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Alfred Grünfeld was born as the second of eight children to Jewish leather merchant Moritz Grünfeld (born 1817 Kolín nad Labem) and his wife Regina, nee Pick (born 1826 Osek), in Prague – New Town. [1] Moritz Grünfeld was a leather merchant, and Grünfeld grew up in a middle-class, musical Jewish family.
Ferenc Mező, also known as Grünfeld (March 13, 1885 – November 21, 1961), was a Hungarian poet. He was born in Pölöskefő , Zala County , and died in Budapest . In 1928, he won a gold medal in the art competitions of the Olympic Games for his "History of the Olympic Games".
Ernst Grünfeld contributed many articles on openings to chess magazines around Europe. Indeed, before he had turned 20, he was already contributing articles on the Ruy Lopez to Wiener Schachzeitung, which was one of the most popular German-language chess publications of its day, and over the next 40 years or so he wrote many articles on opening theory for chess publications in Germany ...
Berthold Grünfeld (1932–2007), Norwegian psychiatrist, sexologist, and professor of social medicine Dan Grunfeld (born 1984), American-Romanian professional basketball player Ernie Grunfeld (born 1955), American former professional basketball player
Greenfeld (Yiddish: גרינפעלד, Russian: Гринфельд) is a surname, which may refer to: . Alon Greenfeld, Israeli chess grandmaster; Boruch Greenfeld, rabbi and Torah scholar
Heinrich Grünfeld was born into an affluent Jewish family in Prague, the son of merchant Moritz Grünfeld (1817, Kolín – 1882, Vienna) and his wife Regina, née Pick (1826, Dobruška – 1881, Vienna). After the discovery of his elder brother Alfred’s musical talent, the family home became a key part of Prague’s music scene.
Henry Grunfeld (1 June 1904 – 10 June 1999) was a merchant banker who played a prominent role in the development of investment banking and the growth of London as a financial centre following the Second World War.
Paul Stefan, born Paul Stefan Grünfeld (25 November 1879, in Brno – 12 November 1943, in New York City) was an Austrian music historian and critic. Born into an assimilated Jewish family, [ 1 ] Paul Stefan came to live in Vienna in 1898. [ 2 ]