See also: History of Bratislava - Historic personalities
Politicians and rulers
- Alexander Dubček (1921-1992) – Prague spring leader
- Mikuláš Dzurinda – third prime minister of modern Slovakia
- Ivan Gašparovič - the third president of Slovakia and previously chairman of the National Council of the Slovak Republic
- Andrej Hlinka (1864-1938) – a national leader before World War II
- Pavol Hrušovský – the current chairman of the National Council of the Slovak Republic
- Gustáv Husák (1913-1991) – president of Czechoslovakia in the 1970s and 1980s
- Koceľ (Gozil, Chozilo, Chezilo) (9th century) – ruler of the Balaton Principality, son of Pribina
- Michal Kováč (1930) – the first president of modern Slovakia
- Vladimír Mečiar (1942) – first prime minister of modern Slovakia
- Mojmír I (Moimay, Moymar) (?-846) – first ruler (Prince) of Great Moravia. He probably lived in the Devín castle and initially ruled over present-day southern Moravia and a small part of western Slovakia. In 833, he crossed the White Carpathians, and attacked Pribina and his Nitrian Principality (see below). Prince Mojmir successfully defeated Pribina, who fled Nitra, and so Mojmir became the first ruler of what was to become known as the Great Moravian Empire.
- Pribina (Priwina, Priuuinna) (? – 861)- the first known ruler (Prince) of what is called the Slovak nation today. He lived in the town of Nitra at the beginning of the 9th century, and ruled over the territory of present-day Slovakia from the Nitra castle, called the Nitrian Principality (Principality of Nitra). Initially, Pribina probably was a pagan, but he probably later became a Christian. He is responsible for building the first known church of Western and Eastern Slavs on Slovak soil in 828. Later, in 839, he founded and became the ruler of the Balaton Principality.
- Rastislav (Rastic, Rasticlao, Rastislaus) (? - 870) – ruler of Great Moravia
- Rudolf Schuster (1934)– the second president of modern Slovakia
- Svätopluk(?-894) – king of Great Moravia, responsible for the empire’s greatest expansion
- Svätopluk II (? - ?906) – ruler of the Nitrian principality
- Jozef Tiso (1887-1947) – president of the WWII Slovak Republic
Saints
- St. Zorard (Svorad, Svoradus) (around 1000) - hermit at Skalka near Trenčín, born in Lesser Poland or in northern Slovakia, adopted the name Andrew (Ondrej, Andrej)
- St. Benedict (original name Stojislav) (? – 1034) – hermit at Skalka near Trenčín, disciple of St. Zorard
- St. Gorazd (9th century) – a disciple of Cyril and Methodius, 881-884 probably bishop
- St. Štefan Pongrác - a Hungarian-Transylvanian Catholic priest tortured to death in Kosice by Gabriel Bethlen’s men in 1619
- St. Melichar Grodecki - a Polish-Moravian Catholic tortured to death in Kosice by Gabriel Bethlen’s men in 1619
- St. Marek Križin - a Croatian Catholic canon tortured to death in Kosice by Gabriel Bethlen’s men in 1619
Writers
Scientists
- Pavol Adami(1739-1814), famous veterinarian, one of the first experts in infectious deseases of animals, Slovak scholar
- Jozef Alauda, philosopher
- Peter Krištof Akai, philosopher
- Vojtech Alexander (1857-1916) revolutionary radiologist
- Dimitrij Andrusov(1897-1976), famous geologist
- Ján Bahýľ (1865-1916) – military engineer, inventor of the motor-driven helicopter (four years before Bréguet and Cornu). Bahyl was granted 7 patents in all, including the invention of the tank pump, air balloons combined with an air turbine, the first petrol engine car in Slovakia (with Anton Marschall) and a lift up to Bratislava castle.
