In the year 1935

304 Notable deaths

Richard Mollier

German physicist (1863–1935).

Born November 30th, 1863 in Trieste. [ref]

Died March 13th, 1935 at 71 years old in Dresden.

Francisco Cepeda

Spanish cyclist (1906–1935).

Born March 8th, 1906 in Sopuerta.

Died July 14th, 1935 at 29 years old in La Tronche (falling from height, bicycle accident).

Mahmud Muhtar Pasha

Turkish soldier and statesperson (1867–1935).

Born December 1st, 1867 in Istanbul.

Died March 15th, 1935 at 67 years old in Alexandria.

Walter L. Fisher

American politician (1862-1935).

Born July 4th, 1862 in Wheeling.

Died November 9th, 1935 at 73 years old in Winnetka.

Herman Bernstein

American journalist, poet, novelist, playwright, translator, jewish activist, and diplomat (1876–1935).

Born September 21st, 1876 in Suwałki Governorate, Kudirkos Naumiestis.

Died August 31st, 1935 at 58 years old in Sheffield.

Meletios

Archbishop of athens (1918–1920), ecumenical patriarch of constantinople (1921–1923) and greek orthodox patriarch of alexandria (1926–1935).

Born September 21st, 1871 in Metaxochori.

Died July 28th, 1935 at 63 years old in Alexandria.

Sarmiza Bilcescu

Romanian lawyer (1867-1935).

Born April 27th, 1867 in Bucharest.

Died August 26th, 1935 at 68 years old in Bucharest.

Friedrich Schottky

German mathematician (1851-1935).

Born July 24th, 1851 in Wrocław.

Died August 12th, 1935 at 84 years old in Berlin.

Léonce Perret

French movie director, screenwriter and actor (1880-1935).

Born March 14th, 1880 in Niort.

Died August 12th, 1935 at 55 years old in Paris.

Tekkan Yosano

Japanese writer (1873–1935).

Born February 26th, 1873 in Okazaki.

Died March 26th, 1935 at 62 years old in Keio University Hospital (bronchitis).

Deaths 181 to 190 of 304

« 1934
1936 »

I wanted a perfect ending. Now I’ve learned, the hard way, that some poems don’t rhyme, and some stories don’t have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what’s going to happen next. Delicious ambiguity. Gilda Radner