Gottlieb (name)
Appearance
Gottlieb (German for "God's Love"; see also Amadeus (disambiguation), Bogomil, Theophil) is a German name that may be used as a surname or as a male given name. The name Gottlieb was created in the 17th century, in German speaking parts of Europe, as a product of the age of Pietism, as a way of naming young men with a religiously charged name.[1]
Surname
- Adolph Gottlieb, American sculptor and painter
- Alan Gottlieb, American author and conservative activist
- Anna Gottlieb, Austrian soprano
- Anthony Gottlieb, British writer
- Carl Gottlieb, American screenwriter
- Craig Gottlieb, American militaria and antique dealer
- David Gottlieb, plant pathologist
- David Gottlieb, established the Gottlieb arcade game company
- Doug Gottlieb, American basketball player
- Dovid Gottlieb, Israeli mathematician
- Edward Gottlieb, Ukrainian basketball coach
- Eli Gottlieb, Israeli philosopher
- Ferdinand Gottlieb, (1919–2007), American architect
- Franz Josef Gottlieb (1930–2006), Austrian film director and screenwriter
- Jean Raymond Gottlieb, Monégasque bodyguard
- Joseph Abraham Gottlieb (1918–2007), birthname of Joey Bishop, American entertainer
- Katherine Gottlieb, American businessperson
- Lea Gottlieb, Hungarian-born Israeli fashion designer
- Leo Gottlieb (born 1920), New York Knicks basketball player
- Leopold Gottlieb, Polish painter, brother of Maurycy
- Leslie D. Gottlieb (1936–2012), American biologist
- Louis Gottlieb, American entertainer, bassist of the Limelighters
- Lori Gottlieb, American journalist
- Mark Gottlieb, Australian fictional character
- Maurycy Gottlieb, Polish painter, brother of Leopold
- Michael T. Gottlieb, American bridge player
- Mike Gottlieb, American college baseball coach
- Robert Gottlieb, American writer
- Sidney Gottlieb, American military psychiatrist
- William Paul Gottlieb, American photographer
Given name
- Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, Russian admiral and explorer
- Gottlieb Daimler, German industrialist
- Gottlieb Fluhmann, Swiss-American rancher in Park County, Colorado; he disappeared in 1892, and the body was not found until 1944
- Gottlieb Heileman, American brewer
- Wolfgang Gottlieb Mozart, a variant of Mozart's name used by his father
- Gottlieb Eliel Saarinen, Finnish-American architect
- Gottlieb Schuler, Australian journalist