- Štefan Banič (1870-1941) - the inventor of the military parachute and of the first actively used parachute
- Johann Andreas Bäumler (1847-1926) – famous mycologist
- Matej Bel (Matthias Bél, Bél Mátyás) (1684-1749) – polyhistor, teacher, one of the greatest Slovak scholars of the eighteen century
- Anton Bernolák (1762-1813) – author of the first Slovak language standard (in the 1780s), which was based on western Slovak dialects
- Gregor Berzeviczy (Berzevici) (1763-1822) – economist
- Juraj Bohus (Georg Bohus) (1687-1722) – geographer, historian, teacher
- Vojtech Budinský-Krička (1903-1994) – archaeologist
- Cyprián z Červeného Kláštora (Frater Cyprianus, Jaisge) (1724-1775) – a (German born) monk and natural scientist living in Slovakia, set up the oldest herbarium of Slovakia
- Ján Dernschwam (Hans Dernschwam) (1494-1567) – a mining expert, chief manager of the Fugger-Thurzo Company in Banska Bystrica
- Dávid Frölich (Fröhlich) (1595-1648) – mathematician, astronomer, teacher, a follower of Kopernikus
- Samuel Genersich (1768-1844) – botanist, physician
- Christian Genersich (1759-1825) – theologian, mineralogist, topographer
- Martin Hattala (1821-1903) - linguist
- Jozef Karol Hell (Joseph Karl Hell) (1713-1789) – mining engineer active in central Slovakia, has influenced the mining technology considerably, inventor of the water-pillar pump machine (his first machine could pump water up from the depth of 212 meters), which is used till today for oil extraction
- Maximilián Hell (Maximilian Hell, Hell Miksa) (1720-1792) – Jesuit priest and astronomer, designed the observatory of the Trnava University, director of the Imperial Observatory in Vienna
- Ján Henkel (Johannes Henkel/Henckel) (1490-1535) - humanist
- Jozef Ľudovít Holuby (1836-1923) – botanist, gave their current names to many plants
- Ján Hunfalvy (Johann Hunsdorfer, Hunfalvy János) (1820-1888)- geographer
- Štefan Anián Jedlík (Anianus Jedlik, Jedlik Ányos István) (1800-1895) – constructed the electromagnetic rotor – a predecessor of the modern electro-motor – three years before Faraday and the unipolar dynamo six years before W. Siemens
- Zachariáš Teofil Husty (18th century) – one of the first pharmacologists, physician, set up the medicare system in 1786
- Ján Jesenský (Johann Jessenius) (1566-1621) – physician, surgeon, anatomist, rector of the Charles University, conducted the first public dissection (in Prague in 1600), Protestant activist
- Jśn Vlk Kempelen (Johann Wolfgang von Kempelen) (1734-1804) - poly-technician and inventor, built the first fountain and pressure water piping, designed a chess machine, a speaking machine and a special typewriter for the blind
- Andrej Kmeť (1841-1908) – botanist, archaeologist
- Pavel Kray (1735-1804) – field marshal, mathematician, engineer, architect, participant of the Seven Years War and of the Turkish War (1788-1789), defeated the Peasant Uprising in Transylvania in 1786
- Ján Kollár, prominent scientist, archaeologist, writer
- Adam František Kollár (Adam Franz Kollar) (1718-1783) – historian, royal councelor and librarian of the Imperial Library in Vienna
- Pavol Križko (1841-1902) - historian
- Albert Laski (Łaski) (1536-1605) – writer, alchemist, humanist, noble (his family stems originally from Poland)
- Filip Anton Eduard Lenard (Philipp Eduard Anton von Lenard) (1862-1947) – a German Nobel prize holder (1905) for physics born in Bratislava, founder of quantum physics
- Ján Lipský (Johann von Lipsky, Lipszky János) (1766-1826) – cartographer, author of the first lexicon of names of towns and villages in historic Hungary
- Samuel Mikovíni (1700-1750) – cartographer, author of a separate cartographic method, constructor of artificial water reservoirs near mines
- Jozef Mistrík (1921-2001) – linguist
- Jozef Murgaš (1864-1929) – inventor of the wireless telegraph (forerunner of the radio). Murgas' "Rotary-spark-system" allowed for much faster communication, through the use of musical tones. He patented his new invention, which is now listed as the "Wireless Telegraphy Apparatus", as well as more inventions in this field. These patents would go on to form the foundations for the invention of the radio. Also devised a system which greatly improved the Morse code. His other patents include the spinning reel (for fishing), the wave meter, the electric transformer, the magnetic detector, and a engine producing electromagnetic waves.
- Martin Palkovič (Martin Palkovich) (1606-1662) – philosopher, professor in Trnava, Košice and Vienna
- Jozef Maximilián Petzval (Josef Maximilian Petzval, Petzval Józeph Miksa) (1807-1891) – mathematician, optician, constructor of camera zoom lens, he is considered by many to be the founder of modern photography, he is most renowned for his work on optical lenses in the 1840's (invention of the portrait objective), which was instrumental in the construction of modern cameras, he is also remembered for greatly improving the telescope, microscope and designing the opera glass.
- Karol Rayger (Rayger Károly) (1641 – 1707) – introduced the pulmonary test of new-born children used in forensic medicine till today
- Izák Potter (Issac Potter) (1690-1735) – born in England, living and working in Banska Stiavnica, engineer, constructor of the first athmospheric steam engine in Europe (in Nova Bana, in 1723)
- Pavol Jozef Šafárik (Pavel Josef Šafařík) (1795-1861) – poet, professor, polyhistor
- Milan Rastislav Štefánik(1880-1919) - an astronomer, scientist, politician and a general in the French Army, one of the founders of Czechoslovakia, he tragically died in a plane crash near Bratislava (the plane was shot down).
- Ján Sambucus (Johann Sambucus) (1531-1584) – a famous humanist at the royal court in Vienna, a historian of the emperor Maximilian II, publisher of works of the Ancients, creator of the biggest private library in the world at that time
- Ján Andrej Segner (Johann Andrea von Segner, Segner János András) (1704-1777) - physician, physicist, mathematician, designed a reactive water engine - the so-called Segner wheel, inventor of the water turbine principle (which is the basis for the functioning of modern space rockets)
- Ján Selye (Hans Hugo Brugo Selye, Selye János) (1907-1982) – discovered the stress (reaction) and the adaptational syndrome; born in Komárno, working in Canada
- Ján Severíni (1716-1789) – historian, natural scientist, author of the first high school textbooks of biology in historic Hungary (together with Matej Piller)
- Tobias Gottfried Schröer (Christian Oeser) (1791-1850) – writer, teacher in Bratislava
- Leonhard Stöckel (1510-1560) – a famous Protestant teacher, writer
- Aurel Stodola (1859-1942) – engineer and professor, enabled the construction of steam and gas turbines (around 1900), constructor of a movable artificial arm (the Stodola arm) in 1915
- Dionýz Štúr (1827-1893) – famous geologist, botanist, director of the Imperial Geological Institute
- Ľudovít Štúr (1815-1856) - best known for his development and establishment of the modern Slovak language (in 1844 it was declared that the central Slovak dialect would be used as the literary language of Slovakia and in 1846 the new language standard was codified for the first time by Štúr in his "Nauka reči slovenskej" [Theory of the Slovak language])
- Alexander Zahlbruckner (1860-1938)- Austrian lichenologist, born and studying in Slovakia
20th century astronomers
Classical Music
- Alexander Albrecht (1885 - 1958) – composer, conductor, teacher
- Ján Albrecht (1919-1996) – violist, musicologist, teacher
- Helena Bartošová (1905-1981) – soprano
- Ján Levoslav Bella (1843-1936) – composer, author of the first Slovak opera „Kováč Wieland“
- Janko Blaho (1901-1981) – tenor
- Ján Cikker (1911-1989) – composer, teacher
- Margita Česányiová (1911) – soprano
- Ernst von Dohnanyi (Dohnanyi Ernö) (1877-1960) – a Hungarian composer born and growing up in Bratislava
- Peter Dvorský (1951) – tenor (currently most famous one)
- Viliam Figuš-Bystrý (1875-1937) – composer, teacher
- Tibor Frešo (1918-1987) – composer, conductor
- Edita Gruberová - soprano
- Klára Havlíková (1931) – pianist
- Ján Nepomuk Hummel (Johann Nepomuk Hummel) (1778-1837) – composer, pianist; born in Bratislava
- Frico Kafenda (1883-1963) – composer, teacher, pianist, conductor
- Dezider Kardoš (1914-1991) – composer, teacher
- Dalibor Karvay (1985) – violist
- Adalbert Keler (1820-1882) – a German-Slovak composer, conductor
- Leo Kestenberg (1882-1962) – pianist, teacher
- Mária Kišoňová-Hubová (1915) – soprano
- Ferdinand Klinda (1929) – teacher, organist
- Sergej Kopčák (1948) – bass
- Jozef Kresánek (1913-1986) – musicologist, teacher, composer
- Ladislav Kupkovič (1936)- composer, conductor
- Johann Kusser (1626-1695) – composer, organist, born in Bratislava
- Johann Siegmund Kusser (Johann Sigismund Kusser/Cusser/Cousser) (1660-1727) – conductor, composer, born in Bratislava
- Marián Lapšanský (1947) – pianist
- Ondrej Lenárd (1942) – conductor
- Rudolf Macudzinski (1907-1986) – pianist, teacher, composer
- Jozef Malovec (1933) – composer
- Peter Michalica (1945) – violist
- Peter Mikuláš (1954) – bass
- Ján Móry (Johann Mory) (1892-1978) - composer
- Alexander Moyzes (1906-1984) – composer
- Mikuláš Moyzes (1872-1944) - composer
- Andrej Otčenáš (1911-1995) – composer, teacher
- Anton Paulik (1901-1975) – Austrian conductor born in Bratislava
- Lucia Poppová (1939-1993) – soprano
- Ľudovít Rajter (1906)- conductor, teacher, composer
- Franz Schmidt (1874-1939) – composer, born and studying in Bratislava
- Mikuláš Schneider-Trnavský (1881-1958) – composer
- Ladislav Slovák (1919) – conductor
- Karol Smith – famous piano producer from Bratislava in the early 19th century
- Ivan Sokol (1937) – organist, teacher
- Eugen Suchoň (1908-1993) – the most important Slovak composer, teacher
- Peter Toperczer (1944) – pianist, teacher
- Bohdan Warchal (1930) – violist; a Czech living in Slovakia
- Ilja Zeljenka (1932) – composer
Popular Music (in the 20th century)
- Karol Duchoň (1950-1985) – singer (pre-rock period)
- Gejza Dusík (1907-1988) – composer, musician, author of many evergreens (1st half of the 20th century)
- Martin Ďurinda (?) – singer of Tublatanka (a band having reacher its height around 1990)
- Jozef Ráž (?) – current singer of Elán (a band having reached its height in the 1980s)
- Karol Elbert (1911) – composer, musician (1st half of the 20th century)
- Boris Filan (1949) – text-writer for many Slovak bands
- Marika Gombitová (1956) – singer, composer, musician in the 1980s and early 1990s
- Pavol Habera (1962) – singer, composer, musician (reached his height around 1990)
- Pavol Hammel (1948) – singer, composer, musician (reached his height the 1970s and 1980s)
- Gabriel Jonáš (1948) – Jazz musician, multiinstrumentalist, composer
- Jan Kocianová (1946) – singer (pre-rock period)
- Marcela Laiferová (1945) – singer (pre-rock period)
- Ján Lehotský (1947) – composer, musician, singer of Modus (a band having reached its height in the late 1970s)
- Peter Lipa (1943) – the most important current Jazz singer, composer
- Peter Nagy (1959) – pop singer, text-writer (reached his height in the late 1980s and early 1990s)
- Vašo Patejdl (1954) – the most important Slovak pop composer in the 1980s and 1990s, singer, musician
- Kamil Peteraj (1945) – text-writer
- Richard Müller (1961) – the best-known current Slovak pop-rock singer
- Dežo Ursiny (1947 – 1995) – composer, rock singer, musician in the 1960s and 1970s
- Marián Varga (1947) – rock composer, musician in the 1960s and 1970s
- František Krištof Veselý (1903-1977) – singer from the early popular music period
- Pavol Zelenay (1928) – swing composer, musician
- Miroslav Žbirka (1952) – singer, composer from the 1970s to the 1990s
Painters, sculptors, photographers
- Alexander Miloš Bazovský (1899-1968) – painter, graphic artist
- Peter Michael Slavomil Bohúň (1822-1879) – painter, graphic artist
- Martin Benka (1888 - 1971) – painter, illustrator
- Andreas Boruth (1873-1955) – painter
- Ján Brokoff (Johann Brokoff) (1652-1718) - sculptor
- Albín Brunovský (1935 – 1997) – graphic artist, painter, illustrator
- Josef Czauczik (1781-1857) – painter
