Notable people
[edit]
Public service[edit]
Friedrich Ratzel
Siegfried Buback, 1976
Frank-Jurgen Richter, 2010)
Jacob Ettlinger (1798–1871), an Ashkenazi rabbi and author and one of the leaders of Orthodox Judaism.
Anton von Stabel (1806–1880), a Baden lawyer, judge and statesman.
Heinrich Julius Holtzmann (1832–1910), Protestant theologian.
Adolf Hausrath (1837–1909), a German theologian.
Adolf Marschall von Bieberstein (1842–1912), State Secretary of the Foreign Office of the German Empire.
Karl Benz (1844–1929), mechanical engineer and inventor of the first automobile; founded Benz & Co., Daimler-Benz, (now part of Daimler AG). He was born locally in Mühlburg
Friedrich Ratzel (1844–1904), geographer and ethnographer, used the term Lebensraum.
Hedwig Kettler (1851–1937), women's rights activist, writer and education reformer; founded the first German Mädchengymnasium (girls' high school) in Karlsruhe
Berthold von Deimling (1853–1944), general officer of the German Army during WW1 became a pacifist.
Franz Lipp (1855–1937), a German lawyer and politician, participant in Palm Sunday Putsch
Ludwig R. Conradi (1856–1939), leader of European Adventism, caused controversy and schism
Gustav Landauer (1870–1919), theorist of anarchism in Germany
Maximilian Bayer (1872–1917), founded Scouting in Germany
Walter von Reichenau (1884–1942), Generalfeldmarschall in World War II; authored the Severity Order
Otto Wagener (1888–1971), SA-Stabschef, Nazi economic specialist and a Generalmajor in the Wehrmacht
brothers Maximilian Fretter-Pico (1892–1984), & Otto Fretter-Pico (1893–1966), WW2 generals
Reinhold Frank (1896–1945), lawyer who worked for the resistance in Nazi Germany. helped the 20 July plot
Hans Frank (1900–1946), war criminal Obergruppenführer SA, Gauleiter and governor-general of Nazi-occupied Poland; hanged at Nuremberg for his war crimes during World War II
Siegfried Buback (1920–1977), then-Attorney General of West Germany, victim of the Rote Armee Fraktion
Werner Nachmann (1925–1988), entrepreneur and politician
Harry L. Ettlinger (1926–2018), US Army private who assisted the MFAA in the recovery of art looted by the Nazis. He was the last Jewish boy to celebrate his bar mitzvah in Karlsruhe's Kronenstrasse Synagogue
Ingo Wellenreuther (born 1959), former judge; politician, (CDU), member of the Bundestag, 2002 to 2021.
Dirk Jens Nonnenmacher (born 1963), mathematician and bank CEO and chairman
Joachim Nagel (born 1966), economist, President of the Bundesbank since 2022.
Frank-Jürgen Richter (born 1967), entrepreneur and former director of the World Economic Forum.
Ulrich Arnswald (born 1970), German philosopher, economist and political scientist
Diana Stöcker (born 1970), politician (CDU)
Karoline von Günderrode
Wolfgang Rihm, 2007
Susanne Stichler, 2013
The arts[edit]
Johann Peter Hebel (1760–1826), short story writer, dialectal poet and Lutheran theologian; lived locally.
Antoine Ignace Melling (1763–1831), painter, architect and voyager
Friedrich Weinbrenner (1766–1826), neoclassicist architect; his tomb is in the main Protestant church.
Karoline von Günderrode (1780–1806), romantic poet.
August Böckh (1785–1867), classical scholar and antiquarian.
Julius Braun (1825–1869), historian, with an interest in art, culture and religion.
Joseph Viktor von Scheffel (1826–1886), poet and novelist.
Ludwig Eichrodt (1827–1892), poet and dramatist.
Ferdinand Keller (1842–1922), genre and history painter.
Teobert Maler (1842–1917), an explorer who documented the ruins of the Maya civilization.
Hermann Billing (1867–1946), Art Nouveau architect, born and lived in Karlsruhe, where his works now are.
Karl Hofer (1878–1955) an expressionist painter & director of the Berlin Academy of Fine Arts.
Otto Bartning (1883–1959), architect and architectural theorist; planned the Bauhaus with Walter Gropius
Margarete Schweikert (1887–1957), composer, music critic, violinist and pianist
Karl Hubbuch (1891–1979), German painter, printmaker and draftsman
Hermann Goetz (1898–1976), art historian (partic. Indian art history) and museum director
Marie Luise Kaschnitz (1901–1974). short story writer, novelist, essayist and poet.
Peter Sloterdijk (born 1947), philosopher and cultural theorist, rejects the existence of dualisms
Wolfgang Rihm (1952–2024), composer of contemporary classical music
Kolja Lessing (born 1961), violinist, pianist, composer and academic teacher
Sebastian Koch (born 1962), television and film actor.
