List of Famous people born in Lviv Oblast, Ukraine
Iwan Snihurśkyj
Ivan Snihurskyi was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic hierarch in a present-day Ukraine and Poland. He was the Eparchial Bishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Przemyśl, Sambir and Sanok from 1818 to 1847.
Julian Sas-Kuilovsky
Julian Sas-Kuilovsky was the Metropolitan Archbishop of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church from 1899 until his death in 1900.
MamaRika
Anastasia Oleksandrivna Kochetova, known by her stage name MamaRika and previously Erika, is a Ukrainian singer and actress.
Eduard Kurzbauer
Eduard Kurzbauer was an Austrian painter. Some sources give Lemberg as his place of birth.
Alexius Meinong
Alexius Meinong Ritter von Handschuchsheim was an Austrian philosopher, a realist known for his unique ontology. He also made contributions to philosophy of mind and theory of value.
Wojciech Bobowski
Wojciech Bobowski or Ali Ufki was a Polish, later Ottoman musician and dragoman in the Ottoman Empire. He translated the Bible into Ottoman Turkish, composed an Ottoman Psalter, based on the Genevan metrical psalter, and wrote a grammar of the Ottoman Turkish language. His musical works are considered among the most important in 17th-century Ottoman music.
Maurice Schwartz
Maurice Schwartz, born Avram Moishe Schwartz, born in the Volhynia province of Ukraine, was a stage and film actor active in the United States. He founded the Yiddish Art Theatre and its associated school in 1918 in New York City and was its theatrical producer and director. He also worked in Hollywood, mostly as an actor in silent films but also as a film director, producer, and screenwriter.
Jan Stepa
Mieczysław Horszowski
Mieczysław Horszowski was a Polish-American pianist who had one of the longest careers in the history of the performing arts.
Julie von Webenau
Julie von Webenau née Baroni-Cavalcabò,, was a German-Austrian composer. She was a student of Mozart's son Franz Xaver Wolfgang Mozart. In 1839 Robert Schumann dedicated his piece Humoreske Op. 20 to her. Her granddaughter Vilma von Webenau also became a composer.