Famous people ending with haus - FMSPPL.com
Lothar Matthäus
Lothar Herbert Matthäus is a German football manager and former player. After captaining West Germany to victory in the 1990 FIFA World Cup where he lifted the World Cup trophy, he was named European Footballer of the Year. In 1991, he was named the first ever FIFA World Player of the Year, and remains the only German to have received the award.
Valerie Niehaus
Valerie Niehaus is a German actress.
Ralph Brinkhaus
Ralph Brinkhaus is a German CDU politician. Since 2018 he has been the parliamentary group leader of the ruling CDU/CSU group in the German Bundestag.
Monica Lierhaus
Monica Christiane Lierhaus is a German sports journalist.
Bibiana Steinhaus
Bibiana Steinhaus is a German football referee. She referees for MTV Engelbostel-Schulenburg of the Lower Saxony Football Association, but since October 2020 only as video assistant referee. She was a FIFA referee, and was ranked as a UEFA women's elite category referee.
Nele Neuhaus
Cornelia Neuhaus is a German writer. She is best known for her crime thrillers set in the Taunus near Frankfurt.
William Nordhaus
William Dawbney Nordhaus is an American economist, a Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University, best known for his work in economic modeling and climate change, and one of the 2 recipients of the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Nordhaus received the prize "for integrating climate change into long-run macroeconomic analysis".
Michael Ballhaus
Michael Ballhaus, A.S.C. was a German cinematographer who had collaborated with directors such as Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Martin Scorsese, Mike Nichols and James L. Brooks. He was a member of both the Academy of Arts, Berlin and the American Society of Cinematographers.
Sarah Valentina Winkhaus
Sarah Valentina Winkhaus is a German television presenter, who presents in German, Italian and English.
Florian Neuhaus
Florian Christian Neuhaus is a German footballer who plays as a midfielder for Bundesliga club Borussia Mönchengladbach.
Carl Niehaus
Carl Niehaus is the former spokesman for South African ruling party the African National Congress, former spokesman for Nelson Mandela, and was a political prisoner after being convicted of treason against South Africa. He stepped down as ANC spokesman in February 2009 after admitting to maladministration of his own finances, extensive borrowing from political contacts and fraud, notably feigning the death of his mother, Magrietha Niehaus‚ in order to get out of 4.3 million rand debt owed to a landlord.
Katharina Althaus
Katharina Althaus is a German ski jumper who has competed at World Cup level since the 2011/12 season. She finished runner-up in the 2017/18 season overall standings, and won an individual silver medal at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
James Glickenhaus
James Glickenhaus is an American film producer, financier, director and automotive entrepreneur.
Uwe Neuhaus
Uwe Neuhaus is a German retired football player and manager who currently manages Arminia Bielefeld.
Jill Ruckelshaus
Jill Elizabeth Ruckelshaus is a former special White House assistant and head of the White House Office of Women's Programs and a feminist activist. She also served as a commissioner for the United States Commission on Civil Rights in the early 1980s. Currently, she is a director for the Costco Wholesale Corporation.
William Ruckelshaus
William Doyle Ruckelshaus was an American attorney and government official.
Brad Lohaus
Bradley Allen Lohaus is an American retired professional basketball player who was selected by the Boston Celtics in the second round of the 1987 NBA Draft. A 6'11" center-power forward from the University of Iowa, Lohaus played in eleven NBA seasons for eight different teams: the Celtics, Sacramento Kings, Minnesota Timberwolves, Milwaukee Bucks, Miami Heat, San Antonio Spurs, New York Knicks and Toronto Raptors. He was featured in the 1993 arcade edition of the popular video game NBA Jam.
Drew Rosenhaus
Drew Jordan Rosenhaus is an American sports agent who represents professional football players. He owns the Miami-based sports agency Rosenhaus Sports, and has negotiated over $7 billion of NFL contracts.
Cioma Schönhaus
Samson "Cioma" Schönhaus was a graphic artist and writer who lived illegally as a Jew in hiding in Berlin during World War II. He was responsible for forging hundreds of identity documents to help other Jews survive during this time. He worked closely with members of the Confessing Church, including Franz Kaufmann and Helene Jacobs. He ultimately escaped from Berlin to Switzerland by bicycle in 1943, where he remained until his death. For the escape, he used a military identity card that he had forged himself.
Anton Haus
Anton Johann Haus was an Austrian naval officer. Despite his German surname, he was born to a Slovenian-speaking family in Tolmein. Haus was fleet commander of the Austro-Hungarian Navy in World War I and was the Navy's Grand Admiral from 1916 until his death.
Dieter Althaus
Dieter Althaus is a German politician of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU). He served as the 3rd Minister President of Thuringia from 2003 to 2009. In 2003/04 he was the 58th President of the Bundesrat.
Anja Niedringhaus
Anja Niedringhaus was a German photojournalist who worked for the Associated Press (AP). She was the only woman on a team of 11 AP photographers that won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography for coverage of the Iraq War. That same year she was awarded the International Women's Media Foundation's Courage in Journalism prize.
Rolf Wenkhaus
Rolf Wenkhaus was a German child actor who is best remembered for his role of Emil Tischbein in the 1931 film Emil and the Detectives.