List of Famous people who died at 92
Henry-Louis de La Grange
Henry-Louis de La Grange was a French musicologist and biographer of Gustav Mahler.
Marion Gräfin Dönhoff
Marion Hedda Ilse Gräfin von Dönhoff was a German journalist and publisher who participated in the resistance against Nazism, along with Helmuth James Graf von Moltke, Peter Yorck von Wartenburg, and Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg. After the war, she became one of Germany's leading journalists and intellectuals, working for over 55 years as an editor and later publisher of the Hamburg-based weekly newspaper Die Zeit.
Inesa Kozlovskaya
Inesa Benediktovna Kozlovskaya was a Soviet Russian physiologist, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation (1996). She was a Doktor nauk of Medical Sciences, Professor, and was fellow researcher at the Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP).She was a laureate of the 2001 State Prize of the Russian Federation.
Ari Rath
Ari Rath was an Austrian-Israeli journalist and writer.
Jun-ichi Nishizawa
Jun-ichi Nishizawa was a Japanese engineer and inventor. He is known for his electronic inventions since the 1950s, including the PIN diode, static induction transistor, static induction thyristor, semiconductor laser, SIT/SITh, and fiber-optic communication. His inventions contributed to the development of internet technology and the information age.
Efraín Jara Idrovo
Efraín Jara Idrovo was an Ecuadorian writer and poet.
Júlio Pomar
Júlio Artur da Silva Pomar, GOL, GCM was a Portuguese painter and visual artist. He was often considered the greatest Portuguese painter of his generation.
Harry Hughes
Harry Roe Hughes was an American politician from the Democratic Party who served as the 57th Governor of Maryland from 1979 to 1987.
Alja Rachmanowa
Alja Rachmanowa is the pen name of Galina Nikolaevna Dyuragina Галина Николаевна Дюрягина, also known as Alexandra von Hoyer, a Russian author and child psychologist. She is known for her diaries which describe her childhood, studies and marriage under the Russian revolution, and life as a refugee in Vienna. As most of her work was first published in German, translated by her husband Arnulf von Hoyer from her Russian manuscripts, she chose a German spelling for her pen name.
Claus Moser, Baron Moser
Claus Adolf Moser, Baron Moser, was a British statistician who made major contributions in both academia and the Civil Service. He prided himself rather on being a non-mathematical statistician, and said that the thing that frightened him most in his life was when Maurice Kendall asked him to teach a course on analysis of variance at the LSE.