The Province of Trieste is a province in the autonomous Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of Italy. The following is a list of notable Triestini (Triestines) and some outsiders who either wrote about the city or resided there.
Literature
Many famous authors were born and/or lived many years in Trieste. They include:
Italian-language authors
- Enzo Bettiza (1927–2017), writer and journalist, born in Split.
 - Nicoletta Costa (born 1953), children's book writer and illustrator.
 - Claudio Magris (born 1939), writer and essayist.
 - Biagio Marin (1891–1985), poet (born in Grado).
 - Giorgio Pressburger (1937–2017), author and director.
 - Umberto Saba (1883–1957), poet.
 - Francesco Saba Sardi (1922–2012), author, essayist and translator.
 - Scipio Slataper (1888–1915), essayist.
 - Giani Stuparich (1891–1961), writer and essayist.
 - Italo Svevo (1861–1928), novelist.[1]
 - Susanna Tamaro (born 1957), novelist.
 - Fulvio Tomizza (1935–1999), writer, born in Istria (now in Croatia).
 
Slovene-language authors
- Vladimir Bartol (1903–1967), writer.
 - Igo Gruden (1893–1948), poet.
 - Dušan Jelinčič (born 1953), writer, essayist, and mountain climber.
 - Marica Nadlišek Bartol (1867–1940), writer and editor.
 - Boris Pahor (1913–2022), novelist.
 - Alojz Rebula (1924–2018), writer and essayist.
 
German-language authors
- Theodor Däubler (1876–1934), writer and poet.
 - Robert Hamerling (1830–1889), writer.
 - Ricarda Huch (1864–1947), writer.
 - Julius Kugy (1858–1944), writer and essayist (born in Gorizia).
 - Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926), wrote Duino Elegies during his stay in Duino.
 
Authors in other languages
- Isabel Burton (1831–1896), English writer, explorer and adventurer.
 - Richard Francis Burton (1821–1890), British explorer, writer, orientalist scholar, and soldier.
 - James Joyce (1882–1941), Irish novelist, poet, and literary critic.
 - D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930), English novelist, short story writer, poet and essayist.
 - Charles Lever (1806–1872), Irish novelist and raconteur, whose novels, according to Anthony Trollope, were just like his conversation.
 - Jan Morris (1926–2020), Welsh historian, author and travel writer.
 - Stendhal (1783–1842), French author and essayist; served as Consul of France in Trieste.
 - Alexander Wheelock Thayer (1817–1897), American librarian and journalist.
 - Samuel David Luzzatto (1800–1865), Italian Jewish scholar, poet, and a member of the Wissenschaft des Judentums movement.
 
Architects, inventors, gallerists, designers, and visual artists
- Emilio Ambrosini (1850–1912), architect.
 - Milko Bambič (1905–1991), illustrator and cartoonist.
 - Franca Batich (born 1940), Italian painter.
 - Leo Castelli (1907–1999), pioneering gallerist and contemporary art dealer.
 - Avgust Černigoj (1898–1985), painter.
 - Bruno Chersicla (1937–2013), painter and sculptor.
 - Tullio Crali (1910–2000), futurist painter.
 - Marcello Dudovich (1878–1962), illustrator.
 - Leonor Fini (1907–1996), artist.
 - Giuseppe Lorenzo Gatteri (1829–1884), Italian painter.
 - Isidoro Grünhut (1862–1896), artist.
 - Alexander Kircher (1867–1939), painter.
 - Franko Luin (1941–2005), Swedish-Slovene graphic designer.
 - Argio Orell (1884–1942), painter.
 - Boris Podrecca (born 1940), architect.
 - Alessandra Querzola (born 1977), Oscar nominated set designer.
 - Stanislav Rapotec (1913–1997), painter.
 - Ruggero Rovan (1877–1965), sculptor.
 - Felice Schiavoni (1803–1881), artist.
 - Ernesto Nathan Rogers (1909–1969), architect.
 - Eugenio Scomparini (1845–1913), painter.
 - Vito Timmel (1886–1949), painter.
 - Jožef Tominc (1790–1866), Biedermeier painter.
 - Antonio Valdoni (1834–1890), painter.
 - Umberto Veruda (1868–1904), painter.
 - Carlo Wostry (1865–1943), painter.
 