Andi Deris (born 1964), musician and songwriter, lead singer of the power metal band Helloween
Susanne Stichler (born 1969), journalist and television presenter
Laith Al-Deen (born 1972), pop singer.
Maren Ade (born 1976), film director, screenwriter and producer.
Nora Krug (born 1977), German-American writer, lives in Brooklyn
Fatma Aydemir (born 1986), German author and journalist
Moon Ga-young (born 1996), South Korean actress and model
Heinrich Kley (born 1863), Influential artist
Michaela Kölmel (born 1956), artist and professor
Mara Kölmel (born 1989), art historian
Richard Willstätter
Rahel Straus, 1905
Science[edit]
Marianne Bielschowsky (1904–1977), biochemist and anti–fascist: 3–4 
Johann Gottfried Tulla (1770–1828), stabilized and straightened the southern Rhine; a co-founder of the Karlsruhe University (1825)
Karl Drais (1785–1851), inventor of the two-wheeler principle (dandy horse) basic to bicycles and motorcycles & the key typewriter and earliest stenograph
Friedrich Parrot (1791–1841), a Baltic German naturalist, explorer, and mountaineer; climbed Mount Ararat
Robert Gerwig (1820–1885), civil engineer, designer of the Black Forest Railway
Heinrich Hertz (1857–1894), discovered electromagnetic waves at the University of Karlsruhe in the 1880s.
Hermann Blau (1871–1944), engineer and chemist and inventor of Blau gas
Richard Willstätter (1872–1942), organic chemist, recipient of 1915 Nobel Prize for Chemistry
Eugen Fischer (1874–1967), physician who influenced Nazi racial hygiene
Rahel Straus (1880–1963), a pioneering German-Jewish medical doctor, feminist and writer.
Friedrich Hund (1896–1997), physicist of the pioneering generation of quantum mechanics (see Hund's rules)
S. H. Foulkes (1898–1976), psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, founder of group analysis.
Erik H. Erikson (1902–1994), children's psychoanalyst and theoretical pioneer of identity building. School locally
Fritz Görnnert (1907–1984), German aircraft engineer and civil servant in the Reich Aviation Ministry
Klaus-Robert Müller (born 1964), computer scientist and physicist, a pioneer of machine learning
Sport[edit]
Lina Radke, 1928
Oliver Bierhoff, 2018
Ludwig Durlacher (1844–1924), a Grand Duchy of Baden-born American strongman and gym owner.
Walther Bensemann (1873–1934), one of the founders of the first southern German soccer club Karlsruher FV and later one of the founders of DFB, lived locally
Gottfried Fuchs (1889–1972), was born in Karlsruhe and holds the record of ten goals in one single international soccer match at the 1912 Olympics for the German national team
Julius Hirsch (1892–1945), Olympian footballer, first Jewish member of the national team, two-time Germany team champion, awarded the Iron Cross during World War I, murdered in Auschwitz concentration camp
Lina Radke (1903–1983), track and field athlete gold medallist, women's 800m at the 1928 Summer Olympics.
Gerhard Hennige (born 1940). a retired sprinter, silver medallist at the 1968 Summer Olympics
Detlef Hofmann (born 1963), sprint canoeist, gold medallist at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
Oliver Bierhoff (born 1968), retired footballer and captain of Germany; played 444 games and 70 for Germany
Oliver Kahn (born 1969), goalkeeper of Karlsruher SC & Bayern Munich, played 630 games and 86 for Germany
Mehmet Scholl (born 1970), footballer for Karlsruher SC & Bayern Munich, played 420 games and 36 for Germany
Jens Nowotny (born 1974), footballer, played 344 games and 48 for Germany
Renate Lingor (born 1975), former footballer for the Germany women's national football team, played 149 games
Regina Halmich (born 1976), retired female boxing flyweight world champion
Vincenzo Italiano (born 1977), Italian football manager currently managing Fiorentina, played 410 games
Dennis Aogo (born 1987), football defender, played 340 games and 12 for Germany
Danny Williams (born 1989), footballer played 290 games and 23 for United States
Sead Kolašinac (born 1993), Bosnian footballer, played 60 games for Bosnia
Marco Pašalić (born 2000), footballer
Alexi Pitu (born 2002), Romanian football player
Aristocracy[edit]
Charles III William, Margrave of Baden-Durlach (1679–1738), Margrave of Baden-Durlach, 1709 to 1738.
Frederica of Baden (1781–1826) Queen of Sweden from 1797 to 1809 as the consort of King Gustav IV Adolf.
Princess Alexandrine of Baden (1820–1904), Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha 1844 to 1893
Frederick II, Grand Duke of Baden (1857–1928) the last sovereign Grand Duke of Baden, 1907 to abolition 1918.
Victoria of Baden (1862–1930), queen consort of Sweden by her marriage to King Gustaf V
Berthold, Margrave of Baden (1906–1963), head of the House of Baden, until 1918 & 1929 until his death