1980
Prince Ludwig Philipp of Thurn and Taxis
1901 - 1932
Nikolaus III, Prince Esterházy
1817 - 1894
Prince Raphael Rainer of Thurn and Taxis
1906 - 1993
Prince Gabriel of Thurn and Taxis
1922 - 1942
Prince Gustav of Thurn and Taxis (1848–1914)
1848 - 1914