Actors, models, musicians, and performance artists
- Federico Agostini (born 1959), violinist.
 - Alda Balestra (born 1954), fashion and beauty model.
 - Antonio Bibalo (1922–2008), pianist and composer.
 - Piero Cappuccilli (1926–2005), operatic baritone.
 - Antonio D'Antoni (1801–1859), opera composer and conductor.
 - Raffaello de Banfield (1922–2008), British composer.
 - George Dolenz (1908–1963), actor; father of Micky Dolenz of the Monkees.
 - Hans Herbert Fiedler (1907–2004), opera stage actor.
 - Fulvia Franco (1931–1988), Italian actress, model and beauty pageant titleholder.
 - Paul Henreid (1908–1992), actor.
 - Alfred Jaëll (1832–1882), Austrian pianist.
 - Tullio Kezich (1928–2009), actor, playwright, and screenplayer.
 - Anita Kravos (born 1974), Italian actress.
 - Paola Loew (1934–1999), actress.
 - Paolo Longo (born 1967), composer and conductor.
 - Alessandro Lotta (born 1975), former bassist of the bands Rhapsody of Fire and Wingdom.
 - Lelio Luttazzi (1923–2010), musician, composer, showman and presenter.
 - Mauro Maur (born 1958), trumpet player and composer.
 - Alexander Moissi (1879–1935), Austrian stage actor of Albanian descent.
 - Ave Ninchi (1914–1997), actress.
 - Denis Novato (born 1976), Slovene musician.
 - Loredana Nusciak (1942–2006), actress and model.
 - Alberto Randegger (1832–1911), composer.
 - Rodolfo Ranni (born 1937), Italian Argentine film actor.
 - Ivan Rassimov (1938–2003), Italian actor of Serbian descent.
 - Rada Rassimov (born 1941), Italian actress of Serbian descent.
 - Enrico Rava (born 1939), jazz trumpeter.
 - Teddy Reno (born 1926), singer and producer.
 - Carlo Rizzo (1907–1979), stage and film actor.
 - Victor de Sabata (1892–1967), conductor.
 - Laura Solari (1913–1984), film actress.
 - Alex Staropoli (born 1970), keyboardist of the band Rhapsody of Fire.
 - Giorgio Strehler (1921–1997), opera and theater director.
 - Elisa Toffoli (born 1977), singer/songwriter, pianist, and guitarist.
 - Luca Turilli (born 1972), guitarist of the band Rhapsody of Fire.
 
TV personalities
- Lidia Bastianich (born 1947), Italian-American chef and TV cooking show host whose family lived in a refugee camp in Trieste after their escape from Istria, Yugoslavia (now Croatia).
 - Bianca Maria Piccinino (born 1924), journalist RAI, the first woman to read a news broadcasting.
 
Entrepreneurs and business leaders
- Andrea Illy (born 1964), entrepreneur.
 - Ernesto Illy (1925–2008), entrepreneur, founder of coffee empire.
 - Francesco Illy (1892–1956), entrepreneur, inventor of coffee machinery.
 - Lionello Stock (1866–1948), entrepreneur of liqueurs and beverages, founder of Stock S.p.A. (known for the Keglevich brand).
 - Mihajlo Vučetić (1790–1882), grain merchant, shipowner and shareholder in Austrian Lloyd.
 
Fashion designers
- Renato Balestra (1924–2022), fashion designer.
 - Adriano Goldschmied (born 1944), leading international denim designer; founder of Diesel and Replay jeans.
 - Ottavio Missoni (1921–2013), fashion designer.
 - Mila Schön (1916–2008), fashion designer.
 
