Biólogo

Adam Lonicer

1528 - 1586

PT.WIKIPEDIA PAGE VIEWS (PV)

Photo of Adam Lonicer

Icon of person Adam Lonicer

Sua biografia está disponível em 16 idiomas na Wikipédia. Adam Lonicer é o 763º biólogo mais popular (caiu do 629º em 2024), a 4331ª biografia mais popular da Alemanha (caiu do 4193ª em 2019) e o 158º biólogo mais popular da Alemanha.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Adam Lonicer by language

Loading...

Among Biólogos

Among biólogos, Adam Lonicer ranks 763 out of 1,097Before him are Alexei Fedchenko, Garrett Hardin, Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton, John Hutchinson, Domenico Vandelli, and Bertha Lutz. After him are Tomitaro Makino, John Ellis, George Prideaux Robert Harris, Hwang Woo-suk, Wilhelm Weinberg, and Otto von Münchhausen.

Most Popular Biólogos in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1528, Adam Lonicer ranks 23Before him are Eric II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, António Ferreira, Claude Le Jeune, Pedro da Fonseca, Benito Arias Montano, and Rémy Belleau.  Among people deceased in 1586, Adam Lonicer ranks 16Before him are Birbal, Luis de Morales, Philip Sidney, Joachim Ernest, Prince of Anhalt, Ignazio Danti, and Martín de Azpilcueta.

Others Born in 1528

Go to all Rankings

Others Deceased in 1586

Go to all Rankings

In Alemanha

Among people born in Alemanha, Adam Lonicer ranks 4,331 out of NaNBefore him are Walter Kaufmann (1871), Heinrich Zimmer (1890), Ludwig Aschoff (1866), Manfred Eicher (1943), Wolfgang Kleff (1946), and Heinrich Kayser (1853). After him are Emil Rausch (1883), Max Dessoir (1867), Klaus Doldinger (1936), Ditmar Jakobs (1953), Gertrude of Brunswick (1060), and Georg Anton Friedrich Ast (1778).

Among Biólogos In Alemanha

Among biólogos born in Alemanha, Adam Lonicer ranks 158Before him are Ernst Stromer (1871), Amalie Dietrich (1821), Hugo von Mohl (1805), Wilhelm Gerhard Walpers (1816), Karl Theodor Ernst von Siebold (1804), and Erwin Stresemann (1889). After him are Wilhelm Weinberg (1862), Otto von Münchhausen (1716), Karl Moritz Schumann (1851), Karl Julius Perleb (1794), Eduard Oscar Schmidt (1823), and Eduard von Martens (1831).

العربية中文NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutschMagyarItaliano日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийEspañol