List of Latvians
This list of prominent Latvians includes:
- people who were born in the historical territory of what is now Latvia, regardless of ethnicity, citizenship, or time period; and
- people of Latvian descent regardless of their place of birth or citizenship.
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- Ainars Bagatskis (born 1967) – basketball player
- Helmuts Balderis (born 1952) – ice hockey player, forward
- Jānis Balodis (1881–1965) – army officer and politician
- Kārlis Balodis (1864–1931) – economist, financist, statistician and demographist
- Krišjānis Barons (1835–1923) – "the father of Latvian folk songs"; compiled and edited the first publication of Latvian folk-song texts, Latvju Dainas (1894–1915)
- Mikhail Baryshnikov (born 1948) – ballet dancer
- Kārlis Baumanis (1835–1905) – composer, author of the national anthem of the Republic of Latvia "Dievs, svētī Latviju!" ("God Bless Latvia!")
- Vizma Belševica (1931–2005) – author, candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature
- Eduards Berklavs (1914–2004) – politician, leader of Latvian national-communists
- Krišjānis Berķis (1884–1942) – general
- Dairis Bertāns (born 1989) – basketball player
- Isaiah Berlin (Jesaja Berlins, 1909–1997) – philosopher
- Eduards Bērziņš (1894–1938) – soldier in the Red Army, later head of Dalstroy, the Kolyma forced-labour camps in North-Eastern Siberia
- Yan Karlovich Berzin (1889–1938) – Soviet military intelligence officer
- Kaspars Bērziņš (born 1985) – basketball player
- Kārlis Bētiņš (1867–1943) – chess player
- Andris Biedriņš (born 1986) – basketball player
- Gunārs Birkerts (1925–2017) – architect
- Miervaldis Birze (1921–2000) – writer
- Ernests Blanks (1894–1972) – publicist, writer, historian, the first to publicly advocate for Latvia's independence
- Rūdolfs Blaumanis (1863–1908) – writer and playwright
- Himans Blūms (1913–2009) – painter
- Jānis Blūms (born 1982) – basketball player
- Ārons Bogoļubovs (born 1938) – Olympic medalist in judoka
- Mairis Briedis (born 1985) – world boxing champion
- Baiba Broka (born 1973) – actress
- Baiba Broka (born 1975) – lawyer and politician
- Ingūna Butāne (born 1986) – fashion model
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- Aivars Kalējs (born 1951) – organist, composer
- Konrāds Kalējs (1913–2001) – alleged war criminal
- Sandra Kalniete (born 1952) – politician, diplomat, former Latvia's EU commissioner
- Bruno Kalniņš (1899–1990) – Saeima member, Red Army General
- Imants Kalniņš (born 1941) – composer, politician
- Oskars Kalpaks (1882–1919) – colonel, first Commander of Latvian National Armed Forces
- Kaspars Kambala (born 1978) – basketball player
- Arturs Krišjānis Kariņš (born 1964) – politician; Prime Minister of Latvia
- Mārtiņš Karsums (born 1986) – ice hockey player
- Reinis Kaudzīte (1839–1920) – writer and journalist[1]
- Renārs Kaupers (born 1974) – musician
- Jēkabs Ketlers (1610–1682) – Duke of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia
- Gustavs Klucis (1895–1938) – painter and graphic designer
- Aleksandrs Koblencs (1916–1993) – chess player
- Ābrams Izāks Kūks (1864–1935) – chief rabbi, Jewish thinker, statesman, diplomat, mediator and scholar
- Aleksandrs Kovaļevskis (1840–1901) – zoologist
- Ilsa Konrads (born 1944) – Olympic swimmer
- John Konrads (1942–2021) – Olympic swimmer
- Gidons Krēmers (born 1947) – violinist and conductor
- Miķelis Krogzemis (1850–1879) – poet, author and translator of German poets
- Juris Kronbergs (born 1946) – poet, writer, free-lance journalist, translator
- Atis Kronvalds (1837–1875) – teacher and journalist; reformed the Latvian language; organized the first Latvian Song and Dance Festival
- Dainis Kūla (born 1959) – athlete (Olympic gold medal in javelin)
- Alberts Kviesis (1881–1944) – President of Latvia
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See also
References
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