Journalists and authors
- Sergio Amidei (1904–1981), screenwriter.
 - Giovanna Botteri (born 1957), journalist.
 - Almerigo Grilz (1953–1987), journalist, freelance war reporter and politician. Was killed during an African reportage.
 - Leo Negrelli (born in Trieste, died in Spain in 1974), journalist.
 - Ann Shulgin (1931–2022), author.
 - Demetrio Volcic (1931–2021), journalist and politician.
 
Political figures
- Engelbert Besednjak (1894–1968), Slovene politician.
 - Willer Bordon (1949–2015), Italian politician, Minister of the Environment, 2000-2001.
 - Gualtiero Driussi (1920–1996), Italian politician
 - Josip Ferfolja (1880–1958), Slovenian social-democratic politician and human rights activist.
 - Odilo Globočnik (1904–1945), Nazi war criminal, SS leader.
 - Riccardo Illy (born 1955), Italian politician.
 - Ezio Mizzan (1905–1969), Italian diplomat, the second Italian Ambassador to Thailand (1959–1965) and the ninth Italian Ambassador to Pakistan (1966–1969).
 - Ilda Mizzan (1885–1922), Italian irredentist and painter, wife of Francesco Salata.
 - Stefano Patuanelli (born 1974), Italian politician, minister of economic development.
 - Mitja Ribičič (1919–2013), Slovenian Communist leader, Prime Minister of Yugoslavia (1969–1971).
 - Vittorio Vidali (aka Enea Sormenti, Jacobo Hurwitz Zender, Carlos Contreras) (1900–1983), Communist agent.
 - Josip Wilfan (1878–1955), Slovene jurist, politician, and human rights activist.
 
Religious figures
- Pietro Bonomo (1458–1546), humanist and bishop, supporter of the Protestant Reformation.
 - Moisè Tedeschi (1821–1898), rabbi and Bible commentator.
 
Scholars, scientists, and intellectuals
- Luisa Accati (born 1942), historian and feminist theoretician.
 - Florian Biesik (1849–1926), Silesian linguist, Wymysorys language scholar and poet.
 - Ludwig Boltzmann (1844–1906), Austrian physicist.
 - Paolo Budinich (1916–2013), physicist.
 - Sir Richard Burton (1821–1890), British explorer, geographer, writer, orientalist, cartographer, linguist, poet, fencer, and diplomat; discovered Lake Tanganyika.
 - Lavo Čermelj (1889–1980), Slovene physicist and public intellectual.
 - Giacomo Ciamician (1857–1922), chemist.
 - Laura Dallapiccola (1911–1995), Italian librarian and translator.
 - Gillo Dorfles (1910–2018), philosopher and historian.
 - Arturo Falaschi (1933–2010), MD, geneticist.
 - Alessandro Ferrara (born 1953), philosopher and author.
 - Boris Furlan (1894–1957), Slovenian legal theorist, translator and politician.
 - Anton Füster (1808–1881), Austrian revolutionary activist, author and pedagogue.
 - Guido Goldschmiedt (1850–1915), Austrian chemist.
 - Boris M. Gombač (born 1945), Slovenian historian.
 - Spiridon Gopčević (1855–1928), Serbian astronomer and historian.
 - Margherita Hack (1922–2013), Italian astronomer.
 - Albert O. Hirschman (1915–2012), economist and political scientist; obtained his doctorate from the University of Trieste.
 - Pietro Kandler (1804–1872), historian, archaeologist and jurist.
 - Fiorella Kostoris (born 1945), economist.
 - Doro Levi (1899–1991), archaeologist.
 - Salvatore Pincherle (1853–1936), Italian mathematician.
 - Jože Pirjevec (born 1940), Slovene historian.
 - Alessandro Pizzorno (1924–2019), Political Scientist and Sociologist.
 - Abdus Salam (1926–1996), Pakistani theoretical physicist, Nobel prize laureate.
 - Denis Sciama (1926–1999), British physicist.
 - Joseph Straus (born 1938), property law intellectual.
 - Marta Verginella (born 1960), Slovene historian.
 - Ivan Vidav (1918–2015), Slovene mathematician.
 - Edoardo Weiss (1889-1970), Jewish psychoanalyst.
 - Guido Weiss (1928–2021), mathematician.
 - Sigismund Zois (1747–1819), Slovene mecenate and natural scientist.
 
