List of Famous people born on September 6th

Un-named Scott

First Name Un-named
Born on September 6, 1955
Died on September 6, 1955
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Klaus Peter Söllner

First Name Klaus
Last Name Söllner
Born on September 6, 1956 (age 69)
Born in Germany, Bavaria
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Christopher Douglas

First Name Christopher
Last Name Douglas
Born on September 6, 1962 (age 63)
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Francesco Lambiasi

First Name Francesco
Last Name Lambiasi
Born on September 6, 1947 (age 78)
Born in Italy, Lazio
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Thomas Peter Dundas McEwen

First Name Thomas
Last Name McEwen
Born on September 6, 1989 (age 36)
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Gregory Francis Pantalemon Yovanovitch

First Name Gregory
Last Name Yovanovitch
Born on September 6, 1947 (age 78)
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James Vincent Chataway

First Name James
Last Name Chataway
Born on September 6, 1852
Died on April 12, 1901 (aged 48)

James Vincent Chataway was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.

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Martha Susan Daisy Whitworth

First Name Martha
Born on September 6, 2015 (age 10)
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Rocco Talucci

First Name Rocco
Last Name Talucci
Born on September 6, 1936 (age 89)
Born in Italy, Basilicata
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Francisco de Holanda

First Name Francisco
Last Name Holanda
Born on September 6, 1517
Died on June 19, 1584 (aged 66)
Born in Portugal, Lisboa

Francisco de Holanda was a Portuguese court painter and sculptor for King João III of Portugal, and later for Sebastian of Portugal. He wrote what is regarded as the first treatise on portrait painting in Europe, Do tirar polo natural (1549). He is considered to be one of the most important figures of the Portuguese Renaissance, also being an essayist, architect and historian. He represented the intelligible reality of the Holy Trinity through a "hypothetical" syntax of geometrical figures. He insisted on the contrast between the ideal plane, the incorporeal form and the "imperfect copy in the terrestrial zone". His visual language demonstrated a mixture of Neoplatonism, Christian Kabbalah and finally Lullism. In education, Francisco de Holanda emphasized mathematics and geometry, subsequently anticipating Clavius's reforms of the late 16th century. Sylvie Deswarte said that "Francisco de Holanda gives a privileged place to cosmography and astrology in the education of the painter. On par with geometry, mathematics and perspective, he recommended them [...] in order to reach the heavens in the hope of one day arriving to the Empyrean and realizing celestial works."

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