- Jozef Damko (1872-1955) – sculptor
- Ľudovít Fulla (1902-1980) – painter, graphic artist, illustrator
- Edmund Gwerk (1859-1956) - painter
- Mikuláš Galanda (1895-1938) – painter, graphic artist, illustrator
- Jozef Hanula (1863-1944) - painter
- Vincent Hložník (1919-1997) - painter
- Dežo Hoffmann (1912-1986) - photographer
- Mária Holoubková (1903) – photographer; born in Poland, living in Slovakia
- Ferdinand Katona (Kleinberger) (1864-1932) – painter; born in Slovakia
- Jozef Božetech Klemens (1817-1883) – painter, sculptor, polyhistor
- Ján Anton Kraus (Johann Anton Kraus) (1728-1795)- sculptor
- Robert Kühmayer (1833-1972) – sculptor; born in Bratislava
- Ján Kupecký (Johann Kupecky) (1667-1740) – painter
- Anton Lehmden (1929) – painter; born in Slovakia
- Karol Ľudovít Libay (Karl Ludwig Libay) (1816-1888) - painter
- Cyprián Majerník (1909-1945) – painter
- Ladislav Medňanský (Ladislav Mednyánszky) (1852-1919) – Slovak- Magyar painter (changed his own name from a Magyar one (Laszlo) to a Slovak one (Ladislav))
- Ľudovít Mack (Ludwig Mack) (1876-1963) – sculptor
- Karol Marko (Karl Marko) (1791-1860) - painter
- Ján Mudroch (1909-1968) – painter, teacher
- Master John of Banska Bystrica (15th-16th century) – painter
- Master Martin (of Spis) (15th century) - painter
- Master MS (Majster MS) (15th-16th century) - sculptor
- Master Nicolaus of Levoca (Majster Mikuláš z Levoče) (15th century) – painter
- Master Paul of Levoča (Majster Pavol z Levoče) (1470-1535) – one of the most important European late Gothic carvers / sculptors, his most famous piece is the magnificent Gothic High Altar in the St. James Church in the town of Levoca, which is the highest wooden altar in the world (18.6 meters high).
- Master of the Figures of Banska Stiavnica (Majster banskoštiavnických figúr) (15th century) – Gothic carver
- Master of the Altar of Košice (Majster košického oltára) (15th century) – the most important Slovak painter of the 15th century
- Master of the Altar of Smrečany (Majster smrečianskeho hlavného oltára) (15th century) – painter
- Master of the Legend of St. Anthony (Hans Moler, St. Anthony-Master) (around 1500) - painter
- Master of Lúčky (Master of Honneshau, Majster z Lúčok) (15th century) – painter
- Master of Okoličné (Majster okoličiansky) (15th-16th century) – painter
- Theodor Jozef Mousson (1887-1946) – painter, born in Hungary, working in Slovakia
- Adam Friedrich Oeser (1717-1799) – painter, sculptor, born and working in Bratislava
- Zolo Palugay (1898-1935) - painter
- Alojz Rigele (1879-1940) – sculptor
- Ján Rombauer (Johann Rombauer) (1782-1849) - painter
- Koloman Sokol (1902) – painter
- Karl Sovanka (1883-1961) – painter, sculptor
- Alojz Stróbl (1856-1926) - sculptor
- Fraňo Štefunko (1903-1974) – sculptor
- Viktor Tilgner (1844-1896) – sculptor, born in Bratislava
- Imrich Weiner-Kral (1901-1978) - painter
- Viera Žilinčanová (1932) – painter
- Andy Warhol (Andrej Varhola) (1928-1987) – one of the most famous artists of the 20th century. He introduced Pop-Art to the world, and was the first artist to use a photographic silk-screen technique in his work. He was born in the USA as the son of emigrants from eastern Slovakia (members of the Ruthenian nationality from the village Mikova), his first language was Rusyn language, he took over the religious views of his parents (and of eastern Europe) and he always wanted to return to the country of his parents, which obviously was not possible because of the communist regime in eastern Europe. There is a Warhol museum with some of his works in eastern Slovakia.