Sportspeople
- Andrea de Adamich (born 1941), former Formula 1 driver.
 - Nino Benvenuti (born 1938), boxer.
 - Biaggio Chianese (born 1961), boxer.
 - Claudia Coslovich (born 1972), athlete.
 - Fabio Cudicini (born 1935), football player (goalkeeper).
 - Aldo Dorigo (born 1929), football player.
 - Giorgio Ferrini (1939–1976), football player.
 - Ambrogio Fogar (1941–2005), sailor, rally driver, and adventurer.
 - Livio Franceschini (1913–1975), basketball player.
 - Sara Gama (born 1989), Italian footballer, defender and captain of both Serie A club Juventus and the Italian national team.
 - Sandro Gamba (born 1932), basketball coach and player.
 - Matteo Gladig (1880–1915), chess master.
 - Margherita Granbassi (born 1979), foil fencer.
 - Duilio Loi (1929–2008), boxer.
 - Cesare Maldini (1932–2016), former AC Milan captain, Italian football team manager.
 - Giovanni Martinolich (1884–1910), chess master.
 - Mauro Milanese (born 1971), football player.
 - Mario Milano (1935–2016), professional wrestler.
 - Tiberio Mitri (1926–2001), boxer.
 - Uberto De Morpurgo (1896–1961), Austrian-born Italian tennis player.
 - Giorgio Oberweger (1913–1998), athlete.
 - Nicola Princivalli (born 1979), football player.
 - Giovanni Raicevich (1881–1957), professional wrestler.
 - Carlo Rigotti (1906–1983), football player.
 - Nereo Rocco (1912–1979), football player and manager.
 - Licio Rossetti (1925–1993), football player.
 - Cesare Rubini (1923–2011), water polo player.
 - Matteo Scozzarella (born 1988), football player.
 - Giovanni Steffè (1928–2016), rower.
 - Caterina Stenta (born 1987), Windsurf and Standup paddleboarding athlete.
 - Max Tonetto (born 1974), football player.
 - Fabio Tuiach (born 1980), boxer.
 - Ferruccio Valcareggi (1919–2005), football player and coach.
 - Renzo Vecchiato (born 1955), basketball player.
 
Statesmen and aristocracy
- Mathilde Bonaparte (1820–1904), Napoleon's niece, daughter of his brother Jérôme Bonaparte; born in Trieste in 1820.
 - Joseph Fouché (1759–1820), duke of Otranto, spent his last 5 years exiled in Trieste.
 - Maximilian of Habsburg (1832–1867), Emperor of Mexico, Archduke of Austria (Schönbrunn 1832 - Querétaro 1867); built the white castle and park on the riviera; planted plants in the park from his travels around the world.
 - Fiorello La Guardia (1882–1947), 99th Mayor of New York City, son of Trieste-born Irene Coen, of the Luzzatto family. Spent part of his 20s in Trieste with his family, also working for the US Consulate.
 - Princess Marie Adélaïde de France (1732–1800), Madame de France, daughter of King Louis XV of France, died in Trieste in 1800 and was buried at San Giusto Cathedral.
 - Princess Marie Louise Thérèse Victoire de France (1733–1799), Madame de France, daughter of King Louis XV of France, died in Trieste in 1799.
 - Manto Mavrogenous (1796–1848), Greek princess and heroine of the Greek War of Independence.
 - Louis Antoine Debrauz de Saldapenna (1811–1871), Austrian diplomat, journalist and author.
 - Gottfried von Banfield (1890–1986), top Austrian Empire fighter ace in World War I.
 - Stefano Černetić (born 1960), journalist and royal pretender
 
References
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