The following are some past and present notable residents of Graz. •
Oktavia Aigner-Rollett (1877–1959), prominent physician •
Peter Handke (born 1942),
Nobel Prize in Literature •
Johann Nestroy (1801–1862), playwright and actor •
Ferdinand II (1578–1637), Holy Roman Emperor •
Anne of Austria (1573–1598), Queen of Poland and
Sweden •
Ferdinand III (1608-1657), Holy Roman Emperor •
Béla Babai (1914–1997),
Romani American musician •
Wladimir Köppen (1846-1940), geographer, meteorologist, climatologist and botanist •
Wolfgang Bauer (1941–2005), Austrian writer •
Infanta Blanca of Spain (1868–1949), claimant to the throne of Spain •
Karl Böhm (1894–1981), Austrian conductor •
Ludwig Boltzmann (1844–1906), physicist, university professor •
Richard von Krafft-Ebing (1840–1902), psychiatrist •
Constance of Austria (1588–1631), Queen of
Poland •
Ulrich Ellison, singer-songwriter •
Manfred Erjautz (born 1966), artist •
Archduke John of Austria (1782–1859), field marshal, imperial regent and modernizer •
Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria (1863–1914), heir to the
Austro-Hungarian throne whose assassination was the source of
World War I. •
Olaf Fjord (1897–1945), actor, film director and producer •
Princess Gina of Liechtenstein (1921–1989),
Princess of Liechtenstein from 1943 to 1989 •
Peter Rosegger (1843–1918), writer and poet •
Carl Julius Haidvogel (1891–1974), writer •
Gregor Hammerl (1942–2023), President of the
Federal Council •
Nicolaus Harnoncourt (1929–2016), raised in Graz, conductor of classical works on period instruments •
Christian Herdtrich (1625–1684), Austrian Jesuit missionary to the
Qing Empire. •
Victor Franz Hess (1883–1964),
Nobel Prize-winning physicist •
Hans Hollmann (1933–2022), theatre director and actor •
Johannes Kepler (1571–1630), German astronomer, astrologer, natural philosopher and mathematics teacher at a local seminary. •
Helmut Kollars (born 1968), writer and illustrator •
Otto Loewi (1873–1961),
Nobel Prize-winning physiologist •
Archduchess Gregoria Maximiliana of Austria (1581–1597) •
Hans Michael Maitzen (born 1943), astronomer •
Marisa Mell (1939–1992), actress born and raised in Graz •
Franziska Meissner-Diemer (1841–1919), journalist and writer •
August Meyszner (1886–1947), SS officer executed for war crimes •
August Musger (1868–1929), invented slow motion cinema means •
Olga Neuwirth (born 1968), contemporary Austrian composer •
Lili Novy (1885–1958),
Slovenian lyric poet •
Marie Pachler (1794–1855), Austrian pianist •
Johann Puch (1862–1914), Slovene inventor and mechanic •
Adam Rainer (1899–1950), only documented person to have been both one of the shortest and one of tallest people. •
Anton Rintelen (1876–1946), cabinet minister and
Nazi conspirator •
Eduard Roschmann (1908–1977), Nazi SS Riga ghetto commandant •
Josef Schleich (1902–1949), farmer, helped liberate Jews in WWII •
Hermann Schloffer (1868–1937), surgeon •
Andreas Schnider (born 1959), theologian, academic teacher, author, publisher, consultant and politician, (ÖVP) •
Erwin Schrödinger (1887–1961),
Nobel Prize–winning physicist in
quantum theory, Chancellor of Graz University in 1936 •
Werner Schwab (1958–1994), playwright and visual artist •
Arnold Schwarzenegger (born 1947), former
bodybuilding champion, actor and former governor of
California; born and raised in farming village
Thal, from Graz. •
Brit Stakston (born 1961), writer, public speaker and media strategist •
Friedrich St. Florian (born 1932), Austrian-American architect •
Robert Stolz (1880–1975), Austrian composer and conductor •
Celestina Ekel (1867–1935), Slovenian music teacher, musician, organist and composer who worked and died in Graz •
Nikola Tesla (1856–1943), Serbian-American inventor, who studied electrical engineering in Graz •
Hertha Töpper (1924–2020), opera and concert
contralto •
Eliza Frančiška Grizold (1847–1913), Slovenian teacher, poet, and composer •
Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg (1568–1634), Austrian statesman and early "prime minister" during the
Thirty Years' War. •
Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach (1656–1723), architect of the
Baroque period. •
Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall (1774–1856), Austrian orientalist, historian and diplomat. •
Ernestine von Kirchsberg (1857–1924), landscape painter •
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (1836–1895), writer and journalist, studied in Graz; the term masochism is derived from his name •
Roman von Ungern-Sternberg (1886–1921), prominent figure in the Russian
White movement and dictator of
Mongolia in 1921 •
Franz Voves (born 1953), Austrian politician (SPÖ), State governor of
Styria for 10 years, ice hockey player •
Franz Wilczek (1869–1916), violinist
Sport •
Bernd Brückler (born 1981), professional ice hockey player •
Hans Dobida (1929–2025), Austrian former ice hockey player •
Elisabeth Eberl (born 1988), Olympic
javelin thrower •
Michael Gspurning (born 1981), goalkeeper for FC Schalke 04 •
Manfred Hoeberl (born 1964), powerlifter and strongman •
Helmut Marko (born 1943), former racing driver •
Emanuel Pogatetz (born 1983), footballer, played 446 games •
Jochen Rindt (1942–1970), first Austrian
Formula One champion raised in Graz by his grandmother •
Gert Schnider (born 1979),
Abalone champion •
Markus Schopp (born 1974), former footballer, played 364 games •
Thomas Tebbich (born 1975), decathlete and pole vaulter •
Thomas Vanek (born 1984),
Ice hockey player, raised in Graz •
Otto Wanz (1943–2017), former
professional wrestler who held
AWA World Heavyweight Championship ==See also==