Architects
Theater
Filmmakers
Sportsmen (except hockey players)
Hockey players
Others
- Balaša (Balassa) – a prominent Slovak noble family (from the 14th century onwards)
- Margita Bangova (c. 1936–) - beggar
- Bubek (Bebek) - a prominent Slovak-Hungarian noble family around the 15th century
- Alžbeta Bátoriová, the „Bloody Lady of Čachtice“ (Elizabeth Báthory-Nádasdy) (1560-1614) – the most famous mass murderer in Slovak and Hungarian history, a countess of the Čachtice castle (near Trencin), she is said to have tortured and killed a lot of young women in her castle (20 - 2000 victims depending on the source) in order to bathe in their blood
- Ivan Bella (1964) – the first astronaut of Slovakia (in 1998)
- Móric Beňovský (Maurycy Beniowski, Baron Maurice Auguste de Benyowski,many other name versions) (1746-1786) - Slovak globetrotter, explorer, soldier, writer, and the King of Madagascar
- knight Donč of Balaša (?-1344)- an important Slovak noble in the early 14th century
- Druget (Drugeth) – a prominent Slovak noble family from the 14th to the 17th century (originally from Naples)
- Samuel Fischer (1859-1934) – founder of the Fischer-Verlag (in 1886), born in Slovakia
- Forgáč (Forgach) – a prominent Slovak noble family in the Middle ages
- General Ján Golian (1906-1945) – one of the main organizers of the Slovak National Uprising
- Alexander of Hunt-Poznan (around 1200) - a prominent Slovak noble
- Juraj Jánošík (1688- 1713) - the Slovak equivalent of Robin Hood, the topic of many Slovak legends, books and films
- Juliana Korponaiová-Géciová (Julie Korponay), the „White Lady of Levoča“(1680-1714) – a legendary person responsible for the capitulation of the town of Levoča during the Francis II Rákóczi Uprising
- Lords of Jelšava (Ilsvay) – a prominent Slovak noble family around the 14th century
- Lords of Pavlovce (Palóci) – a prominent Slovak noble family in the Middle ages
- Leustach z Jelšavy (14th century) – a Slovak noble and warrior
- Rudolf Laban (1875-1958) – dance theoretician; born in Bratislava
- Ľudovít Lačný (1926) – excellent chess composer, FIDE master
- Theodor von Lerch (1869-1945) – general staff officer; born in Bratislava; instructor of the Japanese army, introduced skiing in Japan, writer
- Daniel Gabriel Lichard (1812-1882) – important publisher and the first Slovak professional journalist
- Dušan Makovický (1866-1921) – physician, writer, translator, personal doctor of Leo Tolstoy
- Ján Literát z Madočian (?-1390) – yeoman, the most famous counterfeiter of documents in historic Hungary
- Štefan Moyses (1797- 1869) – bishop, patriot, the first president of the Matica Slovenská, the first Slovak cultural institution
- Štefan Nosáľ (1927) – folklore dancer
- Omodej of Aba (Amadé, Amadeus) (?-1311) – a prominent noble in eastern Slovakia
- Peter Pázmaň (Péter Pázmány) (1570-1637) – archbishop, leading personality of counter-reformation in historic Hungary
- Peréni (Perényi, Lords of Perín) - a prominent Slovak noble family from the 13th to the 16th century
- Podmanický – a prominent Slovak noble family (from the 15th century onwards)
- Poznan – a prominent Slovak noble family in Great Moravia and later in Hungary (wrongly called Pázmány by Hungarian texts)
- Kozma of Poznan (12th century)– a prominent Slovak noble
- Friedrich Röck (1825-1884) – admiral, oceanographer, discoverer, born in Slovakia
- Pavol Rothan (Paul Rubigall(us) ) (1510-1577) – writer, politician, scientist, enterpreneur
- Rozgoň (Rozgonyi, Lords of Rozhanovce) – a prominent Hungarian-Slovak noble family in the late Middle ages
- Alexander Rudnay (1760-1831) - archbishop
- Abrahám Rúfus (Abrahám Ryšavý / Červený) (around 1300) – warrior, reconquered southwestern Slovakia from Austria in 1291
- Juraj Selepčéni Pohronec (Szelepcsény György) – archbishop
- Chatam Sófer (1762-1839) – a famous (German born) rabbi of Bratislava
- Stibor of Stiborice and Beckov (?-1414) - an ethnic Polish noble, who lived in Slovakia, he gained huge properties in western and central Slovakia after 1388 and was sometimes referred to as a petty Slovak king
- Séči (Széchy, Lords of (Rimavská)Seča) – a prominent Slovak noble family from the 17th century
- Adriana Sklenáriková - famous Slovak model
- Ladislav Škultéty-Gábriš (1738-1832), the ”eternal soldier” – serving as much as 80 years as sergeant of the Austrian army, the longest lasting military service ever recorded, took part in more than 250 battles and survived five Hapsburg emperors
- Thököly(Tököly, Tökölli,Tököli) – a prominent Hungarian-Slovak noble family living in Slovakia in the 16th and 17th century
- Ján Thurzo I (Johannes Thurzo I) (1437-1508) – mining engineer, enterpreneur, together with the Fuggers founder of the biggest copper producing and trading company in the world of the 1st half of the 16th century - probably the first capitalist company in the world
- Ján z Turca(c. 1439 - 1490), author of the Vienna Illuminated Chronicle
See also