List of Famous people named Stefan
Stefan Denifl
Stefan Denifl is a professional cyclist, who last rode for UCI Professional Continental team Aqua Blue Sport.
Stefan Kutschke
Stefan Kutschke is a German footballer who plays as a striker for FC Ingolstadt.
Stefan Glowacz
Stefan Glowacz is a professional rock climber and adventurer. He started climbing at the age of 12 and advanced to one of the world's best sports climbers only few years later. Since 1993 he has been devoted to natural challenges such as expeditions to remote places in Canada, Patagonia and Antarctica.
Stefan Brennsteiner
Stefan Brennsteiner is an Austrian World Cup alpine ski racer, and specializes in giant slalom. He competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics and two World Championships.
Stefan Temmingh
Stefan Temmingh is a South African recorder player who now lives in Munich.
Stefan Thesker
Stefan Thesker is a German professional footballer who plays as a centre back for Holstein Kiel.
Stefan Liv
Stefan Daniel Patryk Liv was a Polish-born Swedish professional ice hockey goaltender. Liv played professionally in Sweden, North America and Russia. Liv played nine seasons for HV71 in the top-tier league in Sweden. He played one season in Detroit Red Wings organization without managing to make his debut in the NHL. He then returned to Europe and HV71. Upon his return, he played three seasons in Sweden, then moved to Russia in 2010.
Stefan Oster
Stefan Oster is a German bishop of the Roman Catholic Church who serves as the 85th Bishop of Passau.
Stefan Banach
Stefan Banach was a Polish mathematician who is generally considered one of the world's most important and influential 20th-century mathematicians. He was the founder of modern functional analysis, and an original member of the Lwów School of Mathematics. His major work was the 1932 book, Théorie des opérations linéaires, the first monograph on the general theory of functional analysis.
Štefan Lux
Štefan Lux was a Slovak Jewish journalist, and a Czechoslovak citizen, who committed suicide in the general assembly of the League of Nations during its session on July 3, 1936. He shot himself in order to alert the world leaders of the rising dangers of German antisemitism, expansionism, and militarism.