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German Argentines (in Spanish referred as germano argentinos) are made up of Argentines of German descent, as well as Germans who became Argentine citizens. Please, note that ethnic Germans not only lived within the German borders of their time, but there were many communities of ethnic Germans living in other parts of Europe, especially before WWII. The German language and culture have traditionally been more important than the country of origin, as the basis of the ethnic and national consciousness of the Germans (Germany as a political entity was founded as late as 1871). Therefore, the political places from which these people or their ascendants emigrated to Argentina may vary. For example, Volga Germans arrived from the Russian Empire, most of Danube Swabians did it from the Austro-Hungarian Empire (today Hungary, Romania, etc.), etc. Likewise, there are multi-ethnic European states such as Switzerland, which has a German Swiss population with their own German language, while French and Italian-speaking citizens inhabit other regions of the country, retaining their differences even today. Austrians, on the other hand, were historically regarded as ethnic Germans and viewed themselves as such. As can be seen, the large population of German ethnicity occupied an area of several present-day countries. Citizenship is the mere legal condition of belonging to one state or another, while nationality or ethnicity is related to anthropological and sociological aspects and thus has an extraterritorial character. The following is a non-exhaustive list of some notable German Argentines. In it, German surnames abound. However, an amount several times this number is estimated for notable Argentines of partial German descent who do not have German surnames. Academia Marcella Althaus-Reid (professor of contextual theology and writer) María Teresa A. Waldmeyer (engineer, the first electronic engineer at the National University of Tucumán, Argentina, and the first woman professor in the field of Telecommunications Engineering at the Polytechnic University of Madrid, Spain) Eugenio Bachmann (scientist) Carlos Berg (scientist) Efraín Bischoff (historian) Guillermo Bodenbender (scientist) Osvaldo Boelcke (scientist) Emil Bose (scientist) Luis Brackebusch (scientist) Francisco Bullrich (architect) Carlos Octavio Bunge (sociologist, pedagogue and historian) Mario Bunge (scientist) Arturo Eduardo Burkart (scientist) Hermann Burmeister (scientist) Adolfo Büttner (engineer, architect) Claro Cornelio Dassen (mathematician) Adolfo Döring (scientist) Oscar Döring (scientist) Carlos Fader (engineer, some Argentine schools honor his name) Gustavo Fester (scientist) Emilio Frers (educator) Germán Frers (naval architect) Franz Stephan Griese (philologist) Pablo Groeber (scientist) Johannes Franz Hartmann (astronomer) Gabriela G. Hässel (scientist) Eduardo Ladislao Holmberg (undertook the inventory of Argentine flora and fauna) Kurt Hueck (scientist) Christofredo Jakob (scientist) Roberto Kiesling (scientist) Augusto Klappenbach (philosopher) Alejandro Korn (physician, philosopher and reformist) Otto Krause (engineer, founded the first Technical School in Argentina in 1899) Johannes Kronfuss (architect, he made the first extensive survey of all Spanish colonial architecture in Argentina) Franz Kühn (scientist) Oscar Kühnemann (scientist) Federico Kurtz (scientist) Rodolfo Kusch (philosopher, pro Native Americans activist) Paul Günther Lorentz (scientist) Rolf Mantel (economist) Ernesto Meyer (architect) Teodore Meyer (scientist, he discovered Tabebuia/Lapacho properties) Fernando Moog (architect) Gustavo Niederlein (scientist) Anastasius Nordenholz (writer and scientist) Carlos Nordmann (architect) Alberto Prebisch (architect) Raúl Prebisch (the most notorious economist of Latin America, he formed the basis of economic dependency theory with the Singer-Prebisch thesis) Josep Heinrich Theodor Rauch (engineer, architect, pioneer) Carlos Segers (astronomer) Werner Schad (linguistic scientist and educator) Friedrich Schickendantz (scientist) Walter Schiller (scientist) Otto Schneider (scientist) Augusto Gustavo Schulz (scientist) Hans Schumacher (physicist and chemist) Felipe Schwarz (architect) Marta Teodora Schwarz (medicine woman) Carlos Segers (astronomer) Rodrigo Bustos Singer (botanist) Otto Thomas Solbrig (biologist, botanist) Baldomero Sommer (founder of Sociedad Dermatológica Argentina) Alfred Wilhelm Stelzner (geologist) Adolph Strümpell (scientist) Teodoro Juan Vicente Stuckert (botanist) Kurt Tank (scientist, he designed FMA IAe 33 Pulqui II in Argentina) Max Tepp (scientist) Wolfgang Volkheimer (scientist) Otto von Arnim (architect) Arturo von Seelstrang (engineer) Ricardo Wichmann (scientist) Anselmo Windhausen (scientist) Kurt Wölcken (scientist)Arts and literature Roberto Arlt (short-story writer, novelist and playwright) Osvaldo Bayer (writer) Elsa Bornemann (one of the best writers of children's literature in Latin America) Silvina Bullrich (writer) Delfina Bunge (writer) Domingo Fernández Beschtedt (alias Fernán Félix de Amador, poet, art critic) Helmut Ditsch (Hyperrealism painter) Fernando Fader (painter) Jorge Fondebrider (writer, poet) Juan Pedro Franze (composer and musicologist) Elizabeth Eichhorn (artist) Michael Gielen (conductor and composer) Hermann Federico Arturo Hassel (writer) Liliana Heer (psychoanalyst, writer) Annemarie Heinrich (prominent photographer) Paola Kaufmann (writer) Eduardo Gudiño Kieffer (writer) María Cristina Kiehr (soprano) Federico Klemm (art critic) Bertha Kösler Ilg (writer) Manfredo Kraemer (violinist) Francisco Kröpfl (composer, music theorist) Erwin Leuchter (musicologist, conductor) Carlos Alberto Leumann (poet) Bernardo Neumann (artist) Alan Pauls (writer) Silvia Roederer (pianist) Eric Schierloh (writer) Carlos Schlieper (director) Luis Mario Schneider (writer, poet) Renate Schottelius (dancer, choreographer) Xul Solar (Oscar Schulz, painter) Sebastian Spreng (visual artist, music journalist) Daniela Taberning (soprano) Carlos Veerhoff (composer) Carlos Vogt (cartoonist) Úrsula von der Lippen (artist) Otto von Klickx (writer) María Wernicke (writer) Rodolfo Zagert (painter, architect) Margarita Zimmermann (singer)Business Guillermo Bauer (manager, owner of the first steam-operated flour mill in Argentina) Carlos Miguens Bemberg (one of the Latin America's most Important Businessmen and descendant of the wealthy Bemberg family) Otto Bemberg (founder of the Brand of beer Quilmes, the biggest one in the country) Carlos Miguens Bemberg (one of the Latin America's most Important Businessmen and descendant of the wealthy Bemberg family) Francis Mallmann (one of the best Latin America's chefs, and prominent manager) Roberto Mertig (founder of Orbis Mertig) Alberto Roemmers (founder of Laboratorios Roemmers, the most important Latin American Pharmaceutical Laboratory) Juan Rosauer (founder of Los Alamos de Rosauer SA) Otto Schneider (founder of.... 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