18th century •
Lorenzo Campins y Ballester (1726–1785) Spanish born scientist, founder of the studies of medicine. • Fr.
Baltasar de los Reyes Marrero (1752–1809) (also alumnus) began the teaching of
modern science and philosophy based on the theories of
Newton,
Kepler,
Copernicus,
Stahl,
Lavoisier,
Locke,
Condillac,
Leibniz and
Wolff. In 1789 he was convicted by the Crown as an
infidel for teaching doctrines forbidden by the King.
19th century •
Juan Manuel Cagigal (1803–1856) mathematician. •
Alejandro Chataing (1873–1928) (also alumnus) mathematician, architect. •
Agustin Codazzi (1793–1859) Italian military, scientist and geographer •
Domenico Milano (1810–1880) Italian agronomist engineer, started in 1843 the Faculty of Agronomy ("Escuela Normal de Agricultura"). •
Fermín Toro (1806–1865) politician and linguist. • Alejandro Ibarra (1813–1880) scientist. •
José Gregorio Hernández (1864–1919) (also alumnus) physician, began the teaching of Microbiology in Venezuela. •
Adolf Ernst (1832–1899) Prussian born scientist, started the teaching of
natural history based on
Charles Darwin and
Lamarck. •
Luis Razetti (1862–1932) (also alumnus) physician, began the teaching of modern surgery in Venezuela and wrote an influential code of ethics for the practice of medicine.
20th century Humanities •
Abraham Abreu (born 1939) pianist and harpsichordist. •
Mario Briceño Iragorry (1897–1958) writer. •
José Balza (born 1939) novelist, critic. •
Rafael Cadenas (born 1930) poet. •
Manuel Caballero (1931–2010) (also alumnus) historian, journalist. •
Alejo Carpentier (1904–1980) writer, musicologist, journalist. •
Isaac Chocrón (1930–2011) economist and theater writer. Director of the School of Arts. •
Nicolas Curiel (born 1931) writer and director of theater. •
Gustavo Herrera (1890–1953) lawyer and diplomat. •
Gaston Diehl (1912–1999) French art historian, recipient of the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film in 1950. •
Juan David García Bacca (1901–1992) Spanish born philosopher; translator of the complete works of Plato. •
Gertrude Goldschmidt (1912–1994) German born artist. •
Joaquín Gabaldón Márquez (1906–1984) lawyer and diplomat. •
Ezra Heymann (born 1928) Romanian born philosopher. •
Martha Hildebrandt (born 1925) Peruvian linguist. •
Chibly Abouhamad Hobaica (1929–2005) lawyer, professor and writer •
Eugenio Imaz (1900–1951) Spanish born philosopher. •
Pedro Itriago Chacín (1875–1936), lawyer, historian. •
Margarita López Maya, historian, humanist. •
Ernesto Mayz Vallenilla (1925–2015) (also alumnus) philosopher, rector of the
Universidad Simón Bolívar. •
Juan Nuño (1927–1995) (also alumnus) Spanish born philosopher. •
Luis Enrique Oberto (1928–2022) (also alumnus) Venezuelan banker and politician. •
Manuel García Pelayo (1909–1991) Spanish born political Scientist, elected president of the Constitutional Tribunal of Spain in 1980. •
Manuel Pérez Vila (1922–1991) Spanish born historian. •
Pedro Antonio Ríos Reyna (1905–1971) classical musician. •
Federico Riu (1925–1985) (also alumnus) Spanish born philosopher. •
Angel Rosenblat (1902–1984) Polish born philologist. •
Levy Rossell (born 1945) writer and director of theater. •
Mariano Picón Salas (1901–1965) writer, cultural critic. •
José Antonio Ramos Sucre (1890–1930) (also alumnus) poet, writer. •
Oscar Sambrano Urdaneta (1929–2011) writer, essayist and literary critic. •
Guillermo Sucre (1933–2021) (also alumnus) literary critic. •
Arturo Uslar Pietri (1906–2001) (also alumnus) writer and historian, winner of the
Prince of Asturias Award (1990) and
Rómulo Gallegos Prize for Best Novel (1991). •
Carlos Raúl Villanueva (1900–1975) architect, one of the great
Modernists. •
Guillermo Tell Villegas Pulido (also alumnus), politician, writer and historian. •
Pedro León Zapata (1929–2015) artist and humorist.
Sciences •
Arístides Bastidas (1924–1992) journalist and scientist winner of the
Kalinga Prize, was one of the pioneers of what is termed as "science journalism" in Venezuela. •
German Carnevali Fernandez-Concha (born 1955) botanist. •
Luis Eduardo Chataing (1906–1971) (also alumnus) mathematician. •
Julian Chela-Flores (born 1942) astrobiologist and physicist. •
Paul Dedecker (1927–2007) Belgian mathematician. •
Jacinto Convit (1913–2014) (also alumnus) nominated for the
Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1988 for his research on the cure of
Leprosy. •
Francisco José Duarte (1883–1972) mathematician. •
Humberto Fernández Morán (1924–1999) contributed to the development of the
electron microscope and was the first researcher to introduce the concept of cryoultramicrotomy. •
Celso Fortoul Padrón (also alumnus) civil engineer and calculist of pre-tensate Infrastructures. •
Arnoldo Gabaldon (1909–1990) physician, started the fight over tropical diseases as
Malaria. •
Luis Alfredo Herrera Cometta, relativistic physicist. Professor Emeritus. •
Andras Kalnay, physicist. •
Werner Jaffé (1914–2009) founder of the National Institute of Nutrition. Studied under Nobel prize winner
Paul Karrer. •
Tobías Lasser (1911–2006) (also alumnus) botanist, founder of the Botanical Garden of Caracas, the modern School of Sciences and the Department of Biology. •
Fuad Lechín (born 1928) physician, nominated for the
Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2001 for the development of new treatments of
bronchial asthma and
myasthenia. • Antonio Machado-Allison (b. 1945) ichthyologist. •
Francisco Mago Leccia (1931–2004) ichthyologist. •
Rafael Martínez Escarbassiere (born 1929) biologist •
Ettore Mazzarri (1919–2009) chemist specialist of Maracay Agronomy faculty •
Angel Palacio Gros (1903–1965) Spanish mathematician. •
August Pi i Sunyer (1879–1961) Physiologist Spanish born. Winner of the
Kalinga Prize 1956. •
Carles Pi i Sunyer (1888–1971) Spanish born industrial engineer and literate •
Janis Rácenis (1915–1980) Latvia born entomologist. •
Ivón Mercedes Ramírez Morillo (born 1965) botanist. •
Gustavo Adolfo Romero-Gonzales (born 1955) botanist. •
Eckbert Schulz-Schomburgk (born 1921) chemist. •
Gustavo Rivas Mijares, sanitarist engineer. •
Marcel Roche (1920–2003) physician, winner of the
Kalinga Prize, governor of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (1958–1960) and founding member
Third World Academy of Sciences. •
José Royo Gómez (1895–1961) Spanish geologist. •
Carlos Toro Manrique (1868–1937) (also alumnus) engineer, mathematician. •
Elías Toro (1871–1918) physician, anthropologist. •
Andre Zavrosky (1904–1995) Russian mathematician. ==Rectors==