Grinberg
Grinberg, Grynberg |
Family name |
Meaning |
green mountain |
Region of origin |
Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine, Poland, Israel |
Language(s) of origin |
Yiddish |
Related names |
Grynberg (Polish form), Grīnbergs, Grīnberga (Latvian form), Grinbergas (Lithuanian form)
Greenberg, Grünberg, Grimberg; Grünberger |
Footnotes: [1] |
Grinberg (Yiddish: גרינבערג, Russian: Гринберг, Ukrainian: Грінберг) is the surname of:
- Adam Grinberg (born 1939, Kraków), a cinematographer
- Alexandre Danielevich Grinberg (1885–1979), a Russian-French photographer[1]
- Anouk Grinberg (born 1963, Uccle), a Begian actor[2]
- Lāsma Grīnberga
- Leon Grinberg (1921, Buenos-Aires - 2007), an Argentine psychoanalist[4]
- Grīnberga Māra
- Maria (Izrailevna) Grinberg (1908–1978), Soviet pianist
- Roman Grinberg (1962, Bălţi), a Moldovan-Austrian musician[5]
- Sara Topelson de Grinberg (born 1945), Polish-born Mexican architect
- Simon Moise Grinberg (1895, Milişăuţi, Suceava - 1971, București)[6]
- Teodors Grīnbergs (1870–1962)[7]
- Uri Zvi Grinberg (1896, in Galicia - 1981), Israeli poet, journalist and political activist
- Viesturs Grīnbergs[8]
- Vladimir Davidovich Medem, né Grinberg (Russian: Владимир Давидович Медем; 1879, Liepāja - 1923, New York City)
Grynberg
- Henryk Grynberg (born 1936, Warsaw), a Jewish Polish writer and actor
- Jack J. Grynberg (born 1932), a Denver-based oil- and gas developer
- Marian Grynberg (born 1940), Jewish Polish physicist[9]
- Michał Grynberg (1909–2000), Jewish Polish histiorian[10]
- Weronika Grynberg (1916–2007), Jewish Polish actress[11]
See also
References