•
Johannes Gutenberg was named on 17 January 1465 a courtly nobleman by the Archbishop and Elector
Adolph II of Nassau, who at the time resided in the Electoral castle at Eltville. Presumably under Gutenberg's guidance, the Brothers Bechtermünz founded a small printing shop. This published in 1467 the
Vocabularius ex quo, a
Latin dictionary. In this workshop,
Thomas Aquinas's
Summa de articulis fidei (1472) was also reprinted. This made Eltville one of the cradle towns of book printing. In the castle tower, a memorial recalls Gutenberg. Gutenberg's brother, Friele Gensfleisch, lived in Eltville from 1434 until his death in 1447. The Gensfleisch-Haus still stands today right next to the castle. • Gebeno von Eberbach, clergyman •
Julius Koch (28 February 1912,
Frankfurt2 July 1991, Eltville), German drink researcher, oenologist and food chemist. •
Georg Herber (1763–1833 in Eltville), for many years President of the second chamber of
The Estates of
Duchy of Nassau Sons and daughters of the town • Michael Apitz (born 1965), graphic and comic strip artist •
Franz Josef Jung (born 1949), German politician (CDU) and Federal Minister of Defence in the first
Merkel cabinet • Augustinus Kilian (1856–1930 in
Limburg an der Lahn) was from 1913 until his death in 1930 Roman Catholic Bishop of the Bishopric of Limburg an der Lahn. • Heinrich Köppler (1925–1980), German politician (CDU), candidate at the Landtag election in
North Rhine-Westphalia, 1980. •
Wilhelm Kreis (1873–1955), architect • Eduard Kremer (1881–1948), politician • Ernst Freiherr Langwerth von Simmern (1865–1942), German diplomat, ambassador in Madrid and Imperial commissar for the occupied Rhenish areas in Koblenz • Ferdinand Wilhelm Emil Roth (1853–1924), historical researcher •
Andreas Scholl (born 1967),
countertenor •
Bernhard Schott (1748–1809), music publisher, founded the music publishing house
Schott Music in
Mainz in 1770 •
Jennifer Braun (born 1991), singer, lives in Eltville ==Photo gallery==